483 lines
23 KiB
TeX
483 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-7-elaboration}{%
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\section{Chapter 7: Elaboration}\label{chapter-7-elaboration}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Ah, but being defeated was always part of my plan! Yet another
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glorious victory for the Empire.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Irritant, the Oddly Successful
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\end{quote}
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We'd gotten the usual banter and I'm-going-to-kill-you,
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no-\emph{I'm}-going-to-kill-\emph{you} posturing out of the way, so it
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was now time to get to the stabbing. Admittedly my favourite part,
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especially when I wasn't taking on a hero. This sad sack of smugness
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might pack a punch, but he wasn't carrying a solemn promise of victory
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handed down by the Heavens. If I started chopping of limbs he wasn't
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going to get back up with an irritating one-liner about Evil always
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being defeated. As good ol' Willy had learned in the end, that wasn't
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always true anyway. Sometimes Evil snatched a last moment resurrection,
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stomped in Good's skull and went dancing with a good-looking redhead
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afterwards. Probably not victory the way the Gods Below or the average
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Dread Emperor conceived it, but I wasn't going to be taking life lessons
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from people who'd thought the invisible army plan was a good idea.
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The Rider didn't seem to bother with the same tricks his minions had
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used, devouring the slope on the way down faster than I believed was
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actually possible. It occurred to me that most everyone I fought had
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cavalry while I had to make do with a pack of malevolent goblins, which
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struck me as pretty unfair. Before I could further lament the fact, I
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had to unsheathe my sword and brace myself for impact. It would have
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been a mistake to think of the Rider as a mere lancer, I decided. For
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one, his murderous unicorn effectively had a second spear jutting out of
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its forehead. More than that, unlike most horseman, killing his mount
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was unlikely to slow him down much. The way he'd introduced himself had
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me guessing he was in some way linked to the state of a horseman, but I
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doubted taking care of that would knock him out of the fight. Creatures
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that introduced themselves with fancy titles usually had some power to
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back up that presumption. That or they died early and bad.
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Eyes calm, hands steady, I watched the points of the spear and the horn
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come for me. The spear would be the dangerous one: it wasn't like the
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unicorn could twirl around the horn for a second go once it was past me.
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I hoped. Letting out a long breath, I adjusted my footing to be able to
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dash forward without missing a beat just before the Rider got in range.
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The horn I ducked under, the spear I narrowly avoided -- it scraped my
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left pauldron -- and I made to slide under the unicorn to open its
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belly. The back of the spear hit me right above the nose, knocking me
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down as I cursed. I rolled to the side, but not quick enough: the
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unicorn's hooves came down and caved in my breastplate. Strike one for
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my plate being anything more than expensive dead weight today, since
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that could easily have been my ribs. I hated breaking ribs, half the
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time shards got into my lungs and I ended up coughing blood.
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I managed to swing at the spear point before it took my throat, knocking
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it aside, and rolled before the unicorn could continue dismantling my
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plate. That thing was being \emph{way} too bloodthirsty. Sure I hadn't
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been a virgin for a few years, but there was no reason for it to take
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who I brought into my bed so personally.
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``Look,'' I gasped, managing to get on my feet and hastily backing away
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from a swing. ``He was a fisherman's son. They swim all the time, do you
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have any idea how \emph{fit} they look?''
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Murder made horse was not impressed by my protests, if the way it tried
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to kick me was any indication. The Rider, what little of his face could
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be seen expressionless, fluidly adjusted his hold and slapped down the
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spear at my head. Too fast for me, when I was still sidestepping his
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mount. It dented my helmet, which was a much more acceptable loss than
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my skull. I took back everything unpleasant I'd said about my armour
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today. The second strike I parried, but his handhold shifted again and
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he \emph{twisted} deftly hitting my sword out of my hand. All right,
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this was headed nowhere. If I didn't want to end up an expensively
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armoured corpse I was going to have to change the beat to this. Before
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the third strike -- this one a lunge -- could put me further on the back
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foot, I managed to get back in front of the unicorn. Predictably, it
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objected to this state of affairs and with a whinny took a step forward
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to put its horn through my throat. I was still unarmed, but I \emph{did}
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have two free hands.
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My gauntleted hands closed around the horn and I sharply pivoted.
