559 lines
24 KiB
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559 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-reckoning}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Reckoning}\label{interlude-reckoning}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-reckoning}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Reckoning}
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\epigraph{``Fate is not a bridle; it is an arrow in flight. No hand but your
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own can loose it, yet once loosed there can be no desisting from the
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path.''}{Dread Empress Maleficent the First}
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Masego awoke from his dream to a firm hand on his shoulder. The touch
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was unpleasant, as most touches tended to be, but not so distasteful as
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to stir him to action when he was so\ldots{} \emph{tired}. He'd said
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something, hadn't he? Just now. And it'd been important. Yet he could
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not quite recall, and there were other matters to have his mind
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aflutter. Masego could feel sights flicker just beyond the reach of his
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eyes, as if stolen before they ever became his.
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``I would have preferred,'' a measured voice said, ``to use means that
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preserved your gifts. For that I apologize, Hierophant. You are a rare
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talent and so this stands a great waste.''
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Masego had heard that voice before. Months, years ago. It was not to be
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trusted. It belonged to an enemy. He tried to extend his will, to claw
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back the sights that had been taken from him, but it was\ldots{}
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difficult. He saw a garden and a pale woman in a dress. He saw a man
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with a silver coin, spinning and spinning until it dropped. He saw a
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crowned corpse, a grinning skull -- and his will was firmly set aside,
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like a child whose wrist had been slapped. He struggled against it, but
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only weakly and ceased when the futility of the act became clear.
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``It is necessary, however. If we'd had more time,'' the voice said,
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``it could have been done more cleanly. Yet your mistress forced my hand
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in this, however kind her intentions. So did that amusing child, though
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from him I would not presume kindness of any sort.''
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Masego had no eyes to blink open blearily, but the glinting lights of
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Summer's noon came alight once more. There were arrays around him, in
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the dozens, that he could not remember making. He wanted to study them
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more closely but it was difficult to concentrate. He felt exhausted and
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it was only worsening. Like a barrel draining out. There were other
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circles of rune he remembered carving himself, the necessities of
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bringing back his father, but they were skillfully intertwined with the
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stranger's work. Someone, he realized, had usurped his work. Wormed
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runes into his arrays and so repurposed them for a ritual that was
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almost a manner of scrying, though unlike any he'd ever seen. Still, it
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was all derivative. There should be something at the heart of it all,
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empowering and empowered.
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Gods, he was so tired.
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``Steady now, Hierophant,'' the Dead King murmured. ``Divination is
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delicate sorcery at the best of times, and we seek to unmask the
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greatest liar these lands have ever known. It is too early in our shared
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journey to falter.''
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The hand pulled him up from the slump he'd not known he was falling
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into, its grip now tight enough it hurt, the sights he was still denied
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began to flicker even more swiftly.
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---
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``We are too late,'' the Grey Pilgrim sadly said.
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There had been no missing the colossal pulse of power that'd shivered
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outwards and through them even as they stepped into the sanctum. Tariq
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had been given pause by what awaited inside, for never before had he
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seen such works of magic: it was as if every surface of the great
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pillared hall within had been covered with runes. They had been artfully
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carved, no mere circles but instead almost a great mural: waves crested
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and broke, carved into stone, and spun into forests and peaks. The sight
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of it was oddly beautiful, like a painting made a hundred thousand
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little brushstrokes, but like rivers returning to the sea all the
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patterns of runes coursed back to the throne at the centre of the room.
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On it, a sickly thin man in dark robes was seated, sightlessly looking
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up at the ceiling through a tattered black eyecloth. The Hierophant,
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though he looked more than half dead and great strokes of manifest
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sorcery whirled around him like a storm.
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``He's still breathing,'' Archer flatly replied. ``Careful what you step
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on, Pilgrim. Follow my path.''
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Tariq felt a swell of grief, for he beheld the young woman's
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anticipation of what might yet come and it was like a flinch of the
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heart. The first time, he well-knew, was always the worst. And no amount
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of years or seasoning could ever truly prepare you for it.
