474 lines
22 KiB
TeX
474 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-apostates}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Apostates}\label{interlude-apostates}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-apostates}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Apostates}
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\epigraph{``There is greater power in severing than binding, in releasing
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than capturing. The most fundamental act of will is to cut.''}{Translation from the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to
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the young Dead King}
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Thalassina was old.
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Some scholars believed it to be the first Praesi city, though Wekesa's
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own studies had hinted at Kahtan holding the title instead -- the three
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oases of its site had been a natural draw on the nearby Taghreb tribes
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of the Devouring Sands. Still, it had undeniably existed longer than
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Ater or Wolof which in these modern days tended to be considered the two
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greatest cities of the Empire even though Thalassina's population was
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near the double of Wolof's: three hundred thousand inhabitants, give or
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take a few thousand. The city's fortunes tended to rise and fall with
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the state of the sea trade that was its lifeblood. It was almost
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absurdly wealthy when there was peace with Ashur and the League, growing
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fat off tariffs on grain and luxuries imported from foreign shores. When
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the ships ceased coming, however, its revenues dwindled and the large
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population became a stone around its ruler's neck. As it was the
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Empire's primary sea port, Emperors and Empresses had meddled with its
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ruling line's affairs more than they had any other's. Most of that
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meddling had proved to be costly blunders. Thrice there'd been attempts
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to raise an Imperial Fleet, two swatted down by the Ashurans sailing in
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to torch everything and the last made a failure by one of the foremost
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captains rebelling and going pirate. On occasion, however, reasonable
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notions had emerged.
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Shatha's Maze was one of that rare breed.
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Named after the ancient Warlock who'd built it, it'd been raised at the
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order of Dread Empress Maleficent the Second. She had prudently assessed
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that the victory she'd won against the Thalassocracy at sea had forged a
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very fragile peace, and that improving the defences of Thalassina before
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hostilities resumed was necessary. She'd set her Warlock to the task,
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opening up the treasury without qualms at one of the high historical
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points of Praesi wealth. The Maze was therefore unsurprisingly rather
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extravagant, but also one of the finest ward-based defensive arrays
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Wekesa ever had the privilege to witness. It had only failed twice over
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the last six hundred years, both times to treachery instead of superior
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sorcery. Naturally, knowing this, the first thing he'd requested of High
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Lord Idriss was a thorough purge of any uncertain elements in the city
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followed by heavy restriction of who would have access to the Maze from
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now on. The ruler of Thalassina had taken the opportunity to thin the
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ranks of his vassals with imperial permission eagerly, and though Wekesa
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suspected most of the dead had been rivals and not liabilities as long
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as the liabilities were dead he hardly cared. With that preventative
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measure taken care of, he'd sat down with his husband and his son to
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plan how they would turn a defensive ward array into a death trap.
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It was a fascinating problem. Shatha's Maze warded the waters to miles
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out of the city, except of course it didn't: it was, after all, one of
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fundamentals limits of sorcery that wards could not be made over water.
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Shatha's solution had been to anchor the workings in corals,
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artificially raised to crest over even the tallest waves. The Maze was
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not a single array, though it might seem like it at first glance. It was
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over three hundred small, self-contained wards extending only over their
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coral tower. The ancient Warlock had been brilliant, Wekesa would admit.
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Aware that she could not cover the waves with sorcery, she'd made it
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instead so that the effect would come from people looking upon her
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works. Some wards confused perception, leading ships to crash into
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spikes of rock beneath the surface. Others attacked minds directly by
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sowing madness and uncontrollable fury into all who saw them. Yet more
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contained direct sorcerous effects like flame and lightning, triggered
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by will or proximity. The full lay of the Maze was known only to a few,
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though he'd obtained a version when agreeing to Alaya's favour. It had
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been illuminating, teaching him that sufficient time and manpower could
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create what was effectively an array with no single element linked to
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another. There was, naturally, a catch. Thalassina was a trade port: it
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needed foreign ships to be capable of passing through in peace time.