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\emph{Lift with your legs, Cat}, I reminded myself. Before the Rider
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could rearrange my presented spine at spear point, I flooded my limbs
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with power and \emph{pulled}. For a single glorious moment I lifted the
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unicorn, swinging it forward like some kind of wildly failing mace until
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it reached its apex over my head. At which point the horn snapped. This
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had not, I mused, been one of my better plans. Below getting into a
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verbal fight with Heiress at the Tower, though still above letting
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William go at Summerholm. I hastily threw myself out of the way, seeing
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the Rider gracefully leap off his mount from the corner of my eye. The
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moment I got back on my feet I aimed my arm at the downed unicorn --
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which looked like it had broken a leg on the way down, good for me --
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and snapped my wrist. The backup knife shot like an arrow, sinking right
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into its eye. \emph{Pickler, you queen among goblins. I can't believe I
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argued with you about a second knife being overkill}.
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I stepped back and picked up my sword, adjusting my cloak around my
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neck.
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``Let the record show I'm not above murdering a unicorn if it looks at
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me funny,'' I announced.
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The Rider glanced at his dead mount indifferently.
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``A worthy effort,'' he conceded. ``If ultimately futile.''
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I paused for a moment, too many scathing replies on the tip of my tongue
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for me to be able to settle on a single one, but I ended up having to
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back away when he tried to run me through. I blinked in surprise: he'd
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been fast, on the unicorn, but this was something else. Quicker than
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even the deadwood soldiers had been, and they'd been in a league above
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me. Was that part of the fae package, then? Sorcery and tricks and
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swiftness. Not great on the staying power, but if they killed you before
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it became an endurance match that was hardly a problem. The fairies
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would be useless as tits on a sparrow if they ever tried to make a
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shield wall, but that wasn't the way they fought at all. It was like
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fighting an army of skirmishers, all of them mages, with a backbone of
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heavy hitters behind them. That was not a good match for the Fifteenth,
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or even the Legions of Terror in general.
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Sword in hand, I circled the Rider silently. Another flicker and the
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point was skidding off my arm, leaving a long scar on the steel -- I
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tried to catch the shaft with my free hand but it retreated too quickly.
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All right, so finesse wasn't going to get me anywhere. Closing the
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distance should have been my solution, but I was wary of getting that
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close to a creature so much faster than me, spear or no spear. I was
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going to have to take a hit, I realized with a grimace. I could walk it
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off if it didn't hit anywhere too lethal, and while his weapon was in my
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guts it couldn't defend. I missed the days when the initial parts of my
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battle strategies hadn't involved getting my stabbed instead of my
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opponent. Stepping forward, I kept my eye on the spear. That proved to
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be a mistake. The Rider took a hand off the shaft and a heartbeat late a
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gust of chilling wind slammed into me.
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I dug in my feet, but it wasn't enough. The wind intensified and I was
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sent flying upwards, like I'd been smacked by a god's invisible hand.
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The world spun around me but I kept just enough awareness of my
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surroundings to notice the four javelins of dark ice forming in a loose
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lozenge ahead of me. About where I would be in a few moments, I assessed
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with strange clarity. And it was a sucker's bet that whatever made that
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ice darker would enable it to punch through plate. Well, couldn't have
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that. Fortunately, I still had a few tricks I'd learned since Liesse I'd
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yet to unpack. My Name flared, in the way it did whenever I formed a
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spear of shadows, but I went for something more\ldots{} tangible. The
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darkness pooled together into a circular pane right in my trajectory,
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and I twisted so that I would hit it feet first. It was not quite as
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steady to the touch as solid ground, but it would do. I allowed my knees
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to bend when I hit the pane and effectively threw myself back down in
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the opposite direction.
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The first ice javelin skimmed the edge of my gorget and I winced. I
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half-turned, still falling, and saw that two other projectiles were
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going wide. The last one was headed for the middle of my back, though,
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which was less promising. I formed an orb of shadow in my palm as it
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neared and shot it straight into the point at the last moment -- the
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javelin exploded into shards when it hit, and I braced myself for my
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coming reacquaintance with the ground. Optimism, that. Instead I turned
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back to face the sight of the Rider with translucent wings sprouting off
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his back, just as his spear punched through the plate covering my belly.
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I gasped in pain, writhing around the point, and he tore it off without
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missing a beat. Kicking me away he fluttered back and I landed bleeding
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on the ground. My knees gave and I ended up in an ungainly crouch.
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``Rise,'' I croaked.
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Nothing happened, and panic welled up.
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``\emph{Rise},'' I repeated.