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``He is being used by the Hidden Horror for a ritual, Indrani,'' he
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softly replied. ``Even should he survive, there will be little of him
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left.''
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``You don't know that,'' she sharply said.
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``I know we cannot let that ritual run its course,'' the Grey Pilgrim
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said.
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``If we interrupt it could-'' she began.
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Like quicksilver, without the slightest hint of warning, the Archer had
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two bared blades against Tariq's throat. He'd not even had time to
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blink. The cool touch of steel against skin would have been relief,
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after the exertions of the day, if not for the slight bite of the very
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sharp knives.
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``You won't cleaning up any loose ends under cover of good intention,
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Pilgrim,'' the Archer mildly said.
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``I did not intend to,'' Tariq said.
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She looked at him searchingly.
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``Might be that's true,'' she murmured. ``Might be it's not, or just
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that it won't matter. The Lady said there's only one way to deal with
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your breed, so I'll speak plain now. Just between you and me.''
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She leaned forward.
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``You kill him, Peregrine, and I'll make whatever ten corpses I need to
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make the Grand Alliance eat itself alive,'' Archer said. ``You might
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think Cat will keep me in line, or the war on Keter, or half a hundred
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different other practical little worries for practical little minds. But
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look into my soul, Tariq. When I tell you not a single fucking thing
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will stay my hand, \emph{am I lying}?''
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The Pilgrim looked and beheld the truth of it.
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``No,'' he quietly said. ``You are not.''
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The blades left his throat, and a few spins later they were sheathed and
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put away.
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``Glad we have an understanding, Peregrine,'' the young woman smiled.
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``Now let's find a way to wake him without hurting him.''
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---
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``There's something out there,'' Laurence said.
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The dark of this abominable place had been chased away by the glow of
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the Tyrant's own blasphemy, which brought to mind more than a few
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passages from the Book about Evil clawing at Evil. Not that the Book of
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All Things was all that reliable a guide, when it came down to it.
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Whoever had penned the old thing seemed under the impression that Chosen
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were naturally prone to holding hands and tearfully joining righteous
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cause, in contrast to the spirited backbiting of the Damned. Presumably
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they'd never witnessed two Chosen with different intentions existing in
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each other's presence, much less two of Above's servants coming from
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different parts of Calernia. Without someone like Tariq to keep the
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peace or someone bearing a clear mandate to unite behind like the White
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Knight, you might as well be throwing a whole bag's worth of angry wet
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cats in a half a bag. Laurence caught the drift of her thoughts and
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killed it quick as he could. The mind tended to wander when one tired,
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and she'd not been this exhausted in a very long time.
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``The Hierophant, presumably,'' Roland delicately said. ``Or our more
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discreet comrades.''
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He was looking at her like she was old, which was fair. She was. He was
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also looking at her like she was doddering, though, a dowager seeing
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monsters in shadows, and for that almost slapped him across the face.
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Her fingers itched with the impulse, though she pushed it down.
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``There are \emph{other} things out there,'' the Saint sharply replied.
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``And they are looking at us. Prepare for trouble, Sorcerer.''
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The weight of the attention placed on them did not waver even after she
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revealed her knowledge of it. It might be that the watchers were not
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hostile, she acknowledged. It might also be that they were either
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powerful or ignorant enough to be unmoved at the prospect of two heroes'
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wroth. Whatever the truth, they would not learn it by hesitation or
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idleness. Taking the lead, Laurence quickened her steps as they
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approached the final stretch separating them from the shadowed
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silhouette of the throne room. The Saint bared her sword, for anything
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that would be offended by such a gesture already meant to be a foe.
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Sharp eyes picked out the watchers, and what Laurence found did not
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please her. There were dozens, though each stood alone as some sort of
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sinister of honour guard around the the Hierophant's prison-sanctum.
