382 lines
19 KiB
TeX
382 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-35-colloquy}{%
|
|
\chapter{Colloquy}\label{chapter-35-colloquy}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``Forty-three: if your band is split during a harrowing test set
|
|
by a villain or ambiguous entity, you may safely assume you will next be
|
|
reunited in some sort of cell or unfolding sacrificial ritual.''}{``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was a funny thing, perspective. What Hierophant had stolen from
|
|
Arcadia was a drop in the ocean, a piece of eternity that became
|
|
something less by being removed from the whole. Looking at it with my
|
|
own eyes, though, the scale of what he'd wrought was worthy of awe. A
|
|
kingdom's worth of badlands, consumed by howling squalls and the
|
|
aftermaths of sorcery until the very grounds were made barren. I'd
|
|
walked only the very edge of this land, but it'd been enough to tell me
|
|
that it would take weeks if not months to go from one end to another.
|
|
And it would fall on Creation, a cataclysmic doom on Iserre, if anchor
|
|
was not fashioned before the tipping point. To accomplish that most
|
|
important of tasks, an army would have been too much but a single person
|
|
too little. And so, in a pattern nearly as old as the First Dawn, a band
|
|
of five had been called. Of those chosen few I would not speak of
|
|
myself, but the others? It was not small names -- or Names -- that had
|
|
been assembled to turn back doom.
|
|
|
|
The Tyrant of Helike, an odd-eyed madman who'd pulled at the strings of
|
|
nations and tricked an entity older than the city that'd birthed him.
|
|
Weak of constitution, sickly and feeble, he did not walk with the others
|
|
but instead leisurely sat a throne held up by a throng of
|
|
eerily-intelligent animated stone gargoyles. The ornate scepter in his
|
|
hand was the least of the artifacts at his disposal, though the only
|
|
visible, for the villain had inherited a veritable trove of lunacy and
|
|
wealth from the Theodosians of centuries past. And yet, for all that, I
|
|
suspected the deadliest things remained his tongue and the mind that but
|
|
purpose to it. As if making of mockery of this entire war, the Tyrant
|
|
wore not armour but instead kingly brocaded robes in gold and scarlet,
|
|
match for the ornate ruby-set crown on his brow and his misformed eye
|
|
even deeper red.
|
|
|
|
The Grey Pilgrim needed no introduction, I supposed. The oldest living
|
|
Calernian hero and favourite agent of the Choir of Mercy. There was a
|
|
terrifying amount of power in that wizened frame, and the crooked staff
|
|
of ashwood he bore, but it was the Peregrine himself that was the true
|
|
terror. He was a weaver of stories in dusty grey robes with second sight
|
|
and a choir's worth of angels whispering secrets in his ear. He was
|
|
incorruptible, implacable and while in body he might just be an
|
|
exhausted old man his deep knowledge of miracles and deeper well of
|
|
power allowed him a mystifying breadth of capabilities that only
|
|
strengthened when exercised to save another. Though near a king in the
|
|
eyes of his people, his shoes were worn leather and he wore not a single
|
|
adornment save white locks atop his head.
|
|
|
|
What more need be said of Saint of Swords, after saying she had once cut
|
|
the fabric of Winter itself? Oh, like the Pilgrim her years were slowing
|
|
her down but the vitality of her prime had been replaced by the kind of
|
|
unbroken certainty that in a Named was a hundredfold more dangerous than
|
|
muscle. I would never like her, but the Saint was a heroine who has
|
|
faced sword in hand and slain things whose mere sight would put lesser
|
|
souls to flight. She was one of the finest blades alive, capable of
|
|
cutting through sorcery and steel and the fabric of Creation with the
|
|
plain longsword at her hip, and she had tempered her soul and body into
|
|
a domain whose existence made her halfway unkillable -- and explained
|
|
why she disdained armour in favour of a plain pale tabard over a darker
|
|
collared tunic.