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Shatha's Maze needed to be activated, from twin underground facilities
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dug beneath the banks the adjoining coasts. The rituals involved were
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both long and expensive, as they essentially required three hundred
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separate ward empowerments done in quick succession. The Kebdana had
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been rulers of the Thalassina for the better part of five centuries and
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so ensured that they had a contingent of powerful and well-educated
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mages ready at all times to carry out that onerous duty, but those
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practitioners were unfortunately highly specialized because of it.
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Useless when it came to the kind of theoretical legwork needed to design
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a ritual meant repurpose the Maze, and Wekesa had neither the time nor
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the inclination to educate them. So be it. They'd chosen to waste their
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Gift on being beasts of burden, he would treat them as such. With Masego
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and Tikoloshe at his side, he hardly needed the help anyway. His son was
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arguably the finest magical theorist of his generation, now that Akua
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Sahelian was dead, and his husband had at least three millennia of
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first-hand observation of sorcery to call on. Even a devil as ancient as
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`Loshe had difficult proving truly creative, but his treasure trove of
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knowledge was priceless.
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With such aides he should have no trouble, or so theory went. The
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practicalities proved to be slightly different.
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``Sueton was a hack,'' Masego insisted. ``Barely half his experiments
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are reproducible.''
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``This particular phenomenon is one of them,'' Wekesa replied flatly.
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``Under controlled circumstances,'' his son objected. ``If his results
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are this shoddy, the theoretical framework behind them can only be
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called flawed. There's no guarantee the explosions will cascade if we
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can't accurately predict the nature of the release.''
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``Petronian sorcery \emph{has} a degree of unpredictability,'' Tikoloshe
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noted. ``Not a subtle folk, the Miezans. Never prone to using a dagger
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when a spot of genocide would work.''
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``We cannot use Trismegistan formulae for this large a spell,'' Warlock
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said. ``The precision required is beyond our workforce, and to be blunt
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we lack the power.''
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``Then make a master array and feed it with secondary rituals,'' Masego
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said. ``If we begin accumulating power now and centre it on our own
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manipulation, Trismegistan sorcery remains feasible.''
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``That'd require at least six straight hours of direction on both our
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parts,'' Wekesa said, frowning as he calculated. ``With absolutely no
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margin of error either individually or in concert. That's even riskier
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than going Petronian.''
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``It puts the possibility of failure in our hands instead of leaving
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Creation to roll the dice,'' his son grunted. ``That can only be called
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an improvement on that abomination you call a plan.''
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``Perhaps a more diplomatic word could have been chosen, Masego,''
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Tikoloshe chided.
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His son's beautiful glass eyes swivelled under the eye cloth, brow
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raising.
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``A thing that causes distrust or hatred,'' Masego quoted. ``That is the
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definition. I assure you, it earned both from me.''
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``Redundancies,'' Wekesa said, ignoring the salvo. ``If your issue is
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with the unpredictability, we set several triggers. It will make it
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difficult to predict the exact sequence, but-''
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``- it won't matter if their fleet is deep enough in the Maze,'' his son
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finished thoughtfully. ``Perfection is the enemy of functionality.''
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Wekesa blinked in surprise. Where had he learned \emph{that}?
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``This all rests on the Ashurans being unable to interrupt your little
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game,'' Tikoloshe reminded them. ``They will have hundreds of mages
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trained from the cradle.''
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``Trained in Sabrathan sorcery,'' Wekesa said, the sneer implied.
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Oh, there was no denying that the Thalassocracy's practitioners were the
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foremost in their fields. It was simply that those fields were so very
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narrow. The Gift was only cultivated two ways in Ashur: healers and ship
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mages. Ashuran mage-doctors could take the slightest ember of life and
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turn it into haleness, making Praesi attempts at healing look like the
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fumbling of children. Their sailing-mages could quiet storms or craft
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them, steal sunken ships from the depths and ride the tides. Yet outside
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that particular set of specialties, they were rank amateurs. Unlike
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Praesi they'd never outgrown the sorceries taught them by their
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forebears across the Tyrian Sea. They refined but did not innovate, in
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large part because the Sabrathan theory of magic was so badly
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antiquated. Victory was the mother of stagnation, and after wiping out
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the Miezans in the Licerian Wars the Baalite Hegemony had gone from
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triumph to triumph. Embracing stagnation just as deeply as the empire
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they'd overthrown. They'd not been forced to revisit the foundations of
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their sorcery for centuries, after the rest of the world had moved on.
