434 lines
23 KiB
TeX
434 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-72-outflow}{%
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\section{Chapter 72: Outflow}\label{chapter-72-outflow}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``For though these armed men may carry banner and obey a prince,
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without justice they are only bandits.''}
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-- Extract from ``The Faith of Crowns'', by Sister Salienta
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\end{quote}
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It'd be the first battle in a few years where I wouldn't have Juniper to
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run my army for me. I hadn't quite realized how much I'd come to rely on
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the Hellhound even before the blades were out, when it was all words and
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maps and trying to figure out how not to get your people killed. Not
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that map were all that reliable down here. I had four different tracings
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from mosaics, each contradicting each other on pretty major points and
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one insisting rather boldly that this entire cavern was actually three
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dozen miles to the west and I was sadly mistaken about what my eyes were
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seeing. I'd settled on having a chalk outline of the former islands and
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lakebed drawn on a slab of polished granite, well aware it would be
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imprecise and actual distances would be a guessing game. It'd been
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strange, though, looking down at a battlefield and not having Juniper
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leaning over at my side. Frowning over the latest imperfection in the
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war engine we'd raised together, muttering under her breath about
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Ratface being a tight-fisted twerp. She never would again, I realized
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with a start.
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Ratface was dead.
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There would be a reckoning for that, one day, I thought. It seemed a
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small sin when compared to all the many injuries levied unto Callow by
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the Empress, some likely to become actual legend in years to come, but
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it counted to \emph{me}. As Diabolist might say, a hatred belonging the
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woman instead of the queen. \emph{Won't matter if I don't make it
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through this,} I reminded myself. It wouldn't either, I knew, if I
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survived in failure. Only victors ever got to truly settle their
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grudges. The grim thought called me the order. Perhaps, I decided as I
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studied the chalk battlefield, it was for the best that my marshal did
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not hold command for this one. Juniper's art of war was one of
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discipline and manoeuvre, of bold tactics and vicious traps. It was the
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bastard child of the way the Legions of Terrors had won their wars, and
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for all that the faces of my legionaries had grown paler over the years
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the heart of it remained forged out of the Reforms. A core of
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well-trained infantry empowered by specialists, professional soldiers
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costly to train and equip but who could usually beat significantly
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larger enemy armies.
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Like much of what Black had wrought, for the three Imperial marshals
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might have been deep contributors but there was no denying the central
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architect, it prized skill over power. It was almost more a set of tools
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a brilliant mind could use to produce spectacular results than a proper
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army -- it was fortunate that there'd been so many promising generals to
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be found when the Reforms first took place, and in retrospective the
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number of them that wasn't human did much to explain the sudden gains of
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greenskins and ogres in what had once been a very human institution. At
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least near the top. Few of the old Black Knights had balked at sending
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orcs and goblins into the meat grinder to the west when campaigns got
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going. It was a good model, I thought, though to maintain it in the long
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term Callow would have to build a War College of its own. Talented
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officers did not grow on trees. It had its limits, though. Procer had
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made that clear when it'd tossed a sea of conscripts at the two passes
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defending Callow and effectively accepted every trade in soldier's
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lives, knowing they could afford the most spendthrift or rates and still
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come out the victor. The Legions, and even the Army of Callow, were
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armies built for a certain kind of war.
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They would be lost, down here, so it was for the best Juniper was not
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here to go mad over the coming mess.
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I would have liked to claim I had something as neat and pretty as a
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three-step scheme, that I'd read the opposition and would make them
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dance to my tune, but the unfortunate truth was that I was an outsider
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down here. Even now that I'd stolen Akua's fluency in Crepuscular and I
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could read most runes as well as speak the tongue, a lot of what was
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taking place was beyond me. I didn't have the Jacks and the Eyes feeding
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me reports of about who despised who and why, I didn't have histories or
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supply assessments or even more than bare bones scout reports about
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enemy strength and position. The traitor sigils we'd approached had
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provided information, sure, but how much of it could really be relied
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on? They had objectives of their own which didn't necessarily entail my
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own army coming out on top, no matter what they said, and without an
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easy way to independently confirm what they'd told me I'd had to make
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some choices half blind. At first, I'd tried to get as many solid
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numbers as I could and work from there. I had a good idea of what the
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Rumena Sigil could bring to the table, for example, because a lot of
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people in Strycht hated them and wanted them dead.
