558 lines
22 KiB
TeX
558 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-71-ozone}{%
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\chapter{Ozone}\label{chapter-71-ozone}}
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\epigraph{``A ruler must consider all necessary injuries before beginning to
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inflict them on an enemy, for through repeated opposition they will
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learn your virtues and your faults. Strike once, thoroughly.''}{Extract from the treatise ``On Rule'', author unknown (widely believed
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to be Prince Bastien of Arans)}
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\emph{Nefarious' own Dark Council had once held session in this room,
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though in practice it had been the Chancellor's council and not the
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Emperor's. Amadeus had sat at this table before, when nominally in the
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service of the Tower, but he much preferred the current circumstances.
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It was only the two of them here today, as if often was: only Tyrants
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losing their grip on Praes regularly called full sessions. Those who
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felt secure in their rule did not bother with the pretence of seeking
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the opinions of others.}
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\emph{``We can't keep this up much longer, Maddie,'' Alaya said. ``The
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last time taxes ran this high for more than a few years Pernicious lost
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his throne.''}
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\emph{It would have been easy to engage on the basis of technicalities,
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Amadeus thought. Dread Emperor Pernicious's reign had been plagued by
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constant rebellions for reasons broader in scope than mere tax rates:
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his attempt to raise a new capital replacing Ater in the heart of the
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Wasteland, his inability to keep a Chancellor loyal for more than a few
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months and his failure to take the Blessed Isle back from the Kingdom of
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Callow despite three sieges. Still, it would have been beneath the both
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of them to play that particular game. Allie would not have begun the
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conversation were there not a true threat looming out of sight. Not for
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the first time, Black wondered how many such messes might have been
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avoiding by putting the nobility of the Wasteland to the sword after the
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civil war.}
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\emph{``I understand the burden is most keenly felt by the most
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influential among them,'' he delicately replied. ``But the Reforms have
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produced tangible results, Allie. We're building an army truly capable
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of winning the wars to come.''}
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\emph{She leaned back into her seat, and even after all these years that
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she allowed herself such weaknesses in front of him warmed his heart.
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She'd come in formal dress, today, but left behind her proper regalia.
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As in everything she did, there was deeper meaning to be found. Formal
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attire for matters of state, lack of crown to make it clear this was a
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discussion between partners.}
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\emph{``I know that,'' Alaya said. ``You know that. But in court, they
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can speak of the fortune being sunk into the Legions of Terror without
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conquest to show for it. The Truebloods are pushing for either immediate
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war or dismissal of the military taxes.''}
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\emph{``That would be disastrous,'' Amadeus bluntly said.}
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\emph{``The amount of professional soldiers we're fielding is nearly
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without precedent in Imperial history,'' she mildly pointed out.}
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\emph{``It's not about winning the battles, Allie,'' he sighed. ``Our
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core legions under Grem would have been capable of evicting the paladins
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from the Blessed Isle as early as two years ago. It's the aftermath
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that's the issue.''}
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\emph{``I understand you have worries about heroes,'' Alaya frowned.
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``And I don't agree in the slightest with the time table suggested by
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the High Lords. Yet I do have to wonder if your level of caution is
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actually warranted.''}
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\emph{``We can't leave them banners to gather around during the
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occupation,'' Amadeus said. ``Not the Order of the White Hand, not the
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Fairfaxes, not even the knightly orders. It's not a question about the
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practical power of those entities, it's what they represent. The
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Principate had massive city garrisons during its own occupation and they
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changed nothing. As long as there was a Fairfax loose, Callow still had
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fight in it. From there it was a question of what would give first:
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Callowan stubbornness or Procer's willingness to bleed.''}
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\emph{``One rarely takes the pot when betting against Callowan spite,''
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Allie conceded, tone darkly amused.}
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\emph{``We're not just planning the war, Alaya,'' Amadeus said. ``We're
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preparing for the peace afterwards, and moving before the pieces are in
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place for that is wasting the entire effort.''}
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\emph{``Concessions will have to be made,'' Allie said. ``I know you
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have your doubts about the Imperial governorship system-``}
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\emph{``It's ripe for abuse,'' he flatly said. ``And abuse unmakes all
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of this. The rule we bring must be, if not just, then at least fair. I
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trust not Wasteland lords to know even the shadow of that.''}
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\emph{``Then I'll wrangle a role as overseer for you,'' Alaya told him.
