478 lines
20 KiB
TeX
478 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-12-cambruxe9}{%
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\chapter{Cambré}\label{chapter-12-cambruxe9}}
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\epigraph{``In a finite world, one's gain (victory, large cave) inevitably
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means loss (dead female, enemy grows) for another. There can be no peace
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(looking away, knife already in a corpse) when the very nature of
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Creation is contest (not enough meat, talking).''}{Extract from a theorized translation of `Remnant and Ruin', one of
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the few goblin texts ever obtained}
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``This should not be possible,'' Masego said, sounding obscurely
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pleased.
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He was in a good mood, though I did not share it. The frequency at which
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I ended up lying on table while he fiddled with my guts and soul was
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quite frankly depressing. At least this time I had pants on, only my
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upper body bare.
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``We keep this up for another year,'' I said, ``and you'll have seen me
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naked more often than Kilian ever did.''
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The dark-skinned mage sighed, glass eyes rolling inside the sockets.
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Ugh. Full turn, that would never be not creepy even glimpsed only
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through an eye cloth.
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``Your insistence I `buy you dinner first' is absurd,'' Hierophant said.
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``The only food available here is Legion rations, which you already own.
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I think. My attention might have waned when we had that afternoon where
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you explained to us how kingdoms worked.''
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Ah, that'd been a Hells of an affair. The afternoon session of `We Are
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In Charge Now And Why That Matters' had not been a favourite of the Woe,
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since the two people who actually needed the explanations had been less
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than interested in actually hearing them.
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``Sometimes, Zeze, I feel like you only want me for my body,'' I
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drawled.
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``Ridiculous,'' he sniffed. ``Your soul is far more interesting. Your
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physiology is worth two treatises at most, it is unlikely to be a
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reproducible phenomenon.''
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``Get me candles and wine, at least,'' I suggested. ``It just doesn't
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feel special otherwise.''
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``I thought you didn't drink wine any --'' Masego frowned. ``Wait, is
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this another sex thing I don't know about?''
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For someone raised by a personification of desire, he could be
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surprisingly innocent. No, maybe not innocent. That implied he'd been
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sheltered, which I really doubted was the case. Ignorance born of
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disinterest. His blind spots were usually willing and damnably stubborn.
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``Masego, I'm offended you would even imply that. Get your mind out of
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the gutter,'' I chided him, smothering a grin.
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He looked mighty suspicious, but did not argue. He'd learned the hard
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way not to engage on this particular battlefield. I cleared my throat.
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``So what's the damage?'' I asked.
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His brow creased.
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``You're changing the subject,'' he muttered. ``You always do that when
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you were lying just before.''
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``Calling me a liar is technically treason, you know,'' I pointed out.
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``And that's bad, in Callow,'' he nodded slowly. ``Even if you win.''
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Yeah, Warlock and the incubus had not done wonders for his moral
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compass. It was a work in progress.
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``So?'' I pressed.
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``The Saint of Swords appears to have, for lack of a better term, cut
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Winter itself,'' Hierophant said.
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``That much I'd guessed,'' I said. ``I mean, practically speaking, what
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does that mean? Because I was having a Winter fit before she beat me
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like a goblin stepchild, but after I was back to normal. More or less.''
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``Temporary state of affairs,'' Masego said. ``If you were hoping to
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maintain your hold on the mantle without being subject to principle
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alienation, you were sadly mistaken.''
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I coughed. I supposed it was too much to ask for that the Saint fuck up
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along the same lines as Akua had when she'd returned my full Name to me.
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``I bruised, after the fight,'' I told Hierophant. ``It faded before I
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got back to camp, but it actually hurt for a while. That hasn't happened
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since Liesse.''
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``I've already told you she cut Winter,'' Masego said, sounding
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befuddled. ``The implications should be clear.''
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``Oh, absolutely,'' I lied. ``But I need you to put it in layman's terms
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so that I can explain it to other people. Like, say, if I needed to tell
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Archer about this.''
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``She's actually quite well-versed in arcane dialectics,'' Masego noted.
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``Lady Ranger covered the workings of sorcery very well while teaching
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her to slay mages.''
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I wrinkled my nose.
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``Lucky her,'' I said. ``Black never went in depth.''
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``Uncle Amadeus never did have what could be considered a proper method
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in this,'' Hierophant shrugged. ``As Father tells it, his approach has
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always been having a wide array of tools to employ against enemy
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weaknesses.''
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Which only helped me so much, I thought. Unlike my teacher I did not
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have several decades of scrapping against all sorts of spellcasters
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under my belt. To avoid running into nasty surprises, I'd largely
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delegated that kind of fighting to Masego himself.
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``Juniper, then,'' I said.
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The blind man bit his lip.
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``I dislike using a metaphor, but so be it,'' he said. ``Think of your
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mantle as a cape. Much like your body itself, it is a fixed object in
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the eyes of Creation.''
