465 lines
24 KiB
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465 lines
24 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-31-spectation}{%
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\chapter{Spectation}\label{chapter-31-spectation}}
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\epigraph{``You're a masterful schemer, it's true. Let's see if that helps
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any in the alligator pit..''}{Dread Empress Malignant I, holding court}
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They all knew me well enough to leave me alone with my thoughts as I
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tried to get a handle on what I'd learned. Well, maybe not Diabolist,
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but she was better at picking up on those things than any of the others.
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I occupied my hands with mindless work, taking a whetstone to my sword
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even though it was quite sharp enough already. \emph{In the grander
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scheme of things, Catherine, I'm the petty warlord of a backwater
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kingdom.} Black had told me that once, a long time ago. We'd been
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speaking about the gnomes, and he'd been putting in perspective the
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truth that a second-rate power in Calernia would be considered less than
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dust in the greater world beyond this continent. I was learning now that
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we were all pieces in a greater game even here. There was no other real
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way to understand the conversation between the two abominations, one
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still learning and the other emergent. The Bard had been considered old
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even in the days of Sephirah's fall. Gods, how long had she been around?
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I did not consider myself all that inclined to fear my enemies,
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admittedly sometimes even when I should have. But as the whetstone slid
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against the edge, I admitted to myself that for the first time in ages I
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was genuinely afraid of an opponent. Heroes, even those who could tread
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all over me, I could cope with. There were ways around power, around the
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laws of the Heavens. They could be tricked and twisted. But something
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like the Wandering Bard? She might have set in motion the sequence of
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events that would lead to my death decades before I was even born. If
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Black was to be believed, she could not be killed and even if she
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somehow was anyway she'd only return with a different face. There was no
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telling what she knew or how she knew it. There was no telling where she
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was and what she was up to. How could an entity like that be beaten? The
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sharp song of stone on steel held no answers, soothing as it was.
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I'd believed that I understood the game unfolding across Calernia. That
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I could guess, if not know, the motives and intents of the other
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players. The Tenth Crusade, the Empire and the League: the three powers
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on the board, as far as the nations of mankind went. My attempts at
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seeing through the Dead King were now revealed to have been little more
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than presumption, but light had been shed on more than that mistake
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alone. There was more going on behind the crusade than faith and
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ambition. Hasenbach might have refused my terms because of political
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considerations, as I'd previously believed, or she might have been moved
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by a whisper in her ear years ago that only now clicked into place. I
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could no longer trust any of the actors to act according to the rules
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I'd believed they obeyed, because I'd been blind to half the war even as
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I fought it. Which now took me to the very place I'd been struggling to
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avoid since I took the crown: I had to take measures to insure the
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survival of Callow while in the dark about the objectives of all the
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other forces in play.
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Fuck, for all I knew the Bard was interceding in my favour. I'd had
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strokes of bad luck, sure, but exceedingly good one as well. I wasn't
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unaware that Black had been arranging things quietly in the background
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so that opportunities would land in my lap ever since I became his
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apprentice, but there were things beyond his ability to arrange. The
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Bard had been in the thick of it, at Liesse, when I gained back the
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aspect I lost and snatched a resurrection out of angelic hands. Had she
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been beaten there, or had that restoration been the purpose all along?
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Hells, had she pulled strings for me to win just so I'd fuck up with
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Akua the following year and Second Liesse got the Tenth Crusade going? I
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could go mad, trying to find the hand of the Wandering Bard behind every
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turning point of the last few years. But then could I really afford
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\emph{not} to look for it? If I kept my eyes closed, I'd lose. Or
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whatever else she had in mind for me.
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She'd admitted to the Dead King that he'd been too clever in his scheme
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for her to be able to crush him, but that'd been centuries and centuries
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ago. When she was still learning her Role. I had to face the possibility
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that even if I made all the right choices I might still end up broken
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because the Bard had shaped the choices I'd be able to make so she
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couldn't possibly lose. I felt shards of stone pass through my fingers,
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and noticed with a sigh that I'd crushed the whetstone without even
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meaning to. That was my only one, too, I'd have to borrow Hakram's from
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now on. I picked up my scabbard with a sigh and sheathed the longsword.
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So much for any of this calming me. There were no easy answers to be
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had. No plan to form out of thin air. Should we even finish the journey
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to Keter? I had a better notion of what I'd be letting out, now, and it
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was so much worse than I'd expected.
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I would not have flinched at making a deal with a cunning undead Dread
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Emperor with a little more foresight, but Neshamah was something else.