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``If nothing else, we can use the limits we place to weed out the
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ambitious when they overstep.''}
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\emph{Amadeus rose to his feet, pushing the chair back.}
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``This is the moment where I agreed,'' Black said, turning towards me.
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``The first mistake I made after the war, though it would not be the
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last.''
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My feet were on solid ground. Stone, the Tower's own. I scuffed my boot
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against it and flinched at the sound. It felt too real. I'd had Name
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visions before, but this was\ldots{} different. I'd never had any agency
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in them before. I glanced back up and found him patiently watching me.
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``Black, what is this?'' I asked.
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``Remonstration,'' he said. ``Old favours were called in.''
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My fingers clenched. I did not like the sound of that in the slightest.
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``What happened?''
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``Unimportant,'' he dismissed. ``It is your latest campaign that we must
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speak of, Catherine.''
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``You shouldn't know I'm here,'' I frowned.
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``I know a lot of things I shouldn't,'' he smiled, but the trace of
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mirth vanished quick enough. ``You head towards a debacle. I am ashamed
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you cannot see as much, for I must have failed you deeply for that not
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to be obvious.''
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``I came here because everywhere else was a dead end,'' I bitterly
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replied. ``Even you, playing your games in Procer. How'd that turn out
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for you?''
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``My flaws are many, but no excuse for yours,'' Black chided. ``This
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scheme is flawed. Oaths can be broken, and bereft of that why would any
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of them obey you?''
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``It's a blinking game,'' I told him. ``If the Heavens break the oaths,
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there's a nation's worth of drow loose in the middle of their backyard.
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They can't afford that.''
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``There is no win condition to your plan,'' he bluntly said. ``Only
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different ways you can lose or put off those losses. You cannot even
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claim a purpose for this army you'll mass beyond the current wars.''
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``That's not true,'' I bit back. ``I know exactly where I'll settle
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them.''
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``And where would that be?'' he skeptically replied. ``Your kingdom
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would not survive the process.''
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I paused. It was an effort to keep my face loose.
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``It's fated,'' I said. ``I doesn't need to be me who does the heavy
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lifting.''
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``Fate is a useful tool,'' Black said, tone irritated, ``but it does
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not-''
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I clicked my tongue against the roof of my mouth, interrupting him.
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``So \emph{that's} what this is,'' I mused.
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His face blanked. He'd always been eerily pale, but as blood-red lips
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split into a fanged grin I saw he'd become pale as driven snow. Our
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surroundings broke apart, ripped away by howling winds -- entire chunks
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of not-Tower whisked away by the raging blizzard. The two of us stood
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ankle-deep in the snow, facing each other. Above us there was only an
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endless pitch black night, unknowing of moon or stars. There was only
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one source of light in here: the burning blue eyes set in my teacher's
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face.
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``And so we resume the lesson,'' he said, voice echoing of Winter.
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His sword left the sheath with a quiet hiss and he advanced. Around us I
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felt other silhouettes rise and there we no need to look to know whose
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they were. It would be the Woe, at first. Then Juniper. Aisha. Ratface.
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Nauk. Robber. Pickler. Kilian. Everyone I'd ever shared a laugh with,
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everyone I'd ever given the smallest speck of affection to. Anyone I'd
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ever loved, no matter the manner of it. This was not an unfamiliar
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sight. While my armies struggled through the Battle of the Camps, Masego
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and I had been\ldots{} otherwise occupied. I'd visited his own fever
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dream, taken him out of it. Mine though, I'd never spoke about. With
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good reason. They would come for me, swords high. They'd curse and
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scream and die and poison everything we'd ever shared with their last
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words. Then I'd stand alone, for a heartbeat.
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And it would start again.
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The backlash from our broken gate had entrapped Masego in his own
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desires. Mine, though, had ground away at me one murder at a time.
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Winter did enjoy matching its torments to the disposition of the
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tormented.
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``It \emph{would} be capable of doing this, it's true,'' I spoke out
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loud.
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The raging winds drowned out my words to even my own ears, but that
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hardly mattered in here.
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``But it would also have known about Black,'' I calmly continued. ``You
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could only reach old Name dreams, couldn't you?''
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I paused.
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``No, more than that,'' I corrected. ``I've never had one of those with
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the Dark Council room featuring. You're riding a vision I could have, if
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my Name took the fore. You can probably look at most of what I've
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dreamed before as well. But for the personalities, you had the bare
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bones that gives you with guesswork grafted on.''
