384 lines
17 KiB
TeX
384 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-57-revolve}{%
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\chapter{Revolve}\label{chapter-57-revolve}}
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\epigraph{``Men make swords, Heavens the sheath.''}{Callowan saying}
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The moon was out in full, and though part of me still grew irritated at
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the sight of the pale orb I'd learned to ignore it. I'd wondered once or
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twice at why the Winter King had granted me the title of Duchess of
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Moonless Nights, when his court had such a close association with the
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same celestial sphere. I still remembered the dream that had followed
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the usurpation, doubted I would ever forget even a single detail of it,
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and in it it'd been Summer that wanted to break the moon. \emph{Was that
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the intent from the beginning? To have it in my very mantle that I would
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seek to destroy you?} Now and then I had to wonder who had really played
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who, when I'd tangled with the Deadwood Crown. If my every desperate
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gambit had been foreseen by the immortal thing that now ruled the whole
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of Arcadia, turned to his purposes. I could have lingered on that line
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of thought, and wanted to, but the feel of Kilian's arm under mine was a
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reminder of why I'd begun this walk. I would not suffer cowardice from
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myself, not even in this.
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Southern Callow took well to autumn, even at night. Though the shades of
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orange and gold some godly brush had painted across fields and trees
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could not be glimpsed after dark, there was an undercurrent of serenity
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to the country. Of peace, more than anywhere else in my homeland, for
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these parts had seen less of war than any of the rest. The last two
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years had been eager in attempting to make up that disparity, though
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even the worst of Summer was no match for centuries of Praesi invasion.
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I caught myself sidestepping the heart of this again, and clenched my
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fingers. The two of us moved in silence, away from the bonfire and
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closer to a small pond bordering wheat fields. The muddy banks were
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covered with footsteps from the soldiers who'd come here to fill
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canteens and barrels, but at this time of the night we were entirely
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alone. \emph{Except for the frogs}, I thought, sharp ears catching echo
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of their song. We found a pair of carved stones by the shore, polished
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by what must have been decades of wind and rain, and sat there without a
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word.
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The wind brushed the reeds ahead of us, and as I watched them I realized
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I had no idea what to say. A glance at Kilian told me her face was
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hesitant as well, though the reasons for it were her own. Some part of
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me thought there should be a physical weight to this, given how serious
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it all felt, but I found none on my shoulders. Something like a quiet
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laugh escaped my lips. \emph{Look at us, grim-faced as if the fate of
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the world rests in the balance of this conversation. Like this isn't two
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girls of not even twenty summers settling a dispute of absolutely no
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import to Creation.}
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``Would you care to share the jest?'' Kilian asked.
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For a heartbeat I'd expected her to take my laugh as mockery, but that
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had been doing her disservice. She was not offended, merely curious.
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She'd never been the prickly one between us.
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``I was considering matters of perspective,'' I said.
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I finally gave in to the urge I'd avoided all night and looked at her
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properly. She'd trimmed her hair. Last time we'd spoken it had been at
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the edge of what regulations allowed, but now it was in a clean pixie
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cut like when we'd first met. She was still, I thought, heartbreakingly
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lovely. Porcelain and flame framed hazelnut eyes, and the body I knew so
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intimately radiated a warmth I knew was completely imagined. Winter had
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seen to that. The mantle had done a great deal more, though. I'd been
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months since I needed to look at her to know she was there, ever aware
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of the measure of fae blood she carried in her veins, but as my power
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had grown so had that awareness. I was a Duchess, and she unsworn to any
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of the lords of the fae. There was a whisper in the back of my mind that
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spoke of mastery, of needing only to reach out and \emph{will} it for
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her to kneel at my feet. The disgust that welled up in me at that
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spoiled what enjoyment I'd had of the peace and quiet.
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``Great things,'' Kilian said, ``are made up of myriad smaller ones. I
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do not think import and magnitude necessarily walk hand in hand.''
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A few sentences traded, and what I saw was our relationship made plain.