|
|
|
|
The last one, the Rogue Sorcerer, was taciturn mystery who'd faced two
|
|
of the most infamous villains of our age -- in all humility, Akua
|
|
Sahelian and myself -- without taking a wound, revealing an aspect or
|
|
ever being in danger of death. He'd been able to fend off Diabolist's
|
|
ritual attempts to find my father, proved capable of guiding armies
|
|
through a dying shard of Arcadia and was, to my knowledge, the only
|
|
person not complicit or in my service to have figured out it was a
|
|
Keter's Due that filled the sky. That someone so plainly competent was
|
|
almost unheard of meant the man was being purposefully discreet, and
|
|
given my teachers I knew how lethal Named who went out of their way to
|
|
keep their abilities quiet tended to be. The long coat of leather over
|
|
practical chain mail and less practical silks of many colours was kept
|
|
close to his frame, though there were shapes to be discerned beneath.
|
|
Over his shoulder was hung a heavy bag bearing seven mortal crowns,
|
|
carried on my behalf.
|
|
|
|
It should have been a formal affair, this journey, something solemn and
|
|
dignified.
|
|
|
|
``So is it true you used to knock boots with the Iron Prince?'' Kairos
|
|
cheerfully asked. ``I'm not usually one to bring up salacious rumours,
|
|
but-``
|
|
|
|
I ignored the bald lie he'd spoken and instead kept a wary eye one the
|
|
Saint's sword hand. Which was, unsurprisingly, on the pommel of said
|
|
sword. That tended to happen whenever the Tyrant talked, though to be
|
|
fair we'd only just entered this realm and already I was tempted to let
|
|
her. I glanced at her face, though, and found it wrinkled as usual but
|
|
also irritated this time. \emph{I bet it's true}, I thought\emph{. All
|
|
those late evenings killing ratlings under moonlight?} Hasenbach
|
|
honestly wasn't much of a looker -- though she wasn't exactly plain
|
|
either -- but her uncle might wear those broad shoulders a little
|
|
better.
|
|
|
|
``Black Queen,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``Am I correct in presuming
|
|
that the broken tower is our destination?''
|
|
|
|
He was speaking a little too loudly for this to be entirely about him
|
|
asking me a question. Still, he was pointing in the right direction so I
|
|
actually followed his finger and nodded after a confirmatory look. The
|
|
wasteland here was not entirely plains with a few distant mountains,
|
|
there were other inclines. It was simply hard to see them, sometimes,
|
|
buried as they were in ash and dust and smoke. Even far out from the
|
|
great storms as we were, the winds would be slapping great heaps of
|
|
those at our sides if not for the small glow dangling from the tip of
|
|
the Pilgrim's staff like an amulet of solid Light. Unlike the protection
|
|
Sve Noc had taught me to make, his did not impose a bubble of stillness
|
|
around us. It\ldots{} eased the winds into slowing, so that when they
|
|
reached us they were little more than a warm breeze carrying nothing at
|
|
all. It was a more elegant solution, though when we'd get to breaching
|
|
the great storms I suspected my method would be more effective.
|
|
|
|
``It is,'' I said. ``I'm impressed you can recognize it as a tower, to
|
|
be honest.''
|
|
|
|
If I hadn't been there earlier with my Hunt in attendance, I would not
|
|
have. All that was visible of the tower now under a hill's worth of ash
|
|
and dust was a square house of stone with a broken tile roof jutting out
|
|
form the grey. There'd been glass windows on the sides once, but they
|
|
had not survived the first catastrophe to hit them years ago and even
|
|
the last sticking bits were like ground-down teeth in an open maw
|
|
through which the wasteland's winds poured through.
|
|
|
|
``The slate tiles and sandstone are not unfamiliar to me,'' the hero
|
|
said. ``They were a noticeable feature of Liesse.''
|
|
|
|
The nicer parts of it, anyway, I mentally corrected.
|
|
|
|
``You've been there before,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Once, years ago,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``I had hear that the
|
|
secret tomes of the Wizard of the West had been found, and were to be
|
|
auctioned by a Liessen guild.''
|
|
|
|
Not one of the legal ones, I thought with a snort. Books written on the
|
|
subject of magic had been heavily restricted under Black and confiscated
|
|
whenever found, though there'd been monetary compensation so Callowans
|
|
hadn't really cared unless they were wizards. In which case they already
|
|
had greater reasons to be afraid of the Carrion Lord than books, no
|
|
matter their subject. This, though, a hero's ancient tomes put up for
|
|
auction in largest southern Callowan city but also the only one under an
|
|
Imperial governor? Knowing my teacher like I did, that story could only
|
|
be headed one way.