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No, Wekesa thought little of Sabrathan magic. Or of any other that
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emphasized something as mundane as natural talent over skill and
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intellect.
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``Narrow in scope, yet no less effective for it,'' Masego said. ``A
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hundred oxen cannot raise a pen but they \emph{can} trample it.''
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``At best they'll be able to save a third of the fleet by submerging
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it,'' Warlock flatly said. ``Most of their practitioners lack the
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ability to use the spells, and their methods are ill-suited to
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rituals.''
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``They could interrupt the sequence by detonating parts of it in advance
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with their own sorcery,'' Tikoloshe said. ``It has been done before.''
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``Then we harden the wards from the outside, thin them on the inside,''
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Wekesa said. ``It will be tedious, but as an additional safeguard it
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will serve well enough.''
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``Someone will need to be among the corals,'' Masego disagreed. ``To
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start the sequence again if it stalls. Your schematic works in
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principle, but only if the possibility of Ashuran intervention is
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removed.''
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Warlock's lips tightened. He was not wrong. Much as he held Ashuran
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sorcery in contempt, dismissing it outright would be a blunder. There
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were no heroes here to muddle the mixture, but mortal ingenuity could be
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just as dangerous. The trap could not be sprung twice, it would wreck
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the Maze. Which meant if too few Ashuran ships were sunk, Thalassina was
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stripped of its finest defence while the enemy remained on the prowl.
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Alaya had made it clear that if the city fell there would be major
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unrest in the Empire. Nok being put to the torch was one thing, its
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ruler was by far the least influential of the High Lords and a former
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Trueblood besides. If the Dread Empress of Praes failed to shield even
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her oldest allies, however, there would be waves. Much as Wekesa
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despised the notion of having to stay in this city to protect idiots, he
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despised even more the prospect of having to put down a rebellion
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against the Tower.
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``Agreed,'' he finally said.
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``Good,'' Masego said. ``I'll require some accommodations on my perch,
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which I assume will need the permission of High Lord Idriss before being
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made.''
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``No,'' Tikoloshe immediately said, before Wekesa could speak the word
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himself. ``Absolutely not.''
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His son cocked his head to the side.
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``Father is the best fit to oversee the ritual from the city,'' he
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pointed out. ``It is primarily his design. What follows is obvious.''
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``The risks are much higher out there,'' Warlock said. ``If the sequence
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fails-''
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``- I will handle the matter,'' Masego interrupted. ``If you believe
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your plan to be sound, any risks posed to me are irrelevant. If you do
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not believe your plan to be sound, this conversation is an exercise in
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pointlessness.''
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``You are perfectly capable of overseeing the ritual yourself,'' Wekesa
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said. ``There is no need to discuss this further.''
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``I am capable,'' his son agreed. ``But I am not the \emph{most}
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capable. Logically speaking-''
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``\emph{Enough},'' Warlock bellowed. ``I will not allow you to stand in
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the middle of a fucking Ashuran fleet while we turn centuries-old wards
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into munitions. You are staying in the city, and that's the last we'll
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speak of this.''
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Heat spread across the room, carrying the faint scent of brimstone. His
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temper had loosened his hold. Slowly, Masego straightened in his chair.
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\emph{He's almost as tall as I am}, Wekesa realized with muted surprise.
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Grown slender from his stay abroad, though his long braids and the
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trinkets woven into them made him seem larger. Robes stark black, eyes
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veiled, he looked like a stranger. A man grown instead of a boy.
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``There has been quite enough of not speaking, I would think,''
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Hierophant coldly said. ``And my patience has officially \emph{run
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out}.''
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---
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They did not react to his words, not visibly at least.
