393 lines
20 KiB
TeX
393 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-43-treachery}{%
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\chapter{Treachery}\label{chapter-43-treachery}}
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\epigraph{``Habitually treacherous enemies are accomplices to their own
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destruction.''}{King Henry Fairfax, the Landless}
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I breathed in.
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Fear drifted into my lungs along with the rotten scent in the air, the
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poisonous odour of thousands of hellspawn and one of the oldest beasts
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of the Chain of Hunger. Death, decay and a fight that would have been
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hard business even with an army at my back. Gods, but it'd been a long
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night and the dawn of it was not yet in sight. It'd been one thing to
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stare down armies when I'd been Named, when I'd been in the deepest
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throes of Winter, but now I was painfully aware this could all end as
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simply as my throat being opened by some lucky devil. The knowing of
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that almost numbed my limbs, when it sunk it so suddenly: I could die,
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in these few coming heartbeats. I could have died at any time on the way
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here, and even if we survived the closing jaws of this trap I might
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still die before the night was over. It was an arresting though, one
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that had my palms prickling.
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I breathed out.
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\emph{Fear is an old friend}, I thought. Fear was the pain in my leg,
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the whispering tune of mistake and mortality and needing to always do
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better lest if all fall apart. How could it cow me, when I leant on it
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like a pilgrim's staff? I let that tenet straighten my back and took a
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look at my opposition. Devils, alas, in the thousands.
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\emph{Walin-falme} and \emph{akalibsa}, as we had fought before, but
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this was a disparate horde and there seemed no end to the assortment. It
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made gauging numbers difficult, given the wild variation of shape and
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size in the swarming throng, but it could be no less than two thousand.
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We moved, from there, to threats in the singular. The undead Horned Lord
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known as the Skein was nesting among the ruins of the courtyard and
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attending hall, its darkly furred strangely humanoid body folded inwards
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as if it were a beast at rest. Great antlers of bone jutted from the top
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of its head, set above golden eyes made even more vivid by the deep red
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gouges beneath them. It was a creature gifted with foresight, near
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impossible to damage and wielding at least one aspect I knew to be
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capable of unmaking its mistakes -- \textbf{Spool}, it had called it in
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Keter. At its feet stood two silhouettes, veiled to me until a sliver of
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Night saw to that mundane frailty.
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I breathed in.
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Yet more trouble, and my fingers harshly coiled. My predictions had come
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up short in two different ways and quite visibly so, for I now looked
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upon two men: one whose frayed tabard bore the twin bells of House
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Fairfax, the other whose pale green eyes watched all unfolding with open
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interest. The man who had once been the Good King Edward Fairfax,
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Seventh of His Name, bore old and intricate plate over which a tabard in
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the gold and blue of the royal line of Callow hung. He wore no helm,
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laying bare the face of a man in his late forties with sparse white hair
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and the eternal beginnings of a beard, and in his hand he held a
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longsword for which there seemed to be no sheath. To his side, the soul
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of Amadeus of the Green Stretch had been put in slender silvery stocks,
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his hands too far kept to reach the gag that had been put over his
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mouth. My teacher looked much like his physical body did, though there
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were dark rings around his eyes and a sort of haggard look to him I
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found deeply unsettling. Black had always been near obsessively neat in
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his grooming, but his soul laid bare was in disarray. That boded ill,
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though at least the sharpness in his gaze had not been dulled. A bag had
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been absent-mindedly tossed between the two of them, one I had with my
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own hand filled with crowns. That left only\ldots{}
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I breathed out.
