483 lines
23 KiB
TeX
483 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-42-twined}{%
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\chapter{Twined}\label{chapter-42-twined}}
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\epigraph{``The Lycaonese are a grim people though not without a dark sort
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of humour, as became evident when I was first told what a `northern
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burial' is. The inhabitants of these parts do not bury their dead, for
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fear of the Kingdom of the Dead, instead burning their own and spreading
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the ashes on consecrated ground. What the locals refer to as one of
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their burials is, in truth, someone being eaten by ratlings from the
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Chain of Hunger.''}{Extract from ``Horrors and Wonders'', famed travelogue of Anabas the
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Ashuran}
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This would be the second time I assaulted the ducal palace of Liesse,
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and it would have made three if the Lone Swordsman hadn't picked a
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dainty little eldritch church as his last holdout. Gods, now that I
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thought about it, hadn't I brawled with Akua every time I'd stepped
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within city limits in the past? Sometimes it was hard to reconcile the
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smirking woman I'd hated so bitterly with the Diabolist I know knew and
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on occasion even liked. Hells, I was pretty sure she'd once implied that
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some ghoul she was sending after me was Kilian, back when we'd been a
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couple. An arrow more pointed than plausible but then Akua's knack had
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always tended more towards striking deep than striking true. I dismissed
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the thought as the three of us began our approach down the Caen road,
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the broad avenue that led directly to the gates of the city's ancient
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seat of power. The gates were wide open, having fallen off the hinges,
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and the stone round them had been eaten into brutally.
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``Someone assaulted this before us,'' the Saint said.
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I grimaced.
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``My own work,'' I said. ``From when I last took this city.''
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``Akua's Folly,'' the old woman said. ``The stories began trickling
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across the border after the Camps.''
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I did not reply, even though it was rare for her to engage save through
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threat and insults. I did not owe her a discussion of that catastrophe.
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Not to her, not to anyone. The breadth of the scope I'd failed my people
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by no longer choked me day and night, not the way it had before heading
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into the Everdark, but the Doom of Liesse would never be anything but a
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bitter brew for me. That I seemed fated to walk it again and again was
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perhaps cruel, but then by my hands I had earned that cruelty. I'd still
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my tongue to it and take what was nothing less than my due.
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``They say you bound the Diabolist to the heart of the ritual,'' the
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Rogue Sorcerer quietly said. ``And then broke it on her head,
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extinguishing every speck of her soul.''
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``It was the Black Knight who struck at Akua Sahelian's work,'' I
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brusquely said. ``And it nearly killed him too. It doesn't matter, save
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that we should not touch a ward until the hall where the Diabolist once
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laid her first threshold.''
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I was saved further talk by stirring in the sky, though at the sight of
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them I almost wished we were still rubbing salt into my old wounds. The
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colossal panes of bronze-like glass I'd seen earlier -- how could anyone
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\emph{not}, given how starkly they loomed above the city? -- had began
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to shift. Like those beautiful jigsaw puzzles of glass and metal I'd
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once stared at in the markets of Laure, the pieces began moving like
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some intricate interlinked mechanism. Given the descending side of the
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panels they'd brought to mind a longview when I'd first thought of it,
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and it seemed that Masego was using them for purpose kin to that: rim
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glowing with massive carved runes I could not seem to understand, the
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panes began turning on themselves as if being adjusted for some arcane
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purpose. As it had earlier the first and largest pane of glass showed
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clear sight of the barren wasteland below as if it were being scried,
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but the angle of view and the closeness of the sight seemed to change in
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impossible ways according to the whims of spins.
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``Rogue,'' I quietly said. ``The runes, I can't keep them in my memory
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-- that means they're High Arcana. What are they \emph{for}?''
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``I don't know,'' the hero admitted.
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I waved a hand irritably.
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``I know the upper arcane stuff is personal and unique for everyone, but
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I know there's usually some bridge of understanding there,'' I said.
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``I'm not asking for a treatise on what he's up to, just some broad
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strokes.''
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``Black Queen, I cannot understand High Arcana,'' the Rogue Sorcerer
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bluntly said. ``I can hazard some guesses at the purposes of this device
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-- I suspect every glass-like pane is a different scrying ritual and the
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largest one serves as a sort of receptacle for all that is seen,
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allowing variety of sight -- but I cannot know anything for certain.''