|
|
|
|
``It was a trap,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``It was a trap,'' the Sorcerer sighed. ``I nearly died twice fleeing
|
|
the `auction' and lost a fortune's worth of\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
He paused.
|
|
|
|
``No matter,'' he said. ``Still, the city was a memorable enough
|
|
sight.''
|
|
|
|
I glanced at him.
|
|
|
|
``Did you get one of the books?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``I did,'' the hero disgruntledly said. ``It was only a transcript of
|
|
some Praesi trial involving tapirs, and to add insult to injury the
|
|
Warlock wove a tracking enchantment into it.''
|
|
|
|
I very carefully hid my smile. I had some suspicions as to who had
|
|
chosen the contents of the book, at least. Regardless, we had arrived.
|
|
We'd also pulled slightly ahead of the others as we talked, though they
|
|
caught up quick enough.
|
|
|
|
``- in a way wouldn't that make you Cordelia's aunt?'' Kairos
|
|
enthusiastically said. ``You're practically royalty yourself,
|
|
Laurence.''
|
|
|
|
The Saint's fingers twitched, but sadly I still needed the Tyrant and he
|
|
was bound to have some contingencies that'd cripple us if he was
|
|
actually attacked -- I doubted he would have agreed to come otherwise,
|
|
or kept taunting the old zealot so insistently. Gritting my teeth I
|
|
prepared to step in, but before I could the Grey Pilgrim quietly
|
|
laughed. The sound had the Saint's shoulders loosening, though the
|
|
Sorcerer's tightened instead.
|
|
|
|
``I knew your father, Kairos,'' the Peregrine quietly said. ``Were you
|
|
aware?''
|
|
|
|
``You've not exactly been chaste in the array of stories you'll get
|
|
involved in, Tariq,'' the Tyrant amusedly said, flopping a wrist
|
|
dismissively. ``Though I'll assume that was before the two of us had our
|
|
pleasant chat on the matter of succession.''
|
|
|
|
``You remind me of him,'' the Pilgrim said. ``He, too, felt the need to
|
|
fill silences at any cost.''
|
|
|
|
The Tyrant of Helike went still for less than a heartbeat, and was
|
|
smiling after as if he'd never ceased, but he'd not been quite quick
|
|
enough to hide the glint of frozen rage that passed through his eyes at
|
|
the Pilgrim's words.
|
|
|
|
``Already a little less bored,'' Kairos Theodosian grinned. ``Not so
|
|
kindly after all are we, my kindly stranger?''
|
|
|
|
``If a child pricks his hand picking a rose, it is not maltreatment,''
|
|
the Grey Pilgrim mildly said. ``It is a lesson.''
|
|
|
|
Considering that unlike the Tyrant I hadn't just had an old wound
|
|
prodded at and the wise old man tone was still tiresome to me, that was
|
|
a sign I needed to step in. I didn't have much sympathy for Kairos, but
|
|
it would be preferable if every member of this band at least made it to
|
|
the antechamber of the peril ahead. It'd just be poor form otherwise.
|
|
|
|
``We've arrived,'' I called out.
|
|
|
|
The old man and the young king kept their gaze on each other for a long
|
|
moment even after I spoke, and I cleared my throat progressively more
|
|
loudly until they both looked because it sort of sounded like I was
|
|
choking.
|
|
|
|
``Now that I have your attention,'' I rasped out.
|
|
|
|
I raised a finger, then breathed out a little. Though I was high
|
|
priestess of Night, unlike the rest of these people I didn't have the
|
|
ancillary benefits of Name easing my way through this journey. When ash
|
|
got into my lungs and mouth, I still choked like a mortal. Still didn't
|
|
regret that transition in the slightest, mind you. You just couldn't put
|
|
a price on enjoying a good cup of wine, and not occasionally going mad
|
|
with Winter.
|
|
|
|
``When the Hierophant brought Liesse into this place, it was roughly
|
|
done,'' I said. ``Roughly enough that pieces of the city were sown all
|
|
over this wasteland.''