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No, it was working I realized. Just \emph{slowly}. The wound began to
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close at a snail's pace, and I could feel it drawing much deeper from
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that bundle of power than it should have. Shit. Black had warned me,
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hadn't he? Borrowed power always turned on its user.
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``Your lack of understanding of your own aspects is a marvel to
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behold,'' the Rider commented.
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A flicker and he was in front of me, palm thrust out. I forced myself
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out of the way of the gust of wind, hissing at the pain of my
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still-closing wound.
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``Thrice gifted is your Name,'' he said, idly circling me. ``Thrice used
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can your stolen power be, from dusk `til dawn.''
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Well, that was useful to know. Would have been even better to know it
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before I'd gotten myself run through twice, but beggars can't be
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choosers.
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``Thanks for the tip,'' I grunted. ``While we're at it, I don't suppose
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you'd care to tell me your nefarious plans?''
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I readied myself for another rousing round of
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Catherine-tries-not-to-die, but the attack never came. The Rider was
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twitching, mouth twisting in discomfort.
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``Since you are about to die anyway,'' he said reluctantly, through
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gritted teeth, ``I might as well reveal the depths of your failure.''
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Wait, what? That never worked. Not even with Heiress and she lived for
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this stuff. It certainly didn't look like he \emph{wanted} to tell me
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any of this.
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``This struggle is but a distraction,'' the Rider said. ``You are meant
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to waste time and die here while the true war is fought in Creation.''
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Masego had told me once that Arcadia worked according to different rules
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than Creation. I'd only been pretending to listen when he'd been talking
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about how that affected the creational laws governing the flow of time
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-- which was, apparently, a classical element. I \emph{really} needed to
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learn what those were at some point -- but one part had actually been
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interesting enough I'd tuned back in. Arcadia was, in a lot of ways,
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rawer than Creation proper. In Creation stories bound only the Named,
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but in Arcadia everything was a story. It was why everything was so
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changeable. I was standing in front of an enemy clearly winning against
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me, at his mercy, and had just prompted him to gloat and reveal his
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plans. So he \emph{had}. Even if he didn't want to.
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``Alas, I am in despair,'' I badly lied. ``Tears, woe is me. Why would
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you do something so wicked?''
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The Rider cursed in a tongue I could barely process as spoken.
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``If Summer is at war, so must be Winter,'' he said. ``The boundaries
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have been thinned, the host will be assembled.''
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I squinted at him.
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``You're insane,'' I said slowly. ``You'll\ldots{} never get away with
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this?''
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The fae looked at me, then at the dead unicorn. There was a long moment
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of silence. Then he bolted. Just\ldots{} legged it, as fast as his
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little fairy feet could manage. I frowned, then raised an arm. I formed
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a spear of shadows and shot him in the back. The Rider cursed again,
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though he managed to avoid most of the damage -- all I did was clip his
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shoulder. That might be more of a problem than I'd thought, though: one
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of his wings burst into existence, then out. Huh. Was this what being a
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hero felt like? No wonder they were always so overconfident. I caught up
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within moments. For all that some intangible tide had turned in my
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favour, he hadn't gotten any slower. The spear wove elegantly around my
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sword, but instead of letting him drive me back I forced my way close.
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His palm shot off, but I was in no mood for a repeat of the flight
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adventure. I punched his hand, which while not the most elegant of
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solutions still broke a few fingers with a hard crack. The Rider turned
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his wounded shoulder to me, and the wing formed a moment later.
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I was blown back like I'd been hit by a blast of pure unformed magic --
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my occasional spars with Masego had taught exactly what that felt like,
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in unpleasant detail -- but pivoted on myself and used the momentum to
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take a swing. I hacked into his elbow, tearing through the wood and
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obsidian scales, before having to raise my arm to block a swing of the
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shaft. I almost made a comment about how the tides had turned, but bit
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down on my tongue at the last moment. Gloating was for amateurs, and
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here in Arcadia might have very final consequences. My gauntlet was
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half-crumpled but that didn't hurt any less when I swung again, decking
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him in the face. He flinched back and my sword came down again. Cleaved
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straight through the elbow this time, the limb flopping to the ground.
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The lack of blood was a little off-putting, but I didn't break my
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stride.
