640 lines
32 KiB
TeX
640 lines
32 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-65-elision}{%
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\chapter{Elision}\label{chapter-65-elision}}
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\epigraph{``A hero should not confuse striking at Evil and doing Good, lest
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their Good become the act of striking.''}{Theodore Langman, Wizard of the West}
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I slumped against the wall, catching my breath, and resisted the urge to
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deck Robber in the face. He looked like he was enjoying this way too
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much for it to be healthy. That'd been a close call, inside the room. At
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this point I was unsure whether Diabolist was actually out to kill me or
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not -- she'd been hinting pretty heavily she wanted me to be the Black
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to her second-rate Malicia -- but just letting me get hammered by those
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arrays until I was burnt pulp would have been enough to get me captured
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even if it didn't get me dead. Dead might be the better outcome of the
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two, if it came to that. Assuming it even stuck.
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``How the fuck did you all get in here?'' I panted.
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Robber alone, I could have bought. He was tricky that way. But there was
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a full line skulking around the corridor. Some were wounded, I noted,
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and not just by blades: there were tell-tale marks of spellfire on some
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of their gear. They'd been in a scrap before getting here, but I'd
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assume not even the Special Tribune's pack of marauders had been
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audacious enough to assault this horror of a palace. Goblins were a
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blade best used in the dark or in the enemy's back. There was a reason
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they weren't put in shield walls.
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``Special Tribune Robber, ready to report,'' the wretch said, sparkling
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with insolence.
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I was going to regret this, I suspected. But at least odds were good I'd
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be able to sift out a few useful nuggets out of the mixture of lies and
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blatant exaggerations he would offer.
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``Proceed,'' I sighed.
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That he saluted with the wrong hand before beginning to speak, I
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thought, was likely emblematic of what was about to follow.
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``So,'' Robber said, ``we were just walking around, staying out of
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trouble.''
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``Were you,'' I flatly said.
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``I'm a great believer in the sanctity of law and order,'' Robber said,
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putting hand over his chest.
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It was, I noticed as a splitting headache dawned, over the wrong side to
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be covering his heart. Idly I glanced up and chalked up the lack of
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thunder following that audacious blasphemy as yet another sign the Gods
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Above were washing their hands clean of this whole mess.
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``Then wights started swarming over the arrays we were supposed to blow
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up, which was all right,'' the goblin told me. ``But \emph{then} mages
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showed up, and the key places got locked up real tight. So then Captain
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Borer -- that's him right there, a repeat troublemaker I've had to
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report him several times-``
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I glanced at the side where he was pointing and found a smaller goblin,
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with dark green skin tinted even darker over where his eyebrows would be
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if his kind weren't hairless. It made it look like he was perpetually
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frowning. He looked pained, but also reluctant to outright contradict a
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superior officer.
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``We should make trouble, is what Borer said,'' the Special Tribune
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blithely continued. ``It's pathologic with him, I've been looking into
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getting him a mind healer.''
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``I imagine they'd take a single look at you and run screaming,'' I
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mused.
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``That's racist, Boss,'' Robber informed me, trying to give me what I
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assumed to be doe eyes but ended up looking like a goblin wearing some
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poor doe's skin and batting his eyes through the horrifying flesh mask.
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``Anyway, as the qualified voice of reason I put my foot down. Was about
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to look for some important people to help have some falls down the
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stairs when we ran into Lord Black.''
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My eyes sharpened and I leaned forward. This was the first I'd heard of
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my teacher since we'd parted ways, unless you counted Diabolist boasting
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she'd captured him.
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``He's not with you anymore?'' I pressed.
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``No,'' Captain Borer said, before I could be strung around some more.
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``That's another gold star of shame for you, Captain,'' Robber told him
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with a leering grin. ``I expect you to wear all twenty-three of them on
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your chest when we return to camp.''
