407 lines
18 KiB
TeX
407 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-56-recess}{%
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\section{Chapter 56: Recess}\label{chapter-56-recess}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``And on your grave we shall have inscribed: he was witty all the
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way into the tiger pit.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Vindictive
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\end{quote}
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Nauk had a whole tent to himself, unlike the rest of our wounded
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remaining with the host. Unconscious or not he kept his rank. His Senior
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Tribune had been temporarily granted full legate authority, but no one
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had ever dared to talk of actual promotion in front of me. All those
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that could speak of the matter knew me better than that. There was no
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lit candle inside, but that hadn't made a difference to me in years. I
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dragged the lone stool in the corner across the dirt and sat on it, eyes
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stuck on the orc's inanimate form. His breath still rose and fell
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faintly and the wounds had begun to heal, but there was nothing pretty
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about it. His left eye was gone, taken by Summer flame along with ear
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and cheek and a chunk of his dark hair. It looked like a bonfire had
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devoured half his face, and though the burns were no longer a horror of
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charred skin they had scabbed green and peeling. This, I knew, he would
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be able to live with. That kind of scarring was almost a point of honour
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to orcs. My eyes shifted to the side and lingered on the stump that
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ended at his shoulder. The loss of his fighting arm would be harder
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blow.
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Prosthetics could be made, I knew. The Warlock had made a hand for
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Hakram, after Summerholm, and I did not doubt Masego would be able to
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make something even more functional now that he had transitioned into
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Hierophant. But Nauk would forever be a cripple in the eyes of his own,
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without a Name to make up for his defect. There was much to love in
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orcs, be it the bone-deep loyalty or the fierceness in the face of
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peril, but the Clans were not known to be kind to failures -- and that
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was what they would call him for this, I had no doubt.
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``I never should have taken you into that fight,'' I murmured, brushing
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back an errant strand of hair. ``Neither you nor the Gallowborne. It was
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arrogant, to think I was powerful to keep you alive.''
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I was, in the end, a villain. My power was not meant to be a shield for
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those I loved\emph{. All I can do is kill the enemy before they kill
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you}, I thought. But that too would fail in time, like Black had failed
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Captain. Death could only be cheated for so long no matter how cunning
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and ruthless and strong you thought you were.
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``I've been told Pickler visits you every night, after her hours are
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done,'' I told the orc. ``The others came too, even Robber. You haven't
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been forgotten.''
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There were no wards around the tent but there were guards, and when I
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heard them give way without comment my mind ran down the list of the few
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people with that authority. Wouldn't be Juniper or any of the general
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staff -- most of them had ordered a bonfire made away from prying eyes
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and begun showing up with bottles when Evening Bell rang. I meant to
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join them, eventually, but I'd come to visit my mistake first. Not
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Black, either. He'd been scrying generals and court officials all day,
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and likely would continue until we left for Liesse. That left only
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three. Hakram, but the approaching steps were too light. Archer wouldn't
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have come here at all. And that meant\ldots{}
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``Lord Warlock,'' I said calmly, hand withdrawing from Nauk's forehead.
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The Sovereign of the Red Skies was no more bothered by the darkness than
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me. He strolled casually to my legate's side, leaving the body between
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us, and frowned at the unconscious orc. I studied the villain in
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silence, eyes tracing the sculpted face and fit form that was made plain
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by his tailored tunic. There'd always been traces of silver in the man's
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short hair, and salt as well as pepper in his beard, but I fancied I saw
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a little more of both now. He was still, I thought, perhaps one of the
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most handsome men I'd ever seen. An older man, certainly, but that only
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added to the allure: there was nothing boyish about him at all. The
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admission was set aside earlier than it used to be, the way I could
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dismiss Akua's looks. Some part of me considered the Warlock an enemy,
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and enemies were not to be blushed over. He did not reply to my
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greeting, or call on sorcery. All he did was stand there and look.
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``I'm sorry,'' I said. ``About Sabah.''
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Dark eyes finally turned to me.
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``Your sympathy is a shallow thing of little meaning, Squire,'' he
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replied. ``You knew her for scarcely three years, perhaps a month in all
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of shared presence. Your grief is pale imitation of ours.''
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``And yet I still grieve her,'' I said.
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His face twitched, sorrow and hatred mingled. In my veins Winter flowed,
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the darkness in the room thickening. My mantle craved the strife like a
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parched man craved water.