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My leg swept his as I rammed my pommel into his chest, but I realized a
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moment too late that wouldn't work on this kind of an opponent. His good
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wing burst into existence, getting back on his feet, and he slammed the
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bottom of his spear into my chest. Gods, I was basically wearing scrap
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metal at this point. Even knowing how that had ended up for the Exiled
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Prince I was tempted to get an enchanted suit of armour. Might not get
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my ass killed if I used it only the once. I smacked at his hands with my
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pommel and he dropped the spear. Within a heartbeat a sword of frost had
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formed in his hand but an orb of shadows had formed in mine: I rammed it
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through the spell, dissipating it before it could form properly. I heard
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a grunt and in a spray of crystal-clear water a forearm emerged form the
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stump to replace the one I'd cut off. Well, there went attrition
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tactics. I went for a killing stroke instead, side of my sword smashing
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into the side of his neck.
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There was a spray of scales and he fell: I stepped back to adjust my
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stance for a deeper blow. Both wings flickered into existence, and
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before I could hit him agains he shot off into the sky. Well, shit. It
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figured that if he could grow an arm back he could fix whatever I'd done
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to the shoulder. I was debating how feasible it would be to make a
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series of shadow platforms to pursue -- not very, it ate through my
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reserves like you wouldn't believe -- when a rope of green smoke
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slithered its way through the air until it coiled around his foot. The
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Rider hacked at it with another ice sword but it just went through,
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cleaving through his boots and doing nothing to the smoke. Which was
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pulled a moment later, smashing him into the ground like a falling star.
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Hakram idly walked up to him, burying his axe into the skull repeatedly
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and with great enthusiasm. I turned to eye Masego, who dismissed the
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green smoke rope with an idle gesture.
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``Catherine,'' he greeted me calmly. ``I see you're still alive.''
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``Arguably my best skill,'' I replied.
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The dark-skinned mage blinked.
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``Catherine you \emph{died.} Not even a year ago,'' he said.
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I might have insulted myself by accident there, I reflected. I cleared
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my throat.
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``Your guys are taken care of?'' I asked.
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``Most,'' Hakram replied, wiping sweat off his brow as he joined us.
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``Some fled.''
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\emph{Kill-stealer}, I mouthed at him. He grinned back unrepentantly.
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``I meant to take a prisoner for interrogation, but they were not
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inclined to cooperate,'' Apprentice said.
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I glanced at the corpse of the Rider. With all three of us we might have
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managed to capture him, but given how dangerous he'd been that would
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have been risky. Probably for the best he'd gotten the orc treatment.
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``I learned a few things from this one,'' I said. ``This whole fight was
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bait. They want us to wander around Arcadia while they mass for an
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assault on Marchford.''
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``I suspected as much,'' Masego shrugged. ``We're no longer in the
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shard.''
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I frowned.
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``How d'you figure that?'' I asked.
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``We're not surrounded by blizzard, for one,'' he said. ``And I cannot
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feel the boundaries of the shard anymore. We're in Arcadia Resplendent,
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that much is certain.''
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I sheathed my sword, trying to hide my surprise. He was right, about the
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blizzard. It was still windy out but visibility was clear. I hadn't even
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noticed. When it had gotten easier to move I'd been paying attention to
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the fight, and must have unconsciously chalked it up to my Name taking
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care of the problem.
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``He said something else that caught my attention,'' I said. ``Something
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about Winter having to be at war when Summer is.''
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Hakram looked vaguely pained and I felt with him. The idea of there
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being a whole other breed of these guys out for our blood wasn't exactly
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thrilling. Masego looked pleased, naturally, because he wasn't going to
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have to rebuild a city that was broke, demon-corrupted, iced in
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\emph{and} on fire. I did not care for the way that list kept getting
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longer.
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``That explains a great deal. The Courts of Arcadia are named after the
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seasons, but they have nothing to do with those same seasons on
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Creation,'' Apprentice said. ``Consider them more like states of mind.
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When Winter and Summer become the two existing courts, it means Arcadia
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is at its most contrary.''
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``If they're pissed at each other,'' I said, ``why is Winter making
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itself my problem?''
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``Symmetry, Catherine,'' the bespectacled man enthused. ``If Summer is
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at war with an enemy exterior to Arcadia, Winter must be the same. I
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would say there is no personal enmity behind this invasion, not that fae
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can truly be personal about anything. The weaker boundary at Marchford
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simply made it the obvious target.''
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``Stop sounding so cheery about creatures trying to murder us,'' I
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requested, then shifted uneasily.
