440 lines
18 KiB
TeX
440 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{prodigy}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Prodigy}\label{prodigy}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{prodigy}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Prodigy}
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\epigraph{``No man in Creation is so dangerous as a well-meaning fool.''}{Dread Empress Regalia II}
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When he'd been nine years old, Masego had seen the end of the world. He
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thought of that, sometimes, at gatherings like this one. When making
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meaningless small talk with strangers, wondering if they had any idea
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about how fragile everything around them truly was. That the world was
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nothing but the whim of greater beings, apt to be snuffed out the moment
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they learned what they wanted. But all he saw in the eyes of the
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highborn was hunger and ambition, and could there ever be anything more
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boring than that? The silhouettes melded into each other, a hundred boys
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and girls cut from the same dull cloth. Even those with a measure of the
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Gift were blind, like they were just refusing to \emph{see} what was
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around them\emph{.} They might as well be animals or statues of clay,
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but still he had to stand and smile and pretend he'd remember their
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names if he ever met them again. He usually didn't. Papa chided him over
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that, said connections were always useful, but Father just laughed.
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Still made him come, though, even if it was only a few times a year.
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``- a pureblood Liessen charger,'' the girl said, and Masego only now
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noticed she'd been talking this whole time. ``Getting her across the
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Wasaliti was difficult, of course, but my family is not without
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friends.''
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The boy squinted through his glasses.
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``I thought there was a decree about the Thirteenth Legion getting first
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pick of mounts out of the provinces,'' he said.
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Father had arranged for a tutor to teach him about these things, which
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had only succeeded in motivating him to learn how to craft illusions. If
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he slept through the lessons it was easier to stay up late working on
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his own projects. Uncle Amadeus had called him worse than his father
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when he'd learned, but it had sounded like a compliment. His uncle did
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that a lot, say things he didn't mean while smiling. It had taken Masego
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a while to understand how that worked, and even now he found the man's
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face hard to read sometimes. It was like he was \emph{trying} to make
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things confusing. The girl, whose name he didn't even try to remember
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because he was pretty sure he hadn't been paying attention when she'd
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introduced herself in the first place, laughed like he'd said something
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funny and put her hand on his arm. She had warm fingers, he noted, but
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he didn't enjoy strangers touching him. Well, she was Soninke and
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highborn so she was probably clean at least. Still, since he'd turned
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twelve people kept pawing at him at these receptions. He really wished
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they'd stop, or at least tell him why.
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``What do such trifles mean to people like us, Masego?'' she smiled,
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cheeks dimpling.
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He forced himself not to squint again. It sounded like she broke the law
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a lot, which was kind of stupid. Yeah, Father had told him that those
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didn't really apply to him until Uncle Amadeus said they did, but that
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was just him. This girl would probably get hanged if people knew, so why
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was she telling him?
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``Horses are nice,'' he tried.
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The girl blinked in confusion and withdrew her hand. That was his
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chance, he decided. If you didn't retreat early when people got grabby
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they'd follow you all night.
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``I think I hear someone calling me,'' he hastily said, and fled before
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she could reply.
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He was pretty sure this was the city home of the High Lord of Thalassina
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-- though why someone who lived by the sea would want a house in Ater he
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had no idea -- so hopefully he hadn't just been rude to a relative
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of\ldots{} whoever the High Lord was. There was an S in there, he was
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pretty sure, maybe more than one. The whole place was pointlessly large
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and dripping with gold, jewels and weird wood Papa told him was worth
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more than either, but worse of all it was filled with people. So many
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people. More than two hundred, though there were a lot of servants and
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supposedly those didn't count. Masego declined to take one of the bits
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of meat pastry from a plate, since he'd been told those were poisoned,
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and discretely tried to find either his fathers. They weren't anywhere
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in sight, but there were three floors and a rooftop garden so that
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didn't mean much. Before he could embark on that journey of discovery,
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he found himself cornered by another girl and what looked like a pack of
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minions. Another Soninke. He squinted, pretty sure he'd seen this one
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before. Three months ago, when High Lady Tasia Something had the party
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with the magic lightshow? That had been very interesting, though people
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kept trying to talk to him during. Which, rude. And they said \emph{he}
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had bad manners.
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``Lord Masego,'' the girl smiled. ``A pleasure to see you again. You so
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rarely come to these little evenings.''
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Shit, he was supposed to know who she was.
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``Oh hello,'' he said, and after a moment found a clever ruse.