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I stepped away from it, making mixture of retreat and reason, while she
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stepped forward to bridge the gap at the cost of making herself the
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vulnerable one. There was, perhaps, expectation I would follow suit. But
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never demand. Time and distance had allowed me to see the boundaries
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we'd set more clearly, and the shred of shame I felt over them was
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well-deserved. There had never been anything equal about this, in what
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was given or received. The question that had hung in the air for the
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last few months was whether or not something that had never been
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balanced could be made so. Speaking with Hakram had broadened my
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outlook, but little else. I bared the blade first because in the end
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that was my nature, wasn't it?
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``Were you happy?'' I asked. ``Before.''
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The redhead smiled, somewhat ruefully.
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``You have a trick to tell when people lie, don't you?'' she said.
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``That does seem a mite unfair, going into this conversation.''
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I looked away, gazing at the pond and the small ripple I could see a
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fish making as it swam.
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``Of all the things that are unfair in this,'' I said, ``I would
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consider that a lesser measure.''
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She sighed.
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``The point of this,'' she said, ``was never for you to take lash to
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your back like an Ashuran supplicant. What has blame ever done to mend
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the world?''
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``Ignoring fault is how tyrants are made,'' I said.
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``You are hardly that, Catherine,'' she said, and without looking I felt
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her hand rise.
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It hesitated, then went down again. I was uncertain whether or not to be
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glad.
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``I was,'' Kilian finally said. ``Sometimes. Others not. We had our
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conversation because I feared one side would grow at the expense of the
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other.''
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It had been kind of her to phrase it so delicately but the meaning was
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clear enough. Whatever had been good about it, for her, had been giving
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way to the bad. And I'd hardly noticed, my mind on a hundred other
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matters. The thing was, I did not have it in me to apologize for that. I
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wasn't even sure she wanted me to. At the end of the day, my life didn't
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come first. Neither did the people I shared it with. The lines I was
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willing to cross to ensure both of those were preserved had only grown
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in number, but that part of the matter remained unchanged. \emph{Because
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there's a difference between important and important to me.}
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``You did most the talking, last time,'' I said. ``So I'll get the wheel
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moving tonight.''
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I itched to pick up a stone and toss it into the pond, anything to break
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the damned stillness that smothered the air around us, but I'd done
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quite enough running for the night.
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``It was hypocritical of me to hold you up to standards that I break
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myself,'' I admitted. ``Standards I don't even hold up everyone close to
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me to.''
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Kilian brushed back her bangs, face wearing an expression I could not
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quite read.
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``You thought well of me,'' she said. ``And so you thought I kept to the
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same principles as you. That's not a crime, Catherine. It was
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just\ldots{}''
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``Presumptuous?'' I suggested, a mirthless smile stretching my lips. ``I
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placed expectations on you, then grew angry when you didn't meet them.
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That's on my head and no one else's.''
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Ferreting out exactly why I'd had those in the first place had been more
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delicate, the kind of introspection I was always reluctant to delve in.
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It hadn't been that I cared for her, or at least not just that, because
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I cared for other people too. If Masego had spoken of a ritual fuelled
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by human sacrifice, would I have been angry? Yes, absolutely. But it
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would not have felt like a betrayal, the way it had with Kilian.
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``I used you,'' I said, tongue stumbling on the ugly word, ``as a
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refuge. From all the dark shit that goes on in my life. And that meant I
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wanted you to keep your hands clean regardless of what you actually
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want. Or need.''
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I felt her eyes lingering on me but did not meet them.
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``I hadn't thought you would actually admit that,'' she said.
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The faint surprise in her voice was probably the deepest cut she could
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have made, because she hadn't meant it to be one at all.
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``You once told me one of my virtues is recognizing when I'm wrong,'' I
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said. ``It's fallen a bit to the wayside, lately, but it's not gone.''
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I'd made a lot mistakes, in the last two years. Won great victories too,
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but one did not excuse the other. I'd make more, because I had talents
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but also flaws and no matter what Warlock said in the end I was only
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human. But at least I could stop making them out of wilful ignorance. It
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wasn't as much as I wished it could be. But it was what I could do.