|
|
|
|
The Rogue Sorcerer inhaled sharply as he realized where I was headed
|
|
before the rest. The benefits of having an education in matters magical,
|
|
I thought, and made note that while the Tyrant's eyes had narrowed he
|
|
didn't seem have figured it out. I was honestly uncertain whether or not
|
|
the villain was a mage or not, since I'd never actually seen him use
|
|
sorcery except through artefacts. At the very least, though he was
|
|
gifted in his understanding I was now fairly sure even if he was a mage
|
|
he had not reached High Arcana.
|
|
|
|
``In Creation that wouldn't mean much, but this place is adrift,'' I
|
|
said. ``I won't get into too much detail, since it's all very
|
|
technical-'' and even after speaking with Akua twice I still only barley
|
|
understood what she'd said, ``- but given the fluidity of laws this
|
|
place, and the strength of the story we're riding, the law of sympathy
|
|
can be leaned on pretty heavily to provide a shortcut.''
|
|
|
|
``That is\ldots{} inspired,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``We came through
|
|
Creation, but to emerge elsewhere in this realm we would be walking the
|
|
boundary between it and Arcadia instead.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled and kept my fingers from clenching. It was a good thing I was
|
|
intending on remaining on good terms with the Grand Alliance, because if
|
|
it came down to a fight this one might be too dangerous to keep alive.
|
|
It'd taken Akua Sahelian, a sorceress that even a one-in-a-century kind
|
|
of talent like Masego considered brilliant, a direct look at my Lord of
|
|
Silent Steps using something similar in nature to figure this method
|
|
out. Ivah had begun something close, that it called `skittering', back
|
|
in the Everdark and had refined the trick since into a very dangerous
|
|
tool. The Rogue Sorcerer had figured out from a bastard description in a
|
|
matter of moments, and though that didn't mean he'd be able to reproduce
|
|
the feat that was still a rather nasty knack for comprehending my side's
|
|
bag of tricks. I'd wanted the Tyrant in this band of five because of the
|
|
Sorcerer, but now I was wondering if that was going to be as affective a
|
|
scheme as I'd believed it would be. Not that this was ever going go be
|
|
anything but a risky roll of the dice, considering there was no one
|
|
among my fellows I could truly rely on if things went south. Still
|
|
there'd been no way but leaving Adjutant behind: I needed both the
|
|
Tyrant and the Sorcerer among the five, since it both gave me the shape
|
|
of the former's inevitable betrayal and allowed me to get around the
|
|
diplomatic debacle that would be robbing people I needed to be allies
|
|
with. No matter how badly they deserved to be robbed.
|
|
|
|
``Foundling,'' the Saint of Swords said. ``You admitted earlier that
|
|
your Praesi warlock is possessed by the Hidden Horror, yes?''
|
|
|
|
``Influenced,'' I corrected.
|
|
|
|
``Bit of downplay, that,'' the Tyrant snorted.
|
|
|
|
``As far as my people have been able to tell, the Dead King isn't in
|
|
control most of the time,'' I said. ``Though there seem to be small
|
|
bursts where he is, it's true, but always for less than a quarter hour.
|
|
Though for simplicity's sake, it would be best to consider the
|
|
Hierophant as bewitched.''
|
|
|
|
``And how do you intend to break that bewitchment?'' the Saint bluntly
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
``I can't answer that without crippling the chances it'll actually
|
|
work,'' I replied. ``But rest assured, I do have a method.''
|
|
|
|
``If he's half as powerful as all,'' the Saint gestured at the wasteland
|
|
around us, ``this seems to imply, he needs to die. If the Dead King has
|
|
a way in, he'll remain a risk after even if-``
|
|
|
|
``Laurence,'' I interrupted, tone eerily calm, ``allow me to be
|
|
perfectly frank with you: if you so much as scuff his robes, I'll put
|
|
you down without batting an eye. It's not diplomatic, or all that
|
|
practical, but I do not tolerate rabid animals snapping their jaws at
|
|
the people I care about.''