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``Which is why I can rebuild it from scratch when I lose parts,'' I
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noted. ``Which does happen more often than I'd liked.''
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The mage's head bobbed in agreement.
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``The main difference being that your body is a shape, while your mantle
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is a pattern of power,'' he said. ``That power is, of course, finite.
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Not in the sense that using it spends it, but along the lines that the
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cape remains a cape -- it does not grow or lessen, as a living thing
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would.''
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``So she cut the cape,'' I guessed.
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``Essentially,'' he admitted. ``You might say she cut out a corner of
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the cape. The pattern itself being fixed, the rest of the power thinned
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itself as a whole to recreate that corner.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``Are you saying I have less to call on, now?'' I said.
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``Well, yes,'' Masego frowned. ``Which I believed impossible, as power
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does not simply disappear, but evidently in this case it has. It is not
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unprecedented for heroes to violate Creational laws that apply to
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everyone else, but this is rather blatant even by their standards.''
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``She was a pretty straightforward old bat,'' I grunted. ``So why did I
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bruise?''
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``In the absence of Winter's full influence, Creation assumed you to be
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human again,'' Masego said. ``With all the consequences that apply.''
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I rubbed my forehead, feeling a headache. That made it sound like my
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actual body was basically a trick played on Creation, which was exactly
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the kind of thing I'd been terrified of hearing for the last year. Fuck.
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I \emph{really} wanted a stiff drink right now.
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``So if she cuts me again in that manner,'' I said. ``There'll be a
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window of opportunity where I'm mortal again?''
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``You are still mortal,'' Masego said. ``In the sense that you can be
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killed, at least. I give decapitation a better than half chance of
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working, though for obvious reasons we cannot test this. You would,
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however, lose the ability to reform for a span of time. An increase in
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fragility, though passing.''
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He didn't sound too happy about being unable to experiment with the
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removal of my head from my body, but I'd learned to ignore it when he
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was being an ass by accident. I rose to a sitting position as Hierophant
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got up and began methodically putting away the silvery instruments he'd
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used to have a look inside me. I didn't feel a great need to reach for
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my shirt, folded on a lower table to the side. Being half-naked in front
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of Masego was like baring my ass to a potted plant -- there was no real
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interest on the other side.
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``We're getting close to the pivot for the campaign up here,'' I told
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him, rolling my shoulders to limber them. ``That means a pitched battle,
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and likely revealing our shared trick.''
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Hierophant smiled.
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``Good,'' he said. ``I've been itching to prove the theory.''
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I grimaced. That proof was likely to kill a lot of people, but then
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there was only so far I was willing to go to preserve the lives of an
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invading army. Getting my own soldiers killed when I could avoid it
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wasn't on the table.
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``Before that, I'm going to need you to mess with their scrying,'' I
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said. ``We want them cut off from the Principate when they feel the
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pressure mounting.''
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The dark-skinned man shrugged.
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``It is possible to accomplish,'' he said. ``Their formulas are\ldots{}
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rough-hewn. Easy enough to muddle. Yet doing so will require most my
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attention.''
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``That's fine,'' I said. ``We've got a few more days left until it comes
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to a fight, by Juniper's reckoning.''
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``I could simply use the connection to kill their practitioners,''
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Masego suggested. ``It would require less sustained effort on my part.''
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I breathed out slowly.
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``Do it,'' I said. ``But spare at least five of them. I need them able
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to scry the Principate after the fight.''
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``This ought to be amusing,'' Hierophant chortled. ``They've yet to
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properly master defensive wards against the law of sympathy.''
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``Try not to be too brutal,'' I sighed.
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``An interesting limitation,'' he decided. ``I will take it into
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consideration.''
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Well, at least he wasn't going to draw it out for kicks. Wasn't in his
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nature. That was really all I could ask for. I slid off the table and
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picked up my shirt, slipping it on as he finished his clean-up.
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``I would wish you a good night,'' Masego said. ``But you don't really
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sleep anymore, do you?''
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``Might get some reading done,'' I said. ``Reitz is a pain to learn.''
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``I am pleased you are expanding your horizons,'' he said, patting my
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shoulder awkwardly.
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I couldn't help but smile. He really was trying, wasn't he? I pushed
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back one of his tresses fondly and bade him goodnight. My tent felt
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emptier for his absence, and the books I had piled up in a corner were a
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less than attractive prospect no matter what I'd told Masego. There were
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only so many histories you could read until they all kind of blended
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together. With a battle on the horizon, Juniper would either be sleeping
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or planning -- either way, not to be disturbed. Vivienne was still
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presumably making her way back from her little jaunt in the crusader
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camps and Indrani was both away and probably busy bullying Robber. Larat
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was, well, \emph{Larat}. I dropped into the seat I'd once `liberated'
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from a fae stronghold, savouring the decadent cushioning. It was a
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strange thing, feeling lonely in a war camp still thriving with activity
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even at this hour. I missed Hakram like one of my own limbs, the ache
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having only grown over time. It should perhaps worry me, I thought, how
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much I'd come to rely on him as a touchstone for my sanity. In the
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corner, draped over another seat, the Mantle of Woe waited silently.