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Power alone was never enough.
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``I was not blameless, if we have to speak of it that way,'' she said.
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``We did not have a conversation, last time. I'd made the decision
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before we ever spoke, and that was unfair to you.''
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I nodded slowly. Silence followed, until I pushed forward.
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``So what do you want, Kilian?'' I asked quietly.
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A lot could have been avoided, I thought, by asking that question a few
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years ago.
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``Catherine, \emph{look at me},'' she hissed.
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Her emotions were roiling. I could feel that with my sense that wasn't
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quite a sense. But it was in her voice I read the anger, and it
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surprised me enough I obeyed. She was, I realized, genuinely furious.
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``Don't do you fucking do this,'' she said.
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Irritation flared up.
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``Do what?'' I bit out, exasperated. ``Amends? Gods, Kilian, I'm
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\emph{trying}. What more do you want?''
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Her cheeks were flushed red, and for a moment I felt like kissing her.
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It passed.
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``You're not trying,'' she said. ``You're treating me like someone you
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have to bind to you. I'm not Hakram, Cat. Or Aisha. I \emph{know} you.
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And this is what you do when you bring someone into the fold. You're
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acting like I'm the enemy, not the girl who shared your godsdamned bed
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for two years.''
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``I know a lot less about that girl than I thought I did,'' I flatly
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replied. ``I'm-``
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I bit down on my tongue, took a deep breath.
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``No,'' Kilian said, eyes hard. ``We're not doing it like this. Like I'm
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a horse you have to soothe or a hound you have to feed. I'm not
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interested in the Squire, Cat. She has no place in this conversation.''
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``I don't know what you want from me, Kilian'' I hissed. ``I just tried
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asking and you bit my fucking head off.''
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She met my gaze, the demand that I not look away laying bare.
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``Do you really need that badly to be in control, even for this?'' she
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asked. ``Gods Below, Cat, there's no one else here. Would it cost you
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that much to allow yourself to be a person for an hour?''
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``Yes,'' I said, and I was surprised by the fury in my own voice.
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``Because people \emph{break}. People have limits. I can't have that
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anymore, Kilian, not when I'm making pacts with the Empress and planning
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wars with Black. \emph{Legends don't blink,} and if I'm anything less
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than that we are \emph{fucked}. Because they're stronger and they have
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decades on me and Weeping Heavens, this entire Empire is a house of
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cards and everybody's tugging at it. I am in over my head, I always was,
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and it is \emph{this} close to catching up with me and everyone I've
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dragged into this.''
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The only sound in the silence that followed was my panting breath,
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paired with the unpleasant realization I'd begun to speak furious and
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ended up pleading. I passed a hand through my hair, exhausted in a way
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my body no longer allowed me to be.
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``I can't do this, Kilian,'' I whispered. ``There are no good choices
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anymore, just a spread with different shades of horror that I'm forced
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to pick from. Every time I think it's coming together another thing
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drops and I have to become a little worse to deal with it. By the time I
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finish what I set out to do, I'll be more poisonous than what I wanted
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to break. And I can't back out because the alternative is \emph{every
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single one of you dead}. And you know what's the part that actually
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grieves me? I did this. I got us here in this mess, and I would do it
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again. Because this is bigger than me or you or the others, and if
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that's not ritual sacrifice by another name then I don't know what is.''
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All hail the Black Queen, I thought bitterly. I'd already put thousands
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to the sword to get here, what were a few thousand more for the pile?
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Blood was the grease in the wheels of Creation, and whose it was they
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cared not. Kilian reached over and slid her fingers through mine. I let
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her, though I knew I'd regret it.
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``You are not alone,'' she said.
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Of course I was\emph{. Because at the end of the day I have the power, I
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have the authority, and no amount of love can fit two people on a single
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throne.} I parted our hands and rose to my feet, brushing off my knees.
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``Your ritual,'' I said.
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``Tonight doesn't have to be about that,'' Kilian said.
