375 lines
18 KiB
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375 lines
18 KiB
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\hypertarget{fletched}{%
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\section{Fletched}\label{fletched}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``To follow a principle is to ascribe value to it, and value
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always has worth that can be quantified. Is to value quantifiable worth
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above all, therefore, not to follow the greatest of all principles?''}
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-- Extract from ``Bought and Sold'', a collection of the teachings of
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the Merchant Prince Irenos, founder of Mercantis
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\end{quote}
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It was the second time Indrani was made to serve at an auction of the
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Closed Circle and she knew better than to hope it would be the last. She
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was \emph{exotic}. The word came even more often than \emph{pretty} and
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\emph{mannerly} in the mouths of Honoured Guests, as if the colour of
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her skin had made her some wild animal instead of a nine-year-old girl.
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Merchant Lord Septim had been complimented too many times on how much of
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a coup acquiring her had been for Indrani to ever think he would not
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continue volunteering her as a servant for the evenings. It was rare
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occasion, at least. The Closed Circle never held auction more than once
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a year, and it was not guaranteed to. The nature of what was put to
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auction forbade it from being regular occurrence. The masked men and
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women of the Circle called it `an auction for which that cannot be
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bought' but Indrani had already grown used to the way Mercantians
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slathered drama over everything like honeyed glaze. The Closed Circle,
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as far she understood, put up for trade things that couldn't be bought
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with gold. It was barter the way slaves like her did in the pens, but
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with enough goldleaf and expensive wine involved they got to pretend it
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was different.
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She hadn't been there when the goods for auction were announced, but by
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milling around serving drinks she got to overhear enough conversations
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to piece together a few. There was a letter that could ignite war in the
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Free Cities, the secret to earn the love a Proceran princess and the
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greatest shame of a Callowan baron. Strangers things too, a glimmer of
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Arcadian moon and a sword without a blade forged by a Praesi emperor.
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The last, she knew, had been traded at the last auction. She'd not seen
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it, but they said the Warlock had been there looking for an ancient song
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that revealed the lay of some lesser Hells. He'd offered something from
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the vaults of the Tower in exchange, which had gotten the Merchant Lords
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excited. The Dread Empire sat on the greatest troves of treasures in
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Calernia, it was said, but these days rarely took them out from the
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warded rooms where they were hidden away from Creation. Indrani didn't
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give a fuck about what the Easterners got up to in their deserts, but
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the owners being in a good mood was good for her as well.
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Septim wouldn't sell her until she'd flowered, he'd already said as
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much, but when he felt generous she got a few hours out in the city
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instead of remaining bound to his estate. Once that had been one of her
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rare delights, but tonight the notion she might see her leash loosened
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felt empty. Indrani had been careful, hoarding what she could and
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stealing when she was sure she could get away with it -- the trick was
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to steal from free servants, there was almost never a tracking rune on
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their possessions -- and paid for one a questor to find her parents.
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She'd had to go to the lower city to find one whose fees she could
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afford, but after two years of scrounging finally she had managed. It
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had been pointless. Her mother was already dead, assassinated as part of
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a squabble between Merchant Lords. Her father had been sold in Ashur and
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died in a mine collapse as a `free' member of its lowest citizenship
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tier. The questor told her that was a committee's fault, higher tier
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citizens debating for a week on whether it was worth digging out the
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people in the collapsed shaft or not.
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Eventually, lack of air had settled the question where words failed.
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Indrani wondered if she was supposed to swear vengeance on their behalf.
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Feuds were not rare between Mercantians, though always short-lived, but
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there were Callowan and Praesi slaves in the pens that still stole
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knives to kill each other over things their peoples had done hundreds of
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years ago. There wasn't much, she thought, to seek vengeance for. Her
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father she'd never even met, and she barely remembered her mother.
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Warmth and the smell of spices, that was all. The name she'd been given
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by the woman had been kept since Merchant Lord Septim thought it would
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make her more \emph{authentic}, but the way it was spoken was different
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from what little she remembered. It was spoken in Lower Miezan, not
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whatever tongue was spoken by the people of her parents across the
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Tyrian Sea. All the girl could muster was a vague sorrow at would could
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have been. It was left formless because her life already had form: she
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was to sing, to learn the Three Dances and the Seven Tongues and earn
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great profit for the man who'd snatched her from her mother's arms at
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the cost of a small fortune.
