418 lines
20 KiB
TeX
418 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-zwischenzug-ii}{%
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\section{Interlude: Zwischenzug II}\label{interlude-zwischenzug-ii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``In the East they say that doubt is the death of men, but I have
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seen the end of the forking path and reply this: so is certainty, only
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for others.''}
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-- Theodore Langman, Wizard of the West
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\end{quote}
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Panic blanked Vivienne's mind, for a heartbeat. Her fingers clutched the
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tankard so tightly she felt like it should break. Was this it, then? The
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conversation that took place before the Deadhand snatched the life out
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of her? \emph{I can run}, she thought. But that would be declaring
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treason, or close enough, and they would hunt her like an animal. How
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many of the Jacks would stay loyal, if there was a price on her head?
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Some, but not enough. The guildsmen who'd once answered to Ratface and
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she'd begun to fold into her own web would turn their cloak without
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batting an eye. She was still Queen of Thieves until someone took the
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stolen crown from her, but that was more custom than law and Catherine
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had put the fear of her in their bones. Some would sell her out, if the
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alternative was crossing the Black Queen's right hand. She'd sent all
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her people away before Deadhand arrived, anyway, leaving the two of them
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alone with the hearth crackling in the corner. The thief forced herself
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to drink down some ale, heart still beating against her eardrums. She
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would, could not fall to pieces so easily. \emph{Let's have a talk, you
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and I}, the orc had said. He'd phrased it like it was an offer, like
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there was a decision to make.
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They both knew there wasn't.
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``Honesty, is it?'' she said, affecting a drawl. ``I did not know you
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traded in such luxuries, Adjutant. Ambitious of you.''
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He did not smile. Unsure where to look -- coldly assessing eyes, lips
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hiding fangs or that \emph{damned} hand even when hidden under a glove
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-- she drank again instead.
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``Do you know,'' Hakram Deadhand mildly said, ``I can't remember the
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last time I was genuinely scared. I've been afraid for us, in fights,
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but actual terror? No, not even when the Queen of Summer came down. I
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can't imagine what it would be like, living with that sword always
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hanging over your head. Colouring every sight and scent, creeping into
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every corner of me.''
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Vivienne set down her tankard, slowly and carefully.
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``To be afraid of something,'' she said, ``you have to care about
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something first.''
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\emph{And do you?} Did he care about a single thing in all of Creation?
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Sometimes she thought he loved Catherine, though not in a way that would
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lead to courtship. The Woe were so often like sunflowers, turning to
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remain facing the burning glare hung up in their common sky, and of them
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Hakram Deadhand had been the first. The kind of love, perhaps, that a
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drowning man would have for the shore. But even that could not be the
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sum whole of anyone, and how could she trust in the words of a creature
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that treated every moment like one on the stage? Vivienne was not sure
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which truth would be more dangerous: that there was something buried
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deep beneath, or that there truly was nothing at all. The orc inclined
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his head, thoughtful. The gesture and accompanying visage was not common
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to his kind, the thief had known enough orcs to be certain of that. It
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was learned. Presented consciously to her eyes.
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``I have been thinking of a game, lately,'' Deadhand said. ``I will
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spare you the details, for they are largely irrelevant to this
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conversation, but there is one part of it I have been struggling with.''
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The thief maintained a pleasant smile, letting him speak without
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interruption though her mind was wheeling. A game? It was questions she
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had expected, not some delicate metaphor.
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``Trust,'' Adjutant said. ``That is the one element I could never quite
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figure out. The game cannot be won without the players hiding their
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thoughts, yet it cannot truly advance without trust either. I've tried
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to make a study of why it fails or emerges but found no success. The
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same answers rarely apply twice.''
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``A matter best left to philosophers, perhaps,'' Vivienne said, too wary
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to venture blindly into this. ``Or theologians, I suppose. Faith and
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trust have much in common.''
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``Do they?'' the orc curiously asked. ``It is my understanding you were
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raised to the House of Light, but I never learned its teachings in any
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depth. My people, not unlike the Praesi, see prayer more as bargain than
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oblation.''
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And there it was, the itch in the wound. Not the religious matters, but
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the part he had casually mentioned. My people. The Praesi. As if they
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were two different things entirely. Perhaps they were, Vivienne thought.
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She'd entertained the thought often enough in the past. Why would the
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first orc Named in centuries subordinate himself to a human from a land
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that was traditional plunder and raiding grounds to his own kind? Oh,
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his Name lent itself well to obedience. But even if he'd ended up the
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Shepherd he could have returned to the Steppes and lived like a king
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until his death. Where was his gain, she had wondered? Her answer had
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been that by staying at Catherine's side, he could do more than his
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people than by returning to his desolate home or remaining in true
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Imperial service. Cat had been, by then, as good as queen of Callow even
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if there had been the thin pretence of a ruling council. If the Empire
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was broken apart from the inside, if the Clans were supported by a
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Callowan sovereign whose closest friend was an orc\ldots{} And yet
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there'd been no trace of the steps that should precede that.