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He'd been arranging the death of realms at a time where most the
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continent could barely use sorcery -- and he'd had millennia to plot his
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next moves. I very much doubted that the man I'd seen would call it
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quits after breaking the Kingdom of Sephirah and conquering his hell.
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There would be more. And I had been sent an envoy, I thought, because he
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had deemed I could be useful for that purpose. My fingers clenched, then
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slowly unclenched. I'd get nowhere, stewing in my own thoughts like
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this. The pot had been freshly steered, and I was too close to the
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matter regardless. I'd speak with the others after my head was cleared.
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Besides, for once under the restlessness I felt the call of exhaustion.
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Not physical, though. The boon of knowledge from Masego seemed to have
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tired me out mentally.
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I dragged myself back to camp, waved away the concern of the others and
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crawled under the covers by the fireside. I'd still be just as fucked
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tomorrow, so forcing myself to go through the song and dance now did not
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appeal.
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Sleep found me swiftly.
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---
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I woke to the sound of soft voice, after too short a rest. The orations
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and murmurs of the shard could not be heard, which meant our `night' was
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in full swing. My mind still felt sluggish but at least I was no longer
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wandering from one idle thought to the next, treading the same hopeless
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circle. I kept my eyes closed and my breathing even, at first out of
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laziness but the reason was swift to change: the people speaking were
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Thief and Diabolist. Neither seemed aware I was now awake.
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``- no longer need to sleep,'' Akua said. ``You need not burden
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yourself, I can keep watch alone.''
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Thief chuckled.
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``And you believe you're trusted enough for that, Sahelian?'' she said.
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``I never took you for such a hopeful soul.''
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``To keep quiet in the face of danger would be utterly mindless
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treachery,'' Diabolist said. ``I am, after all, dependent on Catherine
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to walk the world.''
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``Unless someone else takes the cloak,'' Vivienne said.
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``I have use to the Woe,'' Akua said. ``Use enough I was allowed this
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larger cage. There is no guarantee another bearer would have such
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purpose for me. A poor gamble to make.''
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``You seem to think you can talk your way into a semblance of trust,
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Wastelander,'' Thief snorted. ``Best you discard that notion early. It
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will be less irritating for all involved.''
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``Fascinating,'' Diabolist murmured. ``Your distaste of me has not ebbed
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in the slightest, and still here I am. Yet you've been charged with the
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duty of being Catherine's conscience, which means she would not have
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eased the leash without your permission.''
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``Her Majesty, to you,'' Thief bit out. ``Sweet nothings and Praesi
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titles won't get you anywhere with us, Sahelian. We all remember what
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you are.''
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``Liesse,'' Akua mused. ``The sum of all I am, in your eyes. You might
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not be wrong to think so. It was the pivot to who I am today.''
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``The greatest butcher of our time,'' Vivienne said.
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``From a highborn, that would have been a compliment,'' Akua said, a
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smile in her voice. ``Not so here, of course. I imagine that is how
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you've made peace with the nature of the demand I be brutally snuffed
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out when my usefulness ends.''
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It was an effort not to stiffen. Named senses would have given me away
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to Vivienne for sure, though I wasn't sure how Diabolist functioned in
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that way.
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``Not my call to make, that,'' Thief shrugged. ``I'm the spymistress,
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not the queen.''
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``A poor parry,'' Diabolist chided. ``You already know I suspect the
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inner workings of the Woe and your role within them. It would have been
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more effective to feign conflict between you and Catherine over the
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matter, allowing her to position herself as my salvation while you bayed
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for blood.''
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There was a long moment of silence.
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``You're so caught up in your Praesi games you don't even see your
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blinders,'' Vivienne sighed, and she sounded fairly convincing to me.
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``Must be the old madness. You certainly don't sound like a woman who
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thinks she has a sword hanging over her head.''
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Akua laughed softly.
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``My dear Thief,'' she said. ``If I cannot carve a path to survival with
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such early forewarning, I \emph{deserve} to be destroyed. That is the
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measure by which I am to be weighed. I've always found it amusing to
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hear your people speak of the Wasteland's ways as `blinders', truth be
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told. As if bereft of them we would then see Creation as you do. Do you
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truly believe Callowans to be the only lucid people in the world?''
