462 lines
20 KiB
TeX
462 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-13-forgery}{%
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\chapter{Forgery}\label{chapter-13-forgery}}
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\epigraph{``The heart of warfare is deception. Therefore, the generals who
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can deceive even themselves are invincible.''}{Isabella the Mad, Proceran general}
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Researching the old fashioned way would have taken much more than the
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single night we had. Much, much more: after a while I noticed that every
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time we took a book from the stacks and looked away, another one
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appeared in its place. Hopefully Masego hadn't noticed that, or I'd
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never be able to convince him to leave. Already telling him that we
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couldn't loot the library on the way out was going to be a bloody chore,
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I wasn't eager to fight that battle twice. In the end, we relied on
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Hakram's aspect to get our results: Find. There was no denying how
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useful that trick had proved to be since he'd come into it, but I
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remained wary. That was always the trap, with Names: they gave you an
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advantage that would enable you to crush all your enemies, if you
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just\ldots{} kept leaning into it. And it was always so very tempting
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to, wasn't it? The more you used it the more effective it became, the
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stronger the advantage got.
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I'd become so used to relying on Learn to, well, learn things that when
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I'd lost the aspect after Liesse I'd found myself almost crippled. I'd
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been teaching myself the Old Tongue, the Deoraithe language, before the
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dust-up with Heiress. When I'd gone back to the books afterwards I'd
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found to my dismay that I was going to have to start almost from the
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beginning. The information in my head was incomplete, like I had learned
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vocabulary lists by rote instead of actually figuring out the language.
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Almost a year later, I wasn't even even fluent. Back when I'd had Learn,
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I would have spoken like a native in six months while barely putting any
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effort into it. Black had been right, as he often was: people who
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depended on their Names for results fell apart when robbed of those
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powers. \emph{If you use your Name instead of skill, you never develop
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the skill.} There was a reason my teacher had taught me swordsmanship
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the hard way.
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That was the axe I had to grind with Find. When Adjutant used it, he
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found in a matter of hours answers that would normally have taken us
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weeks. It handed us solutions, and if we ever started to rely on that
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we'd be \emph{screwed} the first time we ran into a hero that could shut
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it down. We'd played with the aspect nonetheless, to figure out how it
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worked, and found it wasn't without limits: the information he looked
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for had to be at hand and the need for it clear. As far as I could tell,
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he wasn't warping Creation to get us what we needed. He was using a
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weaker version of Providence, the golden luck that always had the very
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thing they needed land in the lap of the heroes at the best possible
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moment. Masego had theorized that what the aspect actually did was
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tinker with the odds, essentially making something that could possibly
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happen much more likely to \emph{actually} happen. Adjutant wouldn't
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ever be able to point a spot on a map and have that location be full of
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ancient magical weapons, but he \emph{could} crack open a book at the
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exact page he needed to read.
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I'd worried that the library might not have the story we needed, but the
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refilling stacks effectively killed the fear. Here in Arcadia, an aspect
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so subjective in nature was massively more powerful than it would have
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been in Creation: reality was more fluid in the realm of the fae.
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His first attempt found us a story about a shepherd from Summer killing
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a Duke of Winter in single combat with a sling, winning the battle for
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Summer. It had a familiar ring to it. It was an old and popular tale in
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Callow that we'd first gained the Red Flower Vales by a shepherdess
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killing a Proceran prince with the same weapon when the prince tried to
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steal her flock. Dead princes always made for fireside favourites, in my
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experience. Callow had not forgotten the the Proceran betrayal after the
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Third Crusade. The story was not, however, what we needed. Hakram
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narrowed his search on the second attempt and found something more to my
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liking. A boy from Winter becoming a soldier to escape a prophecy he'd
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kill his own father, only learning too late his mother had had an affair
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with a Lord of Summer after killing the very same man on the
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battlefield. That had a shape we could use. It lacked the inheritance,
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but it stacked the odds in the favour of the long-lost child.