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Only one was seated, halfway up the steps leading to the gates. It was
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in the shape of a man, though its hair was too unnaturally dark and its
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lips too unsettlingly red to truly be one. It was like looking at a
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story made flesh, Laurence thought. Raven-haired and red like blood,
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something pretending it was made of flesh with a mocking smile and one
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eye covered by pretty dark silk cloth. On its lap there was a sword, and
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the thing was sharpening it patiently with a whetstone. One languid
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stroke at a time, the sound of it a rasp in the strange silence of this
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place.
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Laurence knew a thing or two of swords, and that one had no need for
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sharpening at all.
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``I bid you welcome, Chosen,'' the thing said. ``You are awaited.''
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The Saint spat to the side.
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``Been skulking about, have you?'' she said. ``And turned out about as
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useful as a wings on a trout.''
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``Saint,'' Roland softly hissed, having caught up to her. ``We greet you
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in peace, Huntsman.''
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The old thing glanced at the boy approvingly.
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``Your kind were a mannerly people, once upon a time,'' it said. ``It is
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pleasing to know some of those ways remain. In the manner you have
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greeted me you may leave, to seek your fate beyond me.''
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``My thanks,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said.
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``What's inside?'' Laurence asked, meeting the faerie's eye.
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She glimpsed something like darkness in there, hungry and old, but she
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bared her teeth and it found no purchase in her soul. The Saint spat to
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the side again.
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``I asked you a question, scavenger,'' she said.
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``The king of pins,'' the faerie laughed. ``I see you, cutter. Wounding
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and wounded, a rag in pale grasp. How much filth can you swallow before
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the stains no longer wash?''
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Laurence snorted.
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``I've had more ominous from street soothsayers,'' she replied. ``If you
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want to earn a copper at least toss around a few fumes and powders.''
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Ignoring the creature's open displeasure she strode forward, making sure
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her tabard flapped in its face as she passed it. Roland hurried at her
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side after making apologies to the thing, but he was only a step behind
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when Laurence passed through the cracked-open bronze gates.
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---
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``It's killing him, isn't it?'' Indrani quietly said.
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The old man sucked in a breath, but after a moment shook his head.
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``I expect he'll remain alive,'' the Pilgrim said. ``Though there will
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little left of him save a broken mind in ruin of flesh.''
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It was difficult to look at him. Masego had thinned, back when he'd
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first gotten into the Observatory and entranced himself with his own
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work, but out on campaign afterwards he'd reclaimed back some of the
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weight. Enough it didn't look like he was being starved, anyway, though
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he'd been nothing like the plump man Indrani had first met years ago.
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Now that was lost, for he was little more than skin on bones with wildly
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overgrown dreadlocks. He must have eaten on occasion -- mage or not he'd
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be dead by now otherwise -- but not often, and he'd likely cheated
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hunger with spells. His sickly frame would have been bad enough by
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itself, but there was a river of sorcery coursing through him that was
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burning his body from the inside. Whatever it was the Dead King was
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doing, it was not gentle to her\ldots{} to Masego.
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``You need to get me through,'' Indrani said. ``If I could reach him-''
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``We've tried, Archer,'' the Pilgrim said, pointedly looking at her arm.
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\emph{It's just flesh}, Indrani angrily thought. The swirls of pure and
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lingering magic around Hierophant did not \emph{immediately} breaking
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through a coating of Light, but it was a near thing. Indrani had tried
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to speed through anyway, though she'd had to pull back. If she'd stayed
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any longer she might have lost the entire arm, but as it was all she'd
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lost was some flesh. You couldn't even see bone, it was basically a
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scratch.
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``So we try again,'' she replied. ``Slap some more Light onto me, and
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I'll take a running leap.''
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``You'll lose more than a part of your arm,'' the old man calmly said.
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``Yeah, so I was thinking,'' Indrani mused. ``Keeping up the protection
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won't work, we saw that, but what if the moment it break you just start
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healing me instead?''
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As long as she didn't lose anything essential, then it didn't matter in
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what state she arrived on the other side. Immediately around Zeze was
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safe, she'd Seen it and the Pilgrim agreed. It was just the outer shell
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that she needed to get through.
