449 lines
20 KiB
TeX
449 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-34-abyss}{%
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\chapter{Abyss}\label{chapter-34-abyss}}
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\epigraph{``You could gather the stuff of all the Hells and still find less
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Evil within than lies in the soul of a single man. The worst monsters
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are always those that chose to be.''}{King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand}
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``So,'' I said, ``before we get into it. What are the odds that Athal is
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our good friend the Hidden Horror wearing someone's face?''
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I couldn't exactly say I suspected that because it was what I'd do --
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though if Masego was to be believed, I was technically wearing a people
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cloak courtesy of Winter at all times -- but come on. Of course the
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friendly servant `gifted' to me was going to be a trap. Sure, it was
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possible Neshamah considered himself above those kind of shell games.
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People who murdered kingdoms for power did tend to have very particular
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notions about their importance and what they would lower themselves to
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do. On the other hand, it was becoming painfully clear that we had no
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fucking idea what the Dead King was really up to.
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``I find it unlikely,'' Akua said.
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The Woe and the murderer -- the one not part of the Woe, I supposed it
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was necessary to clarify -- weren't nearly enough to fill out the
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absurdly large bedchamber that had been given to me. It was larger than
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the entire Rat's Nest had been, and furnished so richly if Robber had
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been around I might have considered looking away while he got sticky
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fingers. Pawning the stuff in Mercantis could have probably earned me
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enough to equip a few hundred legionaries.
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``Possession would be difficult, if not outright impossible,'' Masego
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conceded. ``Bespelling the man for control is a different matter. It is
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not impossible anything his senses come across will be extracted and
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sifted through afterwards.''
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``I hear one for mind control and soul cutting,'' I said, putting a
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jaunty tone to my rising horror. ``Anyone else feeling like putting
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their silver at work?''
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``I bet he put some kind of fucked up devil bug in the man's brain,''
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Archer mused. ``You know, one he can look through?''
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``One reason I'm glad I don't really sleep anymore, straight into the
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pot,'' I added, openly sickened. ``I'm waiting on the rest of the
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gallery for counteroffers.''
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``I'd be surprised if there weren't enchantments everywhere taking our
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conversations straight to the Dead King,'' Vivienne noted. ``Athal
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himself might simply be a red herring.''
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My eyes flicked to Hierophant, who shrugged.
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``There are no active wards I recognize, save those surrounding the city
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and the Hall of the Dead,'' he said. ``Though everything in Keter seems
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touched by sorcery to an extent. The protections I set around us should
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be sufficient to prevent eavesdropping, or at least very difficult to
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breach without my awareness.''
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``Reasonable paranoia, making three,'' I sighed. ``Hakram?''
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``Negotiations in good faith,'' Adjutant said calmly.
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There was a heartbeat of silence.
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``Playing the long odds, I see,'' Akua said amusedly.
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The orc's hand rose to still the incoming tide of responses.
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``We assume it a matter of course the Dead King is intent on crossing
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us,'' he said. ``I would ask you this, however: does he truly
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\emph{need} to?''
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``From an objective perspective?'' I said. ``Probably not. He can get
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what he wants out of us fair and square. That said, he's a villain.
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`Need' takes a different shade when it comes to those.''
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``Yet we are not dealing with Diabolist, it's true,'' Vivienne slowly
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said.
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I looked at Akua from the corner of my eye. She did not seem offended in
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the slightest. She might not even have been listening, scarlet eyes
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still thoughtfully considering Hakram.
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``I do not advocate for blind trust, or even trust at all,'' Adjutant
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said. ``But let us not dismiss the possibility of forthright dealings
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from the onset, either. Salting the grounds prematurely is not to our
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advantage.''
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``He'd bleed us all in a heartbeat, if it got him anything useful,'' I
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pointed out.
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``Is this not a recurrent trait in all our allies?'' Masego asked,
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bemused.
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It was a little depressing that I couldn't really deny that.
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``Point taken,'' I conceded, passing a hand through my hair. ``Which
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neatly takes us to our next point of order. Today's lecture: what we
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want from the Dead King, why, and what we're willing to give in
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exchange.''
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Hierophant raised his hand. I eyed him darkly. Had he even ever sat in
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classroom?
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``Yes, Masego,'' I said.
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``Is this a mandatory lecture?'' he politely asked.
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Archer smothered her convulsive laughter into Hakram's shoulder, the
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wretch.
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``Yes,'' I patiently said. ``Yes it is.''
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The blind sorcerer looked a little miffed, but I pressed on before he
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could get it into his head to argue.
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``For those of you who forgot, or weren't paying attention,'' I said,
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glancing pointedly at Indrani whose lips were still twitching, ``Callow
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is about to have around eighty thousand Proceran and Levantines soldiers
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led by heroes invading through the Red Flower Vales. We need them, very
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badly, to be headed elsewhere instead.''