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She'd gone quiet and her smile had lapsed as she thought, she realized.
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Indrani force da cheerful smile and dearly hoped no one who had rivalry
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with Septim had seen her. All it would take was a single comment to
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humiliate the Merchant Lord and she would have earned a caning. Luck
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might be in her favour, for there were few Mercantians at Closed Circle
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auctions. A third of the people in attendance were fat Merchant Lords
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and Ladies, but the Consortium kept light presence at events like this.
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The Merchant Princes of Mercantis had long ago ordered as much, to
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ensure it would be powerful foreigners that came to the City of Bought
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and Sold for the ineffable prizes offered. Indrani, a sweet smile
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painted on her face, presented her silver platter to the closest
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Honoured Guest. A woman, though not like she'd ever seen before. She had
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the skin of the honey-coloured Yan Tei but her face was different and
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her ears were pointed. Her red dress alone was proof she was wealthy
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enough to be here, silks that could only be had from Praes and Ashur.
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The rough leather boots stood out from the perfectly presented rest, a
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stain on the jewels and beauty. The Honoured Guest considered her for a
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long moment before claiming a goblet of Helikean pale.
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``Well now, a \emph{yamin-ine},'' she said, ``Where did the fat ones get
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theirs hands on one of you?''
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``This one does not understand what you speak of,'' Indrani replied.
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``I imagine your parents made it through on a Baalite ship before Fate
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fucked them bad enough you ended up here,'' the Honoured Guest mused.
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``Your peoples don't often cross the Tyrian Sea, girl. They never
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learned the routes.''
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``This one was born in Mercantis, Honoured Guest,'' Indrani said.
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``You can drop the slave talk,'' the woman said, rolling her eyes. ``And
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that platter as well. You're interesting enough an oddity you'll be
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fetching me drinks for the rest of this bore. Send your owner to me if
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they object.''
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The slave swallowed noisily. She wasn't an idiot. She knew there were
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men and women that were\ldots{} interested in girls her age. She was
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pricey enough a commodity that Septim had never made her available for
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those kinds of deals, but for an Honoured Guest? No one got in this hall
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without being powerful enough to curry favour with. Could she run? The
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rune carved into the back of her neck would start boiling her blood if
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she went too far from the anchor, but it might be worth it if she could
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avoid this. The woman drained the cup and dropped it on the platter,
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reaching for another. She'd just drank, Indrani knew, a vintage worth a
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boy of working age in good health. Like it was water. The waste was like
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a slap in the face, utter disregard for the wheels of value and interest
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she'd been taught ruled the world.
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``Whoever decided there's need to mingle for an hour after the prizes
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are announced should be shot,'' the Honoured Guest sighed. ``I'd burn
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the invitations if they didn't occasionally have useful stuff.''
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``The Closed Circle is pleased to provide for all your needs,'' Indrani
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said.
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The woman snorted.
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``Did you know your people abduct the \emph{salamdeul} who wander too
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close to the border?'' she said. ``Rip out the hearts in some pretty
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grisly rituals to the Gods. Having one of you in slave livery is like
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putting ribbons on a tiger.''
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``This one knows not what you speak of,'' Indrani said, desperately
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reaching for the phrases she'd been taught. ``Are you enjoying the
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auction, Honoured Guest?''
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``Praesi highborn speak just like that,'' the woman said. ``They put
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accents on different parts, but you're coming from Baalite bastard talk
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and they from Wasteland tongues. Their nobles think they're being
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distinguished, but they forget Miezan envoys were always slaves.
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Mercantis was founded by exiles, you see, you keep the traditions closer
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to true.''
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``This one was not taught history,'' Indrani tried.
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The Honoured Guest smiled strangely.
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``I know a man who once said ignorance of precedent is the doom of
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empires,'' she said. ``Though you're too young for romance, I suppose.''
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The girl hid her relief as well she could. Those particular duties would
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not be asked of her, it looked like. The stranger patter her shoulder as
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one would pat a pet. Some owners were like that, liked to think of
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themselves as benevolent.
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``Most of the time, more trouble than it's worth,'' the woman said.
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``It's the exceptions that fuck you, mark my words.''