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The fakes ceased marching towards me and I took a deep breath before
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raising my hand. Will against will, that was all there was to it. I
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ripped away the veil and met my enemy's eyes. Deep and perfect silver on
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pitch-black skin. The last time the glare of them had blinded me, but we
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were in \emph{my} head now. My rules ran deeper than hers.
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``I've gone rounds with demons and fae, Sve Noc,'' I said. ``If you want
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to fuck with my mind, best sharpen your game.''
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The drow's long hair flowed endlessly behind her, turning into
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gargantuan strands of Night the further they were from the silver light.
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She did not seem pleased.
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\emph{Child}, she said. \emph{Your arrogance beggars belief.}
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``Mine?'' I laughed. ``You think you get to win this because I'm close
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to your domain? \emph{I carry mine with me}, Priestess. And you stepped
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in it of your own free will.''
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\emph{Your doom comes}, she said. \emph{You will drown in despair, alone
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and lost.}
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``And we got off to such a good start,'' I drawled. ``Whatever happened
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to `I await you in Tvarigu'?''
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Sudden rage suffocated me. A wrath beyond understanding, beyond any
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single person's capacity. I buckled under the weight of it, but there
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was something behind. Small, almost like a whimper. Fear, I thought.
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There was fear.
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And wasn't that \emph{interesting}?
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``That wasn't you,'' I said.
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Sve Noc snarled.
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\emph{All is Night}, she proclaimed.
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``Which are you, I wonder?'' I grinned, slow and mean. ``The rider or
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the horse?''
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She did not answer with words. The pressure should have crushed me.
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Would have, if this was her realm and not mine. But old words echoed and
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rippled, the whisper of a pair of crows surrounded by a sea of birds of
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paradise, and it washed over me like rain. It was not my truth, but I
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had partaken in it.
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``Uninspired,'' I said, and the dream shattered.
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---
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My eyes opened with perfect clarity, lacking the transition between
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sleep and not.
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``That's a little off-putting, I'll admit,'' Indrani sighed.
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I wiggled out from under her arm, already missing the warmth, and sat
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up. The blanket slid down, baring the upper half of my body, but Archer
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didn't even bother to leer. She just snuggled deeper into the covers, to
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my mild offence.
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``Dare I ask?'' I said.
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``The heartbeat thing,'' she elaborated. ``I got used to the cool and
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skin and stopped noticing when it wasn't there, but it started up the
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moment you woke up. How does that even work?''
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``Fuck if I know,'' I admitted, passing a hand through my tangled hair.
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``Zeze says it has nothing to do with pushing blood anymore, so it might
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just beat when I remember it should.''
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The fire had gone out while we slept but that changed little for me. The
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sensation between different temperatures still came to me, it
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just\ldots{} didn't matter. It was more like a colour than a feeling. It
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wasn't the same for Indrani, though, because my toes informed me she'd
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put on pants at some point I definitely remembered taking off. Among,
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uh, other things. I cleared my throat awkwardly. Indrani cranked open a
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bleary eye.
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``You're not gonna get all skittish about this, are you?'' she said.
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``Considering how enthusiastic you-''
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``I remember, yes,'' I coughed. ``It'd been a while, `Drani.''
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She laughed musically.
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``Yeah, well, it shows you've been mostly with women for a few years,''
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she said. ``You're a lot better than I thought you'd be at giving h-''
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``If you keep dishing it out, it'll burn out the embarrassment,'' I
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tried.
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She mulled over that for a moment.
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``True,'' she said. ``I should probably ration it out.''
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She finally deigned to rise, pushing herself up and stretching out like
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a lazy cat. Considering the blanket had completely fallen, that did
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rather interesting things to a frame I was now intimately familiar with.
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She caught me staring and grinned.
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``Already?'' she smugly said.
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``Any port in a storm,'' I sneered.
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``Ouch,'' she said, putting a hand over her heart. ``That one drew
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blood, Cat.''
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Not really, if her deeply amused tone was any indication. I rested my
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bare back against the stone and closed my eyes to wallow in this passing
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moment of peace. Soon enough I would have to arm myself for war and
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strike the first blow of the Battle of Great Strycht, but just for a
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little while I could enjoy this. The world outside our nook could remain
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a faraway abstract a little bit longer. If I'd done this with someone
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else I might have feared that it would change what lay between us, but
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not with Indrani. She had a rather cavalier attitude towards bedplay, as
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a rule, even if she'd largely refrained from indulging since becoming
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part of the Woe. That'd been a choice on her part, though. She was
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attractive, a well-known war hero and Named besides: if she'd actually
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sought out company, she wouldn't have spent a single night alone since
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Second Liesse.
