321 lines
19 KiB
TeX
321 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-65-impact}{%
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\chapter{Impact}\label{chapter-65-impact}}
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\epigraph{```lo and behold, I have brought peace to the Empire.''}{Dread Empress Massacre, after ordering the Burning of Okoro}
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Three things happened in swift succession.
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The first was that I formed a handhold of ice to hoist myself up. I
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wasn't sure what would happen if I stayed standing in the middle of a
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blanket of Night, but it was unlikely to be pleasant. The second was
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that, even as my fingers closed around the handhold, it began vibrating
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and exploded with a scream. The third thing, unfortunately, was that I
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fell back into that same blanket of Night spread over the roof. Feet
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first, which turned out to be a stroke of luck. The moment they made
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contact with the Night they\ldots{} dissolved, like they'd been dropped
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in acid. I dimmed my mind, turning into mist, and slithered away towards
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the edge of the roof. It was difficult to think, in that state, and my
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situational awareness was shit -- as was made clear by the fact that I
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neither saw nor heard coming the spear of Night that caught me in the
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side. Or as close to a side as I could have, while made of mist. The
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second unpleasant surprise of the day -- night? -- unfolded as the spear
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forced me back into solid form where it struck and sent my human-like
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silhouette to go tumbling over the side. Into a pack of dzulu, though
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that didn't prove to be much of a problem.
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Night spread over the street with a soft whisper and they dissolved
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screaming even as I fell.
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I formed a spike of ice jutting out of a house's sidewall and landed on
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it for exactly a heartbeat before it broke with a scream, but it'd been
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enough to allow me to situate myself. A pair of translucent blue wings
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ripped out of my back and I flew upwards, finally getting a look at the
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drow that'd ambushed me. There were three, all holding so much Night
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within their thin frames they darkened their surroundings just by being
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there: the air around them looked like near-invisible wisps of smoke was
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spreading through it. The two on the sides looked like they could have
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been twins, their deep grey skin and whip-like faces identical save for
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the crescent scars they had on opposite cheeks. Their eyes were pure
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silver, save for the black pupils. Long curved blades in hand, they
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watched me rise with identical bored expressions. If those two were
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strong, holding enough Night to fill a pond, then the drow between them
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was a lake. Taller than either of them, its faces was covered with thick
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burned flesh in a horrid mask that denied even the appearance of lips.
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There was no trace of anything but silver in its eyes, the pupils merely
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a darker shade of it.
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``Urulan?'' I called out.
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``Cattle,'' it mildly replied in Crepuscular.
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Well, that took care of the introductions. I'd go out on a limb and say
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the flankers were rylleh, because with that much power they could hardly
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be anything else. Mighty Urulan wielded a long staff of glass, and
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without bothered with any more banter pointed it at me. Droplets of
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Night formed around me in a ring-like pattern, rippling with power, and
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I definitely wasn't sticking around to find out what that did. I'd
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already noticed that the flesh dissolved by the earlier blanket had
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taken longer than usual to reform after I'd returned to physical form,
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and that'd been the \emph{opening} volley. It could be it'd opened with
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its strongest trick, true. But when had I ever been that lucky? The
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wings folded against my back and I dropped like a stone, which didn't
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help nearly as much as I'd wished. The Night droplets rippled, and every
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single one of them lanced out with a beam of the same stuff downwards.
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The firing angle had been well-judged: I'd be falling right into the
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thickest knot of beams if I didn't act. My wings spread again, but I
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held back a curse when they both began vibrating and broke a heartbeat
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later. Neither the rylleh had moved, but their silver eyes shone
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brighter. Time to improvise, then. Mist-form wasn't getting me out of
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this, so the time for delicate works was over.
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I formed a large cube of ice under me, feeling Winter's influence begin
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to creep and promptly shunting it off, and even as the beams of Night
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tore into the frost I parted it around my falling form to go straight
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through. A whisper came to my ears, the sound of another Night blanket
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forming below me, and the cube began to vibrate. Distraction first, I
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thought. I ripped out a chunk of ice from the bottom of the cube with an
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exertion will, transmuted it into mist and sent it slithering to the
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left. The ice ceased vibrating a pair of Night spears shot out, and
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there was my opening. I fell under the itself-falling cube as the beams
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of Night shot through it, muscles tightening as I caught it with a grunt
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and tossed the entire thing at the drow. I couldn't spare the time to
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look if I'd made impact, instead forming wings again and plunging into a
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somewhat-controlled descent that had me landing in front of the three
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drow. And, most importantly, away from the Night blanket. They'd already
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shown me it did not discriminate in its effect, they shouldn't be able
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to use it when I closed distance.
