429 lines
19 KiB
TeX
429 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-28-acts}{%
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\chapter{Acts}\label{chapter-28-acts}}
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\epigraph{``Despise not the treacherous but instead the weak, for while both
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serve the same purpose where treachery requires skill and daring
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weakness requires only mediocrity.''}{Dread Emperor Vile the First}
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It didn't look like he was sleeping.
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That disturbed me almost more than the rest. Amadeus of the Green
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Stretch was still alive, by the measure of most people. The signs of
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life were certainly there: breath, heartbeat, warmth. So it
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\emph{should} have looked like he was sleeping, but it didn't. It looked
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like someone had just\ldots{} torn out his consciousness and a body had
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been left behind. Its physical functions went on but having known the
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man -- loved him, in our own misshapen way -- I couldn't call this
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breathing corpse anything but the remains of him. His soul could be
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anywhere, by now, and combing through Procer for it brought to mind that
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old metaphor about the needle and the haystack.
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In this case, though, the needle was a top-notch Named mage and the
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haystack was both hostile and on fire. I'd tell Vivienne to have the
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Jacks watching, and I was considering passing on what I'd learned to
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Malicia. She was my enemy, true, and he'd both defied and disobeyed her.
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Yet I suspected she'd sacrifice quite a bit to bring back to Ater and
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might even be willing to cooperate with me to see his soul snatched back
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from the heroes. I only barely grasped the nature of the ties that bound
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Black and Malicia, but I did not doubt the depth of them. Neither would
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have been quite so intensely furious at the other after Akua's Folly if
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there'd not been trust to break.
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Was it not an irony of sorts that I was now relying on the architect of
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that same folly for answers? The shade of the Diabolist had only
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bothered with a cursory examination of Black's physical state before
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turning her attention to more eldritch matters. She was a healer of some
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talent, I knew, but it was more a result of Akua being skilled at
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branches of sorcery that required knowledge of anatomy and biology than
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out of any true affinity for the healing arts. Like Masego, she was more
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chirurgeon than physician. It was typical of Praesi to be more
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interested in the cutting of things than the mending of them. Fingers
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resting on my teacher's forehead, Akua was frowning with her eyes
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closed.
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I could feel the quiet lapping of Night at his body, and perhaps I
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should have been studying her methods to learn from them what I could.
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Instead, though, my gaze remain on his face. He was bearded, now. It was
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uncomfortable to look at, though more for the sloppiness of the growth
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than the threads of grey within. Black had always been cleanly to a
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fault, austere in all his affairs but always well put-together. His hair
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was still dark, for the most part, but it'd grown longer and like the
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beard grey was now touching it. It was\ldots{} distressing to see. Like
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a chip on a blade you'd believed forever smooth.
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``Barbaric,'' Akua suddenly said, both hand and Night withdrawing.
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Golden eyes had fluttered open, and she was looking down at Black's body
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with patrician disdain.
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``Elaborate,'' I said.
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``This was not even sorcery, dearest,'' Akua said, wrinkling her nose.
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``The work of that ignorant little savage the Saint of Swords, I would
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wager. It was the metaphysical equivalent of attempting field surgery
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while eyeballing the affair with a two-handed sword that was most
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definitely \emph{not} cleaned beforehand.''
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``Elaborate usefully,'' I specified, hiding my dismay.
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The body was alive, for all the lack of driving intellect within, but
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had it been damaged irreparably? I was intending to snatch the soul back
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when opportunity arose, to put it back in this very shell of flesh, but
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if that wasn't possible we'd have to get\ldots{} inventive.
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``The severing between body and soul itself was clean and sharply
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made,'' Akua said. ``But near every other aspect was botched. It was
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done too abruptly, for one, and so in a damaging manner. Which means
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there will be some disconnect between the soul and body even should they
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be reunited, possibly permanent. Memory loss is likely as well, though
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proper rituals can mitigate that aspect and it is likely to be minor in
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nature.''
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``Shit,'' I muttered. ``Masego cut up my soul a bunch of times and it
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was never this bad. Why is this so different?''
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The look she sent me was offended on Masego's behalf, I thought, but
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also on hers and possibly even mine for having asked what she evidently
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considered to be a highly plebeian question.
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``Laurence the Montfort is a murderous vagrant swinging a butcher's
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knife at matters she only dimly understands,'' Akua said. ``The
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Hierophant was taught by the Lord Warlock himself from the cradle, and
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even in those days likely could be counted as one of the ten most
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learned Trismegistan practitioners on Calernia. You are comparing a
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mangy attack hound to one of the finest mages alive.''