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``You don't have to do that,'' I told the poor bastard. ``Robber, stop
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fucking around. I don't have the time to spare. Where's Black?''
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The goblin turned serious, or at least as much as close as he could ever
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get.
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``He took us to visit an old friend,'' he replied. ``General Fasili
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Mirembe. The Carrion Lord figured he wasn't outside with the vanguard,
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you see. He had to be in a room somewhere he could command from without
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risking his very expensive blood.''
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``Why target \emph{him}?'' I frowned. ``Diabolist is the head of the
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snake. Fasili getting the axe wouldn't actually change much.''
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``That's exactly what Borer said,'' Robber baldly lied. ``Only much less
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respectful. The Black Knight did that weird smile thing -- I see where
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you get it from now, it was kind of uncomfortable seeing it on another
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face -- and told us that if you want to learn how to bury a villain, the
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first person to hit up is always their second.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``He was after something that Fasili would have,'' I said.
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``Skeleton key,'' the goblin said. ``There's only supposed to be one,
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but you can't stab your warchief in the back if you can't \emph{get} to
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her.''
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``That's how you got in here,'' I deduced. ``But your people look like
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they've fought. There was resistance?''
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``There was a whole garrison of dead around him,'' Robber acknowledged.
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``We couldn't handle that much, not even going in quiet. So Lord Black
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made a distraction.''
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I closed my eyes and silently cursed. \emph{Fucking Hells, Black.} A
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dangerous gamble at the darkest hour that would allow extremely
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important information to reach me in my moment of need? That explained
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why Robber had gotten here exactly when I needed him to -- my teacher
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had effectively twisted Creation's arm into ensuring as much. At the
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price, it seemed, of getting overwhelmed by Akua's minions and taken
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prisoner. He was playing shatranj with us all and treating himself a
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piece like any other. I spat to the side and turned my gaze onto Robber.
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``If it went down this way, you'll have gotten more than a key,'' I
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said.
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That large a sacrifice would have impact. It would get me an edge of
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some sort.
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``He told me to pass along a message,'' the goblin said, and this time
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there was no humour in his voice. ``It went `Only one strike. Make it
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count.'\,''
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And there it was. The way out of the coming trap that Diabolist would
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have laid for me. I grit my teeth. We would have \emph{words} about
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this, if he survived the day.
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``How much of your cohort is left?'' I asked Robber.
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``A bare hundred,'' the Special Tribune replied. ``Dug-in mages are
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tricky to handle.''
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Considering that meant half his men were gone, that was something of an
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understatement. I rose to my feet and rolled my shoulder. Those fire
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arrays had \emph{stung}, cloak or not.
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``All right,'' I said. ``Here's what you're going to do.''
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I spoke, and as I did his grin got a whole lot nastier.
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---
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I'd been taught that, while assaulting the stronghold of a villain,
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there were three things to watch out for.
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The first was the monster. It wasn't always a greater devil or a demon,
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though admittedly that was the traditional Wasteland playbook. Some
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entity, usually difficult to handle, would be leashed somewhere in the
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lair to be used as a way to beat down an enemy too powerful for the
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villain themselves to handle. It was too much to hope that in this case
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it would be the greater devil we'd shanked before entering Liesse --
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that'd been a gatekeeper, and while it would have been difficult to
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handle on my own it wasn't the kind of brutal counterstroke that someone
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with Diabolist's resources would be able to keep around. I had a fight
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ahead of me, and it wasn't going to be a pleasant one. My advantage here
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was that even by villainous standards, Akua was \emph{massively}
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arrogant. She wanted me for her attack dog, apparently, so she wouldn't
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open the game by sending whatever her monster was after me. She'd want
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the personal touch, at least until I backed her in a corner and those
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kinds of considerations went out the window. Considering I'd had to hack
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my way through both fae courts over the last year to varying degrees, my
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bet was on something related to Arcadia. I'd even had Masego and Archer
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send Summer after her neck a few months ago, so it made sense that I'd
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be made to pay for that one way or another.