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``And what great thoughts are we having?'' Indrani said, sitting up at
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my side.
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I opened my eyes and found her looking at me with fond amusement.
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``I was wondering about the self-inflicted nature of your dry spell,'' I
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admitted.
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``Was trying something,'' she shrugged. ``Still on the fence about it.
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Besides, you're one to talk. When we first met you could hardly keep
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your hands off the redhead.''
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Kilian, I thought, but no pang of blurry regret came. It'd been a while
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since it had ceased to. It'd seemed so much more important when I was in
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the middle of it. But now my hours were filled bargaining with empires
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and waging desperate wars, when the stewardship of Callow did not
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swallow them whole, and the intensity had faded. It seemed such small
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thing, compared to what was behind me and what still lay ahead.
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``It was new for me,'' I admitted. ``I'd never stuck that long with
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anyone before. Never wanted to, either.''
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``Heartbreaker, were you?'' Indrani snorted.
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I shrugged.
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``I knew I was going to leave someday,'' I said. ``So there was no
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point.''
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``I can't imagine you married,'' she admitted. ``Or even settled down.''
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``I was kind of proposed to the once,'' I mused.
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She grinned.
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``Now \emph{this} I've got to hear,'' Indrani said.
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``I used to work at this tavern in Laure, the Rat's Nest,'' I said.
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``The owner hinted pretty heavily that if I married his son I'd inherit
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the place after he died.''
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``Truly a love story for the ages,'' Archer commented gravely.
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``He was kind of an ass, and pretty busy ploughing our bard,'' I noted.
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``Harrion didn't push when I made it clear it wasn't happening, he was a
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good sort. Now if \emph{Duncan Brech} had gotten on his knees, my tender
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maidenly heart might have skipped a beat. That boy was fit like you
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wouldn't believe.''
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``And no one else has tried since?'' Indrani said, sounding genuinely
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curious. ``I thought popping out heirs was the queenly thing to do.''
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``Talbot mentioned it once or twice,'' I agreed. ``And everyone
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influential with spare kin paraded a prospect at court. But I've no
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intention of staying on the throne, so why bother? I was only ever a
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temporary measure.''
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The Foundling dynasty would be short-lived, which was probably for the
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best. If a successor bearing my name got into even half the messes I
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had, they'd be more curse than king.
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``We children of dew and lightning,'' Indrani murmured. ``Transient and
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terrible in our passing.''
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She did say beautiful things, sometimes, for all her cheerful crassness.
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``Where's it from?'' I asked.
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``Some poem the Lady taught me when I was kid, from far across the
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sea,'' she said. ``Her father loved it.''
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``It's a big world, isn't it?'' I said. ``We've seen more than most on
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this continent, the two of us, and it's still such a small fraction of
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it.''
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``It's not about how long we last, I don't think,'' Archer said. ``Who
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could possibly live long enough to see it all? We just have to make the
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most of what we get.''
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``We're probably the first humans to walk the Everdark in a few
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centuries, if not more,'' I offered.
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``Oh, we'll do a little more than just walk,'' Indrani said, lips
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quirking.
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The certainty in her voice forged a smile of my own, though it faded
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after a few moments.
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``I dreamt, while I slept,'' I said.
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``Winter again?'' she asked. ``Hakram said whatever you're seeing must
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be pretty fucking grim, if you're not even willing to talk to \emph{him}
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about it.''
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``Yeah, well, Winter doesn't do nice as a rule,'' I muttered. ``But it
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wasn't that, at least not tonight. I got an important visitor.''
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``No shit?'' Archer said. ``Our old buddy Sve Noc showed up? What did
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she want?''
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``They, I think,'' I said. ``And I don't mean it the way it's usually
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meant for drow.''
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``A two woman show,'' she frowned. ``Didn't see that one coming. They
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tend to watch each other's back the same way Praesi do -- considering
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where to plunge the knife. Did she drop in for a bit of trash talk? It's
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only traditional before villains throw down.''
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``She wanted me to believe that real bad, by the end of it,'' I said.