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Kairos Theodosian, Tyrant of Helike, sat draped over the gaudy throne
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his gargoyles were keeping aloft unevenly. Though he'd quite brazenly
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betrayed us, the odd-eyed villain had yet to bother with foibles such as
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armour or a blade. No that he needed them, with a flock of enchanted
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gargoyles obeying his every whim and a treasure trove of lethal
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artefacts at his disposal -- to which, he'd added the casting rod of the
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Rogue Sorcerer, which he was currently toying with as he grinned a
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pearly white grin. This was all of it, I thought. Our enemy, against
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which stood three: the Rogue Sorcerer, roughed up and stripped of tools,
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the now twice-winded Saint of Swords and myself. This was not a fight we
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would win with swords, I thought, given the disparity in strength there.
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The best that could be hoped for was delay. We did, however, have one
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advantage over our foes. The foundations of their side were unsteady,
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while as long as there such a common enemy before us my own triumvirate
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would stand united. \emph{How can I take your strengths and turn them
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against you?} Four heartbeats had passed, and as the fifth reached us
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Laurence de Montfort sighed. Not out of disappointment, I decided, or
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sadness. It was the same sigh I'd heard dockworkers in Laure make when
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some merchant had filled the hold with no eye to taking out the goods
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out and an hour-long job was going to end up taking twice as long. The
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Saint spat to the side, then rested her blade against her shoulder.
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``That's going to take a while,'' she said, sounding irked.
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``That's mine, you loathsome turncoat,'' the Rogue Sorcerer yelled at
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Kairos.
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``I prefer to think of it as ours,'' the Tyrant jauntily replied.
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``Although, if you truly want me to return it\ldots{}''
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So, the sharper was about to blow and the moment the three of us were
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separated by the horde then there would be no more planning. This was
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it, all I had to scheme.
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``Saint, how long can you buy me?'' I asked.
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``You got a way to win?'' the old woman casually asked.
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I nodded.
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``Then however long you need, Foundling,'' the Saint of Swords told me
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with a hard smile.
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I supposed she could be counted on to be a reliable whirlwind of
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destruction to anything she faced even when she was on my side, which
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was somewhat comforting.
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``Keep them off me,'' I said. ``I'll handle the Tyrant.''
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``Figures you'd go for the cripple,'' Laurence de Montfort said.
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A helpful reminder that `on my side' didn't mean friendly or any less
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generally horrid, I noted. A heartbeat later Kairos got the casting rod
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he'd stolen working and streaks of flame that looked fluid as water shot
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out towards the Rogue Sorcerer, who took off running towards them.
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\emph{Godsdamnit, Roland}. It didn't matter if he could handle the
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sorcery being thrown at him, Kairos had hundreds of bloody gargoyles to
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throw at him and however good the hero's set of mail it didn't cover his
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face or throat or neck. I let the Night course through me and flicked my
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wrist, spinning a hooked chain that caught the wayward hero by the back
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of the coat and dragged him back forcefully. The Sorcerer had been about
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to reach the edge of demolished second story room we were still standing
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on, but the force I used in pulling him back had him half-tripping
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backwards. And also narrowly avoiding the knife-wielding gargoyles that
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popped right up from where they'd been hanging off the edge awaiting to
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scythe through Roland's ankles, because because Kairos being a chatty
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jackass didn't mean he wasn't clever. The streaks of flame I left him to
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deal with as I advanced -- he snarled something in a language I didn't
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recognize, still tripping backwards, and some sort of swirling eddy of
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air caught them in a spin until the fires gutted out -- and dismissed
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the chains. The gargoyles that'd come over the top milled uncertainly,
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knives extended into nothing, and did not even manage to chatter before
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I'd sent twin needles of Night through their torsos. They blew a moment
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later, and I met Kairos Theodosian's uneven eyes as I came to stand by
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the edge of the drop.
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``So,'' I said, beginning to reach for my pipe, ``how firmly rooted
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would you say your current allegiances are?''