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``Arguable,'' Diabolist noted.
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``Akua Sahelian, arguing that slaughter \emph{is} the solution,'' I
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said. ``We are all blindsided by this turn of events.''
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I bit my tongue afterwards then forced myself to look at the others in
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turn. We'd begun light-heartedly, and it was my own fault.
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``I know levity is how we've kept our heads on straight,'' I quietly
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said. ``As much as Named can have those, anyway. But this is serious.
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We're at a crossroads, and ahead are dead ends all around. The crusaders
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are in it to the hilt, and there's no compromise to be had with them.
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Callow's on the chopping block for the coming world order and we're out
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of allies and alternatives -- except for the Dead King. This is the deep
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end. So please, let's act like the situation is as grim as it is.''
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That sobered the room. I didn't particularly enjoy doing it -- it kept
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the pressure off my shoulders to treat it as laughable, even when we
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were all deadly serious. But I could not stomach making it a game even
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on the surface when things had gotten this undeniably bad.
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``The Dead King is our counterweight,'' Adjutant said, breaking the
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silence and continuing my thoughts. ``If he breaches Proceran borders up
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north, the armies at our gate will be either thinned or entirely
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recalled to deal with him.''
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I nodded my thanks to him.
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``That said, we don't want him to actually take Procer,'' I said.
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``Aside from the horrifying loss of life that would entail, we'd be
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trading the hound at our door for a much larger tiger. So we need him to
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be enough of a threat the Tenth Crusade turns north, but not so strong
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the First Prince can't win. I believe that's possible to accomplish, for
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two reasons.''
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``The heroes,'' Akua said.
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I nodded in agreement.
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``The Heavens have already assembled their footsoldiers,'' I said.
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``They're on the field and spoiling for a fight. Crusades have reached
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Keter before, so we know the Dead King's not invincible when there's
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enough Named thrown at him. Baited out of the Kingdom of the Dead, he
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might be vulnerable in a way he isn't while in his seat of power.
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That'll draw them like carrion does flies. It's an objectively better
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victory for Above to get rid of Neshamah than to topple us -- the folks
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upstairs will push for it.''
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``And our leverage,'' Vivienne finished.
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``To our understanding, the Dead King is stuck in his `Serenity' unless
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he's either attacked or invited out,'' I said, inclining my head towards
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her. ``Our current working assumption is that we've been called here
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because we can provide that invitation and we've been judged
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sufficiently desperate to actually go through with it.''
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Which, in all fairness, we were. The only person in the room not already
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in on the plan to a full extent studied me intently before speaking up.
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``You intend to add clauses to that invitation,'' Akua said, eyes
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hooded. ``Not obvious ones from an outside perspective, lest the First
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Prince find them out and consider herself to have options other than war
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against the dead. Limitation of strength? No, without a full assessment
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of his forces that would be too risky. Ah. \emph{Territorial
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boundaries}.''
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My fingers clenched. I knew there were few people out there who were
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both clever enough and knew me well enough to get to the conclusion so
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easily. It still worried me how little time it had taken Diabolist to
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see through me.
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``Three principalities,'' I said. ``Hannoven, Cleves and Hainaut. That
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would be the enforced limit of his invasion. Hannoven is fortified
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enough it will be hard to take, and as Klaus Papenheim's own territory
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it will strike bone with both the First Prince and her foremost general
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if it comes under siege. The other two principalities would give the
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Dead King foothold across the lakes, and so rally every Alamans of high
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birth in the Principate to the war. He's dangerous enough a neighbour
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with natural boundaries in the way.''
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``Preferably, we would want those principalities empty of civilians when
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the Kingdom of the Dead advances,'' Hakram said. ``Their armies
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retreating as well, to strike back in strength when reinforced by the
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crusader hosts. Once war erupts up north, the balance of power of the
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Tenth Crusade shifts enough we have room to manoeuver.''
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``Sounds like a clever piece of diplomacy,'' Indrani shrugged. ``But
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you're not dealing with some prick of a prince, Cat. You sure the Hidden
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Horror is going to be willing to put ink to that deal? To put
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\emph{oath} to it?''
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``Our game's crooked,'' I admitted frankly. ``But as far as we know,
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it's also the only game in town. He'd make appreciable gains through
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this deal, even if he went in expecting us to betray him. It's not the
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finest offer he'll ever get, but it's the one on the table. And if he
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wanted to stay behind his walls, well, he wouldn't have sent an envoy in
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the first place.''
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Akua stirred.
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``A warning, if you would,'' she said.
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I glanced at her and nodded.
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``All of this rests on uncertain foundations,'' Diabolist said.