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The second was the trial, because there was more to killing a villain
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than just running them through. There was always a cost, a crucible you
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had to go through to earn that kill. The peasant boy that ended up
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slaying the dragon didn't just pick up the magic sword in a rubbish
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heap, he had to \emph{bleed} first. What made a hero a hero wasn't the
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fancy weapon or the birth right, it was the courage. Or whatever other
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trite and actually fairly common quality they'd had in them all along.
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The shade that had once owned the sword would force a test, or the devil
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guarding the phylactery whisper some sweet temptation. I was of the
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opinion that lacking that kind of trial was why the Lone Swordsman
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hadn't gone out in the blaze of glory, just two stomps to the back of
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the neck. We'd been opposed, yes. But there'd been little personal about
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it except for mutual dislike. To me he'd been a means and then a
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liability. To him I'd been a symbol of everything he wanted to destroy.
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Behind that, neither of us had thought of the other as more than a
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stepping stone towards the real fight. Diabolist wasn't a lit sharper
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tossed at me by the Hashmallim, though. The higher the both of us rose,
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the clearer it had become that the story could only end with one of us
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dead or kneeling. I was partial to dead. That wouldn't come without a
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price.
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The third was the pivot. Fight between Named were never as simple as who
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pulled out their aspects first or who was better with spell and sword.
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While an animated corpse without a single aspect and a shaky mantle, I'd
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been able to beat a still-fresh Heiress and Lone Swordsman in Liesse
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because while they went for blood I'd gone for the story. It'd felt like
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a complicated thing to juggle at the time, but in retrospect it'd been
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fairly straightforward. Here, now that we'd returned to the very city
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where I'd once died, there were a dazzling amount of moving parts.
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Black. Warlock and the Woe. The Empress. And Diabolist herself. That
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last thread, in my eyes, was what would make or break this day. There
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was a moment ahead where the weight of Creation's attention would be on
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both our shoulders, and when that moment came the one of us who made the
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choice first was going to be the one who got to walk away. There was a
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lot of danger to that. Spinning that wheel with William had been one
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thing because the Lone Swordsman, for all his many flaws, had
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principles. He had lines he hesitated to cross even for a win, if only a
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few. Diabolist did not. Her principle, ironically enough, was the same
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that the Legions had chanted outside her gate. Victory mattered,
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everything else was dross. If I wanted to win, I had to go into that
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room ready to cut down something I loved.
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She had Black. I did not like the forming shape of this.
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My sword was already bared when I found the heart of the palace. The
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Dukes of Liesse had been kings, once, and their ancestral seat still
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looked the part. The flight of steps before me had not been built to be
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lightly ascended. The granite was rough, the steps too tall for more
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than one at a time to be climbed. What began as a broad procession grew
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narrow as it rose, leading to tall gates of bronze that now stood
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sealed. Behind them, I knew, awaited the woman I had come to kill.
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Sorcery permeated the air here, so thick that every movement felt like I
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was stirring unseen wisps. So thick I could not tell if there was an
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array hidden, which meant there was one\emph{.} The very trap, I
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thought, that Black had let himself be taken to help me beat.
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I took a step forward and \emph{split}.
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---
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Catherine Foundling found herself tired, after a hard bout in the Pit,
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and slept at the Rat's Nest. She never stumbled across a man raping a
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girl, or what came of it.
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---
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Catherine Foundling bet on herself in the Pit and lost, without having
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meant to. Her savings thinned. She never earned enough to go to the
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College.
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---
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Catherine Foundling had watch sergeant's a hand around her throat,
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choking the life out of her. The man began to speak, but through his
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belly emerged a sword that keened.
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---
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My boot touched the stone. I was myself, across three lives I had never
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lived and one I was living. I began the climb in utter silence.
