479 lines
22 KiB
TeX
479 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-75-the-eye}{%
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\section{Chapter 75: The Eye}\label{chapter-75-the-eye}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``There is more power in blood spilled willingly than unwillingly.
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The latter is simply a great deal easier to obtain.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Sorcerous
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\end{quote}
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I would have compared it to herding cats, but as far as I knew those
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didn't take time in the middle of a rout to backstab allies or enemies,
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depending on who didn't watch their back closely enough. Well, maybe
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Praesi cats. You never knew with Wastelanders. I kept the drow moving
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even after we'd cleared the area that was being affected by the
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`volcano' by more or less stomping out any knot of bravery that formed.
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After the second time Mighty who tried to stand their ground and rally
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their warriors got a gate opened above their heads the message was
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received. I was sinking into Winter at a prodigious rate, no to ways
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around it, but nowadays I had more than just Akua to dump the principle
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alienation into. Twelve hardened former Mighty on top of Diabolist meant
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I could keep this up for quite a while without going all
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monologue-addicted, and if it came down to it I could try to disperse
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some of it into the drow who'd simply taken oaths. There were shards of
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Winter in them as well, after all, put there to enforce the terms. It
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didn't quite feel like I'd be breaking our bargain if I did that, but
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somehow I suspected it was close enough I wouldn't like the ensuing
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backlash. A desperate measure, if need be, but not to be used before
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that.
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The front we'd named the Pit was effectively finished, the chaos within
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being poured into the dawning mess at the centre of Great Strycht, but
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while fighting there I'd taken my eye off the two fronts to the east.
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There were risks in that, which was I'd put Lord Soln in command of the
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reserve to hedge my bets. It had authority to intervene as it deemed
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necessary to keep the wagon on the road. It was about time to see how
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that'd worked out. I remained with the retreat until we reached the
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outskirts of the central district before putting Ivah and Archer in
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charge of the situation and dismissing the glamour and taking flight.
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The false sky of the cavern was mercifully unburdened by fighting, and
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the height allowed me to gauge how the situation was unfolding over the
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entire city. There'd been two battles planned in the east, fronts named
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Spear and Dice. The former I wasn't overly worried about, since the
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Jindrich would be taking the lead there and their sigil-holder was
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infamously destructive. The latter was a different story, as it involved
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a cabal of four sigils informally led by the Hushu, which presumably
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weren't in on any of the plots coming to a head. If they pushed into the
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other eastern front, that whole section of the city would become a
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massive melee I lacked the tools to properly handle.
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Considering the `plan' for the Battle of Great Strycht was to drive
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everyone and their genderless sibling into the centre before the
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Longstrides arrived, there was a lot riding on Lord Soln's ability to
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cope with the situation.
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What I took in from above was a mixed bag. The reinforcing Peerage I'd
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sent to back up the Jindrich had been enough to punch through the
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delaying force sent by the Rumena on the Spear front, by the looks of
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it. They were in full retreat, harassed by coalition and Peerage drow as
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they made for the centre. Considering the amount of Peers I'd sent east
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I was rather surprised it was harassment and not annihilation I was
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looking at, but the explanation was not difficult to find. The Hushu and
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their allies had taken the field and decided to be clever about it.
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Instead of launching a hard assault that would see my Peerage diverted
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from the pursuit to deal with the situation, they were marauding around
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the flanks and striking fast before withdrawing. The Peers and
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sigil-holders in command were hesitating, reluctant to allow the Rumena
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to retreat unimpeded when the Hushu attacks were so lukewarm. The three
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lords I'd assigned to that front had gone with the understanding that
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containment was their main objective, so they were tacitly allowing it
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to happen even if it thinned their ranks. Presumably judging that the
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overall losses would be greater if we fully engaged. The reserve under
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Lord Soln was closer to the centre, in an incline between two
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islands-turned-hills, and so hidden from view. There'd been four sigils
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assigned to the reserve, before hostilities erupted, but only two were
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still hidden down there: the Soln and the Agus, so at least the overall
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commander was there to answer my questions.
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Instead of staying up there and drawing attention, I landed next to the
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reserve and dismissed my wings. The drow parted around me, many of them
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bowing as I passed, and I returned the gesture with a silent nod. The
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Lord of Shallow Graves awaited me with Lord Agus at its side, gravely
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listening to dzulu giving reports. The conversation died as I strode in,
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the two Peers inclining their heads in deference.