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``That's nice,'' I said. ``But what I want to know is if the Saint
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purposefully made this sloppy or if it was just the only way she knew
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how to do it?''
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Diabolist mulled over that for a moment.
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``Though I hate to dismiss the possibility of incompetent wickedness in
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our opposition,'' she finally said, ``I believe this might genuinely
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have been the most clear-cut separation she could accomplish given the
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means at her disposal.''
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So, the Saint had been a bad chirurgeon but not necessarily a malicious
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one. I supposed the distinction had been academic, anyway. I would have
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remembered malice directed at my father when he was helpless and
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prisoner, but in and of itself it would not have moved me to either kill
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or spare her. That decision, in a way, would be making itself. If the
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Saint acted against me or mine even one more time, I'd get her head on a
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pike. If she was reined in by her allies, then I'd swallow my spite and
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let her be pointed at the Dead King instead.
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``Noted,'' I said. ``Which brings us to our next trick -- can you track
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the soul using his body?''
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``I cannot,'' Akua immediately replied.
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My eyebrow rose.
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``The reasons why are twofold,'' she told me. ``The first is that, as
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I've already told you, the severing itself was keenly made. The\ldots{}
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sympathy between body and soul that would remain in most circumstances
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is near entirely absent here.''
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``Near,'' I said.
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She inclined her head, conceding the point.
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``Which brings me to the second reason, namely that I've already
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attempted to do this and found my workings frustrated,'' Akua said.
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``Someone is occluding the soul from sight and search, and doing so with
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surprising skill.''
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``The Pilgrim mentioned he passed on the soul to the Rogue Sorcerer,'' I
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said. ``Who I sadly know little about, save that he often uses fire
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sorcery when fighting.''
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``Given that the workings on his end were surprisingly apt at gainsaying
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Night and its miraculous nature, I would wager her him Proceran or
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Proceran-taught,'' she told me. ``Jaquinite sorcery would be uniquely
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suited to the thwarting of the miraculous, being inspired of miracles
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itself.''
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My lips quirked into a mirthless smile. What a helpful coincidence that
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a Named mage from the theory of magic most suited at hiding from my
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means of pursuit would be sent off with what I was looking before I even
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returned to the surface. Fucking Heavens. It might genuinely have been a
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coincidence, for all I knew, but given the opposition I was inclined to
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gesture obscenely at the sky just on principle.
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``So what \emph{can} you do?'' I asked.
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``Establish a ritual array for resonance,'' Akua said. ``It will be
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imprecise and require a great deal of power, but when employed the
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ritual should reveal if the soul is close.''
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``Define close,'' I said.
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``A radius of seven leagues,'' she said. ``Though that broad it will
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simply reveal if the soul is within that area. For more precise results,
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the radius would have to be significantly lowered.''
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Seven leagues, I thought, forcing myself to visualize it. It wasn't
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nothing, though I would have preferred larger if there was to be an
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investment of Night in every attempt. The haystack had been made into
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smaller bundles, I supposed, but it'd not gotten smaller in any real
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sense.
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``Prepare the ritual array and make me an estimate of the kind of power
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it'd require,'' I finally said. ``When you have the time, Akua. This is
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not as high a priority as our immediate threats.''
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It surprised me that even looking at Black the words were not difficult
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to speak. I'd thought, I supposed, that looking at him in the flesh
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there would be a sudden sprout of sentimentality that'd have me
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hesitating between taking risks to pursue this and taking a more
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pragmatic approach. I cocked my head to the side, gazing at the pale
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skin of my teacher, and found that aside from a faint tinge of guilt the
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decision hadn't brought anything out of me. And the guilt, truth be
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told, came more from how the decision had barely needed to me made than
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from the making of it. \emph{But then you'd understand, wouldn't you?} I
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thought, looking at the not-sleeping man\emph{. That there are larger
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things at stake than you and I.}
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``You seem wistful,'' Akua softly said.
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``I don't know what that means,'' I lied, ``you don't need to impress me
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with your fancy Wasteland words, Akua, I-''
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``Playing the fool did not work even when I considered you to be one,''
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the shade said. ``Why would it now?''
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I shrugged my shoulders, as if to say it'd been worth a try. I could
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have simply left the tent, I thought, but that would have felt too much
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like a retreat and I'd had enough of that for the evening. After my
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private talks with Princess Rozala had made it clear there was no real
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chance of an accord being reached, I'd simply waited until Black's body
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was delivered to my people before taking my leave. My warning to her had
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been blunt, but then we were rather past subtle intrigues weren't we?