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I glanced at the dark-haired man catching that he was faintly
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embarrassed. His pupils had been ringed in red or green, earlier, but
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that now seemed gone. A simple unremarkable brown, not so dissimilar to
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my own, was all that remained. I was a little skeptical of his words
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considering his record when it came to the fights and that at the Battle
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of the Camps he'd been directing the enemy wizard against my own mage
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lines led by Masego, who'd been dabbling in High Arcana long before I
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met him. Still, what did he have to win by lying to me here? Nothing
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worth the candle, I thought, and I knew better than most that Names
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could be tricky things: he might have some help from his in these
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subjects from his. Or, from that matter, the very opposite. It wasn't
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unheard of for transitional Names to serve as a set of shackles to be
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surpassed down the line and -- and this was a rabbit hole I did not have
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to spare tumbling down. I glanced one more time at the pane, and near
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flinched when an eardrum-shattering shriek sounded across the ruined
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realm. I'd heard them before, the interwoven four cacophonies that
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followed, like old metal being twisted and warped. One after another,
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the angled Hellgates opened in the sky above and devils began pouring
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out.
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``Lesser Breaches,'' the Rogue Sorcerer murmured. ``Yet four of them.
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That is\ldots{} remarkable. And absurdly dangerous. The Hierophant is
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taking a knife to the already chewed up fabric of this realm.''
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``Look at the larger pane,'' I urged, ``if it's like the last time then
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there'll-''
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And there it was, clear-cut in view on the bronze glass in a way it had
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not been when I'd attempted to look at it with my own mortal eyes: a
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glittering array of runes that hurt to look at, forming a circle at
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twice the height of a man. I glimpsed a ghostly silhouette within the
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circle, but before a heartbeat had passed there was a flash of blinding
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light and a gargantuan detonation in the distance. I'd looked away in
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time, though I noticed that both the Saint and the Sorcerer had looked
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through the glare uninterrupted. Leant on their Name for it, I guessed,
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though I'd never found how to work that particular trick myself back in
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my Squire days.
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``I don't suppose either if you can shed light on that,'' I said.
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``It is no coincidence the Hellgates opened before the other part of the
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ritual,'' Roland told me, turning to match my gaze.
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Well, would you look at that. Around one his left pupil, the slightest
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tint of azure blue was beginning to form a circle. Name or sorcery, I
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wondered? The more I learned of magic, the more I understood that there
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were as many ways to practice it as there were languages under the sun.
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``Meaning?'' I asked.
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``That the stuff of the Hells is being drawn in at first, then given
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shape by the circle of runes we saw,'' the Sorcerer said. ``It is an
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attempt, I believe, at making something -- though whatever was made
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seems to have been deemed unfit and so immediately annihilated. I would
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say those failed attempts are responsible for the Due that was used to
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occlude scrying in Iserre.''
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My throat caught. Not at the subtleties of the sorcery at use slowly
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being peeled back, but at what the hero had told me without knowing it.
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Masego was drawing from the stuff of Hells and trying to give it a shape
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through High Arcana -- a form of sorcery that was, by nature, deeply
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personal. That shape looked human, or close enough, and he was being
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obsessively exact even by his standards when it came to the results of
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his work. The Warlock had been slain at Thalassina, it was said, and
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having passed to the place beyond there was no sensible way for
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Hierophant to bring him back. But Masego had once told me that devils
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did not die, not truly. They merely dispersed, returning to the primal
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stuff of the Hells where another of their kind would be born when the
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whims of those unearthly realms demanded it. Masego was brutalizing the
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world with sorcery until it gave him back the only one of his fathers he
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could reach. And he was, heartbreakingly, failing.
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``Your Majesty?'' the Sorcerer quietly said.
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``Grief and miscarriage have seeped into the bones of this place,'' I
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said, voice grown rough. ``And damn the Dead King, for having given him
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hope where there can be none.''
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After all, if the hero was correct it was the Due from this that
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occluded scrying then Neshamah was have seen to it that this was an
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exercise in futility: the Hidden Horror would need this to continue for
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months, if not years. Perhaps there was the slightest sliver of a
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chance, I thought, but how many lifetimes would it take for Masego to
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succeed? An obsession had been slid into the ribs of my friend, and not
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one he would easily be able to shake. I knew him, the way he thought.
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This would stay with him like an itch he could not scratch: the whisper
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that if he was a little more accurate, a little more inspired, if he
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spent another few years of research, then it could be done. That every
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moment where he had not yet succeeded was a failure. Merciless Gods,
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that old thing in Keter had wrought damage it would take years to
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unmake. And the middle of a war was hardly the time to do it.
