462 lines
22 KiB
TeX
462 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-32-close}{%
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\chapter{Close}\label{chapter-32-close}}
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\epigraph{``Oh, on most days we lose. But once in a while, just once, it
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works. And those moments of perfect clarity where all the world is in
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the palm of your hand, a hundred thousand middling minds made into
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flawless assembly by your will? Those are worth all the rest.''}{Dread Empress Regalia II}
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Well, we weren't all going to die. That was nice. If my mouthing off had
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been followed by Thief failing to steal the sun, I would have been
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\emph{real} embarrassed before I got my fool ass killed. Wasn't exactly
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enthusiastic about a heroine with shaky allegiances getting to shove the
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-- possibly, I wasn't sure exactly how this worked -- literal sun in her
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knapsack, but it did beat dying horribly. So, you know, I was willing to
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chalk up that one as a win. The skin of Thief's hand was cracking and
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black by the time the orb of fire disappeared, even though she'd never
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touched it at all, but away it went. The moment it was gone, Sulia
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\emph{screamed}. I imagined it was a lot like losing an aspect, and when
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Masego had cut out mine the process had been excruciating. She collapsed
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to her knees and the lights went out. The not-world we were in began to
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collapse, wrinkling on itself, but I was having none of that. Now, if
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I'd pit my power against the Princess of High Noon she would have
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crushed me effortlessly and then maybe allowed me a moment to
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contemplate the sheer stupidity of my actions before ripping out my
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spine. This wasn't a fight, though. Power was leaving her like a leaking
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sieve, and even though I suspected that even whatever was left at the
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end would be enough for her to beat us again I wasn't going to give her
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the opportunity to get her shit together.
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``\textbf{Fall},'' I said.
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It hadn't been dark on the ashy plain, not exactly. It'd been not so
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much darkness as the absence of light. My power filled the endless
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expanse, propping it up and claiming the framework for itself. I saw my
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companions shiver in the sudden cold, now nothing more than shaded
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silhouettes in boundless dark. The night sky above us was without stars,
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but it didn't feel like anything was missing. \emph{A sky from before
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there were stars}, I thought. In here, whatever this place was, my will
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was the only one that mattered. Masego spoke a word, but there was only
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silence here. Silence, cold and weight. I turned my eyes to the Princess
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of High Noon, saw her frame light up with steam as my aspect slowly
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smothered the power of Summer inside her. She fought it harder than the
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Count of Olden Oak had, slowing down the process to a crawl. Letting out
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a long breath, I closed my eyes and sharpened my mind. Black had first
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taught me the exercise when I'd begun to learn the sword, but I'd only
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understood its true worth when I came fully into my Name. My mind became
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as a blade, the way I would when I formed a spear of shadows, but I let
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myself fall deeper into the process. Distractions and stray fought fell
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away. Doubts were scoured clean until nothing was left but pure, sharp
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intent.
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With a clear and resounding snap, the Princess of High Noon froze.
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I opened my eyes and released the night. After the utter silence that
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had preceded them, the noises of the battlefield were deafening. A wave
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of exhaustion nearly toppled me, though it did not scatter my wits
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enough for it to escape my notice that my blood flow had slowed. A few
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exertions away from it to start turning into red sludge, if I was lucky.
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I was out of the game for hours, maybe days. \emph{But I'm not done as
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long as I can speak.}
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``Masego,'' I rasped. ``Bind her.''
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Sulia wasn't dead, oh no. When I'd made the decision of fighting here in
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Arcadia, even with all the odds I'd stacked in my favour, I'd hesitated
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for one reason. The losses I would incur had to be made worth it by a
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greater gain. Bleeding Summer alone was not enough to drive me to make a
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gambit like that, not with what I was putting on the line. There were
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major liabilities to fighting the fae in Creation, of course, but that
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in and of itself wasn't a reason to fight them in Arcadia instead. The
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risks taken by giving battle in Summer were too high to justify the
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decision with just that. But then I'd stopped thinking of this battle as
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a battle alone, and placed it in the context of a campaign. There would
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be a final clash between my forces and the Summer Court, that much was
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certain in my eyes. And given that any advantage of mobility I had
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through my portals the fae had as well but better, when I returned to
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Creation there was no real way for me to dictate where that last clash
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happened. Considering the Legions were at their best on prepared grounds
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and anything but our best might just come short, that was not a recipe
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for victory. I'd understood that I needed something to force their hand,
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and that was why my soldiers and my allies were now dying on this
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unearthly field.