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There was no greenskin faction at court. There'd been, as far as she
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knew, no suggestions of diplomacy with the clans of the Steppes or with
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the powerful officers of his kind in the Legions of Terror. Even when it
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came to the Army of Callow, he'd been one of the main proponents of
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investing in training Callowan officers rather than simply relying on
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the veterans acquired from the wounded legions who'd joined after Second
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Liesse. His game was not an obvious one. The assertion that he could be
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driven by personal ambition was laughable. Deadhand could have taken any
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seat on the queen's council with but a whisper in Catherine's ear, and
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to be frank even without any formal title he'd held authority so broad
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and absolute some actual kings would have envied it. How much higher
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could he rise without holding a crown of his own? Yet Adjutant held no
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noble title, no lands, no significant military force of his own. He
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could commandeers most of these, but he had not cultivated personal
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loyalties or gathered supporters -- even when it would have been almost
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childishly easy to do so. He was, in essence, the perfect loyal right
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hand.
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That degree of apparent flawlessness in anyone would have made
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Vivienne's skin crawl, but in so skilled an actor it was more than just
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\emph{alarming}. As the silence stretched the thief realized she'd
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allowed the conversation to lapse, and cleared her throat.
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``I'm not the best person to explain it,'' she said. ``I never had much
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interest in priestly matters.''
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``And yet you fought by the side of a man touched by the Choir of
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Contrition,'' the orc said. ``Something few priests can boast of.
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Callowans are a study in contradiction, sometimes. You've birthed as
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many heroes as the Praesi have villains, but rare is the song sung in
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your taverns that praises angels or Heavens. Always the kingdom, always
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rebellion and revenge and old scores settled.''
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``How often have your people been the invaded instead of the invaders,
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Adjutant?'' Vivienne softly asked. ``Curse not walls of your own
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raising.''
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``Aye,'' he said. ``We have done that. Yet I find it fascinating, the
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faces nation will paint over faceless Gods. Praesi hold their Gods Below
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to be peerless schemers, for that is their favoured art. Goblins call
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the whole lot the Gobbler, a single crawling thing that will one day
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devour the same Creation it spewed out. Death is the only certainty they
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embrace as a race.''
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``And orcs?'' Vivienne asked.
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``Below is just what they teach us to call them in the Wasteland,''
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Deadhand said. ``We know them as the \emph{Hungry Gods}. We've had our
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lesser idols, as all other peoples have. But that altar was the first
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and remains the greatest.''
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``Kings and shepherds fit the same cookpot,'' Vivienne quoted, tongue
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stumbling over the rough syllables of Kharsum.
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She was the only one of the Woe who did not speak it fluently. Catherine
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had been raised in an orphanage and Indrani in the middle of the fucking
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woods, and still they'd been \emph{surprised} she did not speak orcish.
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As if it was a given that everyone should.
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``Have you ever seen an orc go without meat for long, Thief?'' Adjutant
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said. ``An experiment was made by some Soninke lord called Ehioze, a few
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centuries back, so the process is well documented. He grabbed three
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hundred orcs in their prime, who'd committed one of those crimes that is
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only ever a crime when the Praesi need fresh bodies, and locked them up
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for study.''
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The thief's eyes narrowed. She did not reply.
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``For the first month, it's barely noticeable at all,'' Deadhand
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continued. ``We'll get irritable, aggressive. Slower in thought. Then at
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the beginning of the second month, skin will grow tight and muscles melt
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away. Our bodies start eating themselves alive. By the middle of the
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third month, we are no longer able to tell faces apart. It's all a
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thick, red, pulsing \emph{haze}.''
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Her fingers tightened under the table, not that she remembered putting
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her hands there.
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``Ehioze was a dutiful scholar,'' the orc mildly said. ``Just starving
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them would not have been enough. He sequestered parts of the three
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hundred and studied how different manners of feeding would affect the
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process. He suggested afterwards that it was possible to keep orcs at
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the beginning of the middle state, before muscles start going, if they
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are fed two pounds of meat a month along with higher quantity of other
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provisions. It's true, as it happens. I know this because his
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suggestions were used as the standard orc rations in the Legions up
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until the Reforms. They called it \emph{Ehioze's Measure}.''
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``They wanted you able to fight,'' Vivienne said.
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``But not think,'' Deadhand finished softly. ``Or we might just question
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why it was never Praesi that faced the charges of your knights.''
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``I imagine there's quite a few orcs in the Legions, even in the Army of
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Callow, who have grandfathers and grandmothers that lived under the
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measure,'' she said.
