445 lines
20 KiB
TeX
445 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-29-sixth}{%
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\section{Chapter 29: Sixth}\label{chapter-29-sixth}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Don't be absurd, Black Knight. It would have been called treason
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if I'd lost -- this is merely succession.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Vile the First
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\end{quote}
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It was a striking scene.
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The crypt itself was the part worthiest of awe, I decided. The arched
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ceiling was covered in silver set with glittering jewels where stars
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would have been on the night sky. There was no light within save for
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their shine and a ring of bound sprites serving as magelights. The
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fallen king was being set down in a tomb with his likeness sculpted atop
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the lid, men and women wearing copper circlets on their brows lowering
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him gently. There were low whispers in a smattering of tongues I did not
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know, but the funeral was a hushed affair. I did not linger to watch
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when the orations began after the lid was shut, instead approaching the
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sight that had set my blood running cold. The Wandering Bard looked
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prettier than I'd ever seen her. Tanned and full of life, she wore red
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and silver robes instead of the usual stained leathers. The lute was set
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across her lap in the shadowed alcove where she sat, and she pulled at
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her flask between exchanges with the young man standing next to her. Him
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I took my time studying. How often did one get to have a glimpse of the
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Dead King before he earned that Name?
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I'd expected him to be darkly handsome or strikingly ugly, but he was
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nothing of the sort. Pale, even compared to the other Keterans, but not
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near corpse-like the way Black was. More like a scholar who did not see
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much of the sun. He had bushy eyebrows and full lips set on an
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unremarkable face, the only striking part of him the light brown eyes
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that looked almost golden in the magelight glow. He looked like a
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scholar, I thought. One only an inch taller than me, though few of the
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Keterans were tall. No real muscle to his frame, though his hands were
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surprisingly calloused. The copper circle on his brow was even more
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slender than those I'd seen on the other royals. A mark of status?
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Perhaps. The others \emph{had} looked older, they might be higher in the
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line of succession. Or he might have been from another branch of the
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royal family. Hard to tell when I knew nothing about how the kingdom was
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ruled. Even without understanding the words he spoke, I found his voice
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compelling. Calm and deep, it felt almost soothing. It was hard to tell
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much about intonation in a foreign language -- everything spoken in
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Kharsum sounded like a threat, for example -- but he did not seem
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worried or surprised by the Bard's presence.
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Had he known her? Had she been involved in the fall of Keter from the
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beginning?
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``You're sure it's her?'' Hakram quietly asked.
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I'd been so lost in contemplation I hadn't even heard the orc
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approaching. I nodded without a word.
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``The lute and the flask,'' I said. ``It's her.''
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``They both look different than at Summerholm,'' Adjutant said.
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I blinked and glanced back at the Bard. He was right, I realized with a
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start. The flask was still of that same strange curved shape, but
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instead of old scuffed iron it was freshly-polished copper. The lute was
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not of the same wood, this one paler, and the strings looked different.
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Animal tendons of some sort.
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``The substance changed,'' I murmured. ``But the shape hasn't. There's
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something to that.''
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``Named tend to have symbols and artefacts associated to them,'' Hakram
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noted. ``Save for the Carrion Lord, though the loss seems to have been
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made up in epithets. The lute and flask could be hers.''
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``Malicia warned me they'd moved the Bard to the Empire's official kill
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list, after the war in the Free Cities,'' I said. ``I thought Black was
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talking her up too much because she pulled one over him but I'm starting
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to see his point, if she's had her fingers plucking strings this far
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back.''
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``We don't know for certain her consciousness has been uninterrupted all
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this time,'' Adjutant cautioned.
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``You read the transcripts Black sent us,'' I grunted. ``Hells, I've had
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you lug around the threat assessment he had delivered to the palace --
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half a book's worth of scrolls, in records and theories. She made
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references to events long before she popped out of the woodworks as
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Aoede of Nicae. That's at least two or three incarnations. It's an
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assumption to say she's been at it this whole time, sure, but it's not a
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\emph{bad} one.''
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``Yes,'' Hakram agreed quietly. ``And the voluntary sharing of that
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secret worries me, Cat. It would have been a sharp blade, if kept
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hidden. Why did she not keep the knife in the dark?''
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Yeah, there was that. If there was a meddling face-changing immortal
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wandering around the continent, why had no one ever written anything
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about it? Names tended to grow stronger -- if also more restrictive --
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the more stories were associated with them. She would have had thousands
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of years to build herself up into something pretty much untouchable. And
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even if s\emph{he} wanted to keep quiet and stay behind the curtains, it
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struck me as dubious that every single hero she'd helped had kept quiet
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about. Over the years, there was bound to have at least one blabbermouth
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that fucked up. \emph{Unless Above ordered them to keep quiet}, I
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frowned. That was\ldots{} plausible. Didn't explain why no Dread Emperor
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had ever tried to get out the word there was an opponent on the field of
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that calibre, after being beaten or figuring it out. I was smelling a
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rat her.