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``My tutors taught me that's called a false equivalence,'' Vivienne said
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conversationally. ``The pretence that the obvious failings in the
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customs of a people that slaughter each other and their neighbours for
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sport every other decade are somehow the same as the flaws in the
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customs of Callow. We're not perfect, of course. But I'd rather deal
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with the fucking elves than you and your fellows, Sahelian. The
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long-ears might be murderous assholes, but at least they stay in their
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forest. Your people make your problems everyone one else's problems
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too.''
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``So they \emph{did} teach you rhetoric,'' Akua said. ``Good, this would
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have been quite boring otherwise. You would have served as poor moral
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compass, were you unable to argue.''
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``There's that most sacred of villainous traditions at work,'' Thief
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said cuttingly. ``Cutting one's losses and bailing from the fight.''
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``You speak as if you were not a villain yourself,'' Diabolist said.
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``I am what I am,'' Vivienne shrugged. ``Do you expect anguish and
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conflict out of me? I believe in the decisions that led me here. I would
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make them again. If all it takes to be estranged from the Heavens is
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refusing annihilation and submission, then I have no use for the Gods
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Above.''
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``You would be surprised,'' Akua said, ``at the number of Empresses that
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spoke those very same words.''
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``You're trying to draw parallels,'' Thief said, growing irritated. ``I
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don't know why, and frankly I don't care. Might be some old eastern
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monster was just like me, though I very much doubt it. So what? There's
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no angle there for you to get mercy from me, Sahelian. Your little talk
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about redemption is absurd: there is nothing \emph{redeemable} about
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what you did and what you are. Your execution has been stayed. That is
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as much of a victory as you will ever win, Diabolist. Look that truth in
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the eyes. Wallow in it. That fear is the least of what you are owed.''
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``The true nature of a woman,'' Akua said amusedly, ``is only ever
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revealed after she has been prodded. It is an interesting circle, the
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Woe. Your role in it has been the hardest to grasp.''
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``Has it?'' Vivienne said. ``And to think they said you were clever.
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Lost a few feathers up there along with your heart, I see.''
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``Oh, you are the spymistress of the Kingdom of Callow,'' Diabolist
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dismissed. ``It is no secret. But that is a function, not a role.''
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``Am I in for a story about how Praesi understand namelore so well?''
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Thief drawled. ``Clearly, we should all take advice from the people who
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have been one stabbing away from brutal civil war from the moment their
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empire was first spawned. Please, magical wise spirit, share the secrets
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about continent-burning instability with me. I have so much to learn
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from you.''
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``Since you insist,'' Diabolist agreed with pleasure so perfect-sounding
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it just \emph{had} to be fake. ``The Deadhand is the least complicated.
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His people have been carefully pruned by the Tower into being a soldier
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caste for the Empire over a hundred reigns, and as the culmination of
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that edifice he serves as the right hand of a powerful warlord.''
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``Hakram is the least complicated of us,'' Vivienne said slowly.
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``Hakram. Your insights are truly far-reaching, Diabolist. Reaching in
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the wrong direction, sure, but that can't \emph{possibly} be a first for
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you.''
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``I cast no aspersions on the man himself,'' Akua noted. ``I merely
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state that his Name and Role are no deep secret. Hierophant, however,
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was an unexpected variable. Apprentices have transitioned into Names
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other than Warlock before, but usually when both are living
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simultaneously a succession through murder is the outcome.''
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``An awkward but kind and sweet man with no interest in power did not
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end up murdering his relatively loving father for said power,'' Thief
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said. ``However will we solve this confounding mystery, Sahelian? I just
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don't know.''
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``There is no known precedent to his Name,'' Akua continued without
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missing a beat, and I was reluctantly impressed by her ability to just
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plow through that level of scathing sarcasm. ``Consequently the core
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tenet of it had to be understood from the man himself. Fascinating as
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his upbringing was to study, the pivot seems to have occurred after he
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met Catherine. It was the calibre of the opposition that forged him, you
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see. Choirs and demigods. There was need for one who could understand
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and oppose those entities, and so the \emph{Hierophant} came to be.''
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``You're forgetting demons and a highborn murderous witch with delusions
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of grandeur,'' Thief helpfully provided. ``Admittedly the witch only
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ever seemed good at killing innocents and spending her subordinates like
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copper at a fair, so she might not qualify as true \emph{opposition}.''
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``The Archer did seem like an odd fit, at first,'' Diabolist mused. ``No
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real fetters to Catherine's ideals or expectation of comradeship as
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shared inheritors to the legacy of the Calamities. Ranger, infamously,
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left the Calamities on the eve of the Conquest. And pupils of the Lady
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of Lake have a reputation for being incapable of playing nice with
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others, be they heroes or villains. It could not merely be the fighting
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that drew her -- there is no lack of foes near Refuge.''