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``Namely, that invitation his needed for him to escape his Hell. This is
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speculation, not established fact.''
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``I'm aware,'' I bluntly said.
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``Then follow the thought to its logical conclusion,'' Akua said. ``If
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no invitation is needed and he still sent an envoy to you, what is the
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Dead King truly after?''
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``We're going into guesswork,'' I noted. ``And blind guesswork, at
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that.''
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``If you try to ascertain objectives purely from his perspective, yes,''
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Diabolist said. ``But that is not the full sum of the information we
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have. He sent for \emph{you}, specifically. You are not the first
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cornered villain, Catherine. Yet you warranted an envoy where others did
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not. We can garner some knowledge from studying what sets you apart from
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other villains.''
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I met her gaze, unblinking.
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``And what would that be?'' I said.
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``Two facts seem most important,'' Akua said. ``First, you are now the
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crowned and recognized head of a traditionally Good kingdom. Ensuring
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you remain in power might represent a chance to tip the scales of the
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Game of the Gods on Calernia.''
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There was a cheerful thought. The Pilgrim had bought into the notion,
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anyway, so there might be something there. We had no indication that the
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Dead King's game relied on the balance of power, however, so the grounds
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were shaky.
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``And second?'' I asked.
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``You are Queen of Winter in all but name,'' Diabolist said. ``Fae are
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sworn to you. You are capable of granting titles and assembling a
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court.''
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Adjutant's brow creased.
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``Titles,'' Hakram gravelled. ``It's about the titles, if Winter is
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relevant at all. If you start handing them out, our potential strength
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escalates faster than anyone else can match. All the heroes capable of
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fighting are already out there, and the crusade still hasn't broken
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through. The Heavens are currently winning, but not by wide enough a
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margin to hold up. They would have to put a full hand to the scales to
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compensate, and if they do\ldots{}''
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``Below gets to do the same,'' Vivienne quietly said. ``It'd start a
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vicious circle. The Heavens push again, Below matches, and all the while
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the fire spreads. Winter's the match to tinder. If Arcadia really was
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the sketch for Creation, then bringing Winter into this is like stealing
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the pieces of an earlier match to play in the most recent game.''
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``I haven't been granting anyone titles,'' I flatly said. ``Precisely to
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avoid this kind of complication.''
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``If you did, however,'' Akua said. ``What entity is arguably the most
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powerful on the side of Evil?''
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We all knew the answer to that. An argument might have been made for
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Praes, back in Triumphant's day, but that era had passed.
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``So if it all goes up in flames, he's likely to be involved when Below
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makes its play,'' I completed grimly. ``He'd want to put his finger to
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the pulse before it comes to that, and have assurances in place for when
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the arrows start flying.''
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``Indeed,'' Diabolist smiled pleasantly. ``Which is quite the
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interesting development, don't you think? Whatever the truth of his
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intent, we have something that is desired. What we succeed at making of
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that is all that matters.''
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Gods forgive me but in that moment, even after all she'd done, I was
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glad she was out of the box.
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---
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The white-robed servants came to help us prepare for the audience
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several hours before twilight, but I dismissed mine. Hakram was quite
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enough for me. It was soothing, to have him help me into my armour. A
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ritual just for the two of us. The carapace of steel grew steadily
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around me, until all that was left to add was the cloak around my
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shoulders and the crowned helmet that had already needed reforging
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several times. I only put them on after the others were readied, the Woe
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in the fullness of their regalia. There was sense of solemnity to it.
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Archer's ceremonial garments were not significantly different from her
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usual, merely trading her usual leathers and silver mail for ones we'd
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had tailored for her in Laure, but it was oddly nostalgic to see her
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with the face covered by a hood and scarf again. Hierophant was all
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flowing black robes and silken eye cloth, somehow turning the simplicity
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of it into a statement of might. Adjutant and I were steel from head to
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toe, a frank admission of the nature of what we wrought. It was Thief
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that was barely recognizable. Her short hair had been styled and
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coiffed, going from haphazard to carefully arranged, and her prowling
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leathers were traded for Callowan court garb: a dark green overcoat
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bordered in brocade, over a long high-necked white tunic going to her
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knees. Soft and well-polished boots went up to her calves, with only a
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simple sheathed knife at her hip serving as a reminder of her Name.
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Diabolist remained as I had made her, somehow wearing her ghostly
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garments as if she'd been born to them.
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Athal was our guide to the Hall of the Dead, along with several others
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Hosts. The pale man was subdued today. Not cowed, but well aware of the
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gravity of his duties. It was not often one was granted audience with
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the Hidden Horror. The inside of the spire was not as I remembered from
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the shards, everything within having shifted. Dimly, I could trace the
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pattern of our journey in my head. It all revolved around the royal hall
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now. The heart of the tower, where the portal and the man who'd made it
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awaited us. The antechamber to that hallowed place seemed filled with
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statues, at first glance, but a second revealed otherwise. The fifty
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silhouettes standing still were not stone or the remembrance of kings.