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The Princess of High Noon was my leverage, and I'd not understood
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exactly how strong that leverage would be until only two royal fae had
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come to stand for Summer. There should have been three, which likely
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meant the Diabolist had gotten rid of one for me. I'd give this to Akua
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Sahelian: she was a horrid, cold-blooded and treacherous monster but
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when she put it all on the line she could slug it with the best of them.
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I was still going to stab her repeatedly and burn the corpse twice, of
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course, but I could respect the strength if not how she got it and how
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she used it. Two royals meant there were two people left to lead the
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armies of Summer. If the Prince of Nightfall killed his opponent, and I
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believed he could, that left the Queen of Summer as the only heavy
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hitter in her court. She wouldn't be able to let that stand, not with
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Nightfall and a princess left to back the King of Winter. If the other
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court turned its eyes on her, and it was in their nature to do so, then
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she'd lose that fight and badly. With Sulia back at her side, she could
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\emph{maybe} scrap out a draw. She needed the Princess of High Noon
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back, and needed her badly.
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So if I dragged Sulia back to Creation, bound and gagged? Then the Queen
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of Summer could only come to take her back or face destruction. My bet
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was she'd come with her entire army, where I wanted and when I wanted. I
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honestly couldn't think of another way to bring the war to a close in
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the next three months and some that remained of the time the Winter King
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had given me, and so here we were.
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Hierophant, for though the change was young already I could no longer
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think of him by his old Name, did not immediately reply. Over his palm
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hovered the shards that had once been his spectacles, and though the
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enchantments on them were gone there was something a great deal more
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dangerous to be glimpsed in them now. The last thing they'd witnessed
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was the Summer sun in the fullness of its glory, and that light was
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still alive in the glass. It might never leave. Masego left the shards
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hovering in the air, weaving arcane patterns, and lightly touched his
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eyes. He could no longer see through them, I realized. He'd glimpsed a
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miracle and the miracle had burned away his sight. The dark-skinned mage
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smiled strangely, and then his fingers dug into his face. With a scream
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he ripped out his eyes, blood trickling down his face as the glass
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shards broke again and again until they were nothing but small gains.
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Forming into two orbs, they set themselves into his eye cavities. There
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was a shimmer of heat and the blood turned to red vapour as dull glass
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eyes replaced the ones in his hand.
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``The whole Hierophant thing was kind of attractive, until you did
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that,'' Archer said. ``Way to ruin it.''
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``It was a fair trade,'' Masego said, voice pensive.
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The bloody eyes disappeared without need for even a gesture, whisked out
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into the pocket dimension where he kept his tools.
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``Seven pillars hold up the sky,'' he said peacefully.
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There was a cadence to it, the hint of an incantation. Seven wooden
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pillars formed around the fallen Princess Sulia, looking distinctly
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physical. My knowledge of sorcery was limited, but even I knew the most
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traditional limits of what a mage could do. It was the kind of thing
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that was useful to know when killing caster, and since Diabolist was one
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I'd made sure to learn at least the broad strokes. It was possible to
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turn power into material substance, but the draw should have been
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\emph{massive}. Comparable with teleportation, and the only people who'd
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ever managed that were the Miezans. Masego seemed to have done it
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casually, and did not look winded in the slightest. Like he'd just
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ignored a law. Gods, what had he turned into?
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``Four cardinals, one meridian,'' he said. ``The wheel unbroken, spokes
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that are not. Thou shall not leave the circle.''
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Four runes appeared around the fae, linked by a circle of pale light.
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The ice shattered but Sulia hung in the air, faintly conscious yet
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unable to move. I helped up Hakram from where he was still kneeling,
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eyes closed and breathing irregularly. He leaned heavily on me, which
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almost saw the both of us toppling to the ground until Archer caught his
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other side and steadied us.
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``Careful there, big guy,'' she said. ``This isn't the place to take a
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nap, though I salute your attitude.''
