486 lines
22 KiB
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486 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-3-orison}{%
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\chapter{Orison}\label{chapter-3-orison}}
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\epigraph{``My son, I offer you the greatest gift a ruler can give another:
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a widely reviled predecessor.''}{Extract from the infamous `Sensible Testament' of Basilea Chrysanthe
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of Nicae}
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I'd used to love winter in Laure, as a child.
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Sure, once in a while charcoal and firewood prices went up so the matron
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had to cut corners but as a rule I'd gotten to enjoy the snow in the
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streets while having a warm house awaiting me after. It took mere hours
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for the blanket of pale to turn to mush or soiled mess, but before time
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ran out there'd been a lot of fun to be had. We'd made a fort in the
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steps of the broken old hatcher's house, once, and pitched snowballs at
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everyone passing for the better part of an afternoon. It'd ended when
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we'd accidentally caught some Taghreb legion mage instead of a Liessen
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merchant. Luckily enough the man had been more amused than angered, and
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instead of chewing us out he'd used sorcery to lift half the damned fort
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and dump it back on our heads. We'd all fled shrieking into the streets,
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soaked in snow and red-faced, while he laughed loudly. Gods, how old had
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I been? Seven, eight? I barely remembered anything from back then,
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nowadays, but that one memory of the sunny winter afternoon might as
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well have been seared into my eyes. The matron had remonstrated us
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pretty roughly for coming back to the orphanage drenched, but I was
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pretty sure she'd been hiding a smile.
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It'd taken me a long time to realized how lucky I'd been, getting a
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childhood like that. Sure we had lessons and curfews and the occasional
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lean week, but Callowan orphanages had been funded by the Tower. The
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coin had kept coming, and we'd been \emph{protected} in some abstract
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away. Everyone had known that the orphanages were the Black Knight's own
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notion, and the shadow cast by my teacher's displeasure had been as a
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giant's back then. It'd been easier, hadn't it? When it all seemed so
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large and simple, and all you had to do to change things was climb to
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the top. Foe and friend, victory and defeat. I'd picked up the knife
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that night believing myself clever enough to see through the pretence of
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black and white, but that'd just been scratching the surface. Sometimes
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thing happened that were too complicated, too far-reaching, to be called
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something as clear-cut as a victory or a defeat. Sometimes you could
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hate the people you most needed to clasp hands with and love those that
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would be most dangerous to your heart's desire. My eyes flicked to a
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tall silhouette in the distance, treading the snow without a trace. She
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had her back to me, so there would be no glimpse of golden eyes, but
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there was no mistaking her for anyone else.
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Sometimes you could grow fond of someone even if you couldn't forgive
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them and never would.
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I let out a steamy breath, watching the vapour rise up. That had me
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itching for my pipe, though I was equally reluctant to take off my
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gloves and reach under my cloak to indulge in my little vice. It was a
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cold night out, and it would be hours yet before dawn rose. I could have
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drawn on the Night to warm my bones, or more accurately chase away the
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cold, but some part of me twistedly enjoyed feeling the bite. Not so
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long ago it would have been nothing to be but another faded colour,
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another not-sensation washing up against the thing passing for my body.
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The moon above us was shrouded by the clouds, but light filtered
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through. Enough that I saw the crows streak across the darkness,
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feathered frames of Night batting their wings in utter silence. I dipped
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a finger into the power the Sisters had opened to me, sharpening my
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eyesight for a heartbeat, and caught a glimpse of crimson on the talons
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the pair. They'd killed tonight, then. \emph{If all they require for
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their altar is the occasional rabbit, I can make my peace with that.}
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Their descent was almost a dive, but they failed to make me stumble when
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they landed on my shoulders. They'd kept back their talons, and made of
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Night as they were they weighed near nothing unless they particularly
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wished to. I tightened my cloak around my shoulders and cast a
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meaningful glance at the bevy of drow escorting me. The warriors bowed
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low and scattered across the snowy landscape.
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``Rochelant,'' Komena said, a strangely human voice leaving her crow's
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throat.
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``There will be blood,'' Andronike said.
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Wasn't there always? Stainless victories were not in my nature.