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---
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Catherine stood in the crowd when they hung Governor Mazus. It was
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vindication, sealed by the choked cries of the man that was just another
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Wasteland leech. But the Rat's Nest would not pay for her her tuition in
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Ater, not anymore, so she sought Booker and made a deal. In the months
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that followed she no longer came on the nights where bruises were what
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men paid for. She earned gold with a sword in hand, catering to the
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howls a mob that would settle for nothing less than death. The coin she
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earned was drenched in blood, but blood was the trade she had chosen and
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she made her peace with that truth. Catherine did not know blades well,
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when she began, and her opponents did. She learned, but when she stood
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among the crowd of cadets awaiting placement in a company she had only
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one eye and more scars than a girl her age should have.
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---
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Coin was what killed the dream, not the schemes of foes she would never
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meet. Catherine found her savings disappearing like smoke, and Harrion
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telling her the Rat's Nest could not longer afford her was the final
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nail in the coffin. It was a bitter truth, and the bitterness seeped
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into her bones. The orphanage had taught her enough for a position as a
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tutor or tradeswoman, but the thought of it had her choking in anger.
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Impotence cut deepest of all. When Governor Mazus hung she was not in
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the crowd: her brawl with a guard that had hands prone to wandering had
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ended with the woman's neck snapped. Marked for the gaol, barred from
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the Pit by Booker, she took the offer when it came. Better the Smugglers
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than the Assassins or the Thieves, she decided.
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---
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Catherine did not believe in heroes, but she believed in debts. When two
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monsters cloaked in black arrived in the alley and struck at her saviour
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over the cooling corpses of her would-be murderers, she chose her side.
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They survived only by the skin of their teeth, the Lone Swordsman losing
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a hand to a moving shadow as a large woman turned into twisted
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abomination. They fled the alley, the city, the region. It was doomed,
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she knew. The monsters always won here. But for the first time since
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she'd been born Catherine Foundling breathed free air, and it was
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intoxicating. William learned to listen to her, after she opened the
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throat of the first Eye of the Empire after them. It was in Summerholm
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that her Name found her. \emph{Squire}, the Heavens whispered. She knew
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whose death was needed to become more.
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---
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The War College taught Catherine her limits. She was good. Swift with a
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sword, clever with her mind and with a talent for the unexpected. Tiger
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Company fostered her skills, seeing in her lieutenant or captain in the
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making, and for a time she was sergeant under the cold-eyed ogre they
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called Hune. It was not the already-famous Hellhound that put blood in
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her mouth. It was Lizard Company, Morok's brutes shattering her tenth
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and leaving her broken on the ground. One of the orcs stomped her wrist
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twice, calling her \emph{Wallerspawn}, and it never healed properly. She
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never forgave their kind for that, not the wound but the blind ugly hate
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she glimpsed in the orc's eye. Goblins were tribe of their own,
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regardless of company, and the better Praesi pretended she did not
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exist. The worst made sport of her, and settling that with teeth on the
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ground made her as feared as she was alone. She had the talent to make
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captain, but was never elected by the others. Sergeant was the highest
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she ever rose at the College.
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---
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Catherine could afford the tuition now -- and she could ten times over,
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because she was good with a lie and even better with a knife -- but she
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no longer wanted to go. She'd had a glimpse of the true face of her
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people, beyond the well-worn stories of the Old Kingdom. Every night she
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rubbed elbows with murderers and thieves, not one of them Wastelander.
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What was there to save? Within two years there were only two above her
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in Liesse who belonged to the Guild of Smugglers, and only one after
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gold and whispers were traded. She left the title to the other, but the
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reins were her own. The quotas imposed by the Tower rankled, but she
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knew better than provoke that beast. It was the rest of the gutter she
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turned to, the forgotten and the ignored. The Hedge Guild folded first,
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after their most dangerous mage was found strung up downtown. The King
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of Thieves stole two shipments from Mercantis as a warning against great
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ambitions, so when she got her hands on him she melted down his pretty
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crown and poured it down his throat. The Assassins offered truce. She
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told them to kneel. Blood followed.