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The orc cleared his throat, but did not say anything. He was in even
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worse state than I was. I looked for Thief, but she was gone again. Not
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much about the aftermath, that one. The disappearing act wasn't so much
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mysterious as it was a constant irritant. I'd been known to be, uh, less
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than polite on occasion but at least I didn't leave in the middle of
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things. I felt the gaze on me before the entity it belonged to deigned
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to land. The Prince of Nightfall ignored us entirely, touching the
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ground by the Princess of High Noon and studying her with a harsh smile.
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``Oh, Sulia,'' he murmured. ``The sheer indignity. You'd have been
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furious it if it was one of us, but \emph{mortals}? No amount of lives
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will allow you to wipe that shame away.''
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``You killed your prince?'' I asked.
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He turned to me me, single eye shining with amusement.
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``Very much so,'' he said. ``If the end ever comes, he will still be
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flinching when we next meet.''
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``We need to break the army,'' I said. ``Quickly. My troops are going to
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begin evacuation as soon as I send the order.''
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``There is nowhere she will not follow you, with Sulia in your hands,''
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he said. ``You lack not for boldness. I wonder if I should be flattered,
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that your domain resembles mine so closely.''
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``Ah,'' I said, nodding as if I had any idea what he was talking about.
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``Your third aspect,'' Masego said, long accustomed to my wiles. ``It
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is\ldots{} more.''
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The raven-haired man glanced at the braided mage, inclining his head by
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the barest fraction.
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``You have good eyes, for one of your kind,'' he said.
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The Hierophant inclined his head in return, accepting the compliment
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wordlessly. The Prince of Nightfall breathed in deeply, as if he was
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savouring the heat, and looked up at the sky. It was still day, I saw.
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The light still shone. Yet there was no sun. That might be a problem.
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What exactly had Thief gotten her sticky fingers on?
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``I will lend a vassal to escort you back to your lines, keeping to the
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spirit of our bargain,'' the prince said. ``Do not forget your end.''
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How the Hells I was going to manage to pay the price he'd demanded for
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his assistance was a headache for another day, I decided. I looked at
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the battle lines and saw Summer was wavering. They'd felt the defeats
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that had happened on a deeper level, and it was costing them something.
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``We've won,'' I said.
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``The Duke of Green Orchards will call retreat within the hour,'' the
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fae agreed. ``You killed his sister earlier, and they have no champion
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left to match me.''
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I looked west, to the hill, and saw the silhouette had yet to move. The
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Prince of Nightfall followed my gaze, single eye narrowing.
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``If she is not gone by dawn tomorrow, I will have my due,'' he said.
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I looked at him, then shrugged.
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``Good luck. Gods know you'll need it.''
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---
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We pursued the enemy when they retreated, but not far and not for long.
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I wanted Summer thinned of all the meat I could manage before we fought
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them again, but I was well aware that the moment Princess Sulia had been
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defeated an hourglass had been flipped and we wouldn't survive the last
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grains running out. Masego said that, in the worst case, she could turn
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a journey of several days into one that would take her until nightfall.
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We should be able to manage that. Juniper only sent two thousand
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regulars across before closing the gate, the flanking force they
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represented taking its toll before the fae host managed to extricate
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itself. Mostly green recruits, I noticed. It was so very typical of my
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general to use a battle in goddamned Arcadia to blood her fresh recruits
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that I couldn't help but smile. Juniper was Juniper. I was pretty sure
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if we ever invaded one of the Hells she'd just treat is as tempering
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exercise. The knights and the Winter fae did most of the hard work in
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running down whatever soldiers of Summer were cut off from the
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retreating host, and though it was only a rough estimate Marshal Ranker
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sent me an officer with her best read on the casualties. On our side,
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nearly six thousand. Nauk's two thousand men at the beginning of the
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campaign had been whittled down to a bare five hundred. Most of the rest
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were Deoraithe regulars and fewer legionaries, though the Watch had
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allegedly lost a tenth of their number.