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By the time my bare feet hit the ground -- my boots were sadly gone for
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the foreseeable future, \emph{again} -- all that was left of the ice I'd
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thrown was a rain of mist and shards. I'd not even seen how they'd
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gotten rid of it. With me in the open, the earlier distraction had come
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to an end: all three drow had their eyes on me. \emph{The rylleh first},
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I thought. Urulan would be less dangerous without the backup. I darted
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towards the left one, body centre low, and made it three feet forward
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before they unleashed their arsenal. Darkness fell like a curtain,
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robbing me of my sight, but my ears still worked just fine. It was the
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only reason I heard the low whistling sound of Night on the move,
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dropping to the floor and feeling something scythe just above my body. I
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rolled forward just in time to avoid the spike of Night that came down
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in the other working's wake, letting out a sharp breath. If they'd timed
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that just a little better, I would have taken it right in the spine.
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Another step saw me coming out of the curtain of darkness, which was no
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comfort as I saw my foes for only a heartbeat before a whisper sounded
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and a globe of Night began forming around me.
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If that was the acid trick again\ldots{}
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I realized, dimly, that if this went through entirely I might actually
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die. I'd treated the Everdark like a training exercise, sometimes almost
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a game, but I'd been swimming in the shallows of this sea. There were
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monsters in the deeps that would make these look like imps. I close my
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eyes and let Winter loose. Frost formed all over my body, rapidly
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thickening and then shooting out. They had a globe of Night, I had a
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globe of ice. In a pissing contest of raw power, I'd bet on me every
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time. The Night ate into the ice but I kept pouring out Winter, its
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delighted laughter sounding softly in my ears. At first it devoured
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quicker than I made, but I dug in my heels and truly let loose. It
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became even, and I felt my blood turn cold as I dug even deeper. Like
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skin bursting for being filled too much, the globe of Night came apart
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under the pressure of the ice and I launched out through the opening I'd
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made. For a moment I hung in the air, seeing two curved swords rising to
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point at me and Urulan itself leisurely leaning on its staff. I shaped
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an ice javelin and threw it at the sigil-holder, just quick enough to
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loose it before shackles of Night formed around my wrists and ankles. I
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turned to mist, or at least tried to. The Night shackles thickened and
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nothing happened. Urulan gently tapped its staff against the ground and
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the javelin shattered into mist, the rylleh moving as it did.
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Their stances were perfect, muscles coiling as they simultaneously
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thrust their blades into my sides. They went through the plate, bit into
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flesh, and then I felt my organs began to vibrate. I grit my teeth and
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hardened my insides, but that actually made it worse: it was like a
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sharper full of metal scraps went off in there. Everything was shredded,
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and chunks of my ribs and flesh splattered the floor as they withdrew
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their swords. Urulan pointed its staff at me, and tissue already
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knitting itself back together stopped. \emph{Stupid}, I thought.
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\emph{Stupid, stupid}. I'd already known there were drow who could heal
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themselves like I did, but I'd never entered my mind that the Mighty
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could have tricks that would inhibit my own ability. They just needed to
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keep taking me apart, and sooner or later they'd get me into a state I
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wouldn't walk away from.
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Then an arrow went through my left wrist, breaking the shackle holding
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it on the way, and I promised myself I was going to kiss Indrani next
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time I saw her.
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``My turn,'' I growled.
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My mangled wrist flicked, forming a blade of ice, and I carved through
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my other shackled wrist before offering my ankles the same courtesy. The
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rylleh wreathed their blades with Night and stabbed into my open torso,
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pinning me down with what felt like a similar trick, but they really
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should have gone for the arms. I caught the flat of one sword and ice
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crept up it, shattering three fingers before the rylleh dropped it and
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retreated. There was a whisper and another globe of Night began forming
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around me, which given my current lack of feet was something of an
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issue. So I took care of it, forming feet out of ice and throwing myself
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out of the jaws of death. The second rylleh was not so lucky, and died
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screaming as it dissolved inside. I picked its blade out of my ribs,
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dropping it down, and finally my torso began putting itself back
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together. I stomped down and mist billowed out, covering all three of
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us, though not before I noticed the rylleh who'd lost fingers had
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already regrown them. Still, I'd learned another weakness to the
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Night-acid trick. When it began forming, it could not be stopped. Urulan
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would not have lost one of its lieutenants otherwise.