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He tried again and found something even closer. A prince of Winter
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abandoning his own daughter in the wilds for she was fated to kill her
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father, only for her to be found by a childless prince of Summer and be
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raised as his own. Killing her birth father on the field, she became a
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Princess of Winter only to find the horrible fate still dogged her: she
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was sent as as the champion of Winter to settle a duel, only to find the
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man who'd raised her to be her opponent. This evidently being a tragedy,
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she won again and destroyed everything she'd ever loved. Grim, but I
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could work with that. Stealing bits from both parricidal stories to
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craft it into a fresh one should do the trick. I leaned back into my
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seat with a servant-provided cup of wine, Hakram frowning at the pages
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as he read the third story once more.
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``Prophecy's the important part,'' I said.
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``We don't have one,'' he pointed out.
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``So we \emph{make} one,'' I replied.
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``I don't think scribbling `Catherine murders a duke, gets a duchy' on a
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parchment will get us anywhere,'' the tall orc grunted.
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``When I fought the Rider of the Host,'' I said, ``he trapped himself
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into a role. Had to reveal things to me because of it. I think that has
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long as the fae recognize it's a story, they're bound by it -- no matter
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how obvious a lie it is.''
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``So we need the fairies to know there's a prophecy, one just good
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enough to pass as true,'' he said. ``That's\ldots{} problematic. We'd
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need that knowledge spread before the fight.''
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``Apprentice would be able to make a scroll look old and magical,'' I
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said. ``There's no reason we couldn't make a dozen fake scrolls and
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throw them through the windows of high-ranking members of the Court
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tonight. The Duke himself doesn't have to be warned -- ignorance is part
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of the tragedy.''
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``Still feels thin,'' Hakram gravelled. ``You can make yourself look
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like his long-lost daughter and it'll help, but we need more.''
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``A tragic element,'' I said, thinking out loud. ``It doesn't have the
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right weight if I genuinely don't care I just stabbed my `father' to
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death.''
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I sipped at the wine again, wondering at how it tasted exactly the way
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Vale summer wine did at the peak of summer when served cold, the heavy
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heat making it the sweetest thing you ever drank. No wonder Archer had
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kept hitting the bottle.
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``I could have Apprentice put the belief in my head that the Duke is
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actually my father,'' I reluctantly said.
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Hakram grimaced.
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``I like Masego, Cat, and I doubt there's a better mage in the Empire
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save for Lord Warlock -- but messing with memories is always bad
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business,'' he said. ``You weren't conscious when he operated on your
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soul. It\ldots{} wasn't pretty.''
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Mostly I remembered searing pain and a lot of screaming, so I'd take his
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word for it. Masego had saved my life, that day, but the process had
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been less than pleasant.
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``We'll shelve that, then,'' I said. ``What else do we have?''
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I was an orphan. That was a prerequisite for any of this to be able to
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work, I thought, but I couldn't make more of it. I was the Squire. That
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had been my trump card in Liesse, given the roots the Role had in both
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Praes and Callow, but in Skade there was no ground to gain from it.
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``The Winter King brought us here,'' Adjutant suddenly said.
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``So he did,'' I agreed.
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``Set aside the story for a moment,'' the orc said. ``We're here because
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he wants something from you.''
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``We don't know what that \emph{is}, though,'' I said.
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``A hungry warrior will trade his sword for meat,'' he quoted in
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Kharsum.
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\emph{If you need something bad enough, you'll take even a terrible
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deal.} In other words, we had some kind of leverage on the King. The
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Prince of Nightfall had compared the Court to a fox gnawing off its own
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leg -- there was desperation in that image, not just viciousness.
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Pretending we had an immortal winter god's backing when getting into a
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fight with an immortal winter lesser god felt like fool's gamble,
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admittedly, but hesitation was the province of the slow and the dead.
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Fuck it: I'd already faked the king's signature to get into Skade in the
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first place, after all. If he'd wanted to turn the screws on us for
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that, we'd already be screaming.