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``Losara Queen,'' Lord Soln said. ``I heard word of your success to the
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north.''
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``Drew in everyone I could and sent them running into the central
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melee,'' I agreed. ``I'm more interested in the situation around here.
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Have the Hushu and their cabal declared for a side?''
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``Their own, presumably,'' Lord Agus sighed.
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``They attacked the coalition and the Rumena both,'' Soln calmly
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replied. ``Though with the retreat of the Rumena, we are now the only
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blood left to be shed.''
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``I take it you've something in the works,'' I said, glancing around
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pointedly.
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There were, after all, two missing sigils.
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``I sent the lords Lovre and Vadimyr to circle around Hushu positions,''
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Lord Soln agreed.
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``That'll open another front,'' I pointed out. ``Instead of push them
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into the centre, which is what we're actually after.''
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``So I said, Losara Queen,'' Lord Agus muttered. ``So I said.''
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``I intend to launch an assault myself as they do, my queen,'' Soln
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explained. ``Along the ridges of the southeast.''
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I frowned, trying to remember what I'd seen of the battlefield from
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above. It would make a corner connected to a line that led straight to
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the centre, more or less, if you counted the forces currently pursuing
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the Rumena. If I had to guess at the intent, it'd be forcing Hushu and
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friends to head towards the centre to avoid being assaulted from two
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sides. If we'd been fielding a disciplined army I would have given it
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decent odds of working out as Soln wanted, forcing movement through
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pressure, but as it was we'd be compounding a gamble with another
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gamble. \emph{And even if it works out, we're wedging the Hushu and
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their allies in between the Losara Sigil and the rest of our forces}, I
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thought. Considering my sigil had already taken harsh losses at the
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hands of the Rumena, if the Hushu went all-out against them they might
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outright collapse. That'd be\ldots{} bad. Without my own forces out
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there to stoke the fire, there was a decent chance the `neutral' sigils
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there would rally and retreat rather than remain participants in the
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bloody melee. Soln, I thought, had good instincts. But it was trying to
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fight with an army we didn't have, and its core mistake was trying to
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maintain control over a situation that was already too chaotic to
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handle.
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``How long ago did Lovre and Vadimyr set out?'' I asked.
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``Less than half an hour,'' Lord Agus said.
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``Right, so we've still got time to manoeuvre,'' I frowned. ``All right,
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here's what we'll do. The entire force holding back the Hushu and their
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cabal is to collapse immediately and flee towards the centre.''
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The two drow stiffened with surprise.
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``The casualties-'' Lord Soln delicately began.
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``Will sting, I know,'' I said. ``But your way is as likely to lead in a
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slugging match we can't afford as it is to drive them to the centre. So
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instead of forcing them, we'll bait them. That many sigils in a rout?
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They'll come after them with everything they have, eager for the
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harvest.''
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``And we are to simply look upon the situation and wait?'' Lord Agus
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asked, with what I suspected to be a hopeful tone.
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Not the fiercest of fighters, this one.
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``No,'' I said. ``You two and the two sigils Lord Soln sent out are to
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attack them from behind once they've committed.''
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I paused, meeting the Lord of Shallow Graves' blue eyes.
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``Lord Soln, force them into the centre,'' I said. ``With everything you
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have.''
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The drow softly laughed.
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``And I believed myself to be ruthless,'' it said. ``It will be as you
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say, Queen of Lost and Found.''
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Lord Agus was a lot less sanguine about essentially throwing both our
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`allies' and several of our sigils into a boiling broth, but kept its
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dismay largely off its face.
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``Will you be accompanying us in this, Losara Queen?'' it asked.
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``Sadly, I suspect I'll be needed elsewhere,'' I said.
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If only because the last thing I wanted was to be surrounded by my own
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warriors when the Longstride Cabal showed up.
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``Do either of you know where Mighty Jindrich is?'' I continued.
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``The Rumena angered it enough it grew wroth before they were driven
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back,'' Lord Soln said. ``It was last seen heading out in their pursuit,
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its mind lost to rage.''
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``Find the largest concentration of wreckage and corpses, it shall not
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be far,'' Lord Agus noted.
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``And Mighty Rumena?'' I asked.