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``You may very well die regardless,'' the Pilgrim bluntly said.
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``Neither of us has the means to breach this\ldots{} defence without
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risking the Hierophant's life. I know it runs contrary to your nature,
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but it would be best if we waited for-''
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``We might not have that long,'' Indrani interrupted in frustration.
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``It could be moments or hours, and there's no way to know.''
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Though the strange whistle of spinning sorcery almost covered it, she
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still heard the footsteps. She already had a longknife in hand when she
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came to face the fresh arrivals.
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``Moments,'' the Saint of Swords grunted, striding in sword bared. ``So
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stop whining. What's this, then?''
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---
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Tariq breathed out a sigh of threaded worry and relief. Young Indrani
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was very much at the end of her rope -- there was no need of an aspect
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to tell him as much, though the confirmation was not without value --
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and expecting of Laurence sympathy for any in Below's service was not
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unlike expecting that very thing of a bared sword, which would be a
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delicate dance to lead. Laurence, however, possessed means that he did
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not. Where even the most delicate applications of Light whispered into
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his ears by the Ophanim had failed, her sword would not. He suspected
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the Archer would forgive a great many things if they came accompanied by
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the safeguarding of the Hierophant.
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``Laurence,'' he greeted.
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It was no happenstance his tone was pitched just high enough to cut
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through the beginning of young Indrani's no doubt less than diplomatic
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reply.
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``We are in need of your expertise, and perhaps Roland's,'' Tariq said.
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``It appears the Dead King is using the Hierophant for sinister
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purposes, and has made reaching him difficult.''
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``You want me to cut something,'' Laurence bluntly said.
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He'd known her long enough to detect the amusement twined to the
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bluntness, though he doubted anyone else here had.
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``In that art you have few rivals,'' he said, and immediately realized
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he'd made a mistake.
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Mentioning the Lady of the Lake would only remind the Saint was lending
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a hand to the most prized pupil of that hated foe.
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``Can you cut through that?'' Archer asked.
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She gestured towards the whirling sorcery. Though he'd been ready to
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step in and smooth the rough edges before the situation\ldots{}
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deteriorated, flicked glances at both told him there was no need to.
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``Could your teacher?'' Saint casually asked.
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What he beheld told him behind the nonchalance was a burn that'd dwelled
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in her belly for more than forty years, and having closed the wound over
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it with his own fingers and Light he could not find it in him to
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reprimand her for it. There were some things that couldn't be forgiven
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without losing part of who you were, and the open belly had been the
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least of the wounds the Ranger had inflicted on Laurence that day.
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``I'm not sure,'' young Indrani admitted. ``It's just wild magic, so
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there's no\ldots{} principle to it.''
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The older woman's smiled was darkly pleased.
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``It'll flow back,'' Saint said. ``But I'll carve you a way through.''
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``Good,'' young Indrani nodded decisively. ``Let's finish this, then.''
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``And you attempt does not succeed?'' Tariq calmly asked.
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``It will,'' Archer growled.
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``Watch your mouth, girl,'' Laurence harshly said. ``It's a sensible
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question. If it doesn't work, best way might be to kill him.''
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The Archer had blades in hand before the sentence was over.
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``Peace,'' Tariq said. ``Saint does not mean for him to remain so.''
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The ochre-skinned villain looked at him with narrowed eyed.
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``Your resurrection trick, it works with villains too?''
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The Grey Pilgrim was slightly pained to hear described the act through
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which he came closest to feeling the will of the Gods Above as `your
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resurrection trick', yet he smoothed that away. No one would had not
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done the same could truly understand the nature of the act.
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``It does,'' Tariq said. ``As Laurence well knows. I am not, however,
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certain it would succeed with the Hierophant.''
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It was not only young Indrani that looked him askance at that. Laurence
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was not deeply schooled in the ways of his gift of forgiveness, for
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there had never been a need. Even now he would rather keep silence over
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it, for it touched upon the sacred, yet silence would now cost more than
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speech.