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``I grant you leash,'' I murmured. ``I grant you eyes and ears, tongue
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and feet, at my sufferance.''
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Akua Sahelian strode out of her prison with unearthly grace, clad in red
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and gold. I kind of resented that even with a gaping hole in her chest
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she remained stunningly beautiful.
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``It has been some time,'' the Diabolist mused. ``Longer than usual.''
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``I'm not speaking with Hasenbach before things are settled on the
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field,'' I said.
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``Is that my only value to you, dearest?'' she teased. ``Another pair of
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eyes on your foe?''
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``I'm not sure what you're trying to accomplish with the pet names,'' I
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noted. ``It takes a little more than sweet talk and curves to get me
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going, Akua.''
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She laughed, clear as bell. I really had to commend whoever had taught
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her that, it made her sound almost pleasant.
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``You believe I am attempting to use the fact that you are twice
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bloomed?'' she asked, looking genuinely curious.
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Genuine meant nothing, with that one. She could make it sound like she
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actually believed the sky was yellow if she tried.
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``Bisexual, Akua,'' I said. ``The word is \emph{bisexual}. Seriously,
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what is it with Soninke and making everything sound like bad poetry?''
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``Your own people have the unfortunate tendency of using simple terms
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for complicated matters,'' she chided.
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Fluidly, she sat in the seat across from mine. She didn't actually need
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to, of course. She was little more than a soul, and the physical seat
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made no difference to her position. But villainy of the old breed did
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have a way of prizing style no matter the situation, I'd give them that.
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``Darling, to have interest in mere gender is hopelessly rustic,'' she
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sighed. ``Power is the only valuable measure. The superior looks of my
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people are simply a reflection of our ability to have them. The true
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worth of them is \emph{implicit}.''
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``You'll excuse me if I don't take advice in that from the get of High
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Lords,'' I replied, rolling my eyes. ``As I understand it, your take on
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break ups usually involves poison.''
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``For lesser lords, perhaps,'' Akua spoke with open disdain. ``It is
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gauche to use anything but a dagger if there was real affection. Poison
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is a political tool, Catherine. When employed within one's direct
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circle, it represents a lack of faith in one's abilities.''
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``More ritualized murder from the Soninke crowd,'' I drawled. ``There's
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a shocker.''
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``You must learn to discern between enmity and dialogue, if you are ever
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to rule the Empire,'' Akua said. ``Your lowborn origins are not so much
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of a hindrance as you might think, but your Callowan roots mean you must
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never be anything but exquisite at the Great Game if you are to seen as
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more than a violent foreign thug.''
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``I really don't,'' I snorted. ``Want to rule the Empire, for one, but
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also need to learn what you're talking about. Any culture that requires
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regular intervention by mass-murdering demigods to function doesn't
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\emph{deserve} to keep existing.''
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``Then you declare war on the High Lords, my heart,'' Akua said. ``As
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your teacher once desired. There is nothing but horror awaiting you on
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that path.''
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``There we go again,'' I noted. ``I'm not your anything, Sahelian.
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Except killer, I guess, I'll own to that one. It did make my year.''
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``What other heart can I claim, dearest?'' the Diabolist smiled, lightly
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tapping the edge of her wound. ``You have bound me and taken me into
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your service.''
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``You're a tool, Akua,'' I bit out. ``In all meanings of the word.''
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``And you think this is ungainly in my eyes?'' the Soninke laughed.
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``That is only your due as victor.''
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It was an accomplishment, I decided, that even as a powerless shade she
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could still unsettle me. Best not to linger on the subject.
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``Talk to me,'' I said, ``about goblins. You were aiming to be God-Queen
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Bitch of Calernia, you must have taken them into consideration when
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planning.''
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The dark-skinned beauty studied me with a too-wide smile.
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``They have approached you,'' she said. ``The Council of Matrons.''
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``That's overstating it a bit,'' I said. ``But inquiries were made, a
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few months ago.''
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She folded her hands in her lap.
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``And now you speak to me,'' she mused. ``Understandable. Among your
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most trusted, the two goblins are ignorant of the inner workings of the
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Tribes. Those that would know most are your two Taghreb, the bastard and
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the Bishara, yet their understanding will be\ldots{} limited.''
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``Yours will be too,'' I said. ``But you always had a way with digging
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out secrets, so you're worth hearing out.''