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``Has yet to take the field against us,'' Soln said. ``Though there is
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word it might have participated in the taking of the central district.
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It is largely under that sigil's control by now.''
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``So the dance awaits me in the middle,'' I mused. ``Fitting. Lord Soln,
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I trust you'll be able to carry out your orders here?''
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``That much I can promise,'' the Lord of Shallow Graves smiled.
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``Then wade in their blood, my lord,'' I said, and translucent wings
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burst out of my back.
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I was thousands of miles away from any orc, but their traditional
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farewell had hardly ever been more appropriate. I shot back up into the
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sky and wasted no time before heading out towards the front we'd named
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the Woods. That district had been the centre of ancient Great Strycht in
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senses more numerous than the geographical one, even a swift glance made
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that clear. It was a labyrinth of temples and great halls, each its own
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little island surrounded by a deep canal and tied to others structures
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by curved bridges and arches of stone. The sheer vividness of it
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startled me, for until now I'd seen drow tastes run towards mostly
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colours grey and dark. Here though, strange and half-faded patterns of
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blue, red and white covered every surface. Orange and gold served as the
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colour of the sky in sprawling mosaics where the moon was depicted as a
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feathered wheel of white-tipped red, the stylized heads of snakes and
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drow gazing down at the bloodletting from every corner. The depredations
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of time and abandonment were easy to find, collapsed roofs not since
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repaired and broken walls serving as makeshift doors, but I was
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surprised to see some of the paints had been freshly touched up.
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Some of those mosaics were splattered with greyish red, though, and that
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wasn't paint.
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A square tower with colourful turrets on the corners burst open at the
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base, and just like that I'd found Mighty Jindrich. The drow was
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massive, the largest of its kind I'd ever seen, and covered from head to
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toe in a featureless carapace of pure Night. I watched, reluctantly
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impressed, as its fingers sunk into the sides of the same tower it'd
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just ripped up and it repeatedly smashed the whole thing down on a pair
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of Mighty until there was nothing left but bloody paste. Then it tossed
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the whole thing into a temple and screamed monstrously before leaping
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into another fight. This was, I thought, my primary ally in this battle.
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I sure knew how to pick them. I was almost distracted enough that I
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didn't see the javelin coming, but not quite. There were fires all over
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the district and trails of smoke going up into the sky, but as the
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projectile sailed through a large plume I caught sight of the stir it
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caused and dipped below with a bat of my wings. I raised a brow when I
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realized there was no hint of power in the toss, save in how far it'd
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been thrown, and that even if I'd not moved it would likely have missed
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me. Had some enterprising dzulu decided to bag queen and glory with the
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same throw?
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I'd be sure to praise their guts, before the messy retaliatory murder.
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I flew around the plume of smoke and found where it should have come
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from, eyes landing on a single drow standing atop one of the tallest
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towers in the district. That was strike one. Even far as I was I could
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make out the looks of it. It was, well, old. Its grey skin was deeply
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creased, its pitch-black veins visible through it and though tall it had
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grown visibly stooped. It held no weapon, attired in a strange belted
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tunic of obsidian rings. Almost like mail, I thought. Its hair was long
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and white, going down almost to its waist. That was strike two. Its dim
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silver eyes met mine all the way across the distance, as if it could see
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me just as well, and I could not feel a single speck of power from it.
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That was strike three, and so the drow might as well have `dangerous,
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take caution' tattooed glaring red on its forehead. It did not attack a
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second time, simply waiting. \emph{Not an attack}, I corrected. \emph{A
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way to grab my attention.} My eyes dipped to the large cloth belt it
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wore, and the Crepuscular I read on that only confirmed what I was
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already suspecting. Wings narrowing behind me as I dove, I landed
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smoothly in front of the Mighty Rumena.
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Mantle of Woe fluttering as I rose to my full height -- which was,
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rather unfairly I felt, still shorter than the bent old drow -- my wings
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folded behind me. I wasn't dismissing those before I got a clear idea of
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what was taking place here. I'd read a lot of faces, in my time. I'd
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watched humanity slide off my teacher's true face like water off clay,
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the utter blankness of fae bereft of stories. Shades of contempt by the
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dozen, angers both principled and personal, too many flavours of hatred
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to count. Irritation from creatures considering me an insolent child,
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pity from the likes of the Grey Pilgrim and even casual dismissal from
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the Saint of Swords. Mighty Rumena stood out from that multitude,
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because all there was in its gaze was attention. Pure and unfettered, as
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if the weight of it left no place for anything else. It was
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uncomfortable, to have someone take in all of me so deeply. It didn't
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feel like scrutiny, and I realized the source of my unease a moment
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later. I'd seen that look in another pair of eyes: Masego's, when he'd
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come into his aspect in Arcadia. When he'd witnessed it all with
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impossible clarity.