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---
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They killed their first Calamity the day before she turned eighteen. The
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Warlock was a monster, but a monster who loved his son. That was the
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death of him, and half Summerholm as well. The Penitent's Blade beheaded
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the sorcerer among the ashes of his tower and Squire mustered enough
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kindness to have the Apprentice's corpse left by his side for the Praesi
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to bury. They were growing. Thief, Bumbling Conjurer, Hunter and Bard.
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William found them and bound them, but it was Catherine who made a sword
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of them all, that wielded it against the Empire. The scent of rebellion
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was in the air. They ghosted across the land of her birth, followed by a
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thousand spies, and wherever they went governors and generals died. The
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Empress sent more. The Black Knight drew them into Liesse and burned the
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city around them but they were gone, gone through the corpse of an angel
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and back to haunt him soon enough. Procer sent coin and promises but
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both were spurned. They had sworn to see Callow free, whatever the cost.
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One foreign master would not be traded for another, and as the flames
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burned higher and the graveyards grew full.
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---
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She was twenty-three when rebellion came to Callow. Long past the
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College, Captain Foundling had seen luck good and ill.~The Fourteenth
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Legion, raised in the year after her graduation, had offered better
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opportunity to rise than the old legions already thick with veterans.
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But peace, oh peace was her trouble. It took three years to go from
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lieutenant to captain, and the tribunes above her were all young and
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hale. Her company was obedient and well-drilled, but loved her little.
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Most were Praesi, and her reputation in Ater had followed her to the
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camp. The droplet that tipped over the cup was that the Fourteenth never
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fought. It was sent to garrison Summerholm as the other Legions fought,
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dispersing riots and patrolling empty streets as her desperate
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countrymen died in droves in the south. Vindication, that the Empire
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could not be fought and beaten. Vindication but no hope. It had been
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long since Captain Foundling was last kind, not since she'd killed men
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for gold in the Pit, and so her conscience went untroubled when she
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slipped poison in her superior officer's ale. That was the game, in the
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Wasteland, and if it must be played she would. She would rise whatever
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the cost, to her or anyone else. After that it was only a matter of
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patience and skill. Staff Tribune Foundling was twenty-nine, when civil
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war erupted, and through chaos she rose higher still.
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---
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The Guild of Assassins cost her a hand and a permanent limp, before they
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were broken over her knee. From blood-filled gutters Catherine Foundling
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fashioned her crown. There was only one throne in the Empire, this she
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knew, but come night from Harrow to Dormer her will was the writ of law.
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The Tolltaker they called her now, for there was no sin under Callowan
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sky she did not get a cut from. A woman with ink-stained hands came one
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morning and presented her two scrolls. One held a seal, the Tower's own.
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The other a list of quotas. It was not a negotiation, and neither of
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them pretended otherwise. She thought of that, when the heroes came and
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asked for a way to enter Summerholm unseen. They were going to kill the
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Black Knight, they promised. She smiled and said she would arrange it.
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The coin she got from selling their location to the Praesi was spent on
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a beautiful mansion in Whitestone, where the nobles of Laure still
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huddled and pretended relevance. After the heroes were all killed, she
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put it to the torch. Because she could. Because she had no reason not
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to. To remind the soft-bellied aristocrats living there of what fear
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tasted like. She watched the flames and wondered when it had all stopped
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mattering.
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---
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My boot scuffed the last step and I stood before the gate. Closed, but
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kept so by sorcery. It parted without a sound when I pushed and before
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me the throne room stretched. Tapestries hung from the rafters like
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columns, each an old triumph of the Empire presented in colourful cloth.
