423 lines
22 KiB
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423 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-32-kernel}{%
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\section{Chapter 32: Kernel}\label{chapter-32-kernel}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Match the smile but watch the knife.''}
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-- Soninke saying
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\end{quote}
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The precarious balance the Woe had struck travelling through the echoes
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together was gone. Within an hour of Masego going into the imprint and
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harvesting what he could from the Bard and the Dead King that much had
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been made plain. Thief kept close to Akua's shade, always in earshot,
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but had fallen into a sullen silence. Archer stabbed our most recent
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addition through the throat the very moment she attempted to strike
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conversation, laughing delightedly when the body reformed like mist
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after she withdrew the blade. I denied her suggestion that Diabolist be
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made to run ahead of the rest of us and used as target practice, though
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I was honestly tempted after what I'd overheard last night. There was no
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point in coddling a snake, true, but mistreating a dangerous and bound
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entity led to a particular kind of story and not one that ended well for
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any of us. Hierophant was still feeling the aftermath of stealing an
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entire language from Arcadia so he walked on his own regularly drinking
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from some herbal mixture he'd put together. Archer, thankfully, was
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leaving him alone. She had a talent for discerning between being a pest
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and being genuinely unpleasant.
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That left only silence or Adjutant and I, for Diabolist to make
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conversation, and I got the impression that after so long in the box
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Akua was actually quite eager to talk with people. Which led to my
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finding out something quite interesting: Hakram made Diabolist
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uncomfortable. Not so much that it showed on her face, but I'd been
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looking at her closely and when conversing with my right hand she was
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just slightly off. There was no trace of the easy grace she'd used to
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run circles around Thief to be found, and while she didn't blunder
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either I suspected it was because she was being exceedingly careful. I
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was slightly amused by that, but mostly curious. She could have been
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faking, of course. That was always a possibility with Akua Sahelian, the
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footnote added to her every single action and behaviour. But I was
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pretty sure she wasn't, and that had me thinking about the reasons she'd
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feel that way. Was she racist? It'd been my impression that by Trueblood
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standards she was actually pretty tolerant. Which translated to looking
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down on everyone not a Trueblood more or less equally, with maybe a dash
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of additional contempt added because greenskins were just so
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\emph{uncivilized}.
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Assuming it wasn't simply the spectacle of an orc being articulate and
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calm that had her on the back foot, there might be an angle there.
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Vivienne had her number in some ways and Archer was usually too willful
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to influence meaningfully, but Masego enjoyed talking magic with peers
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enough it could become an issue if left unchecked. It'd already led him
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to argue for the sparing of the woman who now ran the Observatory for
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him, and though I doubted he'd go on a similar limb for Diabolist of all
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people I couldn't dismiss the possibility he'd grow somewhat fond of her
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over time. There were similarities to the way they'd been raised. His
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only objections about mass murder tended to be either on a professional
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basis -- human sacrifice was an amateur's crutch, he'd always argued --
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or because it would displease \emph{me}. Considerate of him, but not
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exactly a solid foundation either way. It was a load off my shoulders
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that Adjutant looked like he'd be able to handle her. I'd long grown to
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rely on Hakram tidying it all up behind me, a pair of eyes that picked
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up on all the details I missed. It was fitting that it him who brought
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up the matter when we paused for a meal around noon.
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``We'll need to change her appearance,'' Adjutant said, head inclining
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towards Diabolist. ``A few people will see through it regardless, but it
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can't be openly known she is now in our employ.''
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``That would not be unwise,'' Akua agreed. ``Your subjects have reason
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to be less than fond of me, and my presence would not help your
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reputation abroad.''
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Understatement of the decade, that. It would have been unproductive to
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maker her choke herself again, I reminded myself.
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``I'm not sure how well glamour would work without something physical to
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be anchored on,'' I frowned. ``I can weave illusions without one, but I
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do need to concentrate. It's not a long-term solution or even a reliable
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one.''
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``I have become part of your mantle, dear heart,'' Akua said with a
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pleasant smile. ``Changing my looks through it should not be all that
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difficult.''