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``I have three things,'' I murmured. ``A prophecy, an heirloom and the
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word of a king. Now \emph{that} has the right weight to it, don't you
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think?''
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Hakram shivered and I smiled.
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---
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``You look the way bad decisions feel,'' Archer told me.
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It was past midnight when the ochre-skinned girl swaggered into the
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library, reeking of liquor and throwing herself onto the table in an
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ungainly sprawl. Masego, who'd been finishing up the eighth fake scroll
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until she'd put her hand over it, sighed and moved his work to another
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table. I picked up a book and dropped it on her face as my reply, though
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even drunk she had the reflexes to snatch it out of the air. Archer
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wasn't wrong, exactly. After Apprentice had given me the silver chain
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enchanted with the glamour I'd had a look in the mirror and winced.
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Kilian pulled off the fae blood, but it could be kindly said that I did
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not. My features were already sharp and constant fighting had put muscle
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to my frame, so the exaggeration of both traits with a few fae features
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thrown in made me look like a pile of harsh angles forced into a
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person's shape. I did, however, look like I could be related to the Duke
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of Violent Squalls. That was the part that mattered.
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``I'm hoping you have more than insults to give me,'' I said.
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Archer rose to a sitting position with a tired moan, dangling her legs
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off the edge of the table.
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``You picked a fight with a bigwig,'' she said.
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``He's a duke,'' I said. ``That was given.''
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``He's \emph{the} duke, Foundling,'' she said. ``Look, you know it's not
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the same king or queen in charge of Winter every time the season comes,
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right?''
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``I'd gathered,'' I said.
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``The role can go to all the fae that are right now princes and
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princesses,'' Archer said. ``They have different natures, so the story
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of Summer and Winter can unfold differently according to who has the
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crown on both sides. That's why sometimes one Court wins and sometimes
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the other. Outcome's decided the moment the story starts.''
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``He's not a prince, though,'' I pointed out.
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``He's just as bad,'' the other Named said. ``Whenever you have a Winter
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ruler trying to avoid the war, he's the one that fucks it up. He's the
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cornerstone for the war happening anyway.''
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``So if he threw his masquerade\ldots{}'' Hakram said, trailing off.
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``Then the current King is trying to avoid a war,'' I finished. ``The
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Duke's \emph{important}.''
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On the bright side, the odds of my getting away with pretending the King
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of Winter was backing me had just significantly improved: I'd be ridding
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him of a nuisance.
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``So even for a duke he's going to be a bastard and a half to kill,'' I
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said.
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``That's the word,'' Archer agreed. ``Things I have also learned: man's
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not married, he's got a bunch of minions on his side and he uses what
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wind sorcery would be if it was actually useful in a fight.''
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``Wind sorcery \emph{is} very useful,'' Masego disagreed without ever
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looking away from the scroll. ``It lacks the offensive abilities of some
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other elemental spells, but it has few equals when it comes to dictating
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and restricting enemy movement.''
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``It \emph{feels} like you're to disagree with me,'' Archer said, ``but
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your words prove my point.''
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``It's the basis for scrying, you ignorant thug,'' Apprentice snapped.
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``Ooh, scrying,'' the woman replied, rolling her eyes. ``\emph{That}'ll
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tip the balance in a fight with a Named.''
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Gods, I missed Juniper. Nobody squabbled this much when she was around
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to glare. People without strong opinions didn't become Named, I knew,
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which was why you could never have a band of them in a room without it
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coming to \emph{some} arguing. It didn't help, though, that Archer's
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mission in life was to be the piece of gravel in everyone's boot and
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that Apprentice was exceedingly easy to rub the wrong way.
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``This conversation's postponed until we're back in Creation,'' I
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ordered. ``Archer, I know you have a fascination with asses but you
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don't need to be so much of one. Apprentice, you \emph{know} if you let
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her irritate you she's going to keep pulling your pigtails.''