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``This one will, Honoured Guest,'' Indrani replied.
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It was toothless enough, as far as babbles went, and she'd been forced
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to smile and nod and much uglier stuff.
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``Ranger,'' the woman said. ``Call me Ranger.''
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The slave stiffened. That was not a name, it was a \emph{Name}. The
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half-drunk guest at her side had been granted mantle by the Gods
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themselves, whether Above or Below. She stood in the presence of
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greatness, and greatness was helping itself to another cup of wine and
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downing it so quickly she must barely taste it. Indrani glimpsed a tall
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silhouette coming from behind and felt cold fear course her veins.
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Merchant Lord Septim was young, barely thirty, and had yet to gain the
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fat that Mercantians influential enough to vie for the title of Merchant
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Prince uniformly wore. His tan face was leathery and desiccated, a match
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for those hungry empty eyes that she had learned to fear. Whims were
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rare in the man, and generosity ever passing.
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``Lady Ranger,'' Septim smiled. ``I see you've taken a shine to my
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Indrani.''
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The honey-skinned woman glanced at the Merchant Lord like he was waste
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scrapped off her boots.
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``Speak in my presence again and I'll slit your throat,'' she mildly
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said.
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The Merchant Lord paled.
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``Shoo, copper-counter,'' Ranger said. ``My patience is already running
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out.''
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Indrani did not smile. When the Honoured Guest was gone, she would still
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be a slave -- and one who had witnessed Septim's casual humiliation.
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There was a beating for her in it, waiting around the corner. The memory
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of the barely-veiled fury on her owner's face wouldn't do much to take
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away the dull throb of a caning's aftermath.
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``Merchant Lord Septim is said to be the foremost candidate for the
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princeship, in a decade,'' Indrani warned quietly.
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Ranger chuckled.
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``I could open the little shit up from balls to throat and all the
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Consortium would do is send me a bill,'' she said. ``Everything's for
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sale here. Even the city, famously, though no one's ever had the coin
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for it.''
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The girl did not reply, for she had nothing to say. Mighty as the Named
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was, she would be gone soon enough. The sun set every night, no matter
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how warm, and never rose twice the same. Attachment to the transient was
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the way of dead slaves.
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``Wekesa's little trinket should be interesting, but the loafer in the
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Tower wouldn't let anything too useful of her grasp,'' the Honoured
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Guest said. ``The only thing worth a second glance here is the
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invitation.''
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``I know not of what you speak, Lady Ranger,'' Indrani admitted.
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``A written invitation to Skade, made from the soul of some poet the
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Winter Court took fancy to,'' the woman explained. ``I could carve my
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way into Arcadia, but that takes a while, and my gate's even more
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finicky.''
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``This one was unaware that your hallowed self kept friendship with the
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fae,'' the girl said.
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``Oh, I don't,'' Ranger smiled. ``You might say I'm fond of their
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jewellery, but that'll have to wait until the seasons change.''
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Indrani smiled as if she understood. The woman seemed amused but not
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fooled.
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``So what did they train you for?'' she asked.
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``This one has been taught to sing, and still learns the Three Dances
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and the Seven Tongues,'' she said.
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Lady Ranger laughed loudly and unapologetically, as if it was the
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funniest thing she'd ever heard.
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``Gods, \emph{singing},'' she gasped. ``Child, your people gouged out
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the eyes of a Minister of the Left and sent them to his Emperor along a
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demand for half his southern territories. My father sacked Sing Du
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twice, burned An Yang to the ground and still lost to the Striped Fleet.
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There was a century where the Ashokas bled the high chief of the Onogur
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as their \emph{coronation ceremony}. A drop of your blood has more war
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in it than half this continent put together.''
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She might as well have been speaking in tongues, for all the difference
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it made. Names of peoples and cities beyond a sea but a handful knew how
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to cross, never to be seen or even heard of again. What did it matter to
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Indrani that some kingdom she'd never heard of and she shared the
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smallest sliver of kinship with was mighty? She had never left
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Mercantis, hadn't even seen most the city. The stranger was marching in
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with her colourful stories, and by night's end would march out and leave
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a mess behind her -- a mess Indrani would pay for. She hated that, hated
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it like poison. She also craved it. It was the difference between one
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who had power and one who did not.