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``She was always the best of us,'' Warlock said. ``All she wanted was
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for us to be alive and happy. It made her so very easy to love.''
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I did not reply. \emph{Tread lightly here, Catherine. Winter had caught
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the scent of war, and in this it is so very rarely wrong.} The tall man
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continued to watch me, the silence growing tenser every heartbeat.
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``I am trying,'' the Sovereign of the Red Skies said, ``to think of a
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reason not to kill you right here and now.''
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``You might not find that so easily achieved,'' I calmly replied.
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I'd come too far to flinch in the face of even a man like this. A slow
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smirk split the Soninke's face.
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``You speak to me of trouble when your soul is one spell away from
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turning on itself,'' he said. ``Proud little Squire, having learned all
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the wrong lessons. Did you really think a mantle was so easily claimed?
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That there would not be \emph{consequences} to usurping a demigod?''
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My eyes flicked to Nauk's silent form.
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``I am sharply aware of my limitations,'' I said.
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``You are an altar raised to your own ambition, child, and the
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foundations are \emph{shaking},'' he jeered. ``You have lied and
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murdered your way through affairs beyond your understanding. Can you
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even still suffer the touch of cold iron?''
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He laughed sharply, teeth like ivory showing in the dark.
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``Perhaps it is too early for that still,'' he said. ``But thresholds
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must already be growing difficult, yes? Wards stand stone where they
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were once parchment, your power mercurial where it was once firmly
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grasped. You are not more than human, Catherine Foundling, merely
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\emph{other}.''
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My fingers twitched, hidden under Nauk's cot by the angle. I felt like
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reaching for my sword even as the words winded their way into my head.
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There was an unfortunate stench of truth about them. The edges being
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turned on me did not cut deep, but my patience was running thin in the
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face of a berating I had not earned. Or, at the very least, not from
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\emph{him}.
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``You once warned me about lines I shouldn't cross,'' I coldly said.
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``I've kept to those terms. And yet here you are, knife on your fucking
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tongue. Act like even half the man you pretend to be, Warlock.''
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Power flooded the tent. Not as a spell or an attack -- the Sovereign of
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the Red Skies had simply ceased hiding the sorcery always roiling inside
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him. Just by standing there, just by being, he was a storm made flesh.
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My Name's hackles rose in answer, frost touching my shoulders and my
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shadow deepening into an endless pit\emph{. I stood in front of
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Hashmallim unbowed, Wastelander. You will not scare me into lowering my
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head with cheap theatrics.}
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``Lines,'' the Warlock hissed. ``You dare speak to me of lines when just
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by existing you bring death to Amadeus? You stand before me reeking of
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bargain incomplete, a thing stitched together by blood and ignorance,
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and pretend you are safe for even a single soul in this wretched
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world?''
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Something bubbled up inside me, and against my will a laugh escaped my
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lips.
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``You blustering fucking hypocrite,'' I said. ``Who are you to cast
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stones, Sovereign? You're more abattoir than man. Have you ever
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accomplished a single damned thing by means other than cutting up men?
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All I can put to your name is death and horror. I have been civil
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because Masego is family and for some godforsaken reason Black forgives
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what you are, but do not mistake that for fear, not for a single moment.
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You think your record cows me? I've bled for it, Warlock, but I have
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\emph{beaten gods}. All you are is an aging bag of curses.''
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The cloth of the tent around us withered until it was threadbare and
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blackened, Winter baring its fangs through my open snarl. The Warlock's
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eyes dilated, red bleeding into them as the smell of brimstone spread
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through cold air.
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``Hye should have killed you when she had the chance,'' he said. ``He
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would have forgiven her, eventually. Damn her for having looked only at
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the hunt.''
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My fingers clasped around the hilt of my sword.
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``Talk is meaningless,'' I said. ``Either act or shut the Hells up.''
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The Soninke's shoulders twitched and for a moment a I thought it would
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come to violence, my sword already halfway out the scabbard, but in the
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end the monster stayed his hand.
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``My son asked for the life of this tin soldier of yours,'' he said,
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tone emotionless. ``Have it back, and count the debt of protecting
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Masego through his transition paid. Watch your step, Squire. If slaying
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you keeps him alive, you will not live to see winter.''
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I forced myself to leave, because if I stayed there would be blood.