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Summer, by Ranker's estimates, had lost around twenty thousand of the
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sixty they'd brought to the plains. Among those, over a third of the ten
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thousand the golden fae who'd very nearly wiped out Nauk's jesha had
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died. They'd suffered more from the two blasts that had been extracted
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from the Duchess of Restless Zephyr than mortal blades, apparently. I
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wasn't looking forward to another scrap with the golden ones, and fully
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intended on a sit-down with the Hellhound over the subject. This had
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been a victory, if a bloody one. We'd traded losses at over thrice dead
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for every one of ours. Winter, though, had not made out so well. Twenty
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thousand had been led here by the Prince of Nightfall, but only nine
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thousand would leave the field. Their cavalry was good as done, while
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the winged knights of Summer still had over half their numbers, and
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they'd lost one of the three royals directly under the King in the
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battle. I wasn't all that broken up about it, to be honest. A Winter
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that was better off than Summer but still weakened was very much to my
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advantage.
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Our wounded had been sent through first, the slow work accelerated when
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Masego crossed into Creation with the Princess of High Noon and then
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used our other aristocratic prisoner to forge a second gate that our men
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could use to evacuate. I gave Duchess Kegan leave to use that one to get
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her people out at her own leisure, getting the Legions through the one
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at behind the palisades. It was quicker this time around, for a variety
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of reasons. One more gate, lesser numbers and our officers had managed
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the logistics of this before. It was past noon when the last few hundred
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began to file through, and sitting on the bloody grass I let out a sigh
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of relief. Masego was lying down on my left, dull glass eyes thankfully
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hidden by his closed eyelids. It would be a while before I got used to
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those. He had to be on this side to close the gate he'd crafted, he'd
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told, me and I'd decided to remain with him so he wouldn't get
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distracted.
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``The Queen won't be able to follow us for some time,'' the mage said.
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``There are difficulties, to something that powerful crossing in
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Creation. They weren't meant to.''
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``How long is some time?'' I said. ``A week, a month, a year? I can't
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have her stuck here for too long. Not if I'm to win this war
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decisively.''
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``No more than a month,'' Hierophant said. ``She would not be able to
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stay for much longer than that, either. She's too deeply intertwined
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with Aine.''
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``I can work with a month,'' I grunted. ``I'll need around that long to
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have everything in place for our second tilt.''
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``It won't be anything like today,'' Masego warned.
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``They always get better, the second time around,'' I agreed softly.
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The others had already gone across. I'd told Archer I didn't mind if she
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wanted to go have a chat with her teacher, but the other woman had
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shuddered and muttered something about \emph{hunting eyes}. She did
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enjoy her dramatics. Ranger, if that was really her, still hadn't moved.
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Might have been she just came to have a look? Regardless, as long as it
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wasn't made my problem I was glad to wash my hands clean of the whole
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thing. Nothing good came out of meddling in the affairs of Calamities,
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even former ones. I sighed, then hoisted myself back up onto my feet.
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Gods, I was going to be more bruise than woman tomorrow. I offered
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Masego a hand, but saw his fingers were tracing the grass. Casting? No,
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he was trying to move the green strands. And failing.
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``Oh fuck,'' I whispered.
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I looked ahead, to the gates. Maybe a little more than a hundred people
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left between the two of them, but none of them were moving. Frozen like
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statues. I'd seen something likes this before, shortly before getting my
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heart ripped out.
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``She's here,'' the Hierophant said, rising unsteadily.
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The difference in light was so subtle I almost missed it: it was the
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shadows that gave it away. Even with the sun missing, the light had been
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cast as if coming from the something that no longer existed. Now,
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though, the angle was different. It all came from above. Hand shaking, I
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looked up. There was no sky. Only an ocean of golden flames, as far as
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the eye could see. Masego began murmuring softly and with a sound like a
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gong transparent wards formed around the soldiers still leaving. They
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resumed their movement for a heartbeat, until the wards shattered.
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``You said we should have had until nightfall,'' I said. ``Aine is days
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away, and she wasn't moving.''
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``No, not moving. She was \emph{casting},'' Masego said, regretful.
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``Time has been suspended across all of Summer.''
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I cast a panicked look at my soldiers. Shit, at the \emph{gates}. The
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Queen might be able to cross through those. If she did, we were done.
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All our armies wiped in moments.
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``I have never done this before,'' a soft voice said, awed.