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``Revenants,'' Archer said, and none of us replied.
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\emph{Heroes}, I thought. \emph{Dead heroes, and perhaps villains as
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well.} Ripped out of whatever ancient age they had fallen, still garbed
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in the armaments of their defeat. Men and women of every stripes,
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knights and sages and wizards. An honour guard that none but the Dead
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King could boast. We passed them by in uneasy silence. Athal bowed low
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as we stood before the bronze gates of the hall.
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``We part ways here, Great Majesty,'' he said. ``What lies within is not
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for the likes of me. May you find all that you seek, and leave a friend
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to the Serenity.''
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I nodded at him, then took a deep breath. A memory flicked back to the
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front of my mind, quick and silver-bright. Too clear for a mortal mind.
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A thumb running up my cheek as the lesser god smiled
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``You are in need of a reminder, Catherine Foundling, of the difference
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between bravery and ignorance,'' I murmured to myself, with a bitter
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smile.
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Another king, that one, that I had only ever beaten on his own terms.
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Something to keep in mind when facing the king ahead.
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The bronze gates opened, and we went forward to meet with the King of
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Death.
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``Her Majesty Queen Catherine Foundling, Tyrant of Callow, Sovereign of
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Moonless Night, the Black Queen.''
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The announcement rang loud and clear in the hall as I advanced, coming
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from a dead man's throat. The others were announced behind me.
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\emph{Lord Hierophant, Lord Adjutant, Lady Archer, Lady Thief. The Shade
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of Splendour.} The words washed over me, made faraway by what I
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witnessed. No portal there, not today. A tall dais with a throne of
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bones, with a long table set before it. From the tall rafters hung
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banners from all the great hosts of Calernia. Old and faded. Some still
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keeking of blood long turned to dust. Yet the greatest of all banners
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hung behind the throne, the deep purple of the Kingdom of the Dead's
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heraldry set with crown and stars. None of it mattered, compared to the
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thing that sat the throne. It was a man, or perhaps just the mockery of
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one. Not living yet not dead, so thin bones could be made out through
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the parchment-thin skin. Pale locks of hair tumbled down messily,
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reaching down to the elaborate purple robes decorated with gold chains
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and riotous jewels that together twice earned a mortal king's ransom.
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The thing was sprawled lazily, the ancient crown of Sephirah on its
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brow, watching us with sunken yellow eyes. A curtain of power hung
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between us and it, unseen but thick against the roof of my mouth.
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\emph{Illusion}. The Dead King was not within the hall. It was not
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Neshamah's body I was seeing, either. Not his first one anyway.
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``I greet you, Black Queen,'' the abomination said in a rippling voice.
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``And confirm by my own tongue extension of hospitality to you and
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yours.''
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I bowed my head.
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``We are duly grateful of the offered courtesy, Your Majesty,'' I
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replied. ``And offer guest-gift as a sign of our own.''
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Hakram strode forward, face serene. It had been trouble, finding
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something that was a worthy gift yet easy to carry through Arcadia. So
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many of the things that would have pleased the monster would have been
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dangerous to us. In the end, it'd been Ratface that came through. He
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knew people that know some people in Mercantis, and for a cost that made
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me wince they'd nabbed something of worth from an auction. Adjutant
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removed the silken veil from the cushion he carried, revealing a small
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shard of black stone.
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``A piece of the Tower as it once stood, before twice being cast down,''
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Hakram announced.
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A white-robed attendant, this one without a heartbeat, came forward to
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take the cushion from his hands. It was offered to the Dead King, who
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took it in hand and studied it with a thin-lipped smile.
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``A sliver of greatness,'' he said. ``And a reminder of frailty. A
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worthy gift, Black Queen.''
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I bowed my head in silence. He set the stone back down on the cushion,
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and it was spirited away by the servant as he returned those wicked
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yellow eyes to us.
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``Sit,'' the Dead King invited. ``You are my guests, after all. It would
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not do for you to remain standing. Would you partake of my table?''
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``We would be honoured to do so,'' I lied.
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``I am pleased to hear it,'' the thing that had once been Neshamah said.
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``We have much to speak of, and it would make me uneasy to do so while
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your throats are dry.''
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I forced a smile.
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``I confess,'' I said, ``that your invitation roused great curiosity in
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me. Talk is much welcome.''
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``And yet you wonder, what are we to speak of?'' the abomination
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chuckled. ``Allow me to shed light.''
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Yellow eyes met mine.
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``We must speak of that most ancient trade of kings, Black Queen,'' the
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Dead King said. ``\emph{War}.''
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