|
|
|
|
She glared at me, eyes burning. I stared back, unblinking. The Saint was
|
|
exactly the kind of heroine to nip what she saw as a looming threat in
|
|
the bud by the edge of her sword. The same traits that made her capable
|
|
of accomplishing that also made her a lot more likely to try it, in my
|
|
eyes, which was rather the issue with Saint in essence wasn't it? The
|
|
moment there was no longer a hand on her leash, the truce went up in
|
|
smoke.
|
|
|
|
``Queen Catherine,'' the Pilgrim intervened. ``The question was not
|
|
meant as an attack. It needs to be asked: if there is no other way, if
|
|
your own method has failed, a decision will have to be made.''
|
|
|
|
My fingers clenched, but I forced them to loosen.
|
|
|
|
``In that very narrow situation you've mentioned, then I'll take
|
|
action,'' I said. ``But let's be perfectly clear: if any of you use what
|
|
I just said as a pretext to kill the Hierophant, I will take it as an
|
|
act of war.''
|
|
|
|
Gods, it was a heavy-handed approach and I might as well be painting a
|
|
weakness in bright red for the wolves among this flock but it needed to
|
|
be said nonetheless. I wasn't sure either the Saint or the Tyrant would
|
|
actually have their hand stayed by the threat I'd just made, but the
|
|
sword I'd just hung above the head of this truce should be enough to
|
|
have cooler heads intervene instead of stand back and watch if either
|
|
acted. The Grey Pilgrim, anyway, I grimly thought. I didn't have a good
|
|
grasp of the Rogue Sorcerer yet.
|
|
|
|
``As I was saying,'' I began anew after a few beats of silence. ``We
|
|
will be taking an unusual path, whose nature is kin to a threshold.
|
|
There are advantages to that. Through Hierophant, the Hidden Horror
|
|
would attempt to strike at us if we approached the city openly. But in
|
|
that more fluid place we will travel through, I suspect it will lurk as
|
|
well. Waiting.''
|
|
|
|
``The first crucible,'' the Pilgrim calmly said. ``Not one, I think, of
|
|
arms.''
|
|
|
|
``When assault the stronghold of a villain,'' I said, ``watch out for
|
|
three things: a monster, a trial and a pivot.''
|
|
|
|
``And you believe this to be the trial,'' the old man said.
|
|
|
|
``I believe that everyone here has a few bodies buried somewhere in
|
|
their past,'' I said, eyes sweeping across the heroes and villain. ``And
|
|
something they want badly enough to listen to the devil when he'll come
|
|
calling. And make no mistake, I have encountered the Dead King before.
|
|
It isn't with threats and screams he'll approach. It will be with a
|
|
pleasant offer for a most reasonable bargain.''
|
|
|
|
Gods, much as I hated to admit it the Saint of Swords was the one I had
|
|
most faith in to blow straight through. Even Neshamah would have a hard
|
|
time cracking open that protective shell of hatred and arrogance. The
|
|
Pilgrim shouldn't be an issue, either, but there were a lot more levers
|
|
to move him than I was comfortable with, especially considering the Dead
|
|
King was bound to know a thing or two about angels. The Tyrant was going
|
|
to sell us out, that was a given, but that was fine. I'd planned with
|
|
the inevitability in mind. Once more, it was the Rogue Sorcerer that was
|
|
the unknown. I glanced at Tariq and caught his eye, then subtly dipped
|
|
my head towards the youngest hero. Just as subtly, the Pilgrim nodded.
|
|
He was either reliable, then, or good enough to fool whatever means of
|
|
second sight the Peregrine used. Either way, it was too late in the span
|
|
to do anything about it.
|
|
|
|
``It was a beautiful speech, Catherine,'' Kairos called out. ``It
|
|
greatly raised my spirits.''
|
|
|
|
I rolled my eyes and limped up the hill of ash and dust until I stood by
|
|
the side of one of the broken windows. Running a hand across the warm
|
|
stone by the windowsill, I breathed out and let the Night flow through
|
|
my veins. The shivering line between realms was no domain of Sve Noc's,
|
|
but the darkness within the broken house was a threshold I could use.
|
|
Night poured out of me like a flood, until I breathed out and withdrew
|
|
my palm. I turned to them, straightening my back.
|
|
|
|
``Into the deeps,'' I said. ``We will meet again on the other side.''
|