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But Masego felt the weight of what he'd spoken fall over the room and
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was glad of it. He'd hoped they would tell him themselves. That he
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wouldn't need to drag it out of them, that maybe they had a good
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\emph{reason}. He'd grown, since leaving to fight in the Liesse
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Rebellion. Learned so much about himself and Creation around him, so
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much the revelations had carried him beyond the Name of Apprentice. If
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they'd recognized that, acted on it\ldots{} It wouldn't have bound the
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wounds, no. Not entirely. But it would have mattered. Been measured on
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the scales of the betrayal. Instead here he was, expected to sit and
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pretend like they'd not \emph{lied} to him his whole life. No, worse
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than a lie. They had hidden the truth after raising him to seek it above
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all else. What possible justification could there be for that?
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``Masego,'' Papa said cautiously, ``I do not know what-''
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``You know,'' Masego said. ``Or suspect, at least. I have been to Keter,
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fathers. And oh, the things I witnessed on that journey. The secrets I
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glimpsed.''
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``The Dead King lies,'' Father calmly said.
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His eyes were dark mirrors, revealing nothing.
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``So do you,'' Hierophant hissed. ``He, at least, does not pretend
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otherwise.''
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``You don't understand,'' Papa sighed.
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``A common consequence of being kept in the dark,'' Masego harshly
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replied.
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``The dark,'' Father murmured. ``The right term, used incorrectly. You
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were kept \emph{from} the dark, my son.''
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``There is nothing in this world to fear save ignorance,'' the blind
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mage said. ``You taught me this, once. The lesson should have been
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tailored to your deeds, if you did not want to be called to account for
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them.''
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Father leaned back into his seat, then drummed his fingers against the
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tables.
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``What do you think death is, Masego?'' he asked.
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``Religion, now,'' the younger man snorted. ``The resort of those
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without answers of their own.''
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``Let us speak of two Dread Emperors,'' the Warlock said. ``One called
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Malignant, third of the name. The other called Revenant.''
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``The same man,'' Masego said. ``Famously so.''
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Malignant the Third had killed himself through ritual and risen from the
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grave a year later, dethroning his successor and reigning again under
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the name of Dread Emperor Revenant. There'd been some rebellion when
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it'd become clear he intended on reigning forever, the first of the Wars
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of the Dead. He vaguely remembered Revenant being used as the basis for
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the legal argument that later excluded undead from claiming the Tower,
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though there'd been some other barely more interesting wars in between.
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``I knew both,'' Papa said. ``And believe this to be untrue.''
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He watched the incubus, looking for a lie and finding none. But they
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were both much better liars than he'd thought, weren't they?
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``What came back shared much with Malignant,'' Papa continued.
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``Memories, thoughts, opinions. It was also fundamentally \emph{other}.
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It was\ldots{} a tracing of the man. A prefect imitation, yet still only
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that. An imitation.''
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``An interesting matter,'' Masego said. ``Yet utterly irrelevant to this
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conversation.''
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``No.~No it isn't,'' Father quietly said. ``Because in one of the
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deepest vaults beneath the Tower, there is the most complete version of
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the Kabbalis Book of Darkness in existence. A third of the full text,
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and not contiguous. And it was there Malignant learned the foundations
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of the ritual that turned him into Revenant.''
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His fingers clenched. All these years, the knowledge had been there. In
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his father's memories, yes, but also \emph{written on parchment}. And
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they'd kept it from him. The oldest, most important instance of
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apotheosis in the history of the continent and they'd hidden it away.
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His teeth clicked together so strongly his mouth almost bled.
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``If you were under the impression this helped your case,'' Masego
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replied in a furious whisper, ``allow me to disabuse you of that
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notion.''
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``You would have embraced the teachings,'' Papa said. ``No matter what
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we said.''
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His Name flared, like a morning sun, sheer power wafting from his frame
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like smoke.
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``And so Father bound you not to speak of it,'' he hissed. ``So much for
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free will.''
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``I did not,'' Warlock said.
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``Liar,'' Masego spat out. ``You should not have taught me diabolism if
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you wanted to maintain that pretence. Papa is driven by \emph{desire}.
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He had answers I wanted, what could possibly silence him except a
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binding?''