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In front of us stood a young girl. She couldn't have been more than
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fourteen. Her skin was tanned, but not like a Taghreb or the people of
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the Free Cities. Like a farmer, and her hands held the calluses of one
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who tilled fields. Her hair was a mass of golden curls, let loose
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without styling. She wasn't beautiful, the way some fae were. If would
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have taken her for some farmer's daughter, with those broad shoulders
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and solid muscles. Her eyes were brown, unremarkable, and when she
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smiled at us her cheeks dimpled.
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``Is this what he saw in you?'' the Queen of Summer wondered. ``You
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change the patterns.''
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My mouth was dry. I had the itch to cough, but my body was still and
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beyond my control.
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``It is not enough,'' she said after a moment, and the sorrow on her
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face was heartbreaking. ``The story will correct itself. All you
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represent is delay. How tired he must be, to embrace this.''
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She sighed, then peered at us.
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``There are five of you,'' she said.
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I could not even nod.
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``Born under cursed stars,'' she told us gently. ``You most of all,
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Catherine Foundling. The five of you would be woe unto all you behold.''
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She had no weapon in her hand but I had not felt this terrified in a
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very, very long time.
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``I will spare you this,'' she said. ``I'm sorry. It's all I can do for
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you. Summer is not kind.''
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Hierophant's hand moved, but the Queen glanced at him and it stopped.
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``If you'd had a few years, Masego,'' she said. ``You have not seen
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enough.''
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Her hand rose and the sky fell. \emph{Now. Come on, now is when you
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come. She has to be why you're here.} I'd never heard anything more
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beautiful than the sound of a sword clearing the scabbard. The sky split
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in half and Ranger stood between us as if she had always been there. My
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hands were shaking, and though I abhorred the weakness it stood for I
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was so relieved I could move again I almost didn't care.
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``It was the Chancellor, who named us the Calamities,'' the hooded woman
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said, a single sword in hand. ``The man always had a way with words.
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`You are a calamity to friend and foe alike'. Only ever screamed when he
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died, though. I guess it's hard to be witty when getting drawn and
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quartered.''
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She hummed.
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``The Woe,'' Ranger said, mulling over the word. ``Too broad a mantle
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for you five now, but you'll grow into it.''
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``I have no quarrel with you, Lady of the Lake,'' the Queen of Summer
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said, brow creased slightly.
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Just the sight of it made me want to comfort her, even remembering she'd
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just tried to kill us.
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``Run along, kids,'' Ranger said, face hooded by shadow save for the
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sharp grin on her face. ``Once is all you get from me.''
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``We could help you,'' I croaked.
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The blade did not move, and neither did the hand that held it. And yet
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for a heartbeat I felt like my throat had been cut, like blood was
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gushing out. The intent had been so strong it had almost become a fact.
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``I dislike ignoring my impulses,'' Ranger said casually. ``So do not
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suggest that again. He would be angry, if I killed you, but we've been
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angry before. It passes.''
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``My soldiers,'' I said, knowing I was testing death but unwilling to
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leave them behind.
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The Calamity shrugged carelessly.
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``What are they to me?''
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She couldn't have\ldots{} no, not even Black would. But I looked behind
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me, and there was no denying the truth. The Deoraithe, the legionaries.
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Nothing left but ashes. She had not protected them. Only the two of us.
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``You will not leave,'' the Queen of Summer said.
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She spoke the words easily, and still I felt my bones creak under the
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|
weight. Ranger unsheathed her second sword and the pressure vanished.
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``I looked for you, in Aine,'' the Calamity said.
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``It would have been a meaningless fight,'' the Queen said.
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The Named had already ceased to pay attention to us, I saw. She'd given
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us our chance, and that was all she felt she owed.
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``So you had me running through a maze instead,'' Ranger snorted.
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``Cute. No maze here now, though. Too far from your throne.''
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|
``This strife is unnecessary,'' the Queen insisted, as if she couldn't
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|
possibly understand why this matter was still spoken of at all.
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|
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|
``I don't think we've ever been properly introduced,'' the Calamity
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laughed. ``I am the Ranger. I hunt those worth hunting. Rejoice, for you
|
|
qualify.''
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We fled, through the ashes of men who'd fought for me not hours ago. The
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gates closed, and the last of Arcadia I saw was a lone silhouette
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standing in a storm of flame. We'd won today, I told myself. Even with
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|
how it had ended.
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I should have gotten used to that bitter taste in my mouth by now.
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