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``As little as possible,'' I said. ``We come for knowledge, not
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conquest.''
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Crow-Komena's laughter sounded like cawing, which we both knew she was
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doing on purpose.
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``So speaks the roving catastrophe,'' Andronike said.
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I could have gone pithy in reply to that, but my mood had gone sour
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after the conversation in the tavern and the march in the cold had done
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nothing to improve it. I simply grunted back wordlessly.
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``Fickle thing,'' Komena chided. ``Is this tossing of insults not what
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you told us to practice? Why do you now shy away?''
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``I stand by what I said,'' I replied. ``You want to stay grounded? Talk
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with people in a way that isn't prayer or orders. My friends were my
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anchor when I was deep in Winter.''
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``Friendship,'' Andronike said, sounding somewhat skeptical. ``A human
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concept, not of the Firstborn. Kinship in interests is ever passing.''
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``Yeah, I'm not exactly holding my breath you two starting to feel all
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warm and fuzzy inside,'' I sighed. ``This isn't about that.''
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``Imprecise,'' Komena noted. ``Elaborate.''
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``Banter's informal,'' I said. ``It puts you on equal footing with the
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other person, if only for the duration of that exchange. And for you two
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it's even more important, because to be hallway decent at it there's a
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lot of things you have to pick up on: the situation, the timing, what
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lines you can and can't cross. It forces you to \emph{think like a
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person} while you do it.''
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``It will not change what we are,'' Andronike said.
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``None of us can do that,'' I replied. ``What we \emph{can} do is make
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sure you still understand what a mortal is. That you don't become so
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utterly removed from reality you march yourself off the cliff.''
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There was a long moment of silence broken only by my boots creasing the
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snow.
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``You are being sexually promiscuous with your subordinate, which is
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humorous for unclear reasons,'' Komena tried.
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I closed my eyes and counted to five. \emph{At least she's trying}, I
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told myself.
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``We'll, uh, keep working on that,'' I muttered.
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I flicked a glance at crow-Andronike, but she did not have another drow
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attempt at humour to throw my way. Well, either that my reaction to her
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sister had scared her off. The crow-shaped sliver of goddess turned
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towards me in indignation, much to my amusement. Yes, clearly she was
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beyond such petty feelings. No, I wasn't thinking that just to appease
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her. I muffled my chuckle with my gloves. The slight ebb upwards in my
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mood disappeared the moment the distraction ended. I was in the dark, in
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more ways than one. And some of the things hidden from my view mattered
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more to me than others. I hesitated, fingers clenching and unclenching.
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``Ask,'' Andronike said.
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``Since you ate Winter,'' I said. ``Your\ldots{} abilities have grown.''
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``Beyond your understanding,'' Komena said. ``Though that is not a high
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wall to clear.''
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That'd actually been pretty decent, I noted. Insults came much easier to
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her than humour, which really wasn't much of a surprise. I cleared my
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throat.
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``Could you find out if someone is dead or not?'' I quietly asked.
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``Yes,'' crow-Andronike said.
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Ah, but would they?
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``No,'' crow-Komena said.
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``I know there'd be risks,'' I said.
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``Of which you warned us yourself,'' Andronike said.
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``If you start swinging your apotheosis around on the surface, something
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a lot older and meaner is bound to start swinging back. That story
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doesn't end well for you,'' Komena said, pitching her voice in an eerily
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perfect mimicry of mine.
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The leather gloves crinkled as I closed them into a fist.
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``There are strategic reasons why the information would be important,''
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I said.
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``Not enough to warrant the possibility of provoking an entity our
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match,'' crow-Andronike said. ``You know this.''
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``Sentiment is unseemly,'' crow-Komena said.
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``Don't do that,'' I sharply said.
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They stilled for a moment. They were not used, I thought, to being
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spoken to in this way. And we all knew that the part of their power they
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had sent with me was enough that they could kill me if they so wished --
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my best defence against it, after all, had been granted to me by their
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favour. But I would not hold my tongue. That was the whole point of my
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being named their herald, the First Under the Night: having someone that
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hadn't been raised to worship them to argue with them, force them to
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reconsider what they believed. They might not always agree with me, and
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frequently did not. But entirely separate from our military alliance and
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the diplomatic authority they had granted me was the real foundation of
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our accord. \emph{A cat may look at a king}, the old Callowan saying
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went. Though the unfortunate pun had me gritting my teeth, it was a
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decent way of putting it. It was my damned purpose to disagree with them
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without sweetening my words.