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``Enough dawdling,'' the Saint of Swords said. ``The longer we wait the
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greater the chance the dagger will be caught.''
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``Agreed,'' I growled.
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I had more than a little wroth to purge from my blood, now, and a hard
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fight seemed just the thing for it.
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---
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A hard fight was precisely what I found us denied.
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The avenue leading to the palace had been empty, which was not
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unexpected, but the way that not a soul awaited as we passed the gates
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was. We'd seen going in that the fresh waves of devils brought through
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the gates had headed for the deeper palace, so it might be that strife
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awaited us there, but why allow us any uncontested advance? It wasn't
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like they were going to run out of devils anytime soon, if the numbers
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brought through the Breaches were any indication. Answer to that was
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only found after we rose by steps and passed through halls where the
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marks of my anger in the face of the Doom had yet to fade until we
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reached a plain oaken door that was not unfamiliar to me.
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``Ward,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said, resting a palm on it. ``Beautifully
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crafted, though it seems to have been aimed sorely at the Fair Folk.''
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``How did you get through back then, if it still stands?'' the Saint
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asked, eyeing me.
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I pointed a finger upwards, where I'd once shattered the stone of the
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ceiling to leap into the room and slaughter the mages that'd been hiding
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in there. Laurence, every spry for her age, glanced at the adjoining
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wall once before breaking into a smooth run -- the first jump had her
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angling on that wall, after which I felt a small ripple of Name power
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and she leapt up through the hole. The Sorcerer, meanwhile, was still
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examining the oaken door with a gaze much too involved for it to be wood
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he was looking at.
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``Can you break it?'' I asked.
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He'd said he could, after all. The dark-haired man blinked and turn to
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give me a sheepish look. Gods, what was it with practitioners and
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getting distracted?
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``I can,'' he said. ``The Saint?''
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The answer came a moment later, as the old woman leapt down the hole and
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landed in a crouch.
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``More magic upstairs,'' she said. ``Peeked through the door and it was
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positively reeking of it.''
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``Ward?'' I frowned.
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``Labyrinth,'' she replied, shaking her head. ``I'm no mageling, but
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I've had to go through enough of those to recognize the scent.''
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``Labyrinth, huh,'' I said, and looked straight ahead at nothing just in
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case it'd be able to see me through spell or prophecy. ``Didn't work
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last time, you one-trick rat, and it won't this time either.''
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``Black Queen?'' the Sorcerer asked, sounding alarmed.
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``I believe we've got the Revenant known as the Skein on our hands,'' I
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said. ``It's got a preference for those.''
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The Saint of Swords went still.
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``The \emph{Skein}?'' she repeated. ``Like in the old rhyme?''
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``What rhyme?'' I frowned.
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``Eater endless, Shrouded silent,
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Sought and lost sleeping below
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Tumult tyrant, Snatcher slyest,
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Dreaming still but waking slow
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Skein scheming, last of five
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Lords of Horn from long ago.''
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She was not a particularly talented singer, and I suspected she'd rushed
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the rhythm, but I understood it without trouble. My brow rose: the rat
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had a history, it seemed. I supposed I shouldn't be surprised, as the
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Dead King seemed to enjoy raising in his service the rare and the
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unusual most of all.
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``Might be,'' I said. ``It certainly goes by that Name anyway.''
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``I thought you'd tangled with some hasty longtail that got caught and
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turned, not one of the Old Lords,'' the Saint grimly said.
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``It's tricky but hardly unbeatable,'' I shrugged.
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``You don't lack stomach, at least,'' the old Proceran said, which was
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not disapproving if not the opposite either. ``Well, if it's the same as
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the old legends it'll be waiting for us. Might as well have a look.
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Sorcerer, get a move on would you?''
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``Please,'' I added, flicking a glance at the man.
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The Rogue Sorcerer nodded, and after muttering something under his
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breath rapped his knuckle against the door once. The hand stayed there,
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after, though he opened his palm and the world shivered close to it.
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Huh. That'd felt like an old friend, and one I knew well: whatever
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aspect it was he'd just used, it was cousin to my old Take. And even
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more distant kin to the more abstract ability I still used as First
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Under the Night, though whatever similarity there'd been at the source
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had strayed the further I went from my Name. Interesting, though.
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Instead of breaking these wards, was he stealing them? It was certainly
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one way to interpret his Name, though given how subtle such matters
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could be I was reluctant to come to conclusions so swiftly.
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``Done,'' Roland said.