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``That,'' I slowly said, ``is a very good question. If she's been
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underfoot this whole time and no one was onto her, why did she let that
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out of the bag \emph{now}? What changed?''
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The tall orc by my side considered the two legends speaking before us
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and clicked his teeth in discomfort.
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``I suspect,'' Hakram said, ``that knowledge of their words would bring
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more questions than answers.''
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``This is too big to walk past,'' I told him. ``Masego will have his
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hours. Tell the others we're setting camp.''
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I stayed there a while longer, watching the Wandering Bard laugh at
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something Calernia's incipient greatest monster had said. I shivered at
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the sight. I felt like they were sharing a joke that no one else could
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understand.
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I was really coming to hate that feeling.
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---
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``We cannot linger for too long, Catherine,'' Vivienne said. ``I
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understand the draw of learning such a secret, but it will not help
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Callow withstand invasion.''
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I drank from the skin. Tough our supplies were beginning to run thin, at
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least there was no need to worry about going without water. I could fill
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the skin with ice with only a thought, then leave it to melt as the
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hours passed. Indrani had badgered me until I used the eldritch and
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fearsome powers of Winter to cool her wine, to no one's surprise. The
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indignity was somewhat alleviated by the fact that the first thing
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Juniper had ever told me after I claimed my mantle was that my ability
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to freeze thing would ease strain on supplies for the Fifteenth. No one
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but Masego seemed to treat my usurpation of a demigod's power as
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anything but a source of free ice and entertainment unless I was
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actively killing people with it.
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``We're putting all our bets on the Dead King, Vivienne,'' I disagreed.
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``An entity we know next to nothing about. We're carrying the finest
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offer our diplomats were able to put together, but we're still going
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into this \emph{blind}.''
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``Whatever he might have been while living, millennia have passed,'' the
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dark-haired woman replied. ``Any understanding gained would be highly
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dated.''
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``Undead can't change nearly as much as the living,'' I pointed out.
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``I'm guessing a lot will still apply.''
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``We trade guesswork for hours, then,'' Thief said flatly. ``This is a
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gamble, let us not pretend otherwise. The decision was made on the
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assumption we would know little about our interlocutor. We might be able
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to change that, if Masego pulls through. To an extent. But we all agreed
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on the initial premise for a reason. Time is our most dangerous enemy,
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at the moment.''
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``I'm not saying we should spend a sennight here,'' I said. ``But a few
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days? The payoff is worth the delay.''
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``If there is one,'' Vivienne sighed.
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I looked at her closely. Of all the Woe she was probably the one who'd
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dealt with the restlessness of our journey the best. Even Hakram, island
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of calm that he was, happened to have a vague look of chagrin on his
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face now and then -- like he was expecting to have work to do and was
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kind of irked he didn't. Thief had been quiet, so far, almost subdued.
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But she'd refrained from pulling my metaphorical pigtails like Archer
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did and kept her eye on the horizon unlike Hierophant. The irritation
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now coming across clear had me wondering if she'd just been hiding it
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better than the others. She was certainly the hardest to read of the
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Woe. For others that crown might have belonged to Adjutant, but I knew
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him like I knew my own limbs.
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``You're worried,'' I said.
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She sent me a look that implied less than complimentary things about my
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intellect.
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``Not just the usual stuff,'' I dismissed. ``This is about all of us
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leaving.''
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``The Grey Pilgrim is unsupervised,'' she said.
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``The Pilgrim is under house arrest, allowed to speak only with goblins
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and Prince Amadis,'' I replied bluntly. ``If he can turn \emph{Robber}
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to Good, I'd argue he actually deserves to win this war.''
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``It feels like negligence not to keep a closer eye on them,'' Vivienne
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sighed.
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Most of the time, with Thief, the trick to understand her was not to
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listen to what she said. It might have been because of her Name, but she
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tended to go obliquely at matters. The only way to get a good read on
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what she had cooking behind the forehead, if she wasn't willing to
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outright state it, was to figuring out the reasons behind what she said.
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In this case, she was speaking of Callow but I suspected Callow itself
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wasn't the point.
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``You've been cut off from the Jacks,'' I said suddenly.