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``There's nothing wrong with feeling things,'' I said. ``You take that
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out and all you view is skewed. They're not the only thing to take into
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consideration, often not even the most important, but they \emph{do}
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matter. Logic alone leads you to ugly ends because you're dealing with
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people, not statues. If you remove that element just to feel
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clear-sighted and superior, you're going to shoot yourself in the foot
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repeatedly.''
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``Your tone,'' Andronike said.
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``Is exactly what it should be,'' I replied, unflinching. ``If you are
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right and correct in your own view, make your argument. If all you can
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quibble about is my phrasing, maybe you should be thinking instead of
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trying to chide me.''
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That didn't please them, but then it wasn't supposed to.
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``You provided what you promised,'' crow-Komena conceded. ``Yet the
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refusal remains. Employ other means.''
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I would, the moment I could. There was a storm taking shape in Iserre
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and I suspected Black would have a better idea than most of what it was
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really about. He was the only person I trusted who'd ever spoken with
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both the Hierarch and the Tyrant of Helike, strange as the nature of
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that trust could be. \emph{I trust people to act according to their
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nature}, Malicia had once said. A Wasteland way of thinking, but there
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was truth to it. I remained alone with the crows-that-were-not-crows on
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the long march, buried in silence until dawn came.
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---
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``It is a dangerous weakness,'' Akua said. ``Though I suppose inevitable
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in some ways. Power never comes without a cost.''
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The sun had begun passing the horizon, and with the light of morning
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something like a shiver had passed through fifty thousand drow. Tents
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had been hastily raised and my host hid away under them before dawn even
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finished. The sentinels forced to remain out in the sun did so after
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boiling water to make herbal concoctions that would keep the awake
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through the sudden wave of tiredness. Dawn, I had learned, was when Sve
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Noc's power ebbed lowest. I would have assumed noon to be it, but Akua
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had offered a complicated explanation as to why that was not the case
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I'd failed to understand twice before I got her to simplify it into
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something comprehensible: dawn was the death of the night. As a
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metaphysical concept, that had more weight than the rest. For some
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reason that apparently required me to have read a lot of books I
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definitely had not before it became sound and evident logic. The tent
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she was keeping me company under was open at the font, but the thick
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linen walls did cut away at the worst of the wind nicely. It made the
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wait tolerable, though I was actually debating taking a nap.
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``This is an inconvenient one,'' I said.
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``Surprisingly light,'' Diabolist retorted. ``They are still physically
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able, after all. Simple temporarily bereft of their access to the
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Night.''
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``They'll also be out like a light for a few hours,'' I grunted.
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``That's a recipe for a morning attack and you know it.''
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The transition from night to dawn was taxing on drow bodies in a way
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that led to exhaustion, and effectively prevented the expeditionary
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force from being truly fighting fit for at least three to four hours.
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And they'd be tired for the rest of the day as well as being fragile
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little mortals if I didn't leave them sleeping a little longer than
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that, though at least that I could push later in the day. It wasn't like
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other armies didn't have to sleep, of course. But having a fixed time
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for that was a liability, and there would be no keeping that under wraps
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forever. The moment we began operating near other armies, there'd be
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outriders and scouts on us at all times and much as I liked to insult
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Proceran royalty they were not above basic pattern recognition.
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``Hence why joining forces with the Legions of Terror remains a
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priority,'' Akua said. ``Fifty thousand warriors led by Mighty able to
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operate flawless in the dark are nothing to scoff at, and a fortified
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camp held by legionaries would allow us to exploit that advantage
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relentlessly.''
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``Until we have allies, it makes occupation of anything concrete
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difficult,'' I reminded her. ``Taking something at night will be easy
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enough. Holding it through the day another story.''
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``Fortunate, then, that occupation is not our intent,'' Akua serenely
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replied.