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``If you are to understand goblins, dearest, you must first grasp that
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their core nature is that of \emph{scavengers},'' Akua said. ``Never
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have they risen in rebellion when the Empire was strong, and even in
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weakness they are patient.''
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``They don't fight armies if they avoid it, I already knew that,'' I
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frowned. ``Which, considering their size and fragility as a species, is
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kind of a given.''
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``It runs deeper than this,'' Diabolist said. ``Goblins will eat
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anything because they can never assume they will be able to forcefully
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claim what they need. To be one of their lot is to know from birth that
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most other life on Creation is larger and stronger. That death is always
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around the corner. Morality is, to a goblin, at best a distant concern.
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Bare survival always comes first, and in its pursuit they will commit
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acts that would given even a High Lord pause.''
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``Considering the neighbourhood, I can hardly blame them,'' I said.
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``You do not grasp my point,'' Akua said. ``The mindset is not a
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consequence of Praesi aggression. It does not ebb and flow with threats.
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It is the starting point of \emph{every single goblin ever born}.''
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``Yes,'' I said patiently. ``And Praesi think \emph{demons} are a valid
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solution to, well, anything ever. My point is that they're not being
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unreasonable in thinking that way.''
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Akua smiled.
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``You believe they've never dabbled in diabolism?'' she said. ``My dear,
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the Sahelians have known for decades that one of the primary ingredients
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in munitions is powdered devil. Our alchemists never managed to
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reproduce the process involved, but it is a certainty. Now, consider
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that goblinfire burns all things born of Creation. What do you think
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\emph{that} recipe involves?''
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My heart clenched.
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``You can't be serious,'' I said. ``They're using demons? How would that
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even work?''
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``My people have studied both alchemy and diabolism for over a
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millennium,'' Akua said. ``And we have absolutely no idea. Munitions are
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only created in the deepest tunnels, and those that take part in the
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process never see the light of day. There is a reason goblin mages are
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so rarely seen among the Legions: as a rule, they are sent below and
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never return.''
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Well, shit. Had I been throwing around burning demon juice at my enemies
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this whole time? Fucking Hells, that was going to take a while to
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process. I leant back into my chair.
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``All right,'' I said. ``So the Matrons are not to be trusted.''
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``This does not mean that they cannot be used,'' Akua said. ``They never
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plot uprising unless they believe the Empire is on the verge of
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collapse, and that their own people might be drawn into the matter. This
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implies Malicia's hold over the Tower is not so solid as one might
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believe. The Matrons would not risk fighting an Empire united behind its
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Tyrant.''
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``Ashur sent a war fleet to seize the Tideless Isles,'' I told the
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shade. ``What few reports I've managed to get on that say they're
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hitting anything near the coast that doesn't have walls.''
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``No a threat to be underestimated,'' Akua agreed. ``Yet as long as the
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cities hold, the might of the Empire is not overly affected. Mere
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foreign incursion would not be enough to move them. Has your teacher
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returned to Praes since our\ldots{} lively debate?''
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``You mean that time where you murdered a hundred thousand of my
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countrymen,'' I said very mildly. ``At which point I ripped out your
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fucking heart and Black wrecked your doomsday weapon.''
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``Yes,'' Diabolist lightly said. ``That. Quite the eventful day.
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Whatever did happen to the wights, anyhow?''
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I did not reply. I simply applied my will, and her hand rose up to
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plunge into the wound. I had her tear at her own insides, patiently
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listening to her wretched screaming as she clawed at herself. After a
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while, I withdrew my will.
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``I tend to disapprove of torture,'' I said. ``But we're all cutting
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corners these days, aren't we?''
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She stayed silent, panting.
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``Your \emph{victims} were released and buried,'' I said. ``Even if I'd
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somehow been able to stomach keeping them, half of Callow would have
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risen in rebellion at the news. Now, prove yourself useful. Black has
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not returned to Praes since I carved out your soul and made it clothing.
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What do you get from that?''
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``There has been break between him and the Empress,'' she got out. ``She
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would have him killed if he returned, or at least that he believes
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this.''
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``Unless they're running a game,'' I pointed out. ``Getting the
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opposition out in the open to cut them down in one stroke.''
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``If that were so,'' Diabolist said, ``the Matrons would not have
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approached you. They must have reason to believe the split is not
|
|
feigned.''
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|
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|
Mhm. That made sense. And it meant that, down line, I might be able to
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find an ally of convenience within Praes.
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|
|
|
``Back in the box, Akua,'' I said. ``And if you ever again speak so
|
|
casually of what you've done, I'll sit down with Masego to figure out if
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shades can lose limbs.''
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|
I withdrew all I had granted her, and she vanished into thin air. I
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|
closed my eyes, tired in a way sleep could not remedy.
|
|
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|
This battle wasn't even done, and already I had to prepare for those
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|
that would follow.
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