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I shed off the last of my ice-forged feet and padded softly on the
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stone, feeling the drow through their warmth where my eyes found no
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purchase. The sigil-holder had only barely moved -- it'd retreated a
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bit, nothing more -- but the rylleh was circling around me. Could they
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sense Winter, as I could sense the Night? The powers were not so
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different. No, I decided. They would already have struck otherwise.
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Their senses might be sharper than those of other drow, though, so I'd
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have to be careful. I'd begin with Urulan's last helper. I crept forward
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quietly, circling it as it believed it was circling me, and only struck
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when facing its back. I could use mist, I had learned, if it was of my
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own making. It was just another facet of my mantle. And so I condensed
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it into ice over the rylleh's body, spooking it enough it dropped down
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into a puddle of shadow -- and that was when I struck. A spear of ice
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forced it back into drow-form, and by then I was upon it. That transient
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moment where it stopped being shadow and started being a drow again?
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They were nearly blind during that, having to reorient all their senses.
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I didn't give it the time: my blade went through its throat, severed the
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spine, and I ripped off the head afterwards just to make sure it
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wouldn't heal. Amusingly enough, it did. Both separate parts closed up
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with fresh skin, though it remained quite dead.
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Urulan spoke a single word in Crepuscular, and just like that I was back
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in the deep end.
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I'd wondered why it was being so prudent, after being so aggressive
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since the start. Because it was preparing a major working, as it turned
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out. The mist had robbed my enemies of their sight, but it had also
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given the drow materials to work with -- something I only realized was a
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very bad idea when my own mist began burning at my flesh. It'd turned
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the whole fucking thing into acid, hadn't it? My eyes were the first
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thing to go, but I could feel the mist eating at me all over. Worst, I
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couldn't just reform my way through it: the Night slowed that down, and
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the acid was eating at me quicker than I healed. This was worse than
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fighting Praesi mages, I thought. Those might be able to make wards, but
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they weren't nearly this quick or vicious. Considering Urulan had likely
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been at this for centuries it only made sense, but that absent-minded
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consideration did nothing to help me out of my current predicament.
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Hardening my flesh, which was difficult when not contained to smaller
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body parts, did little to stop the problem. Slowed it some, but not
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enough to turn the tide. Gritting my teeth, I turned into mist myself
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but was forced back into human-form not even a heartbeat later. With
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fresh acid burns all over to show for it.
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Fuck. Right, if I couldn't flee it then I had to move it. I'd lost all
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of my plate by now, which was infuriating but not as much as the fact
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that most my face muscles were bare and falling apart. I was melting
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like snow in summer sun. I formed of ice a large windmill and set it to
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spinning, which drew back the mist closest to me and bought me a moment
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until Urulan clapped down its staff and broke it without a word. Still,
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thinned was good enough for what I'd intended. Wings ripped out of my
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back for the third time today and I rose out of the mist. The problem,
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now, was that I was literally flying blind with someone waiting to take
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a shot at me. I couldn't just keep rising, that'd be painting a target
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on my back, so I zig-zagged erratically as my face slowly grew back.
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Even if I got hit, I thought, by the time I got back on my feet I'd be
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ready to fight again. Unfortunately, Urulan agreed. The sound of mist
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billowing forward came to my ears, and I realized it was pursuing me
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with the cloud. All right, desperate measures then. I flipped directions
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and went crashing straight towards the ground, hoping to\ldots{} ah,
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there it was, a rooftop. My blood and flesh made a mess on the tiles,
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but I punched my way through and landed in a sprawl below.
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Screams, people running away. Nisi? They hadn't tried to fight anyway. I
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wildly sprayed ice where I'd crashed through and crouched close to the
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floor. I just needed to wait this out, I thought, though every passing
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moment where the mist hadn't caught up was ratcheting up the tension in
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my frame. My eyes finally formed again, and I let out a relieved sigh.
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I'd made it. Through the ice-patched hole in the roof I could see the
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acid mist was surrounding the building, which was my first warning sign.