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The day and night had been exhausting in a way that had nothing to do
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with the physical, and seeing Black with a gaping hole where everything
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that made him who he was should be hadn't helped my mood in the
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slightest.
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``You must hate him like poison,'' I eventually said. ``Are you
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remaining civil as a courtesy to me?''
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I didn't like to think of Second Liesse -- or the Doom of the same, as
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some called it, though my own people most often named it Akua's Folly --
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but on that dark day I'd been allowed a glimpse into the nature of Akua
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Sahelian. Not through the madness she'd wielded like a blade, or the the
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victories she claimed over me, but when I had seen her flinched. She had
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bound me, title and Name both, and the binding could not lie: when Akua
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saw her father die before her eyes, it had wounded her. The body of the
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architect of that death now laid on a cot before us, yet not so much as
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a flicker of hatred had touched her face in all the time she'd been in
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the tent.
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``Hate,'' Akua repeated, tone pensive. ``I can see why you would believe
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so.''
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I glanced at her and found golden eyes watching the Carrion Lord's chest
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rise and drop at its own steady pace.
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``Are you claiming you don't?'' I asked.
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``I suppose I might kill him, given reason,'' the shade said. ``Though
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that would differ from duty only by the tinge of satisfaction that it
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would bring, like an old mistake finally blotted out.''
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``I was there, Akua,'' I said. ``I know what it did to you, when-''
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She turned to me with burning eyes, and my tongue halted.
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``My father's death was the writ of many hands,'' she said. ``His, it is
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true, but others as well. The goblins who fired the crossbows. Your own,
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for serving as distraction while he was taken. But most of all, the
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fault is mine.''
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She looked way.
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``I waged war on villains, and did not sufficiently safeguard that which
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was precious to me,'' Akua said. ``I am the mother of that murder in
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every way that matters.''
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``There's sense to that,'' I replied. ``Logic, even.''
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My eyes stayed on her.
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``And not a trace of the grief I saw then,'' I finished.
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She turned to meet my gaze, and for once there was anger not mastered or
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leashed in the cast of her face.
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``What is it you want from me, Catherine?'' the shade asked bitingly.
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``Tears? Lamentations? Or is it pain that you demand?''
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``Yes,'' I said. ``I want you to be in pain.''
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She flinched back at that like I'd slapped her. Before a heartbeat had
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even passed, she was smiling and amused and her body beginning to angle
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so it would display her curves more prominently. I admired how well
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she'd been trained almost half as much as I utterly despised it.
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``While I've certainly heard you prefer the rougher forms, I-''
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Her tone was light, suggestive, there was a slight emphasis on heard
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that implied she might actually have heard Archer and I spending a night
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together -- which was possible, tents weren't exactly the finest way to
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keep something quiet -- and she'd changed tack blindingly quick. I
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ignored it.
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``If you're in pain,'' I continued, ``if you can \emph{feel} pain, I
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means you value things. People. That you begin to understand things
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other than yourself have value.''
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``I have always known that,'' Akua said. ``Your take on Praesi values,
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my heart, remains simplistic for all that we have spoken of the
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subject.''
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``Intellectually you assign value to other people,'' I corrected. ``For
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their usefulness, potential, the pleasure or amusement they can bring
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you. But that's still thinking of them as assets. As objects. But if
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their loss pains you, Akua, they were more than an object to you.''
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``Should I weep, then?'' the shade harshly replied. ``Should I wail and
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beat my chest, swear revenge on all those who can be revenged upon?
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Should I burn half the world to assuage my grief, make Creation pay the
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\emph{long price}?''
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The Callowan term she spoke derisively, but I could hear it was forced.
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It had screwed my countrymen, over the years, the need to see grudges
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settled. But it also appealed to that vicious, childish part of us that
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wanted to answer pain with pain. Hurt those who'd hurt you. And anyone
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who'd ever grieved had heard that song, sung to one beat or another.
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``Would you like to?'' I asked her softly. ``Weep. Wail. Bury him with
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no honours of mine, but what you can offer from daughter to father.''
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``And what would you know of that, Catherine?'' Akua said, sounding
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tired.
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My eyes flicked back to the body laid out in front of us.
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``I know,'' I said, ``that sometimes you grieve more what could have
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happened than what did.''
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Akua did not answer. The silence hung heavy in the air, broken by only
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two people breathing. The shade among us had no such need.
