414 lines
20 KiB
TeX
414 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-32-woven-weaver}{%
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\chapter{Woven; Weaver}\label{chapter-32-woven-weaver}}
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\epigraph{``And so Triumphant laughed, saying: `You spellsingers, wisdom of
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stars and weavers of fate, know now despair. I will break you so utterly
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even the remembrance of your wholeness will suffocate, and where rose
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your tall spires there be only the barren sea I made of your
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defiance.'\,''}{Extract from the Scroll of Dominion, twenty-fourth of the Secret
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Histories of Praes}
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Gods, but it'd been close.
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More than once we'd tread the edge of the cliff, and every time it'd
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been all I could do not to pull the trigger on all of my most horrifying
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contingencies. If the Pilgrim had refused the surrender, proved himself
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someone it was hopeless to work with under any circumstances. If the
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Tyrant had refused to send forward his armies, proved willing to
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sacrifice even his own plans to prevent truce being made in the west. If
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Vivienne had fallen even slightly short of the kind of woman I believed
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she could be, and chosen the early gain over the slow triumph. Every
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time I'd sat with Komena on my shoulder, watching them face the
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crossroads and knowing if the wrong choice was made all that was left
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would be the hardest of measures. And yet, even as I pulled at my pipe
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and let trails of wakeleaf escape my nostrils, I saw them all turn
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towards me like sunflowers to the sun and understood bone-deep why
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someone like Dread Emperor Traitorous could exist.
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I'd tasted heights in my life, more than most ever got to experience.
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Nights of pleasure with men or women who knew their way around a good
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time, and subtler pleasures of luxury too: a cup good wine and a crisp
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pipe, meals exotic and exquisitely prepared. Different sorts of
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satisfactions as well. Evenings by the fire with people I would love
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until death took me, but also sharper edges -- victory in battle, death
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and terror inflicted on enemies I despised. Enjoyments that soothed the
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soul but others that had your teeth clenching in harsh, spiteful
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vindication. And while I knew it was passing, that like a spasm of
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pleasure or the ephemeral bliss of a drug it would die out and leave the
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body strained for it, there was a moment where I saw it in their eyes.
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The knowledge that to get here, in this moment, I had played them for
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fools and done it remaining one step ahead of them the entire time. The
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blend of hatred and fear and respect, but most of all of something that
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was kin to awe, it was like nothing else I'd ever felt.
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If someone had distilled and bottled victory, I thought, it would taste
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something like this.
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What a dangerous thing this sensation was, and how careful I must be to
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avoid falling in love with it. Else I would become another Traitorous,
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another Irritant, another mad murderer who cared more for victory as an
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end instead of a methods. For the triumph of cleverness at the expense
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of all else, like it was enough to simply beat the others.
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``Black Queen,'' the Peregrine greeted me tiredly. ``That is a
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considerable claim you have made.''
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I pulled at my pipe once more and discretely glanced at Hakram. Prince
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among men that he was, he understood what I needed from him without a
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word.
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``Atalante,'' he whispered. ``Hierarch. Knows about Zeze.''
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The forces at the Tyrant's fingertips that were still missing, along
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with something he should have no way of knowing: the final pieces to the
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sharp-edged jigsaw puzzle that we'd all made of this night. My instincts
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had been right, then. Kairos was making a play for the shard of Arcadia,
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using another madman and the most powerful priests in his armies. He
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still thought he was playing me, I thought, smiling at the villain on
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question. But he'd actually given me the last puzzle pieces I needed to
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be able to run a spit through his guts and hold him over the fire like a
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wildly treacherous goose.
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``Kairos can vouch for me on that,'' I drawled, pushing myself off
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Hakram. ``After all, he's been talking with the Dead King throughout
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this entire campaign.''
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The Tyrant gasped theatrically as everyone's eyes turned towards him.
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Leaning on my staff, I limped forward and left behind the hanging royals
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as well as Adjutant. It'd not escaped my notice that Kairos had seven
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crowns and my closest friend in the world hanging from that wooden beam.
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I might have been amused by that, if not for the implicit threat to the
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gesture: that he'd kill Hakram the moment I made a play for the shard,
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that I could only snatch that prize from him if I was willing to make
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Adjutant my \emph{one}. A heartbeat passed and the odd-eyed villain
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started tittering, putting his trembling hand over his heart in an
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expression of repentance.
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``You got me,'' the Tyrant of Helike snickered. ``I tried to sell you
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all out to the Dead King\ldots{} and for that, I sincerely apologize.''
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The sincerity, I thought, was cast somewhat into doubt by his broad
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shit-eating grin.
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``Though, in my defence,'' Kairos continued, ``it's the Black Queen's
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own court warlock who decided to read the entire Kabbalis Book of
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Darkness and got himself\ldots{} inconvenienced.''