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``His body might be too thoroughly ruined already,'' the Peregrine
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admitted. ``I could breathe back life into him only for Hierophant to
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die again within moments. If the wound were of a different nature I
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would not hesitate, but if they were inflicted by his own
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magic\ldots{}''
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Wound inflicted by a foe would be one matter, easily dealt with. A wound
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inflicted by oneself, even under duress, was a thornier issue. There
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could be no guarantees, and he was inclined to believe it would fail.
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The Gods Above observed the order they had created, as did all the boons
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they bestowed. He could not Forgive a disease borne of one's own body,
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old age or the insidious manners of destruction that years of sickness
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or poison could inflict. Deaths unnatural, those could be forgiven for
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they went against the meanings of Above. The Hierophant's malady was not
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so clear-cut that Tariq could promise a return if the boy was slain. If
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he could be freed whilst still living, of course, that would be a
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different story. It was always much easier to stoke the last flame of
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life back to a blaze than to light it anew from spent ashes.
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``It's his magic killing him, isn't it?'' Roland hesitantly said.
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``More or less,'' Archer said, brow furrowing as she studied the hero.
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It must not be far from her mind, Tariq thought, that at the Battle of
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the Camps all three of them had stood on the opposite side of the field
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from her.
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``I could take it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer admitted. ``His sorcery. That
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would save his life at least.''
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In the breath that followed, both Archer and Saint refused and they each
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eyed the other with displeasure for it.
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``I appreciate it, Rogue,'' Indrani said, and it was genuine. ``But
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taking his magic might kill him in a whole other way, if you know what I
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mean.''
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``Are you an idiot, boy?'' Laurence harshly said. ``You want to take
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sorcery currently in the hands of the \emph{Dead King}? Are you really
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that eager to be hollowed out and made into a Revenant?''
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A valid concern, Tariq silently acknowledged.
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``Roland,'' he said . ``What you take, can you return?''
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``I've never tried,'' the young man admitted. ``I do not confiscate
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without reason. I suspect not, to be honest, but it is not impossible.''
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``Tariq,'' Laurence sharply said.
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He met her eyes and inclined his head to the side. They had worked
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together a great many years, the two of them. She should know by now he
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would not dismiss the concern she'd expressed. After a moment, her face
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tightened and she looked at the Rogue Sorcerer with considering eyes.
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``It's a risk,'' she spoke without looking at him.
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``It is the Hidden Horror,'' Tariq said. ``Can there be anything else?''
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---
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Laurence chewed on her lip. He wouldn't try go through with this, she
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knew, unless she assented. Could she do it, if the worse came to pass?
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Oh, if it worked the victory would be more than merely sweet. But if it
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didn't, she could be permanently crippling a promising young Chosen. If
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she'd been fresh, then\ldots{} No, that was false thinking. It made no
|
|
difference, whether she was tired or not. The issue was of
|
|
\emph{capacity}. And there was not, in the end, a single thing in
|
|
Creation that Laurence de Montfort could not cut.
|
|
|
|
``A measured risk,'' she said, and it was concession.
|
|
|
|
Tariq nodded, lowering his wispy head of hear.
|
|
|
|
``Archer,'' he said. ``Given choice between the confiscation of his
|
|
sorcery and death, would you not agree that confiscation is preferable
|
|
for Hierophant?''
|
|
|
|
The vicious girl glared, more at the situation than anyone in
|
|
particular. Laurence could almost sympathize. It'd been a long night for
|
|
all of them, wicked and righteous both.
|
|
|
|
``It's not impossible for him to get the magic back, right?'' the
|
|
Ranger's pupil said, looking at Roland.
|
|
|
|
``I don't know,'' the Rogue Sorcerer admitted. ``But I would do my
|
|
utmost to return it, that much I can swear.''
|
|
|
|
``Fuck,'' the Archer said. ``All right, worst case if Cat doesn't get
|
|
here we can go down that road. Won't matter, anyway. Saint, carve me a
|
|
path would you?''