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The contrast to the bare stone of the floor was stark. Runes shone on
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the walls and balls of blue flame lit up the darkness bright as day. My
|
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gaze moved to the back, where the Diabolist awaited. Languidly sprawled
|
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on the old throne of the kings of the south, Akua Sahelian watched me
|
|
with bright eyes. There was no sign of Black. She wasn't keeping him
|
|
here, then.
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|
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``Swiftness, Catherine,'' she smiled, ``has ever been your unmaking. You
|
|
never learned patience.''
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``\textbf{Break},'' I replied coldly.
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The throne shattered like a cheap bauble and the wall behind it too.
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Diabolist fell prone, laughing, and I had no intention of allowing her
|
|
to cast. Frost formed at the edge of my sword as I shot forward, granite
|
|
cracking under the force.
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``What your Hierophant has wrought, I claim,'' Akua said.
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|
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The last word reverberated. Aspect, I thought. Then it felt like a hand
|
|
around my throat, and I screamed. There was a vice around me, and as my
|
|
Name desperately clawed at it I found myself stumbling while Diabolist
|
|
rose.
|
|
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|
``I told you, didn't I?'' the dark-skinned woman said. ``That this ends
|
|
with you kneeling. What I have claimed, I bind. It is \emph{mine}.''
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|
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|
I fought it. My knee shook and slowly began to bend, so I wrested my
|
|
hand from her control and stabbed my blade into the leg. Pain flooded my
|
|
mind and I embraced it.
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|
``Kneel, Catherine Foundling,'' Akua Sahelian ordered. ``And rise my
|
|
Black Knight.''
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|
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|
``Fuck you,'' I gasped. ``He's-``
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|
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|
``Dead,'' Diabolist said. ``He was not the kind of man easily kept
|
|
prisoner. Why take the risk?''
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|
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|
I buckled, and one knee touched the floor.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Rebellion spread across Callow like a wildfire. Liesse first, but then
|
|
the south rose up and wherever they went spears were dug out from fields
|
|
and cellars, ploughshares hammered into swords. Old banners were dusted
|
|
off, and when the knights of Callow knelt before her the whole kingdom
|
|
boiled over. It was a bloodletting unlike any Catherine had ever seen.
|
|
Garrisons swarmed by angry mobs, mages killed with stones and knives and
|
|
clubs. The Empress gave answer with a hard hand. The day after
|
|
Summerholm was liberated, Legions surrounded the city and torched it
|
|
with goblinfire. The rebellion flinched. Assassin dogged them every
|
|
step, even slit Hunter's throat, and though she killed him twice with
|
|
William's help he always came back. The fought the Praesi near
|
|
Marchford, a pitched battle, and they would have won had some orc
|
|
commander not disobeyed her general's orders and attacked instead of
|
|
retreated. In the wake of the defeat madness spread. There had gone
|
|
their last chance to keep any of this contained. It was no longer a war
|
|
but a hundred smaller ones, and wherever they went they won but they
|
|
could not be everywhere. The south held, nonetheless, and though the
|
|
central burned the fight was far from lost.
|
|
|
|
Then Procer invaded, seizing the Red Flower Vales.
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|
|
|
The Praesi had been ready for it, unlike Squire. They retreated to the
|
|
ashes of Summerholm, destroying everything as they went. Fields salted,
|
|
villages torched and wells fouled. If they could not have Callow, it
|
|
would be as much a Wasteland as their home. The banner of the kingdom
|
|
grew ragged, but still the people rallied to it. Every man and woman who
|
|
could hold a sword took one up, and though the levies died by the
|
|
thousands the tide was turned back. The Lone Swordsman hung seven
|
|
princes and one and the Conjurer, long grown beyond the bumbling,
|
|
brought down the mountains on the Vales. Shut, for good. The host
|
|
marched to the ruins of Summerholm, the last foothold of Praes in the
|
|
kingdom, and there the Black Knight awaited. Three days and three nights
|
|
the battle went. The Hwaerte ran red with blood. But in the end
|
|
Catherine Foundling rammed her sword through the back of the Black
|
|
Knight's neck and from that death rose Knight as well, decked in white.