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Huh. I wondered if he genuinely didn't know that Masego had actually
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gotten his hands on much, much worse than that -- Neshamah's actual
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memories, harvested from an echo in Arcadia -- or if he was simply
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keeping that under wraps for later use.
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``By inconvenienced,'' the Tyrant added in stage whisper, ``I mean he
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went crazy and ate a city's worth of souls and now the Dead King is
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riding him like a mule, if you'll forgive my language.''
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I could have tried to cut him off before he got all of that out, but I
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didn't bother. For one, the longer he kept talking the least likely he
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was to notice I'd ordered my Lord of Silent Steps to take care of a few
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loose ends. And, most importantly, I \emph{wanted} him to out the facts
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that it was Masego who was, uh, getting slightly rough with the fabric
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of Creation. Nobody here trusted the Tyrant the slightest fucking bit,
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and this would be taken as an attack on his part -- which meant that
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might my reply, which admittedly stretched the truth a little, would be
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granted a lot more good faith than anything coming out of my mouth
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usually would get.
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``The Hierophant attempted to find a way to kill the Dead King, at great
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personal risk to himself,'' I said, carefully avoiding mentioning that
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Masego would have taken a bite out of his own liver for that knowledge
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regardless of all other considerations, ``but whatever it was the
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Ashurans used at Thalassina, it wounded him. The Hidden Horror seems to
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have taken advantage of that.''
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\emph{But it wouldn't have happened if the lot of you hadn't gone
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a'crusading and started a battle that} \emph{wiped a major city off the
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face of Creation}, I left unsaid.
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``That is unfortunate,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, ``yet-''
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``If the next sentence that comes out of your mouth is \emph{we might
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have to kill him},'' I mildly said, ``we're going to have a problem.''
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That didn't win me any favour with the heroes, from the way their backs
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straightened. I wasn't feeling all that threatened by that, to be
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honest. The Saint had tussled with Rumena, so she was far from fresh,
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and like the Tyrant for all his fronting the Pilgrim was dead tired. The
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only hero that was in fighting fit was the Rogue Sorcerer, and if it
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came to that I could bury him in a swarm of Mighty. I didn't intend on
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outright dictating terms here, but I had no qualms with disabusing
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\emph{them} from the illusion that they were in a position to dictate a
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single fucking thing to me. Including the death of one of my friends, no
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matter his current state.
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``Shut your mouth, child,'' the Saint of Swords said. ``You-''
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I glanced at the Peregrine.
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``Tariq,'' I calmly said. ``Do muzzle your hound, before I decide to
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take offence.''
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The old man's face tightened, but he laid a hand on his attack dog's
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shoulder and spoke to her in a whisper. I turned to the Tyrant, who was
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watching all of this happen with a kind of pure malicious glee I'd only
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ever seen in goblins before.
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``Now would be a good time to order your armies to retreat,'' I told
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him.
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``I'm no general,'' the odd-eyed boy said, ``but we do appear to be
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winning.''
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I could have pointed out that the drow had been strengthened by the
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eclipse Akua had brought at precisely the right time, and that now that
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bargain had been struck my armies would back those of the Grand Alliance
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against his. But that'd be missing the point, because none of this
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really mattered to him.
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``Kairos,'' I patiently said, ``I understand you think that by standing
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here and mouthing off you're serving as a distraction for the Hierarch
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claiming the shard unhindered, but you've been had. So call off your
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damn armies, and let's have all of us a civilized conversation.''
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The Tyrant of Helike gazed at me in disappointment, one eye shining red
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and the other teary from tiredness.
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``Now, if I did have such a scheme,'' Kairos Theodosian said, ``and I do
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not, for I assure you I am most defeated and at your common mercy, but
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if I did\ldots{} then the most elementary of steps would have been
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ensuring that the Dead King could not in fact see such a blow coming.
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That, in this most theoretical of worlds, though I am such a villain's
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inferior in many ways distance and the nature of our bargain would blind
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him to the knife until the very last moment.''
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His leg twitched restlessly.
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``Now, Catherine, in this abstract, are you still suggesting that I was
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seen through?'' the Tyrant asked.
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``No,'' I said. ``I'm not clear on what exact measures you took,
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honestly, but I'm fairly sure they worked. Which is why I'm telling you
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that, while you launched your attacks here, I pre-emptively sold you out
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to Hidden Horror.''
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His face went blank at my words, and I enjoyed the sight a lot more than
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I'd thought I would. It hadn't even been all that complicated, to be
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honest. Not once I'd figured out that Neshamah had his finger in this
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pie anyway. Masego was the only angle he could feasibly have used other
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than myself, and that meant all it'd taken to pass a warning about what
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I suspected the Hierarch of being capable of was putting it to parchment
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and having one of the Wild Hunt carry it as far into the Arcadian
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wasteland as she could without getting killed or captured. Something
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like a shiver went through the Tyrant of Helike's sickly frame at my
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words, though I could not be certain whether it was fear or excitement.