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Terror was writ plain on the faces of the two legionaries standing guard
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outsides, and any notion they hadn't heard the argument was dead the
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moment I glimpsed it. My sword slid back fully into the sheath and I
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took a deep breath, wrestling down fury I knew to be not entirely my
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own. My temper was worsening. \emph{Like all the rest}, I thought
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darkly.
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``Everything you heard here is under the Tower's seal,'' I told the
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guards.
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I lingered long enough to receive stammering assurances from them, then
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left. Part of me wanted nothing with the bonfire and comrades awaiting,
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but disappearing into my tent to stew over this wasn't going to improve
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anything about my night. Even if the mood was gone, I would show up.
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\emph{Other}, the Warlock had called me. Other than human. Maybe I
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needed all the company I could get.
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---
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``You're having another,'' Hakram bluntly ordered. ``It's a little early
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for morning dew, so I can hazard a guess why you have wet shoulders.''
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I grimaced but offered up my cup to the orc.
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``Could we at least drink something that doesn't taste of burnt
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orange?'' I complained.
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I got a few smiles for that, though no laughter. No one was quite drunk
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enough yet to have reached that place where everything was funny.
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``Dhahab is an acquired taste,'' Aisha conceded.
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``\emph{Acquired} is the right word,'' Ratface drawled. ``That bottle is
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worth twice its weight in gold.''
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There were ten of us around the crackling flames, and though some of the
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faces had changed it had reminded me so much of evenings in the War
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College that I'd ached. Simpler times, though back then they'd felt
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anything but. These days whatever didn't involve half a river's worth of
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blood felt innocent.
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``They served this at receptions in Ater,'' Masego noted. ``Though it
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tasted different then.''
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``Milkweed extract,'' Aisha explained, her cheeks rosy. ``It's the
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traditional paired poison.''
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My Taghreb staff tribune had begun hitting the bottle early tonight and
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already abandoned the flat stone that had been her seat in favour of
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lying against the large trunk we were using as a bench. Having traded a
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cotton shirt and slender trousers for her usual uniform, I got a good
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glimpse of why Ratface had been stuck on her for so long every time she
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stretched. The toned curves were hard to notice under the aketon, but
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now they were in full display. I didn't allow my eyes to linger, though,
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and the reason why spoke up right after.
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``We're roughing it like proper peasants, then,'' Kilian smiled, cheeks
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dimpling. ``How appropriate.''
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I expected Archer to make something out of that, but when I looked she
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was busy trying to discreetly tie Masego's braids in a knot. He kept
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slapping away her hands, so evidently not a great success.
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``Frosted another table talking with Kegan?'' Juniper asked, seizing
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Aisha's cup and watering down her liquor even as she pouted.
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``I wish,'' I grunted. ``Got into an argument with the Warlock.''
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``Were you asking about his s-`` Robber started, but Pickler pushed him
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off his seat with the ease of long practice.
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It did not escape my notice he half-leaned into the touch before
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allowing himself to be toppled. That infatuation had yet to disappear,
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then.
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``Really?'' Masego said, coil of lightning forming around his finger
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just in time for him to shock away Archer from her latest attempt with a
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flick. ``Father doesn't lose his temper often. As far as I know, the
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last argument he got into was before I was born.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``Huh,'' I eloquently said, nursing the liquor. ``Who with?''
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I wasn't actually all that curious, but steering the talk away from the
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fact that I'd drawn steel on one of the Calamities in the middle of my
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own war camp seemed a solid notion. Even if he'd been fucking asking for
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it.
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``Uncle Amadeus,'' Masego said. ``Uncle wanted him to open an academy
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for mages, after the Conquest.''
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``There already is,'' Ratface pointed out. ``There's a track for mages
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at the College.''
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Hierophant rolled his glass eyes under the cloth.
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``A \emph{real} academy,'' he said. ``He refused, of course. Father had
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no interest in teaching squalling Wasteland brats.''
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``The War College has a limited curriculum, it's true,'' Pickler said,
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and I noticed a subtle slur to her words. ``The Eyries have entire
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volumes on engineering and alchemy that will never see light of day.''
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``The spell scrolls at the College are very narrow in scope,'' Kilian
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agreed. ``And all the more sophisticated treatises are theory, not
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practical.''
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``Praesi hoard spells like dragons do gold,'' Juniper said. ``That's
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always been the way.''