|
|
The monster's bag of tricks had finally run out but oh, the cost. Callow
|
|
was not a kingdom, it was a graveyard and an army. The Fields of Streges
|
|
were taken back, and through those lands Callow reborn marched to
|
|
reclaim the Blessed Isle. Whispers awaited them there. Dread Empress
|
|
Malicia was dead, murdered in the Tower.
|
|
|
|
Dread Empress Magnificent, First of Her Name, awaited them as well. With
|
|
a host the likes of which had not been seen since the days of
|
|
Triumphant: demons and fortresses aflight, swarms of devils and every
|
|
greenskin not buried in Callowan fields.
|
|
|
|
``Kneel,'' Akua Sahelian ordered, crowned in dread.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
General Foundling had struck a deal with the devil. The Empress had been
|
|
losing her grasp for years now, and High Lady Tasia Sahelian might be a
|
|
viper but she was a viper on the rise. She swore the damning oaths, and
|
|
over the corpse of every other senior officer in the Fourteenth rose a
|
|
general. It was on the fields of Callow she fought her part of the war.
|
|
The nests of rebellion that sprang up all over the Old Kingdom when the
|
|
Praesi turned their knives on each other were carefully brought into the
|
|
fold of her legion, promised the settling of old grudges against the
|
|
same generals that had crushed Callow in the Conquest. Even the knights
|
|
came to her banner, after High Lady Tasia's mages broke the right minds
|
|
and reformed them into something more flexible. One occupying legion
|
|
after another shattered even as the war became a thing of horror in the
|
|
Wasteland, and from that destruction General Foundling made herself a
|
|
force to reckon with. The Knightsbane, drawn and quarried by Liessen
|
|
chargers. General Sacker given a true red throat instead of one her
|
|
legion affected. Orim the Grim, a smile carved on his lips as he bled
|
|
out. Marshal Ranker burned alive, save for the black hand that was her
|
|
old boast. Wherever she went, legends died.
|
|
|
|
Nearly every cadet that had gone through the College in her days was
|
|
dead, either at her hand or that of Sahelian assassins. It was Grem
|
|
One-Eye and his second, the one they called the Hellhound, that broke
|
|
her siege of Summerholm and pushed her back in the heartlands of Callow.
|
|
With but a handful of ragged legions they beat her again at Denier and
|
|
smashed her one last time near Marchford. It didn't matter. The High
|
|
Lords had risen one and all in the backing of a villain for the Tower,
|
|
ome going by the Name of Heiress. Tasia's own daughter, it was said. And
|
|
if One-Eye was fighting General Foundling in Callow, he was not winning
|
|
the war for Malicia in the Wasteland. Word trickled that Heiress
|
|
levelled half of Ater winning a duel against the Warlock, that the Black
|
|
Knight had retreated to the Steppes to raise another army with the
|
|
Empress. Marshal Grem and the Hellhound retreated to Summerholm and
|
|
Callow was Catherine's, finally. The Imperial governors were seized and
|
|
executed, even those allied to the Sahelians, and General Foundling
|
|
refused a crown but prepared for the next part of the war. It never
|
|
came, the embers smothered when a Hellgate was opened in the heart of
|
|
Summerholm. The last true stronghold of loyalist resistance, wiped out
|
|
in a single night. Before dawn, precisely a hundred Callowans died for
|
|
every governor she had killed.
|
|
|
|
A warning that did not go unheard.
|
|
|
|
Procer seized the Red Flower Vales, declaring the Tenth Crusade and
|
|
forming a coalition that spanned half of Calernia. General Foundling
|
|
began talks with the First Prince, but they ended when a ziggurat of
|
|
stone large as Laure cast its long shadow over the very city. Dread
|
|
Empress Magnificent, First of Her Name, had come to reminder her of
|
|
oaths taken.