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``\ldots{}You.''
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Flawless. He was going to get away with this cleanly.
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``A very familiar way to refer to Lady Akua,'' one of the minions said.
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The boy frowned.
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``I thought minions weren't supposed to talk when important people do,''
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he pointed out. ``Father says they used to execute people for that.''
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The minion who'd spoken, some Taghreb, went pale at that. Damn it,
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Masego hadn't meant to make him feel bad about his manners. Now he felt
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like an ass.
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``It's all right,'' the boy reassured the stranger. ``It's just an old
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custom. Those aren't very important.''
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The Akua girl's smile didn't change, but he got the impression he'd said
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something wrong. Was it because she was pretty? Pretty girls always had
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these expectations about things he should be saying but no one had ever
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written those down, as far as he knew, and why would people not do that?
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It was just bad scholarship, honestly.
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``A shame you believe so, my lord,'' she said.
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Masego frowned.
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``Why?'' he asked. ``Do you want him to get killed? That's a little rude
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to say right in front of him.''
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The Soninke girl looked bemused, and also a little pained, but before
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she could say anything Masego felt a giant palm settle over his head and
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relief wash over him.
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``Aunt Sabah,'' he breathed. ``Wait, careful with the hair.''
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The big woman grinned and ruffled his braids even as he squirmed.
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``Making friends, Masego?'' she teased.
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``I'm not sure,'' he said. ``I think I insulted them but I don't know
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how.''
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He leaned closer to his aunt and whispered.
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``They must have very thin skin,'' he gravely told her.
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He offered the girl and her minions a smile after that, but some of them
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looked angry for some reason.
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``Lady Captain,'' the girl said, and bowed.
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``Sahelian,'' Aunt Sabah replied. ``Growing into a proper little lady,
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aren't we?''
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``I am ever my mother's daughter,'' the girl smiled.
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Oh, Masego thought, they must be friends. Now he felt kind of bad he
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hadn't remembered her name. Aunt Sabah took her hand off his tresses and
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patted him.
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``One of High Lord Idriss' mages prepares to make a demonstration in the
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gardens,'' she said. ``Your father sent me to get you.''
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The moment magic was mentioned he forgot all about the other people,
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perking up.
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``Skill display or a formula reveal?'' he asked. ``Because they're not
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usually very good at the displays.''
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``Formula,'' the big woman said. ``Come on, we don't want to miss it.''
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Masego wasn't a savage, so he remembered to wave at the girl and the
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minions before he followed his aunt to the stairs.
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``You don't have any idea who that was, do you?'' she asked.
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The boy glared.
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``Of course I do,'' he said. ``It was\ldots{}''
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Shit, he'd forgotten her name again. \emph{Come on, Masego, she just
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told you.}
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``Lady Ubua,'' he said, pretending he was sure.
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Aunt Sabah's shoulders shook like she was holding something in. She must
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have eaten too much.
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``Yes,'' she said, voice tight. ``That is exactly correct, and you
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should always call her that.''
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Masego let out a sigh of relief when she was looking away. \emph{Ubua,
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Ubua, Ubua}, he said in his head. He couldn't forget, just in case Papa
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asked him later. They slowed when they got to the second floor, and his
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aunt steered him to the side. He was a little confused as to why, at
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first, but then he saw Uncle Amadeus talking with some important-looking
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Taghreb. His uncle was very pale, though Father had told him it was
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because he was a Duni -- which wasn't a disease, even if it sounded like
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it -- and he usually looked sinister but tonight he was smiling and
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standing real close to the other man. They must have been old friends,
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he thought. The Taghreb was smiling very widely and his hands were
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shaking with excitement.
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``Brat,'' his uncle lazily said, turning to him. ``Heading up for the
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reveal?''
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Masego nodded.
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``Do you think people will try to talk to me?'' he asked. ``Because they
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did last time, and it was very tedious.''
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Uncle Amadeus' lips quirked.
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``Stay close to me and I'll serve as your guard,'' he suggested.
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Masego beamed. His uncle turned to the Taghreb.
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``Think on it, Lord Baneg,'' he said. ``It would be my pleasure to
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arrange it.''
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The Taghreb said his courtesies very quickly, bowed and left.
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``What were you talking about?'' the boy asked.
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``Giant spiders,'' his uncle said. ``Lord Baneg seems to have an
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interest in seeing them up close.''