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Or, for that matter, something as mundane as exhaustion.
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``Well,'' Kairos Theodosian mused, ``it seems we truly do have about an
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hour to live.''
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He spared a look for some of the throng of gargoyles ever surrounding
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him, some of which flew away with urgent chittering.
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``Queen Catherine,'' the Pilgrim said, tone sharp.
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``I'll give you the broad strokes,'' I said. ``Kairos can fill in the
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parts I'm uncertain about. Won't you, Kairos?''
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Most of the time it was a damned pain to deal with intelligent
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opponents, but once in a while it had its uses. The Tyrant looked at the
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heroes, face twisting into a thoughtful frown as he asked himself what
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use I had for the heroes. It could not be to kill him, since he had to
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know just the same as I did that he'd slip away like an eel if we tried.
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He had symbolic hostages, had just finished making a broad splash in the
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story pond with a plan and so he was very much due a beating at heroic
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hands -- followed by him scampering away to fight another day. So no, I
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wasn't trying to use the heroes as a borrowed knife. I was even,
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tacitly, inviting him to be part of this as something other than an
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enemy. Which meant\ldots{}
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``There are six of us,'' Kairos noted, eyeing me as he wagged a finger
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chidingly.
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``Adjutant will stay behind,'' I replied.
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``Not even one of them,'' he laughed. ``Ever bold, Catherine. Put this
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way, how can I refuse?''
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My gaze returned to the Pilgrim, whose face had grown cold as the back
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and forth continued. The light tone of the exchange must have grated on
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him, considering people were dying as we spoke. \emph{You can't act like
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that with the Tyrant}, \emph{Tariq}, I thought. \emph{He'll pounce on
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that kind of weakness every time.}
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``The block on scrying is what gave it away,'' I told the Pilgrim. ``I'd
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been given details before that allowed me to catch on, troubles at the
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Observatory and my mages theorizing that the sky was already in use and
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that was why the rituals didn't work. I thought it was a side-effect, at
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first, of whatever Hierophant is being tricked into doing, but it was
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just too \emph{convenient}.''
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The Rogue Sorcerer stirred.
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``The scrying troubles are a consequence of the Keter's Due of some
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great working,'' he said. ``That much I have confirmed.''
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``Figured it might be that,'' I said, ``because Hierophant picked up the
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ruins of Liesse on the way here, and I'm no scholar of sorcery but I do
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know there's one thing about that weapon that makes Akua Sahelian a
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legend: it made use of the Due.''
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Instead of the turning Liesse and its surroundings into a blighted
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wasteland, Diabolist had used the wild release of wasted energy that
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accompanied every spell to power the city's flight. That did not mean,
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however, that the artefact could not be shaped anew until the release
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served other purpose.
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``You're implying the Dead King, through the Hierophant, intervened to
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prevent scrying from being possible in Iserre,'' the Pilgrim said.
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He flicked a glance at the Rogue Sorcerer, who nodded a concession it
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was possible for that to have been the case. I didn't need to tell the
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Peregrine much more than that: he might not have been in the middle of
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anything like this before, but given how long he'd been kicking around
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he would have been in the middle of a lot of things that were a
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\emph{little} like this.
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``We were meant to bloody each other,'' the old man quietly said. ``The
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Grand Alliance, the Legions of Terror, your Army of Callow. By cutting
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off the rituals, negotiation was made difficult and \emph{you}-''
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A coldly burning gaze turned to the Tyrant of Helike. I sympathized with
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the sentiment. The Pilgrim and I had both known we were doing the Dead
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King's work for him, by fighting here in Iserre, but neither of us had
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grasped quite how literally that was the case until tonight.
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``Me,'' Kairos grinned. ``I've had eyes in the sky this entire time, in
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a manner of speaking. And on occasion, I spoke with a dear friend of
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mine about\ldots{} common interests.''
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Which explained why the armies of the League and of Helike in particular
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had been able to dance around Iserre flawlessly, never encountering any
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true setback until I'd arrived on the surface with Sve Noc at my back:
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perhaps the only entity in the principality that could veil itself from
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the ritual Neshamah was using. And to make it even worse, with that
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knowledge Kairos had undertaken the collection of even more. Since he'd
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known where every army was, he'd been able to make deals with them for
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even more secrets until he was the only person in all of Iserre who
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truly knew what was going on. Which had made him, in turn, even more
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useful to the Dead King who needed an agent in the region to keep
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stirring the chaos and escalate the mess. I suspected he'd used that
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need a chip to learn quite a few things he shouldn't. Likely the
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information about the Bard he'd traded me initially came from Neshamah,
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and for him to know of the specific price to my bargain with Larat -- as
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he quite obviously did -- meant the chances were good most of what
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Masego knew had been spilled and passed on. It did smack of the Dead
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King's ironic touch, to be selling my secrets instead of his.