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Gods, how many other hidden bindings were there? Had Father forced love
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as well? How could he tell if a single thing he'd seen or heard or felt
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was genuine? Had Papa baked because he enjoyed it, or because there was
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a rule that made him? The most sophisticated set of oaths in existence
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bound the incubus, decades in the making. Free will made by mortal
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cleverness, they'd called it. Could you really call it that, if there
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were \emph{exceptions}?
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``A greater desire,'' Tikoloshe said. ``Of my own.''
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Hierophant bitterly laughed.
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``Did you want me ignorant so badly?''
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``I wanted to keep my son alive,'' Papa softly said. ``Even if it hurt
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him. Even he hated me for it.''
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Masego flinched.
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``You can't just-''
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``You should have noticed by now,'' Father said, tone calm and even.
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``I'm told you've studied her physiology in depth, both physical and
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metaphysical. The signs must be there.''
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``No,'' Masego said.
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``Catherine Foundling died at Second Liesse,'' the Warlock gently said.
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``What walked out of that fortress is an impression of the young woman
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made on the fabric of Winter, no more and no less. I'm sorry, Masego. I
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really am. I know you liked her. But even if the Black Queen believes
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she's the same person, she is not. Amadeus didn't realize it either, he
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doesn't have the learning. But he described what happened in the city to
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me. There can be no doubt.''
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``We hurt you,'' Papa said. ``And for that, I will apologize. But not
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regret. Not if you are still alive to be hurt.''
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He didn't want to think about it, but he couldn't not. He'd been told a
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theory and so it must be considered. He had observed a certain stiffness
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in thought in Catherine, an inability to deviate from goals even if it
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meant employing means she would have once dismissed out of hand.
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Believed it, back then, to be a consequence of the mantle becoming one
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with her soul -- it would retain certain properties, which would be made
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inherent to her. It had been a reasonable theory. Or it could be that
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the imprint on Winter was limited in nature, and that the creature
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playing at being Catherine was incapable of deviating from it. He'd
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already known that her body was a construct, proved it.
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Was her mind as well?
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``Oh, child,'' Father sadly said. ``It will pass. The first one is
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always the worst. But you do yourself no service by denying the truth.''
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Masego could no longer close his eyes. The closest he could come was to
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cease paying attention to what he saw. It was not a release. An effort
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of will was still required, and he abandoned the attempt after a moment.
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``No,'' he said.
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``Masego, I understand you don't want to-''
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``This is not sentiment,'' Hierophant said. ``I disagree with you on
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rational grounds. Even if what you say is true, it is irrelevant. She
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remains the same individual.''
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``You know that to be untrue,'' Father said.
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``I am not the same person I was this morning,'' Hierophant said. ``I
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have learned and changed. I am still Masego.''
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``The degree of change is different,'' the Warlock flatly said.
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``And how does one decide on the appropriate degree?'' he replied. ``If
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I removed all my memories from age five to fifteen, I would behave
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differently. A part of what makes me would be absent, and yet I would
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still consider myself to be the same person. Assuming your theory is
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correct, the changes she went through are lesser than this. It is,
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therefore, irrelevant.''
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``You're being willfully-''
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``Furthermore,'' Hierophant said, raising his voice. ``If your theory is
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incorrect, you both kept me ignorant out of petty fear.''
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``Petty?'' Papa repeated softly, and there was a rare thread of anger in
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his voice.
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``I am no great scholar of niceties,'' he replied. ``But even I know an
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apology that is not \emph{apologetic} rings empty.''
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``Consider it withdrawn, then,'' Papa tonelessly said.
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His heart clenched, but he would not bend in this.
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``You could have told me,'' Masego said. ``What you believe, why I
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shouldn't do it. But you didn't. You made the choice for me.''
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``That's what parents do, Masego,'' Father said.
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He swallowed.
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``I love you,'' he said. ``Both of you. But I disagree. You didn't learn
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anything, you just\ldots{} flinched. And apotheosis is not for the faint
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of heart.''
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``There are journeys,'' Father said, ``that you can never finish.
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Because the person that left is not the same that arrives.''
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``There is nothing in this world to fear save ignorance,'' Masego
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replied, eyes burning bright. ``And whatever may come, \emph{I will not
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flinch}.''
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