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I downed the rest of dhahab and reached for an open bottle of wine
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before Hakram could fill my cup with that sin against tastebuds a third
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time. I poured too quick, red spilling over the rim, and unthinkingly
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licked my fingers clean. Feeling eyes on me I turned, and found Kilian
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watching. I cleared my throat, in a hurry for a distraction.
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``That may change,'' I said. ``I've had a talk with Black.''
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There was a heartbeat of silence, my teacher's name falling like a
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shroud on the previously light mood.
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``Lord Black,'' Juniper insisted, breaking the silence.
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I snorted into my cup and saw a few smiles bloom. I hesitated to call
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anything about the Hellhound girlish, but the way she got so
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coquettishly proper about Black came pretty close.
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``I call him sir about once a year, that should be enough formality to
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meet the quota,'' I said. ``Regardless, there's going to be changes in
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the Wasteland after we clean up the Sahelian mess.''
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Stillness hung in the air like fog, the fire crackling loudly around us.
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The quiet was pregnant with words none of us dared say.
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``That sounds like murder talk,'' Archer cheerfully said. ``Doesn't that
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sound like murder talk?''
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``It does,'' Robber said, grinning hungrily in the dark. ``And with
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official sanction, no less. That is going to be a \emph{ride}.''
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Hakram cleared his throat.
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``Enough blade-talk for he night,'' Adjutant announced. ``War will still
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be looming tomorrow, but then we'll have to be sober.''
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``Cheers to that,'' I said, raising my cup.
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``A toast,'' Ratface shouted. ``To liquor, obtained by entirely legal
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means!''
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``To victory, fickle bitch that she is,'' Aisha added just as loudly.
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She handed her cup to Juniper long enough to pass the bottle to Pickler,
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never noticing that the orc poured half of it to the ground.
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``To stabbing Diabolist in the face,'' Archer said. ``Like, at least
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twice.''
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``To claiming her personal possessions afterwards,'' Masego contributed.
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``If you keep that up, warlock's get, I'll have to adopt you into my
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tribe,'' Robber said, placing his hand over his heart.
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``That's illegal, they'll have you killed,'' Pickler noted.
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``Then I'll make my own tribe,'' Robber said.
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``Also illegal, will also get you killed,'' Pickler replied without
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missing a beat.
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``Boss,'' Robber said, turning to me, ``you need to make your own tribe
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so I can abuse that power most sorely.''
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My brows rose.
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``Congratulations, Special Tribune Robber,'' I ceremoniously said. ``You
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are the first and only member of the Lesser Lesser Footrest Tribe, by my
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authority as Vicefuckingqueen of Callow.''
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``You said I'd go back to just lesser if I behaved,'' the goblin whined.
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``Which you did not,'' Pickler said, sounding amused.
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``\emph{Goblins},'' Juniper sighed, then raised her cup. ``To the
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Fifteenth.''
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``Boring,'' Archer catcalled from the side, obnoxiously drawing out the
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word.
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``To making it this far,'' Kilian said, bringing up her cup before a
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squabble could erupt.
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``To us,'' Hakram said, and with that sentimental finish we all drank.
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The drinks kept flowing after that, and as the hours passed the
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stillness returned bearing sted tiredness instead of nervous
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anticipation. We did not speak of plans or war or the deaths to come,
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however close they may be. We talked like the friends I'd wished to
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have, back at the orphanage, and that I had found in this strange place
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along that winding path my life had taken. That the path also took me to
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dark and ugly places, I could not deny, but once in a while it led to
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golden nights like this as well -- and they almost made up for the rest.
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When talk finally died down half my friends were asleep, Aisha draped
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over Juniper's side and softly snoring as the general fondly looked down
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at her. Hierophant was having a quiet conversation with Pickler as
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Robber interjected less than helpfully, Archer passed out over the
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mage's lap. For all that they bickered constantly, it had become plain
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for anyone to see how close the two of them were. He'd tightened her
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cloak around her shoulders, earlier, gentle in a way I'd never Masego be
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with anything but books. I was gazing at the scene, something between
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happiness and contentment having found me, when Hakram nudged my rib. He
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inclined his head to the side and I followed the direction, finding
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Kilian worrying her lip. She rose when she noticed my gaze and I closed
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my eyes. An overdue conversation, this. I rose to my feet as well,
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clapping Adjutant on the shoulder, and offered the redhead my arm.
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``Let's go for a walk,'' I whispered.
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