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She looked away. Ah. There it was. Possibly beyond even me, Vivienne
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Dartwick was the individual in the Kingdom of Callow with the most
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information at her fingertips. Hakram was the one piecing together the
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reports from her Jacks, the Dark Guilds under Ratface and Aisha's web of
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relatives to send up the most important reports to me, but that was more
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administrative than a matter of authority. I just didn't have the time
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to read it all and see to my other duties as well, not even now that I
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no longer slept. But Thief had access to all of it as well, and as the
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head of my net of informants she wielded the power to send agents to
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unearth any secrets she wanted. It must have been like an itch she
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couldn't scratch, being removed from the centre of the web to go
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traipsing around Arcadia.
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``I understand the necessity of committing to this,'' Vivienne said.
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``And the risks that bringing any but Named into Keter would have
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carried, along the vulnerability of leaving only one of us behind. But
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we are blind to all the happenings in Creation until the matter is dealt
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with.''
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It'd be exceedingly difficult to scry back home from Keter, admittedly.
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Unlike Malicia and Black I didn't have decades' worth of mages trained
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in scrying to create relays all over the continent that delivered
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reports within hours. My limited number had to be placed very
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strategically, and had largely focused on Praes and Procer. Moving it
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all around so we could get in touch with the Observatory around the
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natural barriers surrounding Callow wouldn't be impossible, but it would
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screw up our eyes abroad for months. Months where we could hardly afford
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to be blind to movements within the borders of our most dangerous
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neighbours. Not something to use except in case of dire emergency.
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``It's not a gamble if we're in control the whole time,'' I told her
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gently.
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``I know,'' she said, passing a frustrated hand through her short hair.
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I'd thought the cut a little too rough, when we first met, but it had
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grown on me since. Long hair on Vivienne would have felt odd now.
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``We are taking so many risks, Catherine,'' she said quietly. ``And
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every one of them seems reasonable when the decision is made, but I look
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back and wonder if what we have built is a house of cards.''
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``It does feel like everyone is out for our blood, doesn't it?'' I
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chuckled bitterly. ``Gods, we know we're at the end of the rope when the
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Hidden Horror is the best ally on the table.''
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``That is a too great a decision for us to really understand the scope
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of its consequences quite yet, I think,'' Vivienne said. ``It is the
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small things that worry me.''
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The glanced she flicked at the collar of my cloak was all she needed to
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say. I did not immediately reply. The two of us sat on the granite tomb
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of some dead queen and watched Hierophant weave his runes in the
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distance. He'd been at it for half a bell, now, and the breakthrough
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he'd been speculating about was nowhere in sight.
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``She could accelerate his work,'' I said, keeping my eyes on
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Hierophant. ``Masego tells me that the doomsday fortress had
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similarities to the Greater Breach at Keter. There's not a lot of more
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knowledgeable mages to be found, either.''
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I did not need to speak the name of the woman in question. We both knew
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who I was speaking of.
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``She,'' Vivienne said with admirable evenness, ``has not been
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punished.''
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My brow rose.
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``I ripped out her heart and bound her soul to the cloak,'' I replied.
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``I'll admit it hasn't exactly turned out to be eternal screaming
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torment, but at the very least it's imprisonment with a dab of
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torture.''
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``Yet now she plies her powers in your service,'' Thief said.
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``Safeguarded from all her former enemies. She has made herself useful,
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and so the leash loosens. How long, Catherine, before practicality pries
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open the door entirely?''
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``I haven't forgotten Liesse,'' I said coldly.
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``Peace,'' the other woman said, hand rising. ``I helped you draft the
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Accords, Catherine. I've seen that look in your eyes when you think
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yourself alone and you remember the breadth of the massacre. I know the
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failure shames you still. I've seen your fury at the architect of the
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massacre.''
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``I'm not sure what you're saying,'' I admitted.
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Aside from effectively admitting she sometimes spied on me unseen, but
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I'd honestly considered that to be a given. The notion of privacy was
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something I'd resigned myself to having lost even before an invisible
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sneak thief joined the Woe.
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``I told you once, that Akua Sahelian treading Creation again was a
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line,'' Vivienne said. ``One desperate hour after another, we have
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walked past it.''
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I grimaced. I could have made an argument that back then we'd been
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speaking about the soul she put in the infant as her resurgence plan, or
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even that all I'd ever allowed to pull at the leash was a soul, but it
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would have been dishonest. I \emph{had} allowed Diabolist a foothold
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back in Creation, like it or not.
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``You want me to destroy the soul,'' I guessed.
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Vivienne laughed, something vicious glinting in her blue-grey eyes. It
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was a little fucked up, I admitted to myself, that it made her look more
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attractive to me. Not that I expected anything to ever come of it. Thief
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was so painfully straight I could have used her as a ruler.
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``I have learned,'' she said, ``the uses of pragmatism. No, let her
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continue to exist. Let her out, even. She has uses, and the hour has
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only grown more desperate. Another face will even make Indrani less of a
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pest for a while.''