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That and I still had a few cards to play if things got bad, though
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heroic presence would make the whole matter chancy. They tended to do
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that, as a rule. At least the Dead King should keeping a good chunk of
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them out of my hair for the foreseeable future. I cast a look back at my
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bed, which was essentially a pile of covers and inexplicably flat
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cushions, and finally gave up the notion of a lie-in. Maybe after I
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worked out some of the tension in my body. I rose with a grunt, curtly
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refusing Akua offered helping hand, and buckled my sheath back onto my
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belt.
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``Who has the watch again?'' I asked the shade.
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``Lord Ivah,'' she replied.
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Ivah, huh. It'd been a while since we'd had a proper chat. Unlike some
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of the Peerage, who seemed discomforted by how easily they still obeyed
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me and so made themselves scarce, my old guide had remained at hand.
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Unfortunately it was also a pathfinder of some talent, and so often sent
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out ahead of the expeditionary army. Might as well take the occasion
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today, I didn't know how long it would be until the next. Though was I
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was higher than General Rumena in the pecking order of the Empire Ever
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Dark, it \emph{was} in charge of leading the expedition. While I could
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give orders and dismiss its own, the details of the duty rosters
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remained at its discretion. I could have intervened, but was reluctant
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to do as much without a better reason than liking having Ivah around.
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Akua followed me out of the tent and onto the camp wordlessly. After
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years of commanding legionaries, the sight of the mess around us had me
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wincing on the inside. The layout of this place was a bloody maze, all
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haphazard tents with no real thought given to quick deployment and no
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chance of a bloody palisade being raised. Rumena wasn't a fool, so it'd
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been pretty thorough about putting sentinels in place during our
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vulnerable ours, but it'd admitted to me in private that it could not
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turn a gaggle of tribal sigils into the kind of army the Empire Ever
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Dark had once fielded with less than a month before the campaign began.
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Assembling a functioning chain of command had been miracle enough, in my
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opinion, which should count for quite a bit considering I was now the
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foremost priestess of an entire race.
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``Have you considered using a staff?'' Akua suddenly asked.
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She'd pulled slightly ahead of me, I only then noticed. I could go
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quicker, in all honesty, but I was in no real hurry and this pace was
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most comfortable.
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``My limp's not that bad,'' I shrugged.
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``It pains you,'' the shade frowned.
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``When it loses its novelty I'll get herbs for that,'' I replied.
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``That's what my pipe was for in the first place.''
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We turned around a cluster of tents, the smallness of the gap rather
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irritating to my eyes. She resumed the line of conversation afterwards.
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``Unnecessary suffering is exactly that,'' Akua said.
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``I'm still fighting fit,'' I said with irritation. ``And if I need a
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little nimbleness, I'll call on the Night to make it withdraw for a bit.
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I got the juice directly from Sve Noc, daylight won't stop me.''
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``It does significantly weaken you,'' Diabolist retorted.
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I rolled my eyes. So the kind of power I could call on went from
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terrifying to merely appalling after dawn. It was still more than I'd
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ever had to work with as the Squire by an almost absurd margin.
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``Yet that was not my meaning,'' Akua mildly continued. ``I worry more
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about what embracing this implies of your mindset.''
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I watched her from the corner of my eye, and she did not meet my gaze.
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Worry, huh. The words she chose were never an accident.
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``Sometimes it's a good thing,'' I said. ``To remember what it feels
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like for the people who don't make pacts with gods.''
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``I had thought you estranged with contrition, dearest,'' she said, tone
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prickly.
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``I won't wallow,'' I flatly replied. ``But I won't lose sight of it
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twice either. A lot of people are going to bleed before this is over,
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Akua.''
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I brought up my fingers to block the sun from my eyes, feeling the shade
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studying me.
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``Now and then it's worth the sting to feel a part of what you're going
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to dole out,'' I finished quietly. ``It's be a kinder world, if we were
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all made to remember that.''
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``Kindness,'' Diabolist mused.
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``Not a Praesi favourite, I know,'' I drily said.
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Not much grounds left to cover before we reached the edge of the camp.