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``Mighty Rumena,'' I said. ``Your invitation was received.''
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``Losara Queen,'' my foe simply greeted me.
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It had a calm voice, I thought. Unruffled, unhurried. Like nothing could
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really affect it. It was old and powerful enough it might not even be
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wrong about that. It glanced down at the messy fighting below, the
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screams and blood and fire swallowing up the district.
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``I remember this city,'' Rumena said. ``From when it was at its height.
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The jewel of the south, second only to Tvarigu in beauty. It brings me
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no pleasure to layer ruin over ruin.''
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``And yet,'' I said, ``here we are.''
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``There are only a few of us left, Losara,'' the Mighty said. ``Those
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who knew this land before Night fell upon it. In Strycht, Jindrich is
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the only other -- and it was young when we lost the wars. Too young to
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understand the true depth of the loss.''
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``But you weren't,'' I said.
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If it wanted to talk while my designs unfolded, I had absolutely no
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objection to that. If we engaged it was going to be the kind of mess
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that'd make devils blush, and while my forces below weren't winning
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exactly they were carrying out my plan perfectly. It was hard for them
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not to, when the entire plan was to create chaos and that was the
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natural state of the Everdark.
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``I was a general, honoured twice for victories won in the Burning Lands
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by the Twilight Sages themselves,'' Rumena said. ``One of them, I think,
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against a people whose blood you hold. The look has little changed since
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those nights.''
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My fingers tightened. It was implying it'd fought the Deoraithe, at some
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point, and there was a little problem with that: neither the Kingdom nor
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the later Duchy of Daoine had ever come under drow assault in recorded
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history. There was the Golden Bloom in the way, after all. Which meant I
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was talking to an entity claiming it'd been alive before the elves
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arrived on Calernia. Three thousand years old, I thought, at least.
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Gods. It might be the single oldest thing I'd ever met save for the Dead
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King.
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``And now you're a sigil-holder in the remnants of the old empire,'' I
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said.
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``My army followed me,'' the Mighty said. ``Already they were rylleh and
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jawor, though the titles had different meaning then. None of them
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survived the passing of the years. The Night is not a forgiving
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sacrament.''
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Sacrament, I thought. Not just a domain, some Name's power manifest.
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It'd always felt too large, hadn't it? And I had wondered why no drow
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seemed to be born a mage. This whole time, had I really been looking at
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an entire people wielding Below's equivalent of Light? Miracles of the
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darkness, purer in nature than even the stuff devils were made of.
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``You saw it happen, then,'' I said. ``What Sve Noc did.''
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``I knew one of the sisters,'' Rumena said. ``And now know her better
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still. She is in my blood, in my soul.''
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Sisters? My eyes narrowed. And it'd called the Sve \emph{her}. There was
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something significant about that, I thought. A detail I was missing.
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``They broke you,'' I said. ``Your entire civilization.''
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The drow shook its head.
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``Not them,'' Rumena said. ``The Twilight Sages, in their wanton
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arrogance. How tall stood their pedestal and proud they were of it,
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until the nerezim cast them down. Only then did they regret the
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height.''
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My blood ran cold. For a creature that old and powerful to call
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something \emph{wanton arrogance}, how terrible must it be?
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``What did they do?''
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``They sought to kill death,'' the Mighty said. ``But leashed it
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instead. We were to live forever, you see. As gods. And we did, for a
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time.''
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The old drow's lips twisted into a bitter smile.
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``Then we lost the wars,'' Rumena said. ``And while we raged and wailed
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of wealth lost, of glories unmade, the wise Sages knew terror. For the
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nerezim put entire cities to the sword, and our immortality
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\emph{narrowed}. They had borrowed from what would never be. And with
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every defeat the debt grew closer to that moment where it could no
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longer be repaid.''