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``But she played tricks early on trying to get me to answer questions.''
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``O Mighty Catherine, would you pretty please tell me your battle
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plans?'' Indrani mocked in a high pitched voice.
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``That I wouldn't have minded,'' I admitted. ``It'd mean she thinks it
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could go either way. But what she was actually asking was where I intend
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to take the drow down the line, and I mislike the shape of that. It
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feels like she's playing a different game.''
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And Captain's death was proof enough of how costly that sort of
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disconnect could be.
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``We're the outsiders here,'' Archer said. ``It was given we'd have to
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go in blind. But two heads, huh. Wonder how that came about.''
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``I'm more interested in how it can be used,'' I said. ``The first one I
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spoke with had a fairly different take on this mess than the other.''
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``Think there's an angle there?'' she asked.
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I breathed out slowly.
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``There was a story I used to love when I was a kid,'' I said. ``The
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orphanage was an Imperial institution, when it came down to it, and the
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tavern I worked that was heavy on Legion clientele. Neither was in the
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habit of peddling Callowan stories to impressionable young minds.''
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I half-smiled, thinking of those days where the trifling had loomed so
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tall.
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``But I got my hands on this old book at the Rat's Nest,'' I said.
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``Called \emph{Stirring Tales of Chivalry}.''
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``Was it all about lances and ladies?'' Indrani asked, wiggling her
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eyebrows.
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I rolled my eyes.
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``It was water damaged, so most of it was just blurry ink -- probably
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why the family never managed to pawn it,'' I mused. ``But there were a
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few stories in it that were readable, and one I must have read a hundred
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times. It was about this giant ogre, you see, that lived somewhere in
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the south of Callow. It had two heads and it could do magic, so even
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though knight after knight tried to slay it all that happened was that
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it made a house of their bones.''
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``They call their city in the Wasteland the Hall of Skulls, right?''
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Indrani said. ``It holds up.''
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I imagined General Hune would have some issues with the story if she
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ever heard it, but then most my high-ranking officers would have
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problems with Callowan folk tales. They, uh, tended to get killed in
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them. To popular acclaim.
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``So there's these three knights that head out to slay it,'' I said.
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``One's strong, one's quick, the last is clever.''
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``Clever survives at the end,'' Indrani immediately predicted.
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``The last one listed always survives, you're not impressing anyone,'' I
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grunted. ``Anyway, they go up to the ogre one after the other. Yes, bad
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tactics I know so don't even start. Strong and quick get fried, because
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magic is perfidious and all that. Each of the ogre's heads eats one of
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the dead.''
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``I thought it was using the bones for its house,'' Archer said.
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``Look, I never said it was high literature,'' I said. ``Clever knight
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goes up, and then says `I surrender', flatters them and says they're
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invincible.''
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``And then it asks which head is going to eat him after he dies,''
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Indrani said.
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``Exactly,'' I said. ``The heads start arguing, the clever knight makes
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it worse, and eventually one head clubs the other in anger and they both
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die.''
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``I thought it was a mage ogre,'' she said.
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``It also had a club,'' I sighed.
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``This is why people make fun of Callowan literature, Cat,'' Indrani
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said, not unkindly.
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``My point,'' I said, valiantly pressing on, ``is that creatures with
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two heads can be of two minds.''
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There was a pause.
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``Was that all?'' Archer asked.
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``There's another version of it that I came across later,'' I said.
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``No doubt it will be as stirring as was promised by the title,''
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Indrani replied, smothering a smile.
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``In that version, the third knight is a young Elizabeth Alban,'' I
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said.
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``The Queen of Blades herself,'' she said. ``She plies a clever trick as
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well?''
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``No,'' I said. ``She straight up murders the ogre, because that's what
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Elizabeth Alban \emph{does}.''
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That surprised a laugh out of her and so I left it at that. We shared a
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comfortable silence for a little while longer, until I could no longer
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even slightly justify lingering. Reluctantly I rose up, somewhat pleased
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she was finally taking the time to ogle my nakedness, and picked up my
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clothes. I shimmied on my trousers as she reached for her leathers and I
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was surprised by the muted intimacy of getting dressed together. It
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wasn't domestic -- the word would never feel anything but forced matched
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to Indrani -- but it was a kind of closeness we'd never shared before.
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There was, I thought, nothing to regret about last night. Belts
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tightened, weapons at our hips, we left the dead fire behind us.
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There was a war to wage.
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