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Already we were passing drow so wrapped up in cloth the only seen could
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be seen was their eyes, though those were sharp and peering at the
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horizon. Ivah should be somewhere within the small thicket of bare trees
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I could see ahead, by the feel of the presences in the Night. Even when
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bereft of the power, they still left an impression. I slowed when I
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realized Akua had stopped. She was looking at me with narrowed eyes. Ah.
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Irritated her, had I?
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``Is that what you think?'' she said.
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Not irritation, I thought. Disappointment. Fancy that.
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``Are you sure, Akua Sahelian,'' I said softly, ``that you want to get
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in an argument with me about the moral fabric of the Wasteland?''
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``I had a great-uncle,'' she said. ``By the name of Thandiwe.''
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My eyebrow rose.
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``Fascinating,'' I said.
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``I found him to be, as a child,'' Akua casually admitted. ``He was,
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after all, stricken from family records.''
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``Maybe he used the wrong fork during the cannibalism ritual,'' I
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suggested.
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Much as I disliked to admit, though, she had my attention.
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``My mother would not speak of,'' she said, ``and so naturally I pursued
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the matter secretly.''
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A half-smile quirked her lips.
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``He was a sorcerer of great promise,'' she said. ``As is custom among
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our line, as a boy he was brought to the deepest part of the Maze of
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Kilns. There he was made to sacrifice one dear to him, and for months
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after remained silent.''
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\emph{So it wasn't just you}, I thought. Had Tasia Sahelian been made to
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do the same by her own mother, I wondered? How far back did the wounding
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of their own children go, for it to have earned the name of tradition?
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``The lesson was believed to have been taught,'' Akua said. ``And it
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was. One the eve of his sixteenth year, Thandiwe Sahelian stole several
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tomes and artefacts from the family vaults and fled to Mercantis, where
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he pawned them for a small fortune he used to make a home further south
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in Nicae.''
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I snorted.
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``I imagine that went over less than pleasantly in Wolof,'' I said.
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``Rage is an apt description,'' she mused. ``Which only worsened when he
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began to thrive after entering some sort of merchant consortium and
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became comfortably wealthy even by Praesi standards. Enough to seek the
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protection of the Basileus, which the Empire sought favourable trade
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terms with in those days.''
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``Clever, then,'' I said. ``Though I'm wondering as to your point. The
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man sounds decent enough, but he \emph{left} Praes.''
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Akua inclined her head.
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``And yet he was also a Sahelian,'' she said, and even now there was an
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undertone of pride when she spoke the name. ``The blood of the original
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murder, unhallowed from the cradle. I am told that he kept to the Gods
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Below even on that foreign shore.''
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``He grew past his roots,'' I said.
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\emph{And I'm not so sure you have}, I thought. She looked up at the
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morning sun, her silhouette wreathed in light for a heartbeat, and there
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was something about her smile that unsettled me.
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``You have seen the worst of us,'' the shade said. ``And through that
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knowing taken our measure. But there \emph{is} more, Catherine. We are
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not beyond kindness, not even the highborn. If even a Sahelian can have
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the taste for peace, there is yet something left to be kindled.''
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``If you want to be known by more than the ugliest parts of you,'' I
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said, ``perhaps you should show them to the rest of the world. Maybe the
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capacity is there, Akua, but we don't judge by capacity. It's the
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choices you make that matter.''
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``Ah,'' she murmured. ``And how many of those do we really have, in the
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end?''
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\emph{One hundred thousand souls}, I thought. \emph{That was a choice.}
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\emph{It's the weight on the balance by which you will be judged, and
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what could possibly even the scales?} I cleared my throat, uncomfortable
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the lingering silence.
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``Your great-uncle,'' I said. ``What happened to him, after?''
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Golden eyes met mine.
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``The old Basileus died. His successor refused the Empire's terms
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outright,'' she said. ``And so my grandfather, a noted alchemist, took
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to his workshop. If he is so ashamed of his blood, I am told he said,
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let us relieve him of it.''
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Neither of us blinked.
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``Thandiwe Sahelian sweated out every drop of blood in his body within
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the year,'' Akua said.
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We finished the rest of the walk in silence.
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