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``None of those names mean anything here,'' Indrani harshly said. ``My
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blood even less.''
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``So you have some fire in you,'' Ranger smiled. ``Good. We've got some
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fate, you and I, but I've no patience for hollow dolls.''
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``We have never met before,'' Indrani said.
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``My father would never have been exiled, had he not lost to your
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people,'' the Honoured Guest shrugged. ``Would never have met my mother.
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That gets you a second look, at least.''
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``I am not for sale,'' she bitterly said. ``Will not be for years yet.''
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``What the lords of this place deem to be law matters very little to
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me,'' the woman said. ``Have you ever used a weapon?''
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Indrani shook her head.
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``Mercantians do not keep war slaves, my lady,'' she said. ``Only
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Stygians do. To lay hands on a blade here is killing offense, save for
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the pit fighters.''
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``Let's see if you have it in you, then,'' the Lady Ranger said.
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``Follow.''
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They were noticed. Indrani felt like flinching. Slaves should not be
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noticed, no good ever came of it. The Honoured Guest elbowed aside a
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dark-skinned Praesi who bowed and offered her manifold apologies, not
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that she bothered to listen, and she snatched a hilt without a blade
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from atop marble pedestal. She pressed it into Indrani's hands, who
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winced as she held it. Moments passed without anything more than the
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sensation of cool metal against her palm. The absence stung harder than
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she'd thought it would, and the girl damned herself twice for having
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hoped. \emph{Hope is the bitter brew, hope is the usher of despair. One
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day at a time, never looking back or ahead. I will survive this.}
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``Sorcerous was a real prick anyway, as I hear it,'' the Lady Ranger
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mused and dropped the hilt back on the pedestal. ``Wasteland aristocrats
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always like to talk about sorcery being the best thing the Gods bothered
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to shit out, like it ever saved them from a knife in the throat. Steel,
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girl, always wins. Remember that.''
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Indrani nodded and the worthless advice and followed the madwoman. They
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came to stand in front of another pedestal, this one bearing a horn bow
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with carved images along the length of the arc. The eyes of everyone in
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the room where on them by now. There would be no escaping the
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consequences.
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``Lycaonese,'' Ranger told her. ``They've always liked these, nothing
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quite like them to kill ratlings from a wall. This little piece must be
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older than the Principate, back when the Iron Kings still ruled.''
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She'd spoken with a degree of respect, but handled the bow like it was a
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tool instead of a literally priceless artefact. She strung it casually
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and pulled, eyeing the bend with a critical eye before handing it to
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Indrani. The girl's fingers closed around the bow and found it fit just
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right. Perfectly, as if it had been made for her hand. In the background
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she heard a masked woman of the Circle tell Ranger it had been crafted
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by Peerless Artisan and the enchantments on it would never lapse, but
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the words passed her by without taking hold. Indrani's eyes remained on
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the bow and she let instincts she should not have guide her hands. She
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looked ahead and pulled the string, feeling the weight of an arrow that
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did not exist take hold. It felt\ldots{} it felt like what her mother
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should have felt like. Coming home. Closing a circle. She shivered, and
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only returned to herself when the Honoured Guest put a hand on her
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shoulder. The woman leaned close.
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``If you could loose an arrow at anyone, who would it be?'' Ranger
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whispered.
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Indrani was careful not to look for Septim, not to remember painful
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throbs and bruises that were allowed to swell before magic was taken to
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them. The Named chuckled.
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``And after him, the rest?'' she said.
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Indrani slowly shook her head.
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``A debt,'' she said. ``Not a cause.''
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Ranger smiled and took the bow from her hands, placing it back on the
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pedestal. The absence left her hollow.
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``What's your name, girl?''
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``Indrani,'' she replied.
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``Indrani,'' the Ranger repeated, mulling over the word. ``It will do
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for now. Come along, duckling. We're leaving.''
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``I'm not for sale,'' the slave replied, alarmed.
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``Consider this your first lesson, duckling,'' the Lady of the Lake
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said. ``Rules should only be a concern when someone is able to enforce
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them upon you.''
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Indrani saw a wild glint in those eyes, and her fate writ in it.
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\emph{Never looking back or ahead}, she thought.
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She smiled, and for the first time in a very long while it was genuine.
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