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I mulled on that. It was true that she was no longer just bound to the
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Mantle of Woe. I'd known that the moment I summoned her before beginning
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our journey. My influence over her shade had grown stronger, broader in
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scope than simple hold and release. I breathed out and focused, Winter
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slithering through my veins like whispering smoke. I looked her into the
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eyes, those brown orbs so dark they were nearly black, and\ldots{}
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withdrew what made them. Or at least the thinnest surface of it. Akua
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blinked, eyes now completely white and without either iris or pupil. I
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swallowed a flinch. That'd been a little more than I was aiming for.
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Thief made her way to us, cocking her head to the side.
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``Fae,'' she said. ``Give her the appearance of a fae. You're known to
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have dealings with them, it's the most plausible story we have.''
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``And not,'' Akua mused, ``entirely untrue. As all the finest lies
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are.''
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I was unsettled by the idea of moulding another person -- even if their
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soul was all that was left -- like clay, but I pushed that down.
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Diabolist was already almost inhumanly beautiful, the result of
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centuries of Wasteland highborn breeding, so twisting her into something
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fae-like was not as much effort as I'd thought. Larger eyes, the way
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most fae had, and coloured a vivid scarlet like the dresses she used to
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wear. Long dark hair, the tresses going down her back, and her already
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high cheekbones were shaped into a face that was just a little too long
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and finely boned to be human. I would have made her shorter, if only for
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the novelty of having someone not towering over me around, but I'd never
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met a fae that was short. Instead I elongated her, for lack of a better
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term.
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``Fewer curves,'' Thief said, fixing me with a steady look.
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I sneered back. I didn't ogle \emph{all} my enemies. And despicable
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person or not, it would have been a deplorable waste to make Diabolist
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stick-thin. I did adjust her to her taller height, but left it at that.
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``Pointed ears,'' Hakram suggested.
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Difficult to mould, but not impossible. It still took longer than the
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rest of her face put together. I watched Diabolist as I did, for even a
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hint she was uncomfortable at what was taking place. People with good
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looks tended to be attached to them, in my experience, and more than
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that for Named most of all appearances mattered. There was a reason
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Black still looked in his early twenties and my hair had remained the
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same length since I became the Squire. Our perceptions of ourselves made
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us fixed points, to an extent, in one of the subtler rebellions against
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Above a villain was made of. But she remained indifferent. Like her face
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was no real importance. It might actually be, I finally decided. Akua
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was Praesi to the bone, and the highborn of the Wasteland saw everything
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as a tool -- even their own appearances.
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``I don't feel like I'm working with a set amount of clay here,'' I
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admitted uneasily after finishing. ``I could make her tall as an ogre
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without trouble, and she certainly wasn't that large to begin with.
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Isn't there an original law about that? `Something cannot be made of
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nothing'.''
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``It would not apply,'' Diabolist lightly said. ``You draw on Winter as
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the substance of my being. One does not dry an ocean by removing a
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droplet from it.''
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That was less than reassuring, though her tone had seemingly been aiming
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for that. Thief assessed her with a frank gaze, the most practiced of us
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as disguising herself.
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``It would pass muster, for most,'' she said. ``The voice has to go,
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though. It's too recognizable.''
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``I'm not sure how to do that,'' I admitted. ``She's a shade, so is she
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really speaking with her throat and chords?''
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``It is a mere property, now,'' Akua said. ``No different than colouring
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or height. Twisting it only requires the appropriate exertion of will.''
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Well that was just helpful of her, I thought drily. Unfortunately none
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of this had come with a manual so I spent almost half an hour struggling
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in vain before calling for Masego. He was irked at being called away
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from his almost-nap with a cool cloth on his forehead, but what was
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being done interested him enough the mood passed quickly. He held my
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metaphorical hand through the process and we'd made Diabolist's voice
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lower and throatier within moments. It would do, for now. I could have
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tinkered more, but the simple fact that I could \emph{tinker} with
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someone's appearance was raising the hair on the back of my neck. That
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level of control was\ldots{} No one should have that. Certainly not me.
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We got moving again afterwards: the centre of the shattered kingdom was
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close now, we could all feel it.