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But then I'd tried to get a solid notion of what the Jindrich could
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field -- the Rumena were the most powerful sigil by far, but there was a
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reason the Jindrich Sigil was the undisputed runner-up -- but all that
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accomplished was making clear the scope of the problem. Mighty
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Jindrich's envoy, fresh off the pact we'd made behind the back of the
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rest of the city, had informed me they had around one hundred and fifty
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Mighty of varying ranks they could bring into the fight when time came.
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We'd bribed three lesser sigils going thirsty with blocks of ice for
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information on the same subject, since ice was a lot easier to transport
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and didn't require a highly visible fairy gate to deliver, and we'd
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gotten three different numbers between one and four hundred. Now, at the
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scale of the kind of battles I'd fought on the surface, a variation of a
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few hundred wouldn't mean much. But down here? It'd made no sense to me.
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All the sigils had small territories, were bound to keep a vigilant eye
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on each other and constant raids should give them a good idea of enemy
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strength.
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Diabolist figured it out first, because we \emph{had} gotten some very
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precise out of those bribes that was the same over all three reports.
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Small details, like the first rylleh under Jindrich being able to
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shapeshift and the four shapes it could use, or that the third and
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fourth under Rumena usually fought as a pair. It wasn't that the drow
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were shit at spying, I knew they weren't. There was a Secret that was
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pretty close to fae glamour, after all, which was why Ivah had taken so
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well to it in the first place. It was just that, in fights between
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sigils, usually the only people that actually mattered to the outcome
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were the ten, fifteen strongest Mighty. Raids succeeded or failed
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depending on who was leading the attack and the defence. Why would
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anyone bother keeping track of how many dzulu there were when a single
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rylleh could tear through an entire cohort without even working up a
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sweat? We could and had gotten mostly reliable information on those
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particular individuals, but getting irritated that no one could give me
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good troop assessments was rather missing the point.
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I wouldn't win or lose the Battle of Great Strycht through dzulu and
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lesser Mighty, so instead of getting lost in a maze of unreliable
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reports I needed to focus on the aspects that would actually make me
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come out on top. Namely, that most of those people were at each other's
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throats if not actively trying to kill each other even as I planned.
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When you looked at it through that lens, the situation was a lot less
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grim. For one, my own army was larger than the Rumena Sigil's and I'd
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bet on my Peerage over their Mighty any day. My lords had lost nothing
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of their old prowess and gained much from Winter. Considering the Rumena
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were the most powerful tribe in Strycht, that meant I could expect that
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if it came to a slugging match I could come out on top against any one
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sigil -- barring an unexpectedly powerful Mighty fucking up my day,
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which was admittedly quite possible. The crux of this, then, would be
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preventing the sigils of Strycht from actually unifying against me.
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Which wasn't nearly as hard as it should have been, given that I was an
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eldritch invader of dubious purposes and origins. Unfortunately, there
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was also the Longstride Cabal to account for.
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Two hundred of the most dangerous Mighty in the Everdark apt to pop out
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at any moment to come straight for my head, and probably the Peerage's
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too for good measure. They weren't here for territory or wealth, all
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they wanted was the glory of crushing me. Which meant negotiating with
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them in any way was effectively impossible unless I could punctuate my
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offer with `or you will immediately die', and even then it might be a
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toss-up. I'd picked the brains of my lords for a little more on the
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Longstrides, wondering if the angle of promising them a battle at a
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designated time and place could get them off my back long enough to deal
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with the Strycht sigils. I'd gotten some pretty heart laughs in
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response, as my Peerage assumed that I was actually joking. Cultural
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divide, I decided. The whole glory in battle thing was tied pretty
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heavily to honour, back home, but in the Everdark was the word was only
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ever used in the sense meaning `respect'. The whole rules of behaviour
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part of drow culture had been pretty much ripped out and replaced with
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the Tenets of Night when Sve Noc decided it was time for a regime
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change\ldots{} however long ago that'd been.
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Since sidelining the Longstride Sigil wasn't an option, I had to either
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secure the city before they arrived or make them part of the plan
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somehow.