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``It's almost entertaining how much thought you're giving to the actions
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of a woman whose notion of a plan is dumping all her rations in a well
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and filling her bag with identical cheap booze flasks so she won't run
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dry,'' Vivienne said. ``But by all means, tell me everything about the
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intricate considerations that are behind Indrani joining a band of
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people that allow her to drink, fight and sleep around as much as she
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wants. It ought to be enlightening.''
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Wait, was that why Archer never seemed to run out? Fucking Hells, I'd
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been wondering why she was being such a magpie about taking food from
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Masego's plate recently.
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``Peers not in direct competition,'' Akua said. ``That was what the
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Archer found. A luxury previously beyond her reach. And from her
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addition the Woe gained both an executioner and a field Named capable of
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independent action for long stretches, which they sorely needed. Hers is
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the thinnest bond by far, and I do not expect it to keep her bound past
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the end of the crusade.''
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``And that leaves me,'' Vivienne lightly said, though there was an edge
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beneath. ``Don't disappoint now, sagely collar genie. What has your
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profound discernment taught you of my hidden nature? I'll go first: deep
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down, I always wanted to be a shoemaker. Shoes are the foundation on
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which rests civilization, Diabolist. We are literally barefoot without
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them. You ever think about that, in between ruminations about how you
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tried to conquer the world and got your heart ripped out instead? Food
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for thought.''
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``You were a late addition,'' the shade said. ``And in some ways the
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most interesting. You were, after all, previously a heroine. I should
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have realized which the wind was blowing when she succeeding at turning
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one of Above's own, in retrospective. The weight on the scales had grown
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too uneven, for all my labours. But we were speaking of you, Vivienne
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Dartwick.''
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``Thief,'' the Callowan hissed. ``There's only a few people that get to
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use that name. Don't ever count on being one of them.''
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``Thief indeed,'' Akua said. ``Not, for all your skills, an assassin.
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That was what first drew my interest. Archer filled that purpose, to
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some extent, but you seemed a more apt candidate. Yet your knives did
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not grow bloody after your turning, nor your Name change to reflect
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it.''
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I heard Vivienne go still as stone. Diabolist had touched something
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there, though I didn't know what.
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``Looking back, the void you filled seems more obvious,'' the shade
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mused. ``You are Callowan. The only one of the Woe who shares
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Catherine's ideals to any deep extent, as Adjutant would likely adapt
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without true challenge to a change in her priorities. After she seized
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Winter's mantle in full, you became the measuring stick. It was
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simplification to call you a moral compass, I will confess. You are not
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a particularly moral woman, Thief. But you do love your homeland, and
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have kept some of the qualms you were taught as a child. You are a
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restraint, and through your function as spymistress a provider of
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choices. In some ways, one might argue your perspective is the crucible
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through which Catherine remakes herself every time she is confronted
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with greater strife.''
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``You know,'' Vivienne said, ``I used to wonder why you were playing the
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tamed hound nowadays. Oh, you're bound. That's part of it. But you have
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to know that all the playacting and sweet whispers you've been up to are
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not strictly necessary. Being useful and not actively offensive to
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everything we stand for would have gotten you this far anyway. But that
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last tirade of yours? It says a lot more about you than me. Because it's
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about Catherine more than me or the Woe. And it has to be, doesn't it
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Akua? Because you ended up in the box, and there has to be a reason for
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that. She has to be special in some way to have beaten you, otherwise
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you just \emph{couldn't stand it}.''
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``I lost, my dear Thief, because I prepared for a battle against my
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rival and faced instead her power wielded by the Black Knight,'' Akua
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said softly. ``The mistake in this was mine, and I do not deny it. And
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still, at the height of my wrath, I fought to a standstill a coalition
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of all Callowan arms of note and every Imperial army west of the Blessed
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Isle. Led by three Calamities and the full muster of the Woe. My fall
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was just, for every fall is just. But it would be a mistake to think
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\emph{Liesse} is the origin of the laurels on her brow. That victory was
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hers alone in that she was the last woman standing.''
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``So you're trying to make her the Empress,'' Vivienne mused. ``Because
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it's fine to have lost, if she was fated to climb the Tower all along.
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You were a necessary part of the story. You \emph{mattered}. And who
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knows, maybe you'll manage to be Chancellor if you play the game well
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enough.''