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The Saint of Swords strolled forward, elbowed him to the side and kicked
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the door down before walking through. I pushed down a snort and limped
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after them, gesturing for the Sorcerer to catch up to her. I slowed my
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steps just as I passed the broken door, bending down to pass my fingers
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lightly over the shattered oak. There was not, to my senses, so much as
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a speck of sorcery left in there. Akua had laid her ward in there more
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than year ago, and considering the usual thoroughness of her work it
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should have been exquisitely done. Yet there was not a damned trace of
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it left, not even some faint aftertouch. Creation rarely brooked such
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exactness, I thought. This was the work of his Name, not any sorcery I
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knew of. \emph{I wonder}, I thought, \emph{if there's a touch of colour
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around your pupil right now?} I'd master my curiosity for now, but I'd
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never been able to leave secrets alone for too long.
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I hurried to catch up with them before anyone could notice.
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---
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I'd give the Skein this much, it put in an effort.
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Though I did not know whether it had powers akin to sorcery or it was
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simply wielding the tripartite works of the old Dukes of Liesse and the
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two greatest Praesi mages of my generation, it tried to trap and waylay
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us at every turn. Of course, given that the Rogue Sorcerer seemed to be
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able to shatter any ward in less than thirty heartbeats and that
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Laurence de Montfort's answer to mazes was to cut through any wall in
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the way of marching in straight line it did not end up amounting to
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much. While I knew that the Saint would tire in time, she did not seem
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at the moment more than lightly winded and if anything Roland seemed
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haler than he'd been since hobbling back to the band. While they brute
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forced their way through the best-laid schemes of the Skein I kept a
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wary eye out, for this all seemed to easy to me. We'd yet to encounter
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any devils, or the Tyrant or any Revenant at all. All three of these
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would need to be met before we arrived at the conclusion of this
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journey, and indeed the shape of our story should ne nudging us towards
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that encounter. If we'd yet to meet them there was a reason for it, and
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since it was not of our own making it must be of the enemy's. That
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usually meant a trap.
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``You ever hear of the Two Hundred Axioms, Foundling?'' the Saint
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casually asked.
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Boot against the wall, she pushed until the rectangular shape she'd
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carved into the wall toppled forward. Abandoned servants' quarters were
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revealed behind, and if I had to bet I would bet that we were closing on
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the edge of the western wing of the ducal palace. Soon we'd hit the
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inner courtyard, that heavily warded killing field that Akua had
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prepared to fend off any attempting to approach the part of the palace
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where she'd laid the heart of her ritual and her throne room with it.
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Hierophant was using the ritual arrays that she'd carved into Liesse,
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which meant he was likely in there as well. I doubted any of the holes
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I'd made in the defences on my way in were still there, considering the
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quantity of devils Masego had been calling forth. They'd turn on him in
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a heartbeat if they could, Dead King looming or not, so odds were fresh
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layers of viciousness had been raised instead.
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``I have not,'' I said. ``Some sort of philosophical book?''
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``Close enough,'' Laurence de Montfort said. ``They're best kept out of
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hands like yours, anyway.''
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``Charming,'' I commented, following her through the opening. ``Why
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bring it up?''
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``The only sensible solution to a maze is to not enter the maze,'' she
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quoted, tone amused. ``This is close enough, I'd wager.''
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``And \emph{there},'' the Rogue Sorcerer hummed.
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The open palm he'd laid on the wall in front of us went straight through
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what I'd believed to be a stone wall, revealing it to be a skillful
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illusion. The other half of the room, until now veiled, ended in a
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broken glass window overlooking the inner courtyard of the inner palace.
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Which was empty, save for the broken and scorched grounds where Akua had
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once nearly succeeded at killing me with her clever traps. Were we going
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to be allowed to run of this all the way to the heart of the palace?
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Archer had been in here before, and she'd told me the place was swarming
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with devils. What had-
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``Wait,'' I said, as the Saint neared the window.
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``What?'' Laurence growled.
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``The Skein,'' I slowly said, ``in your stories, what is it known for?''
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``Scheming,'' she bluntly said.
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I grit my teeth. Now was not the time to get mouthy on me, Saint.
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``Look, in your rhyme all five of the `Old Lords' have some epithet that
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goes with their Name,'' I said with forced patience. ``The Tumult is a
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tyrant, which I'm guessing means it's good at herding other ratlings.
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The Eater is endless, which I'd wager means even for a Horned Lord means
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it's \emph{really} hard to put down. The Skein is scheming, sure, but
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the Snatcher is the `slyest'. What does the Skein \emph{do}, Saint? Are
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there any stories that hint at anything more?''