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He nodded. Not wary, never wary, for that was to be her curse and not
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his.
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``There's another part to that tale, Adjutant,'' the thief said. ``One
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you forgot to tell. You see, there's quite a few Callowans in the army
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who have kin that got \emph{eaten} by orcs. Not even thirty years ago.
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What the Wasteland did to your people is a horror. What they went on to
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do to mine is a fucking horror as well, and one does not expunge the
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other.''
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``I know that too, Thief,'' Deadhand said. ``You asked, in your own
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roundabout manner, what it is I care about. I have answers you won't
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care to hear, but this one you will. I care about seeing a world where,
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when I tell this story, the woman on the other side of the table can't
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reply the way you did. Where we're more than hunting hounds for those
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who \emph{measured our starvation}.''
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And there it was. Everything she had feared -- hoped? It was such a
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blurry line, some days -- he would say. The confession that he meant to
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use Callowan lives to secure orc interests. How long would it be, until
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Catherine's fanged Chancellor whispered the right words to have her war
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for the independence of the Steppes? And yet\ldots{} \emph{He has not
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prepared for this}, she thought. The orc was meticulous to a fault, so
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where was his spadework? Where were the correspondences and the deals,
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the alliances made in the dark? Where were the mouthpieces for this
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ugliest of crusades? Part of her wanted to dismiss all the absences as
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him simply biding his time, but it rang false. It was fear giving
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answer, and Vivienne despised how seductive those whispers were. She was
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willing to fear for her life, for her home, but what was she if terror
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was the sum whole of her? Just another prisoner, yet another Callowan
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who'd never quite left the days of Imperial occupation. The moment she
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ceased looking for the truth, she was lost.
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``And yet you are here,'' she said. ``In Laure. Working for a kingdom
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you love not, when you could be raising banner among the clans of your
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kind. \emph{Why}?''
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``Of all of the Woe,'' Deadhand calmly said, ``you should understand
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that best. I could raise rebel flag, I could give the Tower a war it
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would remember for a very long time. I might even win it and cast down
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that peerless tribute to murder. But what would that accomplish, Thief?
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The head bearing the crown changes, the world moves on and two hundred
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years from now we'll be right back where we started. You don't cure a
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sickness by fighting the symptoms. You go after the root, or it will
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linger until death.''
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``The Liesse Accords,'' Vivienne said.
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``The Liesse Accords,'' the orc agreed. ``They will not come to be
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unless we take a hatchet to everything that holds up Praes, beyond
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repair. And under those rules, that agreement of nations, we change
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things. Not a dynasty's name or a few battles won or borders on a map.
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We truly \emph{change things}.''
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It was perhaps the only argument he could have brought forward that
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would have appeased her without appeasing her too much. A perfect
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balance struck. The thief could feel the hair on the back of her neck
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rising. There were devils in the deepest Hells that did not have half as
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silver a tongue as Hakram Deadhand.
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``And so, I now worry of you,'' Adjutant said.
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``I have been more ardent a defender of them than any of us,'' Vivienne
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harshly replied.
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``So you have,'' the orc easily conceded. ``And that surprised me, for
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while Callow will benefit they are not tailored for the primary benefit
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of the kingdom -- and it is Callowans that will bleed to have it
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signed.''
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She'd run with heroes once, the thief remembered. Men and women who'd
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carried the broken pieces of their old lives with them just as the Woe
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did, and some nights she wondered how deep the differences truly were.
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And then there were moments like this, where the killer across from her
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was surprised that she would embrace salvation extending further than
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her own little corner of Creation. Like it was expected that the lines
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on the map delimited the border between people and foes and there could
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be nothing between. William had been a monster too, in his own way, and
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Vivienne had neither forgotten not forgiven what might have taken place
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in Liesse without Catherine's intervention. Rare was the day where she
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did not curse herself for having hesitated, having quibbled. Having
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allowed it to happen without raising a fucking hand. But even William
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would never have been surprised by someone trying to do good for the
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sake of doing good\emph{. I discarded those hesitations}, she thought,
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and threw in my lot with the Woe\emph{. I made a bet on Catherine, and
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within the year a hundred thousand innocents were dead.}
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``I can hate the princes of Procer, for their rapaciousness,'' she said.
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``I can hate those who allow themselves to take arms for a morally
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bankrupt cause and the heroes who would see us burn for a point of
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philosophy. I can do all that, and not hate the people under them.''
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``And yet there is an imbalance, isn't there?'' Adjutant quietly said.
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``It is not equal care. Who you hesitate, if the choice was between a
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Callowan life and a Proceran one?''
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``And that makes me a villain?'' she hissed, and immediately regretted
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it.
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Panic flared. Was this going to be it, then? The moment where he reached
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across the table and snapped her neck like kindling?