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I doubted I would enjoy what I'd find there.
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---
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Shard by shard, the fall of Sephirah was coming together. We spent most
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of a day journeying through plague-ridden cities and losing battles,
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watching desperation grown on the Sephiran side. I could understand why
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the nobles at the funeral had been dismissive of the chances of the
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People of the Wolf: though decked out in iron, their warriors were
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helpless before tall walls as most Sephiran cities boasted. They seemed
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more like a pack of raiding tribes than a true army, without siege
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weapons or any notion of supplies. If they could not ransack granaries,
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they went hungry. There'd been a mention of an organization of mages at
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the funeral, the Conclave, and Hierophant grew excited when he finally
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saw them in action. They were certainly a notch above the early
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practitioners we'd seen: the few Sephiran victories we saw had them
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playing a central role. Rituals seemed to be their specialty, nothing
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like the fireballs and lightning bolts that were the bread and butter of
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the Legions.
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The boiled the ground under enemy soldiers, snatched the air out of
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their lungs and even drew storms towards the invading host. It was not,
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unfortunately, nearly enough. They were too few, less than two hundred,
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and not unmatched besides. The People of the Wolf were led by their
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Named queen, and she broke their rituals whenever she took the field.
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She had mages of her own, if few and seemingly all from the same tribe,
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and though they used little offensive sorcery they seemed to have a
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knack for calming and dispersing rituals. The sacking of a great city --
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for the times, anyway, it was barely the size of Dormer -- was the
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turning point. There were piles of burning plague victims outside the
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walls, and when the invaders arrived they scaled the walls in the dark
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of night and slaughtered the beleaguered defenders. It got vicious after
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that, on both sides. The People of the Wolf began having a semblance of
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a baggage train from the sheer amount of plunder they were dragging
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along, which slowed them down, but their numbers kept swelling.
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Repeated and richly rewarded victory had drawn more tribes to the war.
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That was my guess, anyway, because the warriors no longer all spoke the
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language that Hakram had told me shared root with Reitz. The dead king's
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eldest son wore the crown for some time, with one of his sisters as the
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lesser queen sharing his reign, but we watched the Witch Queen feed him
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to wolves after she broke his army beneath city walls and captured him.
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That was when Neshamah began appearing along with the Conclave. Not
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often, but whenever he did the Sephiran mages always won the day. And
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their rituals were always a little more vicious every time. One battle
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where the defenders were particularly outnumbered led to the first use
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of necromancy we'd seen, the dead rising to make up the odds. It was far
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from the last instance we came across.
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``Their manner of rule is not without merits,'' Akua said as we watched
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yet another coronation in the royal hall unfold beneath us from a
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balcony. ``Though it would never function as intended in Praes.''
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The entire story was unfolding over what had to be at least a decade,
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I'd come to realize. Possibly more. The royals I'd first seen at the
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entombment were all growing older my more than a few years.
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``It's not just primogeniture,'' I said. ``The lesser king beneath the
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ruling one isn't always the next oldest in the family.''
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``They are the favourite or closest ally of the ruler, I suspect,''
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Diabolist said. ``The purpose behind the practice is quite clear
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regardless. The successor is allowed to entrench themselves in the court
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and kingdom so that any war of succession would result in their crushing
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victory. A cunning enough method to keep such matters stable in an era
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where they were anything but.''
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``We haven't seen them fighting each other yet,'' I agreed. ``But
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they're going through kings like a basket of pastries. Not much
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entrenchment going on there.''
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``The Dead King is positioning himself,'' she smiled. ``He is the
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youngest, yes? And was long gone from the kingdom. He must earn enough
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acclaim to be seen as the worthiest candidate for the lesser crown even
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though his ties to the others are weak. Once the succession reaches a
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sibling without sufficient support, they will inevitably appoint him
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beneath them to benefit from his repute.''