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Masego hummed in approval. As a provably repeated phenomenon of unclear
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sorcerous origin that displayed manifestations going outside the bounds
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of the classical table of elements, the giant spiders under Ater
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\emph{were} a fascinating study subject.
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``Is he a mage, then?'' he asked.
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Uncle Amadeus patted his shoulder.
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``No,'' he smiled coldly. ``No he is not.''
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``He must be a great scholar,'' Masego mused.
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It wasn't people's fault, that they weren't born with the Gift. Yes, it
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made them kind of useless and ignorant but it wasn't like they could
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\emph{help} it. Just like he couldn't help but finish the tray of lemon
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tarts when Dada made them, no matter what his other father said. It was,
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like, Fate. Delicious lemony Fate. The three of them were given a wide
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berth as they headed for the stairs, which tended to happen whenever
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Uncle Amadeus was around. He didn't have a lot of friends, which was why
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Masego had been glad to see him getting along with the lord earlier.
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``Our little Masego was making friends when I found him,'' Aunt Sabah
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said.
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``Was he?'' his uncle said, eyebrow quirking.
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``Oh yes,'' his aunt said, voice tight again. ``With Lady Ubua. You
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know, Tasia's daughter.''
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His uncle's face blanked, which meant he was sad. Or angry. Or happy.
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Ugh, people were complicated. There should be a guide.
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``Auntie's lying,'' Masego said. ``I think I made them angry. Somehow. I
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don't know why they thought \emph{I} was the rude one when she said she
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wanted to kill her own minion, but maybe she's just not that bright.''
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``It's not good to insult people, Masego,'' Amadeus said. ``You should
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send a letter to Lady Ubua to apologize.''
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``Do I have to?'' he whined.
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``I'll help you write it, don't worry,'' his uncle said, a tremor going
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through his shoulders.
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Aunt Sabah was grinning, which made people around them back away even
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further. Masego sighed, but figured he might as well. Father always said
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he was only supposed to hurt other people's feelings on purpose. They
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passed through the third floor and the boy tugged at his aunt's hand.
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``There,'' he said, pointing ahead. ``Papa's talking with people.''
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There was a cluster of at least a dozen highborn in a circle around his
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father, most of them women. Papa said something that had them laughing
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and drank from his cup, nibbling at cut of meat. Some of the ladies were
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looking a little red in the face, but people did that a lot around his
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fathers. Papa saw him from the corner of his eye and smiled, saying
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goodbye to his friends and sauntering up to them.
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``Tikoloshe,'' Uncle Amadeus said, inclining his head.
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``Amadeus,'' Papa smiled. ``Always such a pleasure. And Sabah, dearest.
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A shame you did not bring your children.''
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``Bad enough I have to come, I'm not going to torture them with this
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kind of company,'' Aunt Sabah snorted.
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``Do give my regards to your husband,'' Papa said.
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His aunt laughed.
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``'Loshe, I'm not going to help you flirt with him,'' she said. ``Give
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it up.''
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``But he always gets so \emph{flustered},'' Masego's father said,
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smiling over the rim of his cup.
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Uncle Amadeus' face was blank again. It was like that a lot, around
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Papa. Father said they didn't get along very well but when Masego had
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asked why he'd just said it was `complicated'. The boy tugged at his
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father's tunic.
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``There's going to be a formula reveal upstairs,'' he said. ``I don't
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want to miss it.''
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His father's brow rose.
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``Have you earned it?'' he said. ``How many people did you talk with
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tonight?''
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``Ten,'' Masego said, having honestly no idea whether he was lying or
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not.
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Papa studied him closely.
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``Zego, are you lying to me?'' he asked.
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``It's not a lie if you don't get caught,'' Masego replied cheerfully.
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The Empress had said so, once, so it must be true. Papa sighed.
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``We will mingle after the demonstration, you and I,'' he announced.
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``And I will have no backtalk.''
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The boy grimaced but didn't argue. That way lay Callowan apples instead
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of pastries for dessert, which was basically torture and probably
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illegal. The adults talked while they made their way up to the garden,
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mostly about Aunt Sabah's children and how quick they were growing. She
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said they were going to be bureaucrats like their father, which sounded
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horrid but he supposed someone had to do it. The rooftop garden, he
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decided after they went up, was actually very nice. It wasn't just
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plants, there was also obsidian sculpted to look like flowers and trees
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and in little nooks he could see runes had been carved. Much of this, he
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realized, was actually illusions. He drifted away from the adults and
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elbowed aside a bush of large green leaves, kneeling at the foot of an
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obsidian tree and tracing the runes hidden in the roots with his
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fingers. The work was simplistic, he thought. The harmonics in the sound
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production could be significantly improved if they took out the array
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stabilizer and separated the core into two different workings. Yeah it'd
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be a little trickier to power but then you could have illusionary wind
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moving the leaves and also-
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``Look at you,'' Father sighed. ``They lose you for ten heartbeats and
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you get dirt all over your robes.''