|
|
|
|
Laurence looked at the child the Ranger had so fondly raised. She saw
|
|
there the same indolent pride and skill, only without the weight of
|
|
centuries behind it.
|
|
|
|
``Say please,'' the Saint of Swords said.
|
|
|
|
``Please,'' the villain replied without missing a beat.
|
|
|
|
Laurence's fingers clenched. Oddly enough, she felt more cheated by how
|
|
easily the girl had said than she would have if the Archer had never
|
|
said it at all. Sword in hand, the Saint tread across the carved floor
|
|
and came to stand by the edge of the sorcerous whirls. She adjusted her
|
|
stance, weighing her sword in her hand.
|
|
|
|
``Archer?'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``Ready,'' the girl replied.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Now},'' she hissed, and struck.
|
|
|
|
Her will cut where her sword could not, and it was enough to disperse
|
|
sorcery. Long enough for the Archer to race across the opening. The girl
|
|
grinned triumphantly as she slid before the Hierophant, laughing, and
|
|
then-
|
|
|
|
``Pesh.''
|
|
|
|
-- the seemingly-entrance boy lazily raised a hand, sorcery flickered
|
|
and Archer's brains splattered the floor.
|
|
|
|
``Now that I have your attention,'' the Dead King spoke through the
|
|
Hierophant's mouth. ``That was your single resurrection, I believe. Do
|
|
not attempt to meddle again, lest your losses expand beyond the
|
|
recoverable.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Masego was half-asleep, for not even the painful squeeze of the hand on
|
|
his shoulder could keep him entirely awake anymore. Almost dreaming, he
|
|
drifted in and out of consciousness. The sights still came, but he could
|
|
feel they were nearing the end. They were slower now, like they had to
|
|
reach deeper for less.
|
|
|
|
``How mundane,'' a voice spoke close to him. ``How \emph{petty}. I
|
|
expected better of you, Intercessor. This is\ldots{} beneath us.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, Nessie,'' a woman's voice fondly said. ``You should know by now
|
|
the house always wins.''
|
|
|
|
It was a jolt to his consciousness. Masego's not-eyed fluttered open.
|
|
Though this surroundings were still hazy, what had been lulling him into
|
|
slumber had drawn back. There were two people here with him. One stood
|
|
behind the sorcerer, and had a hand on his shoulder. He was the Dead
|
|
King, an enemy. And in front of him a woman. Slender, dark-haired, much
|
|
too pale to be Catherine. He could not make out everything about her,
|
|
but there was a silver flask in her hand and she was drinking from it.
|
|
|
|
``You believe I cannot see your little scheme?'' the Dead King said.
|
|
``The thief and the cutter, to lessen me for every year to come. I need
|
|
not witness your plans to see that. It is an acceptable trade, for I now
|
|
know the lay of you.''
|
|
|
|
``That's getting a bit ahead of yourself, innit?'' the woman chuckled.
|
|
|
|
``I know,'' the Dead King said. ``And now that I do, I need not lift a
|
|
finger. I'll tell them, Intercessor, and \emph{every last one will turn
|
|
on you}.''
|
|
|
|
``Yeah, see, that's the part where you're getting ahead,'' the woman
|
|
drawled. ``You knowing. The little shard of you in poor ol' Zeze knows,
|
|
but \emph{you}-you? That's a different story.''
|
|
|
|
``You failed,'' the Dead King said. ``The Tyrant spread into the souls,
|
|
yes, but the Black Queen contains him. I will still have room enough to
|
|
pass what I know.''
|
|
|
|
``Do you?'' the Wandering Bard grinned.
|
|
|
|
Masego saw her perfectly then. He saw, too, the blood and brains on the
|
|
floor and the woman they belonged to.
|
|
|
|
``Dead King,'' Hierophant roared. ``You did this.''
|
|
|
|
The Wandering Bard raised her flask in a toast.
|
|
|
|
``Always,'' she smiled, ``wins.''
|