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The clean play was taking care of Strycht first. Ivah and my Peerage had
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found me the right tools to get that particular pile of dry burning,
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which would weaken the opposition before we struck and allow us to take
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it with moderate casualties before they realized what was happening.
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Give or take a few angry sigil-holders. Then before the Longstrides
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arrived we'd consolidate, harvest Night and title the willing before the
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enemy struck. Most my Peerage had been proponents of that course of
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action, betting on a proper ambush laid in Strycht to take care of the
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problem. I had issues with that plan, though. I'd taken enough cities in
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my time to know that soldiers walking through the streets wasn't enough
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to actually establish control. That held twice as much for a place like
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the Everdark, where the nisi might not make the kind of mess an
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occupying force would have to deal with in Callow but millennia of
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tribal rule ensured there would be significant resistance among the drow
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`upper class'. In essence, anyone with a speck of power not under oath
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not to stab me in the back would the moment it looked like there was a
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chance it might pay off.
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Wouldn't be much of an issue if I \emph{did} put everyone with a speck
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of power under oath, but practically speaking that'd take days we didn't
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have. Establishing order after a battle always took longer than the
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fighting itself, and the margin of manoeuvre was thin enough as it was.
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I could have put the finest minds at my disposal to work on solving that
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-- well, mind, Archer tended to solve her problems only one way -- but
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there was a larger problem behind. Aside from the shaky foundations we'd
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be making our stand on, when the Longstride Cabal showed up we'd be the
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only enemy on the field. The totality of their efforts would be
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dedicated to killing me and wiping out my Peerage, with everything else
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a minor distraction at best. Sure, I could try to drown them in fresh
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recruits. Send every dzulu and Mighty I had after them, in warbands led
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by the Peerage, but casualties would be brutal. And when they converged
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on me, because they absolutely would, the kind of workings I'd need to
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pull out to stay alive would probably level Strycht and the people
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living in it. Evacuating the city in advance was certainly possible, but
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it'd also be hanging up a sign warning them of the ambush.
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So either massive civilian death toll or the cohort of hardened killers
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drunk on Night came in forewarned. One I refused out of principle, the
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other had decent odds of leading to a rout.
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Which brought us to the other option. That one had been cooking in the
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back of my head since I'd first gotten Ivah's reports. The sigils in
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Great Strycht were, well, at each other's throats to put it mildly.
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Starting a city-wide fight in there would be about as hard as starting a
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fire with a jug of oil and a torch in hand. Once hostilities erupted,
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there would be no banners and uniforms: only a lot of scared and angry
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drow attacking everything looking remotely like a threat. That was the
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thing with civil wars, wasn't it? It was hard to tell who the enemy was.
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Sure, infighting within actual sigils would probably be minimal while
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they were in the middle of a battle. But cabals would split and even
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nominal allies would have to wonder what was going on and if the other
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ones were in on it. A very volatile mixture that could be made much
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worse with a few nudges, personified by a cheerfully murderous Indrani.
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For once, her ability to pick fights with anything sight could actually
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come in useful! Deep down I'd always known there would be a payoff for
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that eventually. This part, in and of itself, wasn't significantly
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different from what an attempt to seize Strycht would be like.
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Which was where the\ldots{} interesting part came in. The Longstride
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Cabal, as my Peerage had noted, were not exactly the diplomatic kind of
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crew. Oh, to have survived this long they probably must have \emph{some}
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degree of moderation. Otherwise another band of old monsters would have
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put them down by now. But while Great Strycht was further into the inner
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ring than say, Lotow, it was far from the heartlands. I tended to
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compare it to Marchford, in my mind. An important city, given the lake
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if loomed over, but not a major player -- like Laure, Liesse and Vale
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had once been in Callow. The Longstrides could come in here and expect
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to be the biggest kids on the block because, well, they actually would
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be. Now, combine that with the way drow usually behaved whenever they
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stood even an inch over another drow and throw in that their cabal
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hunted powerful entities for sport? The moment someone gave them lip
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they'd answer with blades, and from there it would escalate.
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Sigil-holders would know what they were dealing with and likely withdraw
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if given the chance, but to be able to do that they'd need to have a
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clear idea of what was going on and the presence of mind to make that
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decision.