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It was theatrics, not directly asking what it was the Dead King had
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offered, just like reaching for a smoke in the middle of battlefield. I
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could not show weakness in the face of the Tyrant of Helike, lest he
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decide we were spent and that the Dead King's victory was assured. Calm,
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control and even a smidgen of nonchalance. Anything less and I would not
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have gotten that keen glint in his good eye, the one that delighted in
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there still being a game afoot. For though Kairos Theodosian enjoyed a
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good bout of treachery, he would not commit to it without purpose and
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would never climb into a sinking ship. In that sense, I understood him
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in a way that few people could: like me, he had reached his current
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heights climbing over a tottering pile of victories. Like me, he knew it
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only took one hard defeat for it to all come tumbling down on his head.
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``We are close as kin, our trust boundless and fondness without peer,''
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Kairos soulfully said.
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``Kill them,'' the Skein snarled, head suddenly rising up. ``\emph{Kill
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them all}.''
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I passed my palm over the head of my pipe, allowing a flicker of black
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flame to light it before pulling at the wakeleaf unhurriedly. I sighed
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in pleasure, feeling the Tyrant's gaze unwavering on me.
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``Shouldn't you see to that?'' Kairos amusedly asked, moving his head
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towards the courtyard.
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Devils, Revenant, the closest thing I'd ever have to a father. A fight I
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could not win. \emph{Calm, control, never miss a beat.}
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``That's what heroes are for,'' I said.
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I glimpsed, from the corner of my eye, the Saint of Swords landing in
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the midst of a sea of devils with her sword raised high. Screaming
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followed, none of it hers. So, Kairos hadn't taken the unspoken
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invitation I'd given to imply he was open to further treachery. Which
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meant Neshamah had bought him with a prize that was significant enough
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the Tyrant didn't believe I'd be able to match it. He wasn't refusing
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the prospect of turning on the Hidden Horror, that wasn't his way, but
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he was making it known the bidding had started high and would only get
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higher. \emph{So what did he offer you?} I wondered. Given that Kairos'
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ambitions were still bound, as far as I knew, to the peace conference
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he'd forced then it had to involve the survival of the armies below. Or
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at least his, I corrected, for Iserre was made into a tremendous
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butcher's yard by the Tyrant's hand then the only the threat of utter
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annihilation could possibly bring either Hasenbach or myself to
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negotiate with him ever again. Couldn't be just being spared, though,
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because the Grand Alliance would be crippled by losing the armies below
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and so far Kairos had gone out of his way to avoid accomplishing that. I
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was missing something, because I could see no way in which the Dead King
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taking this realm benefitted the Tyrant. My fingers tightened, beneath
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cover of my sleeves. Was it that simple? When I'd irritated the Hidden
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Horror, he'd said something that now sounded anew in my mind: \emph{when
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I have taken what I wish from this ruin I will forsake it as well}. If
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after he got what he'd come after Neshamah had no use for this place,
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what would he lose by promising it to the Tyrant of Helike?
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I inhaled smoke and blew it outwards towards Kairos, whose nose wrinkled
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at the acrid smell. I couldn't beat that offer. It was a way for the
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Tyrant to get everything he wanted, so long as the Hidden Horror got it
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too. Which was, I realized, my angle. Kairos Theodosian could not, as
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I'd thought earlier, afford a single hard defeat. And he had to be
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achingly aware here that he'd made a bargain with an entity his superior
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in every way, including perhaps even treachery, and that if he was
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crossed then he had no real way to strike back. Not alone, anyway, and
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when it came to opposing the Dead King then there was only one game in
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town.
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``Well, he's lying to at least \emph{one} of us,'' I pensively said.
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``Did you offer something worth more than a hundred-year truce?''
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``You jest,'' the Tyrant grinned.
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A little too quickly, I thought.
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``I'm deadly serious,'' I said. ``Kairos, I'll be blunt here because if
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he's actually sold this place to you instead of me I'll need to cut my
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losses and break it. Which is going to be damned hard to do a messy
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besides, so I haven't the time to dawdle. I got my win here in exchange
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for backing his envoy at the conference when the truce offer comes. One
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of us got peddled goods already sold, obviously, so which of us is it?''