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``But she was wrong,'' Masego muttered mulishly.
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Archer hid a grin behind her hand and I moved to change the subject
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before they could start again.
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``Heard anything about the Fields of Wend?'' I asked her.
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``There's a lake outside the city,'' she replied. ``With shifting
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glaciers in it. They use it to throw balls sometimes.''
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Not, I thought, a good battlefield to fight against someone who has a
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knack for using winds. Not that any place in Winter was, to be honest.
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Still better than a closed space like the inside of the palace had been,
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especially since the damned place had been built from the Duke's power.
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``Well, that ought to be interesting,'' I said.
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``So now we wait for dawn?'' Archer asked. ``I might actually die of
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boredom, Squire.''
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I glanced at Apprentice.
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``How long until you're done with the scrolls, Masego?''
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``Give me an hour,'' he replied absent-mindedly.
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``Stay awake, Archer,'' I said. ``I have something for you to do after
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this.''
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``Tell me it doesn't involved paying attention to what people are saying
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again,'' she implored.
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``I want to to break people's windows by throwing lies at them,'' I
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replied.
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She grinned.
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``Sometimes, Foundling, you say the sweetest things.''
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---
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I managed to grab a few hours of sleep afterwards. Enough that I was
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fresh, anyway. I could have slept longer but my mind was awake so
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instead I found myself trudging to the courtyard this place was named
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after. Servants popped up out nowhere, not unexpectedly, and I sat by
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the edge of the snow with a steaming cup of tea and a pair of sweet
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apple turnovers. I'd say this for the fae, they cooked better pastries
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than anything I'd tried back in Creation. By my estimate there was still
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about a bell left before dawn, so I took my time eating. I heard
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footsteps behind me, a sure sign one of my companions was also awake:
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the fae didn't make noise. Archer plopped herself down, leaning back
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against a wooden pillar. She had a plate of cold cuts and yet another
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bottle of wine, I noted with dark amusement. I wasn't sure it was
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possible to empty the cellars of Winter, but she was certainly giving it
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a gallant effort.
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``Did you even sleep?'' I asked.
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``Couldn't,'' she replied. ``I'm too curious about what's coming.''
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I hummed. If all went well she wouldn't need to fight anyway. Besides,
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even if she'd been up all night she didn't seem tired in the slightest.
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I wasn't actually in the mood for conversation, so I let silence reign
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as I drank my tea and nibbled at the pastries. Couldn't muster much of
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an appetite -- never could before a fight, though during I always ended
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up feeling hungry.
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``So what's your deal, exactly?'' Archer said suddenly.
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I eyed her sceptically.
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``My deal?'' I repeated.
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She scarfed down a piece of meat before replying.
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``Every Named has one,'' she said. ``Lady Ranger wants to break anything
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that thinks it's stronger than her. Your mage wants to open up Creation
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to see what the gears look like. The orc wants to murder everything in
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your way.''
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``And you?'' I deflected.
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``You already know what my thing is, Foundling,'' she smiled. ``I want
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to live \emph{large}, so I can die without regrets. You, though? I can't
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seem to get a read on you.''
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Funny thing, this. I was more used to being on the other side of the
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conversation. I'd had one just like this with Hakram, what felt like
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years ago. Then another with Masego, when I got a glimpse at the
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detached mania that lay at the centre of him.
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``People don't usually ask me that,'' I said. ``Don't need to. I'm
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pretty straightforward, when it comes down to it. All I want is to dig
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Callow out of the pit it's in.''
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She raised an eyebrow.
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``Aren't you the Tower's lieutenant there, nowadays? Seems like a done
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deal.''
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``You'd think so, wouldn't you?'' I grunted. ``I have the reins, within
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limits. I won. Pit's still there, kingdom's still in it.''
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Archer eyed me, expression unreadable.
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``So that's really all you're after?'' she said. ``Picking up a
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half-crown for the land you were born to?''
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I smiled mirthlessly.