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``Of course, they \emph{are} villains,'' I said. ``Which means the Dead
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King always intended to kill him, and Kairos always intended on stealing
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the Dead King's victory at the very last moment.''
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I cast a curious glance at the Tyrant, since I was still unaware of the
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full details of what Neshamah was up to. I'd figured out that if no one
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ended up claiming the shard it would have no anchor and so just keep
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falling -- you know, until it \emph{crashed on us} -- but I doubted the
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Dead King was just going to let that lying around afterwards. Though
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after making corpses out of the core armies of the Grand Alliance, the
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East and the League he should definitely have some further means to
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meddle.
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``He planned on turning this lovely little ruin-realm into a fresh Hell,
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I do believe,'' Kairos mused. ``After binding our souls, raising us from
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the grave and unleashing us against all he opposed anyway. He's got
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classic tastes, our friend up north.''
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``Neat,'' I flatly said. ``So, Kairos here wanted to snatch the shard
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from the Dead King using the Hierarch and Atalante's priesthood.''
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``It was going to be beautiful,'' the Tyrant sighed. ``Terrible for all
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of you, of course, but absolutely glorious for everyone that matters.
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I'd even been looking into the practicalities of crashing it into the
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Serenity.''
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He'd \emph{what}? No, now was not the time to let him distract me.
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``Won't work now,'' I said. ``The Dead King's been warned. But, as it
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happens, there's still a way to prevent this from killing us all.''
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The Tyrant leaned back into his throne with a vicious grin.
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``Now, this is the part I've been looking forward to,'' Kairos
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Theodosian cheerfully said. ``Go on, Catherine, I want to see how you'll
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be selling the birth of a fae court sworn to Below to the
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\emph{Peregrine}.''
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The Pilgrim's hackles went right back up, not that they'd ever gone down
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all that much. Might be more accurate to say the crux of his indignation
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had been pointed at another villain, for once. He didn't accuse me, at
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least, though at his side Laurence looked both triumphant and remarkably
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eager to run me through. I rolled my shoulder to loosen it, the same way
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I'd used to do before fights -- in a way, this was one. Without blades
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having been bared, but it counted all the same. All my plans meant
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nothing, if I couldn't convince the Peregrine that backing me was the
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right choice. The Saint was a lost cause, and I knew next to nothing
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about the Sorcerer, but they'd both fall in line if Tariq gave his word.
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Leaning against my staff, I gestured upwards at the darkened firmament.
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``Now, a realm has been carved out of Arcadia and sent careening down
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into Creation,'' I said. ``There's no changing that, there's not sending
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it back and destroying it would be worse: it's close enough to us by now
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that if we broke it the aftershocks would likely kill everyone in
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Iserre. Which means that realm needs to be seen to, anchored, and
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there's only three stories for us to craft that fate from.''
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I raised a single finger, then jammed it towards the north.
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``The Dead King's story is a kingdom of death, made for the reigning
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king of the same,'' I said. ``Its herald was the folly and blindness of
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mortals, who willingly sacrificed themselves at an unseen altar to allow
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the blooming of calamity.''
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I paused.
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``It also involves everyone here dying and returning as a Revenant in
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his service, leading his armies in the conquest of Calernia,'' I added.
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``Not, I feel same in assuming, anyone's first choice.''
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I shrugged.
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``Now, there was a second story,'' I said. ``Woven by the hand of our
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very own Tyrant.''
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Kairos nonchalantly waved, which had the Saint's lips thinning in anger
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and her hand visibly reaching for her sword. It was almost unsettling to
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see that directed at someone else.
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``His was the madness-''
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``-visionary wisdom,'' the Tyrant corrected.
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``- of the Hierarch woven into the very fabric of a realm,'' I
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continued. ``A vessel of revolt, an instrument for the sowing of strife
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uncivil. That story, however, was broken.''
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``She sold me out to the Dead King,'' Kairos complained to the heroes.
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``You really can't trust anyone these days.''
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``The last story is mine,'' I said. ``It is made of crowns and debts,
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the desperate trick of a fox chewing through its own foot for fear of
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the night.''
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``Then it is true,'' the Grey Pilgrim grimly said. ``You want to make a
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Court of Night.''
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``Oh no, this is where you have me wrong,'' I smiled. ``What I want,
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Peregrine, is for us to make a god.''
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My smile turned sharp, almost blade-like.
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``Then to \emph{murder that god} and make of his bones a highway for our
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armies.''
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