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``You are afraid,'' Deadhand noted. ``There is no need. You have not
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spoken anything I did not already suspect. And that is my worry,
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Vivienne. Because deep down you still believe, you still \emph{act},
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like you're the same girl who was at the Lone Swordsman's side. You are
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not.''
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``And so to keep my throat uncut I must kiss the feet of the Gods
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Below,'' she said. ``Is that it? Shall I eat a baby to prove my
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dedication to the \emph{cause}?''
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``Your life is in no danger,'' Deadhand calmly said.
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She laughed, right in his face.
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``Is that so?'' she mocked. ``Why, because Catherine would be cross if
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you killed me? It would pass. She needs you too badly, and you'll be
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able to tell her you tried before I so regrettably forced your hand.''
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``Your murder would be seen as a greenskin coup, regardless of
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context,'' Adjutant said. ``So if you cannot believe in my own
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intentions, at least believe in the practicalities involved.''
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``Spot on, Deadhand,'' she snarled. ``There's nothing quite as
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reassuring as hearing one's death would be politically inconvenient.''
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``So that's the kernel,'' the orc said, sounding surprised. ``You do not
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believe you have worth.''
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She flinched. That had cut too close to home for comfort. The orc's brow
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creased.
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``You stole a sun,'' he slowly said. ``And were instrumental in the
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killing of several of our most dangerous opponents.''
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``You do have a talent for the exact,'' Vivienne said, ``Instrumental is
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precisely the right word.''
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An instrument, wielded by sharper minds and quicker hands. A bundle of
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aspects to be used as a surgical tool, perhaps sometimes a discreet pair
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of eyes. \emph{You are all Named}, she thought\emph{. I am an artefact
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that breathes.} And the moment she strayed from that function, what came
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but defeat? By the Grey Pilgrim, by fae, by a \emph{single Praesi mage}.
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Lightning coursing through her veins, not delivered by some ancient
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power but a single woman with a speck of sorcery to her. The humiliation
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of it only deepened the echoes of the pain across her body.
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``War is not your Role, Thief,'' Deadhand said. ``Forcing the matter
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will only result in failure.''
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``Then what is my damned Role, Adjutant?'' she asked quietly. ``Because
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there's no need for a thief, here, and what else can I be used for? I do
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not rule, I do not lead armies, my judgement is background drone to
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decisions of import even when Catherine \emph{is} here. Is that all? Am
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I just the forced voice of morality that must be sweet-talked before we
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take yet another plunge. Gods, I am tired of being an obstacle instead
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of a speaker.''
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The orc considered that in silence.
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``Trust,'' he said, sounding almost amused. ``Always trust. I would
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offer you a bargain, Vivienne Dartwick.''
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The deal or the grave, she thought. So it finally came to that,
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Catherine's little helper tidying up all the loose ends.
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``You're right,'' Adjutant said. ``You never spoke the accusation, yet
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you are right. I have no great love for this kingdom. I see what it
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takes from her, from all of us, and I wonder how it could be worth it.''
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The orc's eyes met hers squarely.
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``So teach me,'' he said. ``Why I should care for it. Show me.''
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``I can't squeeze tears out of a stone, Hakram,'' she tiredly replied.
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He nodded, as if he had come to a decision.
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``There is nothing I can say that will convince you,'' Deadhand said.
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``You are not wrong. Even oaths are just words.''
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The orc methodically took off his gloves, one after the other. Flesh
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first, and the scuttling bone. He brought up the skeletal fingers.
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``Your knife, please,'' he said.
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Vivienne's pulse quickened. Slowly she palmed her blade, eyes remaining
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peeled on his face, and she saw only cold determination there. Gods
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forgive me, she thought. \emph{Hide}. The hand remained there, his eyes
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on hers. \emph{Hide}, she thought again, panic mounting. She could touch
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the aspect but it refused to bloom. It was like trying to catch smoke.
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Gently, the orc took the knife from her sweaty, shaking hand.
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``I made a promise to you, once,'' Adjutant said. ``One I have come to
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regret.''
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The tip of the blade touched the bone hand with a soft clink, artfully
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moved to allow it from his grip.
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``Only blood can wash away bad blood,'' he said. ``Our peoples have that
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in common. I should not have forgot it.''
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The knife came down, hard enough to shake the table beneath, and carved
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into the orc's only flesh wrist. Blood spurted as Vivienne's blade
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scraped across bones, fear and astonishment taking hold of her.
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``Adjutant, what-''
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``My word is of no worth to you,'' Hakram Deadhand calmly interrupted
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her, face pale and taught with pain. ``That is not unwise. Amends must
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be made. So when you next doubt your value, I want you to remember this:
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when the choice came, I judged you well worth a hand.''
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The orc's wrist pressed down, bone shattered and Adjutant's black blood
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crept across the table as his hand came fully severed.
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