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``A truce,'' the Tyrant skeptically said.
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``Don't be daft,'' I frowned. ``You know what it's meant for. I'm
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willing to take the bet, because I'll get this continent ready for war
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on Keter even if I have to kill and raise every ruler myself, but I'm
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hardly blind to the risks.''
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A hundred years was a long time. Time to prepare, yes, but also for the
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continent to come apart. A truce meant no armies, not absence of
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schemes, and the most brutal blow the Hidden Horror might yet deal was
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to let that century come to pass and then do \emph{nothing}. To let
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every willing sacrifice turn into bitter recrimination, to let his
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opponents devour themselves from the inside without sending a single
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soldier across the border. If I'd tried to weave a lie out of thin air,
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I thought, the Tyrant might just have sniffed me out. But this? If I
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were Kairos Theodosian, I'd believe it. Because I would afraid I'd been
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double-crossed, yes, but also because of who it was I was looking at. A
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woman who'd bargained with the King of Winter and Sve Noc, when the
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cliff's edge was reached, and Hells hadn't I headed to Keter to make
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another deal not so long ago? The Tyrant of Helike watched me with an
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inscrutable expression his face, and the simple fact that he was no
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longer grinning like a lunatic told me I'd drawn blood. I thought, for a
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moment, of feigning impatience and trying to hurry him along -- an
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announcement it was time to cut my losses, cryptic action begun -- but I
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stilled my tongue. On real stakes I would not gamble this way. And the
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more I actually lied, the more I risked this exceedingly more skilled
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liar catching me out.
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``Speak to me, then, Black Queen,'' the Tyrant coolly said.
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Not victory, this, but it was an opening.
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``I'm not going to bribe you,'' I snorted. ``You just knifed us, Kairos.
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You want back on this side? Make it worth my while to keep the heroes
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from putting your head on a pike. I'm willing to deal because I'd rather
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you sell me this place than the Dead King, but don't mistake that for
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actual \emph{need}.''
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For a terrible moment, I thought I'd overplayed my hand. That the
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bluster had been too much, that I'd been seen through because I'd
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refused to bend my neck even if in that situation it would have been my
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words exact. Instead I was interrupted by a flock of steel-clad devils,
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whose leathery wings beat loud as they descended towards me with raised
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spears. My muscles began to tense and it was all I could do not to reach
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for the Night. But I had appearances to maintain, and Gods I was so
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close to flipping the Tyrant I could almost taste it. The
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\emph{walin-falme} hit a hastily slapped down ward like birds hitting a
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window, as the Rogue Sorcerer came through for me. I did not even grin,
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instead pulling at my pipe as I continued matching gazes with Kairos.
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\emph{Look at how in control I am}, I thought\emph{. Wouldn't I have to
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be a lunatic, to stick to a bluff so stubbornly when the situation is
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this dire?} Airily tossing aside the Sorcerer's casting rod -- Roland
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distantly screamed in a furious voice about it being irreplaceable and
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worth a fortune -- and extending an open palm, Kairos was handed his
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jeweled sceptre by a chitter gargoyle and used it to thoughtfully
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scratch his chin.
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``Are you lying?'' the Tyrant of Helike asked, cocking his head to the
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side.
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I grinned, all teeth and malice.
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``I don't know,'' I said. ``Am I?''
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A heartbeat passed, both stares unflinching.
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``I think, Catherine,'' Kairos Theodosian fondly said, ``that you are
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lying through your teeth. But I still can't tell, and so it seems were
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are still allies.''
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Calmly I inhaled a mouthful of wakeleaf, and waited for the --
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\emph{there it is}, I thought as the Skein's hulking shape obscured the
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sky, rising behind the Tyrant and myself. The stench of it was horrid,
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though spitting out the smoke in front of my face took the edge off of
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it.
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``\textbf{Spool},'' the Skein snarled.
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And just like that/
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/the Tyrant of Helike sneered.