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Urulan wouldn't have bothered unless it intended to flush me out. Night
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flared above me, a beacon to my eldritch senses, and I cursed under my
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breath. It wasn't just going to flush me out, it was going to shattered
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the damned thing and drown me in acid again. I wouldn't be able to dodge
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that. I had to convince it to strike elsewhere instead. I wove glamour,
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two separate workings. I sent an image of myself through the ice,
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wreathed in a blue halo that would serve as cheap explanation why she
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wasn't melting. Too cheap, too obvious. A look to the side revealed
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there was an open door to my left, with five corpses where the nisi had
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tried to flee and been caught by the mist instead. Through there I sent
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another illusion of me, this one discreet and melding with the shadows.
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Almost invisible. She ran for the other on the other side of the street.
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It evaporated a moment after she entered in a burst of Night that shook
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the entire Crossroads and collapsed the wall of the house I was really
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in.
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The glamour had been dispersed by the hit, and I dispersed the one above
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as well. Crouching low behind loose stones, I wove one last glamour: my
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own skeleton, slowly growing back its flesh. Spikes of Night fell down
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around it in a circle and there was a swell of power. Biting my lip, I
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slowed the regeneration to a crawl in the glamour. I wasn't sure if that
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had been what the trick was intended for, but I'd have to guess. Urulan
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approached slowly, its glass staff pointed at my fake body and quietly I
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formed a sword. I waited until it was standing over my illusion, staff
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raised, before I attacked. Had it been its senses or a discrepancy in
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effect that tipped it off? I might never know, but when I was a mere ten
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feet away the sigil-holder turned and cast a silvery gaze towards me. We
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were done with the posturing, and so I struck. Step forward, feint low
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to the left and then a spin -- its staff my sword and I smiled. It went
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away quickly, when the staff did not break and its arm did not lower. I
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was, I could feel, slightly stronger. But not enough to hammer it back,
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and then the staff \emph{rippled}. My sword blew up, shredding a few
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fingers with it, and the tip of the staff hit me in the stomach.
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I rocked back and it struck upwards smoothly, breaking my chin before
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whipping back down and going for a thrust into my throat. I spun on
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myself, feeling the staff pass a hair's breadth from my neck, and formed
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another blade to swing at its extended shoulder. It spun with me, as if
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the two of us were dancing, and fluidly stepped away when my strike at
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reached the apex of its arc. The tip of the staff lightly touched the
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sword, and just like that it fucking blew up again. The fingers I'd just
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bloody grew back were shredded again, to my mounting irritation. I made
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a third blade along with what was clearly more than my third set of
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fingers of the fight. Irksome as this was, it was likely better than
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what would happen if Urulan pulled the same trick on my actual body. The
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drow spoke something in a language other than Crepuscular, sounding
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amused, but I didn't recognize the language. It sounded close to Reitz,
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but the vowels were even more of a debacle. Some older form, maybe? Some
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Secrets floating around the Night were much older than the current
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Calernia. Most of them, actually.
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``Didn't catch that,'' I said, and attacked.
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I didn't start with a feint, this time. It was clearly a better fighter
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than I was, the only way I'd win was by cheating. I angled my sword for
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its throat and swung with brute force and speed. It withdrew just out of
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reach, bending backwards, and then bent forward. One hand came off the
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staff to tap my side and I had to bite back the scream. It'd found a
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vein, and was pouring the Night-acid in it. I did the only reasonable
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thing, and froze my own blood so stop it from spreading. It caught the
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wrist of my sword hand and forced it to continue the arc as it drew back
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the staff to better bring it down.
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``Mistake,'' I calmly said.
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I turned the wrist it held to mist, and wrenched it out. The wisp of
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wrist moved under my will, slithering up its nostril and sinking into
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the brains behind them. All it took after that was a twist of will, and
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I shredded what lay inside its skull. Mighty Urulan dropped the ground,
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and I stood panting. I'd didn't bother recover the flesh I'd turned into
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mist, making another hand instead. Didn't want the old one back, after
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where it'd been. My flank still felt like it'd been lit on fire, but I
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carved out the infection and breathed a sigh of relief. It was only
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then, covered in blood both my own and that of my enemies, that I
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realized I'd been naked ever since the acid mist trick. I'd just been
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too angry to notice, and it wasn't like I felt the cold anyways. I
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looked down at the drow's corpse and shrugged. Might as well steal its
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clothes before I cut its head off, then.
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Throwing Mighty Urulan's severed head in the middle of its own warriors
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ought to have a slight effect on enemy morale.
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