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``They didn't make you immortal,'' I spoke slowly, piecing together
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what'd been laid out for me to find. ``Did they? They stole years from
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children not yet born. That would never be, because their parents were
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slain by the dwarves.''
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It was one of the fundamental laws of sorcery, wasn't it? That you
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couldn't make something out of nothing. I had not forgotten that
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glimpsed conversation between Neshamah and the Bard, where she'd implied
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the Twilight Sages had been mages.
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``And so our end loomed, Losara Queen,'' the Mighty said. ``The balance
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dipped closer to irredeemable disaster with every fallen city. Until the
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two of them took action.''
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``The sisters,'' I said. ``They made the Gloom. They made the Night.
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Before the point of no return was reached.''
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There was a long moment of silence between us, as the sounds of the
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slaughter below drifted up to our ears.
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``Before?'' Mighty Rumena smiled. ``O Queen of Lost and Found, did you
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not come here to rob a corpse?''
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I shivered. The old creature laughed.
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``Dead, every last one of us,'' the drow said. ``You thought Sve Noc the
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cause of our ruin, and you were wrong. You thought them the cure to our
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disease, and you were wrong again. Our most beloved betrayers did not
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save a single soul. They\ldots{} delayed.''
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``It makes no sense,'' I said. ``The Gloom yes, but the Night? It
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incited slaughter. If instead they'd encouraged childbirth, raised your
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population, you might have gotten out of it. You've had centuries to
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recover since those wars, you could have evened the scales.''
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``You do not understand,'' the Mighty said. ``It was too late, Losara
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Queen. \emph{We were already dying}. But those clever sisters, the
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wicked and the merciful, they struck a bargain.''
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And I grasped it, then, what it was that I was being told.
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``The Night is the only thing keeping any of you alive,'' I whispered
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hoarsely. ``And the slaughter isn't a mistake or an unforeseen
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consequence, it's the entire point. Every kill is a sacrifice. Willing.
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Eager, even. Merciless Gods, Archer was right -- this entire realm is an
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altar.''
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``The greatest in all of Creation,'' Rumena said, ruinously proud.
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``Witness and weep, Losara, the glory of the Firstborn: we alone, of all
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peoples in the world, have cheated death \emph{twice}.''
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``But it couldn't last,'' I said. ``You had to have known that. The
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dwarves were going to come sooner or later and it was all going to fall
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apart the moment they did.''
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``The Night was not an answer,'' the Mighty said. ``But it could be
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understood as a question.''
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And another part of the puzzle fell into place.
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``Apotheosis,'' I said. ``Through brute force. Trying every possible
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application of power through hundreds of thousands of Mighty so that a
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path out could be found.''
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And I had thought myself inelegant, for merely blundering my way into my
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mantle. The sisters were trying to force the lock by trying every
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possible key.
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``Was it?'' I asked. ``Did they find a path?''
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Pale silver eyes considered me calmly.
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``Come now,'' Rumena said. ``Why would the Shrouded Gods grant such a
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boon, when our base terror kept their altars slick with blood?''
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``So they failed,'' I said. ``Rumena, there's another way. I can help
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with this. We don't need to fight. Winter-''
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I bit my tongue.
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``You knew that already,'' I finally said. ``And you still struck.''
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``You are right, Queen of Lost and Found,'' the Mighty said. ``You
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|
\emph{can} help with this.''
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As a sacrifice, one last to finally even the scales. And I'd been a good
|
|
sport, hadn't I? The Everdark entire might be an altar, but I'd
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|
consecrated Great Strycht with thousands of dead just so Sve Noc could
|
|
properly open my throat over its ashes. Even as my alarm mounted, part
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|
of me could not help but admire the game of the Gods Below. They'd
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|
played their hand flawlessly, hadn't they? It didn't matter to them
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|
whether the drow rose from the dark as the Winter Court reborn in
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|
shadow, or if the Priestesses of Night devoured my mantle whole and
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|
unleashed madness on Creation as a two-faced goddess. No matter who won,
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|
they won as well. That was their way, I was beginning to understand.
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|
They didn't move like Above, trying to force a victory in every fight.
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They only ever fought when they couldn't lose.
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``Why tell me any of this, if we're going to fight?'' I asked, warily
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backing away.
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``To give them time to surround us,'' Mighty Rumena said.
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The roof exploded beneath our feet, and the Longstride Cabal entered the
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fray.
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