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``Fate is a tug of war, you raggedy old thing,'' Kairos Theodosian said,
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and there was something sharp in his tone I'd never heard there before.
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``Do you think the wishes of the conquered matter more than those of
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contenders?''
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``You die laughing,'' the Skein hissed. ``Or. You flee. Or. I am broken.
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Or. Everything burns. Or. Or. \emph{Why does it keep changing}?''
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``There's more than one reason I picked him out for this band,'' I
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amusedly said.
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Was Kairos Theodosian a treacherous, unpredictable and murderous madman?
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Yes. Obviously. But against a particular kind of foe -- say, an oracle
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who'd spin our of new thread of prediction from his every whim as the
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lunatic committed to them with ironclad will unhesitatingly -- that had
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its uses.
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``\textbf{Spool},'' the Skein snarled again and/
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/``Do you think yourself above even the Gods, you presumptuous relic?''
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the Tyrant of Helike snarled back. ``Do you think you can erase
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\emph{me} like chalk on a slate? Learn your place.''
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``Shouldn't have done that,'' I told the Revenant, pulling at my pipe.
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``It will kill you,'' the Skein cackled, its laughter like rumbling
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thunder. ``Wish, wish into the grave. How many years can you spend?''
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I winced. I'd fought enough Named to recognize when one's bottom line
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was being crossed, and the continued attempts of the Revenant to use its
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aspect were definitely whipping Kairos into a proper frenzy. I could
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only guess at what was the cause of it, but the rage in that crimson
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bloodshot eye and the wildly shaking hands struck me as too raw to be a
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lie.
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``I will confess,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, tone eerily calm, ``that
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you have rather offended me. You may attend to other matters, Black
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Queen. This one will be settled by my hand.''
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``And now,'' I said, ``for my next trick.''
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Because if I were an undead sorcerer with my personal Hell and forever
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ahead of me, if I'd taken to snatching Named and making them into my
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vanguard in Creation -- which would mean, most of the time, that they'd
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be far from me and exposed to all sorts of aspects and sorceries -- then
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there was one thing I'd make sure of. The Skein went still as the corpse
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it was, and pale gold eyes shone with something eldritch.
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``You have been fooled, Tyrant,'' the Dead King spoke through his
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puppet. ``I struck no bargain with the Black Queen.''
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And there it was, I thought. The gap between the man the Hidden Horror
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had once been and the man the Tyrant was. Neshamah had been a brilliant,
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sharp-sighted sorcerer whose apotheosis had been achieved over decades
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of careful planning with nary an opening left open. Even in undeath the
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heart of that man remained, made stiffer perhaps but undiminished. And
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the thing was, he had that same flaw that my father sometimes did. Gods,
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clever as they were they forgot anyone else could see the world in a
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different way they did. Forgot to see, I supposed, or simply didn't
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care. Why would they? Victors that they were, they'd gotten their way so
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often. But Kairos Theodosian, now that was a man of a different breed.
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He was Tyrant of Helike not because he wanted to change the world, to
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shift borders on a map or leave behind a name that would ring through
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the ages. Kairos, he was \emph{villain}. He was a partisan of Below, not
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a warlord or a theft of godhead, and his faith was the same ruinous red
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thing that had rent the Wasteland asunder for more than a millennium.
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And so the Dead King, brilliant monster that he was, had just made his
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first blunder of the night. Because the moment he'd made an effort to
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not be at odds with the Tyrant of Helike, he'd made every lie I'd spoken
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irrelevant. Because, in the eyes of the Tyrant, he would only be worth
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appeasing if he was a \emph{threat}. And given the choice between
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successfully crossing me or the Dead King? Well, one of them was
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worthier prayer than the other.
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I met the Dead King's eyes.
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``Mistake,'' I said in Ashkaran.
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``\textbf{Rend},'' Kairos Theodosian laughed, and all Hells broke loose.
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