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``Disappointed, are you?'' I said.
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``You're the heiress to people who changed the face of Calernia,'' she
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said, not denying it. ``And I don't mean conquering a kingdom -- who
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gives a fuck about where borders are drawn? That comes and goes. When
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the Lady of the Lake was with the Calamities, they broke a story old as
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dawn. Just picking up a lesser piece of that is\ldots{} \emph{small}.''
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The word was spoken with distaste.
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``Last year,'' I said, ``I crushed the skull of a man who thought he was
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a visionary. He wanted to save Callow, he insisted. Thing is, I don't
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really believe you can \emph{save} people anymore. I tried that and it
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doesn't ever quite seem to work right. I think it's because it doesn't
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matter, if they worship at the House of Light or sacrifice at some dark
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altar -- most days they're just people, and those are the same
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everywhere. They till the same fields, pay the same taxes, marry their
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neighbours and die fat if they're lucky enough.''
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``Named are more,'' Archer said. ``We're the brighter flame: the people
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who can actually \emph{change} things.''
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``Are we?'' I smiled. ``The part of the Conquest you pay attention to is
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the Calamities sweeping all opposition aside. You think that's because
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they were mighty, but that's not the part that matters. They were
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figureheads, enablers. Praes won because it had grown as a nation while
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Callow had not.''
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``The Empire grew because villains \emph{made} it grow,'' she replied
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flatly.
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``And don't you think it's telling the most successful villains since
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Triumphant put their efforts into reforming institutions rather than
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building a bunch of flying fortresses?'' I asked. ``People won that war,
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not Named. Malicia and Black, they're brilliant -- but there's been a
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\emph{lot} of brilliant Named over the centuries, on both sides. What
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makes those two different is that they know change comes from the
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bottom, not the top.''
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``That's\ldots{}'' she hesitated.
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Heresy, she wanted to say. That it went against everything we knew.
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History was forged by the hands of those that stood out and crowned
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themselves with power, those precious few even the Gods recognized as
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apart from the masses. \emph{Except that's a lie.} \emph{A thousand
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Dread Emperors and a thousand Kings, but nothing ever changed -- until
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what lay behind them did. It's not the tip of the blade that kills, it's
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the force that drove it into your belly.} That was, I was beginning to
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grasp, what I'd done wrong in Callow. I'd fought to put all the
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authority in my hands with the vague notion that I could fix it all
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afterwards, but how was that any different from what the Lone Swordsman
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had been doing? There were people all over the Empire who could make
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things better, if they were allowed to. And if there were forces trying
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to stand in the way? Well, I was a villain. The parts of Creation I did
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not like, I would \emph{break}.
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``Right now I have an enemy in Liesse who thinks by sheer will and
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ruthlessness she'll drag Praes back to a golden age that never
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existed,'' I said. ``I'm not worried about her, deep down, because even
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if she claims I'm the one going against the grain \emph{she's} the one
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fighting the tide.''
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I broke off a piece of turnover and popped it into my mouth.
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``Last spring, a little boy gave an orc a crown of flowers. There's
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something beyond any of us happening in the Empire, right now,'' I said.
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``Malicia and Black think they control it, but I don't think they
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\emph{do}. They're watching the story when what's important is the
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people telling it. They want me to part of the machine they're built,
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but I don't think that's my role.''
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``Then what is?'' Archer asked quietly.
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``When heroes and villains come knocking in the name of fate,'' I spoke,
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tone calm and measured. ``When they try to drag us back to where we were
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by force with a Choir behind them or the host of some howling Hell --
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\emph{I'll kill them all}. Every last one of them.''
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Softly, Archer laughed.
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``Ah, Foundling,'' she murmured. ``I was wrong about you -- you're not
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boring at all. You're just as mad as the rest of us.''
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I looked up at the sky. Night was dying.
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``Drink up, Archer,'' I said. ``Dawn's coming and we have a god to rob
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blind.''
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