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The heroine matched my gaze, brow creased with thought.
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``It led a horde to devour whole what would become Hannoven,'' she
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finally said. ``Through some secret way, using wiles. They're old
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stories, Foundling. There's not a lot of them and the Skein is barely in
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any. Makes sense, if Old Bones got to him.''
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Through some secret way, using wiles. It wasn't a lot to work with, and
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that it ate a whole ancient city didn't weigh much on the scales to my
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eye -- it was what ancient hungry beasts \emph{did}, what mattered was
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the manner of it. Hannoven was, as I recalled, one of the most fortified
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cities on Calernia -- it was usually put in the same breath as Rhenia,
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Keter and Summerholm. Could I assume that even in the dawn of days it'd
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been a fortress? \emph{Yes}, I decided. The Skein had, after all, used a
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`secret way'. If it'd been a pack of huts, given the size of the damned
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thing there would have been no need for subtlety. It itched at me that
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the story spoke of a city, a place that was fixed. Not an army or a band
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of heroes, it was a city that made the tale and that was detail that
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resonated. In Keter, the Skein had been given the defence of a palace
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and it was the same here. \emph{It might have a trick that works well
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with fixed positions, either both the attack and the defence.} I had too
|
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little to go on, Hells. That was the thing with the Dead King, wasn't
|
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it? Anything secret that might help in defeating him for good was long
|
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dead and buried. If not by his hand, then by sheer dint of centuries.
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Although, when we'd fought the Skein in the Threefold Reflection, it'd
|
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been as part of a pattern hadn't it? One Revenant per palace. King
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Edward in the Garden of Crowns, the Thief of Stars in the Silent Palace
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and the Spellblade in that horrid half-realm we'd tread trying to move
|
|
between Creation and reflections.
|
|
|
|
The ancient King of Callow had been placed in a place for only the
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regal, the Thief of Stars assigned to spy on us in a place where every
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sound was muted and the Spellblade, a dead elf utterly lethal in direct
|
|
combat, given watch over a place where there could be no place to hide.
|
|
They'd all been posted, so to speak, in a place that benefited talents
|
|
or nature they'd had before being sent there. Was is the same with the
|
|
Skein then? I knew it'd used an artefact to manipulate the three
|
|
interlocked realms of the Threefold Reflection, and that its oracular
|
|
abilities had allowed it to do so even more dangerously, but this felt
|
|
like a departure from the pattern. The Silent Palace had made it easier
|
|
for the Thief of Stars to sneak around, not possible -- amplification of
|
|
a capacity, not crafting of a new one. It was the same with all the
|
|
others, too. And if that held, then some pieces were beginning to fall
|
|
into place. Gods, I almost couldn't believe I hadn't noticed: I'd
|
|
already walked the grounds of this very ducal palace once and seen it
|
|
gone still and bare, when I'd unleashed my domain of Moonless Nights.
|
|
And then too, I'd still come across wards and traps. There was a reason
|
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we hadn't come across so much as an imp on our heedless advance through
|
|
these grounds, and that was because we weren't in the palace at all: we
|
|
were in the domain of the Skein.
|
|
|
|
``Saint,'' I said, opening eyes I hadn't realized I'd closed. ``When you
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|
cut Winter, cut my domain, you were still within it right?''
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|
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|
``I was,'' the old woman warily said.
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|
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|
``And you could feel that you were?'' I pressed.
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|
|
|
Her eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``Here, now?'' she asked.
|
|
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|
``Been too easy so far, hasn't it?'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Her blade returned to the sheath and she took a moment to steady her
|
|
stance and breathing. Then the world shattered around us like panes of
|
|
glass, and the only hint that it wasn't her work was the slight widening
|
|
of her eyes.
|
|
|
|
The first thing I noticed was that the roof over our heads and walls
|
|
shielding us were gone.
|
|
|
|
The second was that the Skein in all its horned glory was nesting in the
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|
courtyard below, surrounded as far as the eye could by hordes of devils.
|
|
Two silhouettes were at its feet, though in the gloom I could not make
|
|
out who they were.
|
|
|
|
The third, and last, was that of us the Tyrant of Helike was being held
|
|
aloft on his throne by a swarm of gargoyles while grinning like a man
|
|
having the time of his line.
|
|
|
|
``My friends,'' Kairos Theodosian cheerfully announced, ``I am grieved
|
|
to inform you there might have been some \emph{slight}changes to my
|
|
allegiances.''
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