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``It already is,'' I replied steadily. ``I have no grounds, as either
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the Squire or the Vicequeen of Callow, to tell you not to do it.''
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The redhead frowned.
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``And yet you still find the very notion repulsive,'' she said.
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``This isn't about me,'' I said. ``That was the mistake from the start,
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thinking that it was. I will, one day, grind that practice into
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nonexistence. Because it offends me, because it is a blight on Creation
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and the way of thinking it spawns is my enemy. But until then, it is
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against no law or regulation. Do what you deem best.''
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Her face went blank.
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``That sounds,'' she said, ``like goodbye.''
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``I love you,'' I said. ``I've never said it before, not like this, but
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I do. It didn't really sink in until I saw the amount of principles I
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was willing to break to keep you.''
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A shiver went through her frame.
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``Is that supposed to make this better?'' she said, voice raw.
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``It was due, regardless,'' I said. ``You were always the one that
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reached out. But this was about being equals, wasn't it? I don't think
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that means power, or titles, or authority. It's about neither of us
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being expected to bend our knees to the other's beliefs.''
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My hand rose, going for her cheek, but she shook her head.
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``Don't,'' Kilian said. ``Not if you're going to excise me out of your
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life. It would be crueller than just walking away.''
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``I'll still care for you,'' I said quietly. ``That's not going away. We
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are friends.''
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The redhead smiled bitterly.
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``You bloody fool,'' she said. ``Do you really think \emph{friends} is
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what I want from you? Getting just a part of someone after having had
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all of them can't be counted anything but a loss.''
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I almost took it back, right there and then. I could still do it, I
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thought. Salvage something out of this mess. But I didn't. I felt like
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weeping for what I was giving up on, but it'd been a long time since I'd
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been in tears and I wasn't sure I still could. My mantle and my Name
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woke, intertwined beyond separation, and I could have shunted all
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this\ldots{} tangle off into them. Let the cold clear it all away. But I
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was not yet so far gone, and so my hand came down instead. I did not say
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goodbye. It was too cheap and end for this. Instead I bowed my head, and
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left. Grace had never been my strength, and there'd been precious little
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of that on display tonight. I found my feet taking me back to camp
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instead of the bonfire, where I knew Hakram would be. I had no taste for
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the conversation that awaited there, would not for a long time. Instead
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I found a tent, still lit with magelight even at this hour, and let the
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wards wash over me as I entered. Black was seated on one of his rickety
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stools, his thin shirt for only armour as he poured over papers arrayed
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before him. He took one look at me, then let out a breath that was
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almost a sigh.
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He leant back to claim a cup from his bedside and filled it with the
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wine at his table, pressing it into my hands. I could have sat across
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from him, but instead I went on his bed. I folded my knees against my
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chest and cradled the cup. I barely remembered what it had felt like, to
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be a child, but it must have been something like this. He did not speak,
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but neither did his eyes return to the papers.
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``I met Ranger,'' I heard myself say. ``She almost killed me, in
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Arcadia.''
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``So I've heard,'' Black said. ``She is\ldots{} difficult at the best of
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times.''
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It was not an apology, nor had I expected one. The Black Knight did not
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apologize for himself, much less others.
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``But you love her,'' I said.
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He inclined his head in agreement.
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``I have, on occasion, thought of it as a singular obsession,'' he said.
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``But perhaps that is merely as close to love as I can manage, given
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what I am. It is enough for the both of us.''
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``Why?'' I asked. ``Why do you love her?''
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He smiled faintly.
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``I have wondered the same for many years,'' he said. ``I have loved --
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still love -- others, but never quite in that manner. In the end, I
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think it is because she does not need me.''
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I drank from the cup, a bitter Wasteland red that lingered on the
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tongue. I was glad of it, in no mood for sweetness.
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``Does it get easier?'' I asked. ``Carving away pieces?''
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Pale green eyes met mine.
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``Yes,'' he said.
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It was a lie. We both knew that. But I loved him a little, for saying it
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anyway.
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The last part I remembered of that night was my father's hands putting a
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blanket over me.
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