|
|
|
|
``Kneel,'' Akua Sahelian ordered, crowned in dread.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Praesi were at each other's throats, but what did the Tolltaker
|
|
care? The quotas would not change no matter who held the Tower. But
|
|
then, oh wonder of wonders, months passed and the war continued. Then
|
|
the first two legions were pulled out of Callow to reinforce the
|
|
Wasteland, and that was just the scent of opportunity wasn't it?
|
|
Catherine Foundling had left behind the illusion that there was
|
|
something remarkable about her people along with her girlhood years, but
|
|
she was Callowan still. For small slights long prices, and there had
|
|
been so \emph{many} slights offered since the Conquest. The Tolltaker
|
|
mustered her empire of ghosts and crooks, and began a waltz with the
|
|
many devils claiming the floor. It was a long and bloody night, when
|
|
every Imperial governor in the old kingdom found death knocking at their
|
|
door. The nobles, feckless wastes that they were, gathered in hidden
|
|
rooms and plotted a nation born anew. She had no interest in dead
|
|
dreams, and so the right whispers fhad Eyes of the Empire rounding them
|
|
up for treason. They were looking for her as well, of course, and the
|
|
Legions with them. They found nothing, for her kingdom was not made of
|
|
castles but of a hundred ugly pacts made in the dark. Those could not be
|
|
besieged, could not be fought on the field.
|
|
|
|
There was blood in the water, and so the west stirred. Procer marched
|
|
into the Vales, filling every nook and cranny with their dead before the
|
|
Legions could be dislodged. A host of Procerans marched into the central
|
|
plains, claiming that they had come to put Gaston of Liesse on his
|
|
rightful throne. So the Tolltaker had him killed, right in the middle of
|
|
his precious little army. She had never enjoyed anything half so much as
|
|
watching sixty thousand foreigners milling about, trying to think of
|
|
justification for their invasion. They spoke of liberating Callow, in
|
|
the end, and as they tangled with the remaining legions Catherine found
|
|
her own amusements. The pot of rebellion was already boiling, so she
|
|
helped it along. Weapons from the Kingdom Below, acquired through
|
|
Mercantis, reached the hands of mobs. The Assassin came for her but she
|
|
set the warehouse aflame with stolen goblinfire and whatever the
|
|
creature had been, it did not crawl out. She learned to live with a hole
|
|
through the lung, her breath always rasping. One by one the last
|
|
aristocrats of Callow found knife in the back or poison in the cup, even
|
|
as knights emerged from the south and fought both Procerans and Praesi
|
|
for rule of the land.
|
|
|
|
There was no great plan, no matter what her lieutenants believed. There
|
|
was only the dance, and every day she lasted against the monsters was
|
|
yet another victory. The rebel in the Wasteland won, though that part of
|
|
Creation had come to deserve the name twice over in that making, and
|
|
after claiming the Tower she moved west with all her strength. Hellgates
|
|
bloomed across the land and Procer retreated back behind the Vales
|
|
before calling for a crusade no one else wanted. The knights fought
|
|
against the tide, valiantly, and equally valiantly they died. In the
|
|
wreckage of it all Dread Empress Magnificent, First of Her Name, came to
|
|
Laure. The call came and the Tolltaker went, for someone who cared for
|
|
nothing had nothing to lose. In the throne room of ancient Fairfax
|
|
kings, a Praesi stood and looked down at her.
|
|
|
|
``Kneel,'' Akua Sahelian ordered, crowned in dread.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Across three lives I had never lived and one I was living, I knelt. A
|
|
face as beautiful as it was terrible allowed a smile of triumph to
|
|
flicker.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
\emph{Only one strike. Make it count.}
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I/General Foundling/the Tolltaker/the White Knight rose, and shoved
|
|
steel through her throat.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
My boot touched the stone. I looked up to doors of bronze wide open and
|
|
began the climb, humming the tune to a song I had never heard.
|