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I didn't reply immediately, eyeing my companion in silence instead. It
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was still jarring to hear the different voice and see the difference
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appearance, but that was a passing thing. No, what had be uncomfortable
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was how \emph{easy} talking with Akua was. She was, well, surprisingly
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pleasant company. I could have done without the occasional endearments,
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but the more I spoke with her the more it became clear she wasn't a
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raving lunatic. I'd known that, of course. That she was just twisted in
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a way that couldn't be undone, not actively mad. But living with that
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truth in front of me was different than knowing it in this abstract. If
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she were not responsible for the single greatest loss of Callowan life
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since Dread Empress Triumphant, I might actually have caught myself
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liking her once in a while. It was made worse by her usefulness. Thief
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had been tutored as a noble's child, even if her father had lost his
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title after the Conquest, but like me she'd always felt more comfortable
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in the streets than sitting down at a writing desk. Diabolist had been
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raised as heiress to Wolof, and though she was mother to half a dozen
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atrocities I could not deny she understood the halls of power in a way
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none of the Woe did.
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Her words to Thief still echoed in my mind, sometimes. That she'd fought
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the better part of the armies of two nations to a standstill, led by
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eight Named. Her methods had been disgusting, and I would not forgive or
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forget them. But she had done it regardless, and cornered as I was by
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the Empress and the First Prince I could not deny there were things I
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could learn from the monster on my leash.
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``He succeeded,'' I finally said. ``We know that. But I'm not certain
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how. He's forging a reputation as the savior of the kingdom, but at some
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point he must have gotten the lesser crown or even the one above. If
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Sephirah kept losing even then, as it must have if they got desperate
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enough to resort to a Greater Breach, how did he remain king? A
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reputation like that has to be maintained or they'll turn on your twice
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as hard.''
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As it happened, I knew a thing or two about that. The Black Queen would
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only reign so long as she was not seen to bleed.
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``You still think like a Callowan, dearest,'' Akua said. ``Even before
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the Conquest, the kingdom of your birth had been a single entity with
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largely static borders for centuries. The loss of even outer provinces
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would have been felt a slight by all the rest. These Sephirans, however,
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are less than a century from the days of their unification. The royal
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army fights for the realm entire, certainly, but we have seen that the
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armies of their twelve cities are not willing to bleed for their
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sisters.''
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I frowned, following down the path she'd set out for me.
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``It's all expendable,'' I finally said. ``Except for Keter itself. That
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one city's all he really needs. The rest is willingly on the chopping
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block, because it allows him to accumulate power for his ritual without
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damaging his powerbase enough it unseats him. Merciless Gods. That's
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brutal even by Wasteland standards.''
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``Many usurpations of the Tower has been executed through Callowan
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swords,'' Akua said. ``It is an old trick. Evidently older than I had
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believed. I will confess surprise, however, as to the Dead King's chosen
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method of ascension.''
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I flicked a glance at her.
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``He's building up to a massive ritual by bleeding everyone else,'' I
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said. ``That's the classic Praesi play, Akua. You can't crack open a
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history of the Empire without finding an instance.''
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She dismissed that with a graceful movement of the wrist.
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``It matters, my dear, that his path to that ritual is so indirect,''
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Diabolist said. ``He did not usurp the crown, though opportunities must
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have abounded. The fullness of his influence seems to be his unspoken
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prominence among this Conclave and his popularity with the masses. He is
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not wielding his own might to seize authority, but instead relying on
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outside pressures to propel him to that desired summit.''
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I considered that. On one hand, he was using others as tools to place
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himself in power. On the other, those people weren't true accomplices.
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There was no plotting cabal backing him that we'd seen, and even his
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influence with the Conclave was odd. He was teaching them sorcery, that
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much was clear, and leading them to slowly dip their toe in darker
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waters. But he wasn't turning them into his own personal circle of
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sorcerers. Hierophant had been the one to first say the way necromancy
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was being introduced was odd, but Diabolist had agreed. Neshamah knew a
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lot more than he was teaching them, and what he \emph{did} teach them
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didn't seem like he was offering a true education. \emph{Even within the
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purview of necromancy there is a great deal of latitude in structure and
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variance}, Masego had said. \emph{Some of those rituals are near
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completely unrelated.} I'd had a growing suspicion for a while that
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winning victories wasn't the point of the corpse-raising at all. And if
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the ends were unimportant, it was the means that mattered. And it could
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not be forgotten that beyond necromancy, there was another set of means
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at play -- the scheme he was using to rise. Most notable in that it put
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a crown on his brow without conflict. Without breaking the mores of the
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Sephirans.