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``She will climb the Tower, Thief,'' Diabolist said with iron certainty.
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``She cannot stomach any of the remaining claimants and will not suffer
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to leave Praes to its own devices. You speak of fate as some invisible
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force, but it is a simpler thing: fate is character. And it is in hers
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to cut deep into her bones for her ambitions.''
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Thief laughed.
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``She's not in charge because she's been chosen, Sahelian,'' Vivienne
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said. ``Gods, certainly not because she's chosen either. Or even because
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she has power, for that matter.''
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``Is it the power of love, then?'' Akua said, a touch drily.
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``There's plenty of people who care about Callow,'' Thief said. ``And if
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I learned anything from the Woe, it's that caring doesn't fill granaries
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or run a court. She's certainly in the right place at the right time
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with the right amount of power to get things moving, but that's not
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really what matters. See, the thing is that she \emph{acts}. Sometimes
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those actions are mistake, like going after the fae and leaving you to
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plot under your rock in Liesse. But, most of the time, she improves
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things. Just by a little bit. And she draws other people who act with
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her. You think that's some unearthly trait, like she's some force of
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nature, but that's Wasteland talk. The Tower's the centre of the world
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for you, and the most important person in the world is the one that
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climbs it.''
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The other Callowan paused.
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``Except she's not,'' Vivienne said. ``The exemplar of whatever fucked
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up Praesi virtues you want to sing about, that is. She's kind of petty,
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her temper's foul and if Hakram hadn't stepped in she'd probably be a
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drunk. She ogles every pretty face that shows up even if they're our
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enemies, and she cannot for the life of her shut the Hells up even when
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she \emph{really} needs to. She's not unique or irreplaceable, but even
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if you think otherwise that doesn't really matter -- because she's part
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of something greater than her. She's just the rock that started the
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avalanche, Sahelian, and she did that by doing the most Callowan thing
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there is: after the invasion is done, you get up and get back to work.
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Others will come to help you, because a kingdom's people and not
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\emph{banners}.''
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None of this was exactly singing my praises, but then that wasn't
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Vivienne's wheelhouse. She'd gotten the part that mattered, anyway. That
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we weren't supposed to stay in charge forever, that we were just a
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stopgap until Callow could handle itself on its own. The purpose wasn't
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to rule, it was to hammer away at Calernia until it was in a place where
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there was no need for someone like me.
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``You think that'll make her Empress,'' she laughed. ``You're thinking
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of her like some sort of tormented saint that'll take up the burden of
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keeping the lot of you in line for the greater good. You want to know
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what Praes is, for us? Another mess to clean up. Like the Tenth Crusade
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and the Dead King and the heroes. You're not owed anything. You're not
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different or unique, just another line on a long list. And that's your
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fate, Diabolist. That's your fucking \emph{character}.''
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Akua stayed silent for a long time.
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``It is a pretty world you speak of,'' she finally said. ``We will see,
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in time, which one of us is right.''
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The silence spread again, and though I could not hear the shade move I
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suspected she was looking away.
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``Good performance,'' Thief suddenly said. ``But, Diabolist, if this is
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all of it I'm honestly disappointed. Was that really the whole ploy? I
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mean, Merciful Gods, you've used this one before. If this were a
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fairgrounds play I'd catcall and ask for my coppers back.''
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``Pardon me?'' Akua said, voice painted with genuine surprise.
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``Trust,'' Vivienne mused. ``That's what fucks you every time. Like, for
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example, believing I'd be so ashamed about ordering you to rip your eye
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out repeatedly I'd never mention it to anyone. I did, Sahelian. And you
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know what she told me? That it makes no difference, if the same thing
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reforms repeatedly. Pain doesn't increase in the slightest.''
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``I don't follow,'' Diabolist said.
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``You panted and you screamed,'' Thief said. ``You pretended it hurt,
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because it made me feel like I'd accomplished something while you were
|
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actually getting your way. You `lost' so I'd lower my guard. Like you
|
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did just now. Getting into an argument then throwing it, just so you'd
|
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be less of a threat in my eyes. Chastened little Akua, reconsidering her
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choices. Gods, you really are a snake.''
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``If I had done such a thing,'' Diabolist said, tone even. ``What
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purpose would telling me you are aware serve?''
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``I'm surprised you don't know,'' Vivienne Dartwick lightly said. ``I
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get to see you pretend you're not furious. Sweet dreams, Sahelian. Our
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little chat's over until the next time you need your chain yanked.''
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