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Masego looked up at his father, then down at his knees. Huh, it was
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true. He'd been kneeling in soil this whole time and pushing aside the
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dirt covering some runes had gotten some all over him.
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``This is very unprofessional work,'' the boy said gravely. ``They used
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a cascade pattern to keep the sorcery flowing, Father, it's like they're
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not even \emph{trying}.''
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The dark-skinned man crouched at his side, the edge of his tunic
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brushing the soil.
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``What is the Third Law of Artifice, Masego?'' he asked.
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``Sorcery anchored in the material will only work perfectly for the
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sorcerer who created it, because every caster leaves a different mark,''
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the boy dutifully recited.
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``And the corollary?''
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``The more complicated anchored sorcery is, the more prone to failure it
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becomes over time,'' he said. ``Simplicity is pow- oh. They made it
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shoddy on \emph{purpose}, so that anybody could use it.''
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``The mage who first built the Stoneglass Garden was very talented,''
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Father said. ``But he knew his successors might not be as skilled, so he
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kept the system simple.''
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``That's stupid,'' Masego said bluntly. ``If they're not good enough,
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they don't deserve to use it.''
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``This is a showpiece, Masego,'' his father said. ``It's meant to be
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used as often as possible.''
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``All they're showing is that they're shit at spellcrafting,'' the boy
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muttered under his breath.
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Father looked amused as he rose again, offering a hand to help him up.
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``Come,'' he said. ``Let's have a look at that formula. I'm told the
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demonstrator has improved significantly on an old Thalassinian spell.''
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Masego followed eagerly, excited again. There was a place in the middle
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of the garden where a large round platform of stone was left in the
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open, seats of pale wood set all around it. His uncle was already seated
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but Aunt Sabah wasn't, which made sense. She'd probably break the chair
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if she tried, she was \emph{really} heavy. His fathers had him sit
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between them, Papa fussing with the tresses his aunt had messed up and
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shooting her a dark look. Silence washed over the garden when some
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Taghreb woman got onto the platform, bowing and talking a lot about how
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some High Lord was great and blah blah blah, honour and old blood and
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Gods when were they going to get to the magic already? Eventually she
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raised her hands and began tracing red runes in the air. Oh, so she used
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Miezan tracing. That was rare, it was a lot more rigid than the
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techniques developed under Dread Emperor Sorcerous. A triad of runes
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formed a triangle as she continued murmuring, then a thin needle of blue
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fire erupted from the centre of it. She guided it into shapes, but
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Masego's eyes narrowed as she watched. The initial quantity of fire had
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not changed: she was just thinning the intensity so it looked like there
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was more. It was inefficient. It was slow. It was \emph{inaccurate}.
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``No,'' he said, and rose to his feet.
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There was a ripple of murmurs around but he didn't care, going onto the
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platform.
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``You're doing it wrong,'' he insisted. ``Look, look closer until you
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can have a \textbf{Glimpse} of what you should be doing.''
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His fingers danced across the air, using her lame Miezan tracing instead
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of proper High Imperial. He slowed when he made the initial runes,
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making sure she'd be able to see where he differed -- adding a draw
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pattern to her initial burst, then followed along the same lines of her
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spell but actually making more blue fire because the working was still
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drawing on his sorcery instead of diluting the power like hers had. It
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fit, but already his mind was running through ways to improve the spell.
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Refine it, cut away at the impurities. Masego felt clarity descend on
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him like morning dew, fresh and limpid on his tongue. A sigh came from
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all the lords and ladies like they were a single person, and Father came
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up to steer him away from the platform. Some old man that was too light
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to be Soninke but too dark to be Taghreb came up to them, all smiles.
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``My congratulations, Lord Warlock,'' he said. ``A Name at his age is an
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achievement that will sound across the Empire.''
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Masego squinted at the stranger, then leaned close to his father.
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``Father, who is that?'' he whispered.
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The only thing that broke the silence that followed was Uncle Amadeus'
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convulsive laughter.
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