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``He's not after the quickest or most effective way to rise,'' I said.
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Akua's scarlet eyes turned to me.
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``Then what \emph{is} he after?'' she asked.
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``The one that leaves no openings,'' I grimly replied.
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I ended our conversation there, without gracing her with an explanation.
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Akua Sahelian was not someone I ever intended on telling of what Masego
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and I had witnessed.
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---
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The centre of the maze was the birth of apocalypse. I'd known it was
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coming, but nothing could have prepared me for the sight of Keter's
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final hours. It was, I had to admit, a great city. Almost as large as
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Laure, which was astounding for a people that could not even forge iron.
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Tall walls of blocks of stone without mortar hid away most of the
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insides, though Indrani told us they were a pittance compared to the
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walls now encircling Keter. The capital of the Kingdom of Sephirah stood
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on a low plateau that formed a dais of sorts over the surrounding
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plains. There were abandoned mining pits scattered across it, and
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cobbled stone roads leading to four great gates of bronze facing the
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four directions. Copper shone in the dying afternoon last, covering the
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roofs of the great houses surrounding the central great tower looking
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down on the city, but none of us spared much thought for the beauty of
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it. The horror of the unfolding battle saw to that.
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How many invaders were there? Easily over ten thousand, and not all of
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them from the People of the Wolf. Banners decorated with animal skulls
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and skins formed a sea beneath the walls, the host of what must have
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been half of what would become Procer assembled to take the last of the
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twelve cities of Sephirah. The invaders were dying in droves, but the
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city was slowly edging towards a loss. Sorcery crackled, weaving storms
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and raising the dead, but the tribal mages tore through the spells and
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bestowed enchantments upon the assaulting warriors that allowed them to
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climb the walls without thought to their weight. We were witnessing the
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death of a nation, and in the sky above twilight was growing crimson.
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We headed deeper in. That was where the gate out would be, I knew
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instinctively. Indrani threw a grappling hook over the walls and eagerly
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began to climb, but I drew on Winter instead and formed a narrow set of
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stairs that the others took even as she catcalled. Ghostly warriors of
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both sides dying around us, we ascended into the city. Fear hung in the
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streets, thick and lingering. Doors were barred, prayers and weeping
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sounding everywhere we tread.
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``The Hall of the Dead,'' Archer said, pointing to the tall tower ahead
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after catching up. ``What it's called now, anyway.''
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The city around the tower was deserted. All those beautiful mansions,
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and not a soul in sight. It was inside we found our ending. The chanting
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could be heard as we walked through the labyrinthine corridors, only
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growing louder as we got closer to the royal hall where we'd seen so
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many get crowned. Files of kneeling mages spread out from that centre
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like tentacles, each singing the same incantation in unison. There would
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be consequences to missing a step, we learned. One young girl
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mispronounced a syllable and let out a blood-curdling scream as her body
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withered, leaving a husk of a corpse behind.
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``Fucking Hells,'' Indrani murmured.
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``Workings this powerful leave little room for mistakes,'' Hierophant
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noted, eyeing the corpse with interest.
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We reached the hall as the ritual neared its end, the chanting growing
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quicker. We'd seen this place before, many a time. A throne room richly
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decorated with banners of the twelve cities and statues of copper. There
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was no throne here today, nothing save for a tall sculpted arc of
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obsidian and the man standing before it. Neshamah was no longer young.
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He was closely-shaven and his hair was messy, and even now there was no
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trace of great Evil in him. No sunken eyes and horrid sneer: only calm,
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patient expectation. We advanced in silence until we could hear our own
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footsteps echo. Not a whisper to be heard. Then the Dead King spoke, and
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the shard ended. In the blank emptiness that enveloped us, we heard a
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woman's soft laughter.
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My hand rose, the gate opened where the arc of obsidian had once stood
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and into Keter we went.
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