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Back in Laure, the Ruling Council's session had been delayed to talk
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about an incident in Dormer: a handful of Summer fairies making a mess
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down there, though not a large one. The picture that was putting
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together was not one I liked at all.
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``How likely is it that the courts could be targeting the same enemy?''
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I asked.
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Masego blinked.
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``Impossible,'' he said.
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Oh, good. That made the mess even more complicated but I'd take it.
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``Though, of course, from the fae perspective no nation as we know them
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would be considered the `same enemy','' he added absent-mindedly.
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``Making the distinction largely academic.''
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\emph{Don't punch him}, I told myself. \emph{You still need him to get
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out of this place.}
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``Should have led with that, warlock's get,'' Hakram said, tone amused.
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``Oh,'' Masego said.
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He glanced at me reproachfully.
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``It was a very poorly-phrased question,'' he said.
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``Quit while you're ahead,'' I advised. ``All right. Fine. So Winter's
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going to keep attacking as long as Summer does, and we have no idea
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\emph{why} it's attacking or even who specifically.''
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``If I was trying to keep you busy and had an understanding of the fae
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mindset,'' Hakram said. ``I would provoke a war with Summer, knowing
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Winter would be forced to mirror the action. Likely at Marchford.''
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I sighed.
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``Heiress,'' I said.
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That did sound right up her alley. As Governess of Liesse, even if
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Summer was at war with her city specifically, I'd still be forced to
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protect her from the consequences of her actions. It was my duty as a
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member of the Ruling Council, and her city was full of Callowans to
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boot. Meanwhile I'd have to deal with an assault on my demesne from an
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entirely different court, eroding the strength of the Fifteenth while
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simultaneously forcing me to use other means to deal with Summer. It was
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the kind of overly complicated plot with massive potential for
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backfiring that was her bread and butter. Hells, she might as well have
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signed the whole thing. I clenched my fingers and unclenched them.
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``Winter's got a boss fairy, right?'' I said to Masego.
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``There will be a king or a queen, yes,'' he agreed.
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``If I punch it until it dies, that feels like a problem solved,'' I
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grunted. ``If Winter stops attacking then Summer would have to as well,
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no?''
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The chubby mage frowned.
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``I'm not sure,'' he admitted. ``Possibly. Regardless, Catherine, if you
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attempt to fight the ruler of a court you will get killed. Those
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creatures qualify as a god by most measures.''
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``Dying's never stopped me before,'' I said.
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``We lack angels to loot for a resurrection, this time,'' Hakram said.
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``Cat, there's no need to go at this alone. This is bigger than us. The
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Tower needs to step in.''
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\emph{If Malicia gets involved I'm tacitly admitting the Ruling Council
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can't run Callow without her help}, I thought. I bit my lip. I'd need to
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think on this more.
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``First we get out of here,'' I finally said. ``Masego, you said we're
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no longer in the shard. Does that meant we can't leave the same way we
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came in?''
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``We'll need a gate to step through or a fairly powerful fae to open a
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path,'' he said.
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``Do your thing, then,'' I said. ``Where's the closest gate?''
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``Explain the fae to me, Apprentice,'' he muttered. ``Find me a gate,
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Apprentice. I could be taking apart a pocket dimension right now, you
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|
know. \emph{They} never ask for anything.''
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|
He just beginning to trace runes in the air when Hakram cleared his
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|
throat. I looked at him, then the direction he was pointing at. There
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|
were snow-covered hills as far as the eye could see, with the occasional
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|
thicket of dead trees and a few distant mountains. There was also a path
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|
now, paved in ice. It snaked across the hills towards what looked like a
|
|
glistening city.
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|
``That wasn't there a moment ago,'' I said.
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``We weren't looking for a gate a moment ago,'' Apprentice said.
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``Gods, I \emph{hate} this place,'' I cursed.
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|
I eyed the road, which began atop the hill just beyond us and looked as
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|
pristine as if it had just been built. For all I knew it had been.
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|
``We're not using that,'' I said. ``That is an \emph{insultingly}
|
|
obvious trap.''
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Hakram clapped my shoulder, amused.
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``It would be an easier walk than the snow,'' Masego said, just shy of
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|
complaining.
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``You could use the exercise,'' Adjutant said, nudging him.
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|
I blinked. If Hakram was next to him, then who had -- I went for my
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sword, and someone laughed.
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|
``You lot are \emph{terrible} at not getting killed,'' Archer told me
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cheerfully, hand still on my shoulder.
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