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``He shouldn't have been born in Praes,'' Akua said. ``He'd be angry
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with me for saying that, but anywhere else on the continent they would
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have let him read in peace and deep down that was all he ever wanted.
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But in the Wasteland, when the Gift flowers so strongly there are
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\emph{expectations}.''
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``He was powerful, I'm told,'' I said. ``Like few others.''
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``Like many others,'' Akua softly denied. ``But he was clever and found
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angles others did not even consider. But he was not of the old blood, so
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his fate was death or patronage. He could have been husband to my
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mother, you know. He had the talent for it and if he'd tried to
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establish a presence at her court he would at least have been made a
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formal consort. But it wasn't in his nature, Catherine, to see magic as
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a tool for power. To him it wasn't just the Gift, it was a gift.''
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``He's the one who taught you,'' I said.
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``I suppose he did,'' Diabolist murmured. ``Though it was never a lesson
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in the way my tutors would have made it. He was\ldots{} sharing
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something he loved with me. Helping me understand it so we could wonder
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at it together. It made a difference. I could not help but love it as
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well, when it was something that was \emph{ours}.''
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I envied her that. The memories she must be peering at with that faraway
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gaze, the hours she'd gotten to spend with her father that hadn't been
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just lessons. Getting to know him as more than a teacher and a guiding
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hand.
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``I loved him,'' Akua suddenly admitted. ``But, in the end, not as much
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as I loved what my mother taught me to reach for.''
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She chuckled barrenly.
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``So how could I dare weep, dearest one, when I chose that ambition over
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him?'' she said.
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``Because you miss him,'' I softly replied. ``Even so, you miss him.''
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I heard her move and found her leaning forward. Chin against her raised
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palms, long hair cascading down her back. I couldn't see her eyes or her
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face, but the tension in her shoulders was open.
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``I do not think this is a kindness you offer me, Catherine,'' she said,
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tone ambiguous.
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``It's not about kindness or cruelty,'' I said. ``It's about being
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whole, more than just the parts that're useful.''
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Silence, as she mulled over my words.
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``Why?''
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A dangerous question, that, for it was being asked by a dangerous woman.
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Akua Sahelian was bound to me still, and had been shorn from Winter by
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virtue of there no longer being such a thing. But my leashes on her had
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frayed as well. The Night was not mine, and though I could stripped her
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of her power that would have left her nothing but a shade. Powerless. It
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should have been a matter carefully weighed, the absence of many
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safeguards Winter had allowed against Akua being divested of her claws.
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It hadn't been, though, not after Great Strycht. Because she'd said some
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things about doing good that night that I didn't believe she truly
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understood the implications of. Because once you embraced a principle,
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you didn't get to pick and choose where it worked and did not.
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``Because, now and then, I forget who you are,'' I said.
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\emph{What matters more}, Akua Sahelian had asked of me once, \emph{the
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conviction or the act?} I still had no answer to that, no iron-bound
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truth to offer. But she had made her choice, and it betrayed her own
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belief.
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``It won't matter,'' Diabolist said, ``for you are, my darling, Callowan
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to the bone. It will kill me or it will kill you, but in the end all
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debts will be paid.''
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``So it will,'' I agreed quietly. ``Did I not swear to you, once, that
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no place in Creation would safeguard you from me?''
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``That,'' Akua fondly said, ``and a fate that would have men trembling
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in a thousand years.''
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\emph{Praesi}, I thought and did so less than affectionately. Would else
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would take a ruinous oath as a tender remembrance?
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``And you'll have that,'' I mused. ``It's owed. But I'll make you into a
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person first. Because there's no meaning to passing judgement on the
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Diabolist -- she's just a villain. That's the sum whole of her.''
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``Yet you still do not believe there is difference between the Diabolist
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and Akua Sahelian,'' the shade said, cocking her head to the side. ``I
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am bemused, dear heart.''
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``I'm going to claw back a person from what they made of you, Akua,'' I
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calmly said. ``And then, at the end of our road, we will have justice.''
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``And I will submit myself to this decree,'' she said, sounding amused.
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``You seem implacably certain of that.''
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``It is borrowed certainty,'' I said. ``But certainty still.''
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``I am all ears, Catherine Foundling,'' she drawled.
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``What matters more,'' I asked, ``between the conviction and the act?''
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``The act,'' Akua Sahelian said.
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She had not hesitated a moment and so I smiled.
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``How long have you been acting like one of us, Akua?'' I simply asked.
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No answer followed, not after and not when I left the tent.
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