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``But,'' I said.
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``For small slights, long prices,'' Vivienne Dartwick said harshly.
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``Let Akua Sahelian see the light and taste freedom. Let her believe she
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has slipped the noose, so long as she remains of use.''
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Thief's fingers clenched.
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``But there will be a day where the world we made no longer has place
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for her,'' Vivienne said. ``When we have faced all the horrors before
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us. And on that day, when she has glimpsed victory?''
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Vivienne met my eyes and there was something in them that gave even
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Winter pause.
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``Snuff her out, Catherine,'' she said. ``Slowly. Painfully.
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Excruciatingly aware of what is being taken from her.''
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I shivered, both out of respect at the viciousness of what she was
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proposing and a little bit of arousal. Gods, it was a tragedy she only
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rode stallion. I pushed that guilty thought aside and gave the moment
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the seriousness it was due. Should I hesitate at effectively letting our
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Akua with the intent to murder how down the line? Gods, that I even had
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to ask. I would have seen no nuance there to be had, when I'd been
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seventeen. But I hadn't had a kingdom on my shoulders, back then. And I
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hadn't looked Akua Sahelian in the eyes as she told me nonchalantly she
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was going to slaughter a hundred thousand innocents to use as fodder for
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her ambition. Putting a knife in her back wasn't somehow made moral by
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Diabolist being a mass murderer, but it was the kind of petty evil I had
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made my tools of trade. Fair dealing and mercy were no longer things
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that applied to people willing to butcher an entire city for their
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purposes.
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``It could be years,'' I warned her. ``Before we're out of opponents. We
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could die before that, too.''
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``I know,'' Vivienne said. ``Let her follow us in death, if that is our
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lot. Otherwise my words stand.''
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I spat in my palm and offered it up. Thief was not the kind of maidenly
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flower who balked at spit, aristocrat or not, so she did the same
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without hesitation.
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``Bargain struck,'' I said, and we clasped hands.
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``Bargain struck,'' she echoed.
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We rose. I spoke the words, and Akua Sahelian walked the world again.
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---
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I had two of the finest mages of our generation working on a solution,
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and yet half a day later here I was: standing with a scowl on my face,
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being told nothing I wanted to hear. Hierophant at least had the decency
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to look as frustrated as I felt. Akua's lips were just slightly quirked,
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not enough for it to qualify as a smile but enough to reveal how pleased
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she was to be out of the box and talking magic with one of the few
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people in existence she'd consider a peer.
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``The issue has been the same since you interrupted me,'' Masego said, a
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touch accusingly. ``I have yet to succeed in accounting for the
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disparity in alignment.''
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``We can hear what they say now,'' I pointed out. ``You managed touch
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for a little bit yesterday.''
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``The formula was a dead end,'' Diabolist said. ``The runes involved
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would have disrupted further addition. Consider them an ore that spoiled
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the alloy.''
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It kind of pissed me off that my dead rival was better at explaining
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sorcery to me without sounding condescending than one of my closest
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friends.
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``But you \emph{were} aligned,'' I pressed.
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``Not in the right manner,'' Masego irritably said.
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``The difference was not unlike reading of a river on parchment while
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seeking to swim in one,'' Akua smiled. ``Result was achieved, but along
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a different path than desired.''
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Yeah, still pissing me off. I suspected that was going to happen a lot.
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``It might be that this is impossible to achieve within the bounds of
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Trismegistan sorcery,'' Hierophant said. ``We've been speaking of
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different perspectives, but most of them are so glaringly fallible or
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unusable by humans my studies of the subject have been shallow.''
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``We only have so much time to spend here,'' I reluctantly admitted.
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``You demand the miraculous on the schedule of the shoddy,'' Masego
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muttered, then paused.
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His saw his glass eyes turn to peer behind him while the rest of his
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body remained still.
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``Could it be that simple?'' he said.
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``You've dealt with miracles before,'' I encouraged.
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``I've vivisected and employed parts of them,'' he corrected
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absent-mindedly. ``But the gap is one of understanding, and I have a
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mechanism at hand to correct that failing.''
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I felt him gather power without ever chanting or drawing a rune. Not
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shaping it for a spell, I thought. Drawing it into himself. I opened my
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mouth to ask, but Akua discretely shook her head.
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``A mystery,'' Hierophant muttered to himself. ``In the technical sense.
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Foolish, foolish. I saw, when in transitioned. Quantification is
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anathema to higher sorceries.''
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His hand shot out and he clasped my wrist.
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``Yes,'' he grinned. ``They will not deny me, be they Gods or fathers. I
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will \textbf{Witness}.''
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A ripple passed across the world, and what it left behind was no longer
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an echo.
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