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Both were pretty rare things, when in the middle of an all-out battle
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that would determine whether you and your tribe survived the night.
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Akua had called it fighting fire with fire, when I'd put forward the
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notion, but I disagreed. That implied a degree of control we wouldn't
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have after the blades came out. It was more like\ldots{} fighting a
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battle by starting another half-dozen battles. I didn't have to win, not
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exactly. I just had to lose less than everyone else. Just enough that I
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got to take home the prize when the dust settled. We'd used our last few
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days to put the pieces in motion for what Diabolist scathingly named
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Operation Damage Control, all coming to a head on the day we believed
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the Longstride Cabal would arrive. Spending the last night with Indrani
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should have cleared my mind, but instead when the hour came I had a
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fresh worry to chew over. I still believed that the plan, if it could be
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called that, would serve its purposes. There would be setbacks, but I
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still had cards up my sleeves. I hadn't wasted my days since Great
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Lotow, or forgot the hard lesson the duel with Mighty Urulan had taught
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me. If I fought the same way I had since claiming my mantle, I would
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lose. \emph{Badly}. Preparations had been made accordingly. But that
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wasn't the worry, was it? There was only one thing I knew this morning I
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hadn't last night.
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Sve Noc would act. Not down the line, not through intermediaries. She'd
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strike, today and straight at me. If this really was a death match for
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Below's favour, then the chosen would have to bleed. And that changed
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the nature of this battle, didn't? I did not feel like a coincidence,
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that's she'd shown her hand only this late. When the wheels were already
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turning and it was too late to stop them.
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``A good morning to you, dearest.''
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I did not turn or reply. Behind me the camp was stirring for war,
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preparing to march. Below me plains of half-dried mud stretched out all
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the way to the distant plateaus and hills of Great Strycht. My fingers
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drummed against the hilt of my sword, the gesture failing to settle me.
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Diabolist was not offended by my lack of reply, simply coming to stand
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by my side.
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``Did you enjoy yourself, at least?'' Akua drawled.
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I glanced at her, eyebrow rising. Did she\ldots{} Well, I supposed it
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hadn't been the most discreet of trysts. Drow senses were shaper than
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those of humans, even those that weren't Mighty, and the shade's were
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sharper still.
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``Sve Noc paid a visit to my dreams,'' I said.
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I had no intention of discussing how I spent my nights with Akua
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Sahelian. She was not the Scribe to my Calamities, part of us in her own
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way. I would not forget how she had come into my service, no matter how
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useful. Or how tiring. That was the part that surprised me, how
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\emph{tiring} it could be to hate Diabolist. The Doom of Liesse was
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reminder enough, but sometimes it felt like I was flogging myself with
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the memory of it.
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As, no doubt, she intended.
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``Her purpose?'' she asked.
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Whatever whimsy there'd been was gone. She understood perhaps even
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better than me the seriousness of that.
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``Information,'' I said. ``About what I'd do with the drow, if I led
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them out of the Everdark. About how I'd deal with the Heavens if they
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meddled.''
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Scarlet eyes tightened.
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``That such an entity would consider surrender is highly unlikely,'' she
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said, pausing to allow me to contradict her.
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Both assessing and fishing for fresh information with the same sentence.
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Fucking Praesi, I thought half-admiringly.
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``She was definitely hostile,'' I said. ``And tried to overcompensate
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when I caught her out. All doom and damnation. But she slipped up --
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there's two of them, I'm almost certain. And they're not necessarily
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aligned in their opinions.''
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``Now \emph{that} is rather interesting,'' Akua said. ``I had previously
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assumed that her lack of action was the result of either rules or
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indifference. Power akin to a god's does tend to come with the
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limitations of one.''
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I raised a skeptical eyebrow at her.
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``I got a pat on the back and a badge from that order's grandmaster and
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I'm not feeling all that constrained,'' I noted.
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``You've only ever used a fraction of your power,'' Diabolist said, and
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raised her hand to prevent me from replying to that. ``For good reason,
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I am aware. The alienation would endanger you. Yet that is why such
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entities have seats of power, Catherine. The Dead King rules the
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Serenity. The Priestess of Night rules the Everdark, or close enough.
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There is a reason my ancestors raised \emph{pyramids} to gather power,
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darling one. The summit stands on the steps, and is greater for it.''
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``I do rule a kingdom, Akua,'' I reminded her. ``You know, little place
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between Praes and Procer? There was a coronation a while back, in
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between the constant fucking wars.''
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``Ah, but do you rule it as Sovereign of Moonless Nights?'' she said.
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``Hardly. Even the Wild Hunt are merely in your service, not true
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vassals. You bound neither the Woe nor the realm to your mantle.''
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``Making Arcadia but worse out of my home isn't exactly in the works,
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yes,'' I flatly replied.
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``And so you have not grown roots,'' Diabolist said. ``An apotheosis
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incomplete, so to speak. Did you not wonder why the Grey Pilgrim and his
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ilk are so desperate to remove you from the throne?''
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``I'm a villain ruling Callow,'' I said. ``I don't believe we need to
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revisit the whole Calernian balance of power argument, Gods know I'm
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tired of hearing about it.''
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``The Carrion Lord ruled it for decades,'' Akua said. ``And, to be
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frank, the legitimacy of your rule is only marginally better.''
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I frowned. It was a pretty sparse forest she was describing to me, and
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as a rule I tended to think I understood heroes better than she did. But
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she \emph{was} a villain, in a way I'd never really been. From a people
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who'd been fighting heroes for centuries. She might not always be right,
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she often wasn't, but once in a while her perspective did allow her to
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see things I didn't.
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``Roots,'' I said. ``That's what you're implying. The Peregrine worries
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about me growing roots in Callow.''
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``It is one thing to slay a villainous queen of Callow,'' Diabolist
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said. ``Quite another to seek the destruction of the immortal Black
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Queen, the wintry personification of centuries of her people's grudges.
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The first is a threat. The second is another Dead King, one whose armies
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can march through the realm of the fae\emph{.}''
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``He knows,'' I said, then hesitated. ``Or at least suspects that I
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intend to abdicate.''
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``And so you were handled with gloves,'' Akua said. ``Deals and stories,
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marching armies instead of a Choir unleashed. You ascribe this to the
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man being reasonable, but he is a \emph{hero}. If that decision was
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made, it was made because he feared that cornering you would see you
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tumbling through the threshold of apotheosis complete.''
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Or he could have been genuinely trying to limit the damages the country
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would suffer. If he had started calling on Choirs, I'd have needed to
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escalate accordingly. \emph{But when the pivot came}, I thought,
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\emph{he backed Hasenbach}. \emph{Backed the crusade victorious at all
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costs. He was willing to play within certain boundaries, but only so
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long as he'd win.} The trouble with Akua was she would be convincing
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even if she was wrong, because she was a persuasive person period. I was
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unwilling to put any stock in it before I had Hakram and maybe Masego
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serving as advocated for the opposite thought.
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``Doesn't matter,'' I said. ``For now, the war is down here. And it's
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Sve Noc we're facing.''
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``Part of her, at least,'' Diabolist mused. ``I wonder if the simplest
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answer is truly the correct one.''
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``Simplest?''
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``One is the pyramid,'' Akua smiled. ``The other standing atop it.''
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A rider and a horse, I thought. I'd considered that as well.
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``It would explain why we're not fighting the Night,'' I said. ``Just
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something using it.''
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``Strife, mother of a thousand opportunities,'' she quoted in Mthethwa.
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An old proverb I would have been able to name the home of even if she'd
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spoken it in Lower Miezan.
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``I need you to do something for me,'' I said.
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She turned to face me completely. In Masego that would have been a
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notice I had his full attention, but with her I always had that. Even
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when she pretended otherwise.
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``I had role given in the battle to come,'' Akua said.
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``I know,'' I said. ``But this is more important.''
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``And what exactly do you need of me, dearest?'' she asked.
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There were a lot of ways I could have answered her. Some true, others
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euphemisms or a hundred different shades of flippant. It'd helped me
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over the years, the quips. Allowed me to make it a joke or a game,
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anything but a reality so often ugly. But if I was to let the monster
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off her leash, then she should be given her due.
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``Folly,'' I said.
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Akua Sahelian smiled, and in that smile lay the promise of things great
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and terrible to behold.
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