401 lines
20 KiB
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401 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-51-twilight}{%
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\chapter{Twilight}\label{chapter-51-twilight}}
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\epigraph{``Of all Praesi I trust least those who come bearing gifts.''}{Queen Yolanda of Callow, the Wicked (known as `the Stern' in
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contemporary histories)}
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There was a part of me still, after all these years, that expected the
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momentous to be flagrant. That the closing of an era or the birth of a
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realm should be an affair of thunder and lightning, a crashing and
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crackling storm of power. But that was so rarely the way, wasn't it? The
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pivots of history that we all got to see, the speeches and battles and
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coronations, they so often flowed from unseen turns taken months before.
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Quiet bargains and private councils, decisions made in the dark. Yet I
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had learned that the truth of Creation was that while at times power in
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exercise was deafening, more often it was hushed. Subtle. And as the
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ending that was breathed into the Twilight Court came from the Grey
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Pilgrim -- Mercy's patient, farsighted and indirect hand -- why would
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its coming be a raucous thing?
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Tariq Fleet-foot, the sword of his oldest friend through the heart, let
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out a soft gasp and slumped onto the throne. Blue eyes fluttered to a
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close as trails of scarlet tainted the dusty grey of his robes: death
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blooming in three hues, painted by the Peregrine's own hand. The
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Pilgrim's face loosened slowly from a clench decades in the making, and
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as he sagged down against the throne he let out one last shuddering
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breath. That shudder rippled out, the last will of a man whose life had
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been a thankless struggle to lessen suffering in a world so very intent
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on wounding itself time and time again. It was a death that would ring
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out across Calernia, I thought. One not easily forgotten. Yet, looking
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at the white-haired healer who'd stumbled back with a sword through his
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chest, I could not help but believe it had been a lesser ending than
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he'd deserved. I'd had my quarrels with the Grey Pilgrim, but never once
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had I thought him malevolent or deliberately vicious. The shudder I'd
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felt slowly faded, and in deference to the death of a man who had tried
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so very hard to be a good I closed my eyes. I had no prayers to offer,
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for the goddesses I kept to were not the kind whose attentions would
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have been welcomed by the Pilgrim, and so I remained silent instead.
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The roof that would have been above our heads had been ripped away by my
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own wroth, when I'd hunted down Kairos Theodosian meaning to kill him,
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and so the lazy summer breeze reached us unhindered. It shook me out of
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my daze, enough that I opened my eyes and looked up. What had been
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darkness above us, Masego's grief and madness given shape, had became
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something softer. Almost wistful. It was closer to night than day, to my
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eye, but the shade of the twilight writ across the firmament of this
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realm was a pale and starry blue. Speaking not a word, I limped out of
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this cursed room. The summit of the tall stone stairs beyond the bronze
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gates allowed me to stand and take in the breathtaking sight splayed
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below: what had once been a ruin of dust and flame was now a realm in
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truth. The Hierophant's devastating use of this broken realm had been
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turned into something beautiful: a sprawling kingdom of tall grasses and
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rolling hills, of shadowy rivers and secret paths. It was a warm
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evening, like a southern summer's, yet the breeze was soft and its
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caress almost playful. It was the kind of night, I thought, that would
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be a pleasure to journey through.
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I wondered if a young man called Tariq had once roamed a twilight much
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like this one, a very long time ago in a land far from here. If the echo
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of that memory had been enough to leave its mark on this place. For that
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this was the inheritance of the Peregrine there could be no denial: just
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as it had been set on the Twilight Crown, the pilgrim's star shone above
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in the starry sky.
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``It's beautiful,'' the Rogue Sorcerer quietly said.
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I'd not even heard him approach, too deeply lost in my thoughts. Long
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leather coat trailing at his back, the last of the three heroes to have
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heeded my call came to stand at my right. He was looking not only at
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this starlit realm below but also had what had been made of
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thrice-broken Liesse. The City of Swans had partaken of life breathed
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into this place, and though it was not the same city that'd once been
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the jewel of southern Callow I could still see the traces of that place
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in its fresh face. The ruins had not been raised anew but the sight of
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them had been\ldots{} eased by the growth of greenery. Tall shaded trees
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had become the pillars of slender basilicas, gutted churches turned into
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ethereal gardens of flowers in shades of dusk. Vines with umbral flowers
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bound together streets like strange arches and soft grass had grown
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through both pavestones and graveyards. Liesse, I thought, had become
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the City of Twilight. A resting place for pilgrims and the lost, bell
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towers and softs beds of moss awaiting all who'd wander to this cradle
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of tragedy. I found my throat choking at the sight. How could it not,
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when Tariq's last gesture had been to make beauty out of the broken
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shards of my bitterest failure?
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``The star's always watching,'' Archer softly said, having come to stand
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at my left. ``You old rascal. Keeping an eye on it all, are you?''
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How strange, that I found the thought comforting when the man had tried
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to kill me more than once.
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``He always did,'' Roland said, tone quietly fierce. ``Gods, he was not
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a perfect man. And there are things he did, that he asked us to
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do\ldots{} But he looked out for us. Even when it cost him.
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\emph{Especially} when it cost him.''
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It was not a grand eulogy, for a man who for good and ill had done so
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much for so many years, but I couldn't truly mind. What kind of words
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could any of us say that would be more than a pittance to the living,
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breathing tribute to the Grey Pilgrim that was around us?
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``I wished I'd never had to fight him,'' I simply said, the honesty of
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it feeling a little too raw. ``I wish it'd never come to this. But we so
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rarely get to choose, don't we?''
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``Then win, Black Queen,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said, eyes burning as they
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met mine. ``Because this was not \emph{nothing}. Two great stars fell to
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forge this realm you promised, two servants of Above like few before and
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few will ever come again. It has to matter. Or else\ldots{}''
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He trailed off, though it was not a threat. It was almost a petition and
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more than a little desperate. \emph{Or else what did their lives mean?
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Their tears and blood and decades of bitter struggle to bring just a
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little light to Calernia?} If the fall of such old and honoured stars
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meant not a thing, what could any of us ever hope to amount to?
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``This war has only just begun,'' I softly said. ``It will take us to
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Salia, to forge a peace. It will take us to Keter, to visit upon the
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Dead King what he has so often visited upon us. But there's another
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enemy, Sorcerer. She breaks kings with sentences and topples kingdoms
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with but the lightest of touches. None of this can end before she'd been
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killed. For good.''
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Roland dipped his head, not in acceptance but at least in
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acknowledgement.
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``It seems,'' he said, ``that we have much to speak about.''
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That we did, I silently agreed, dipping my own head in a return of
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courtesy. But not here, not now. Not looking at what could either be
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taken as a last breath of life freely gifted or an entire realm made
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into the mausoleum of good intentions.
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``Not dawn yet, I think,'' Archer said. ``But close. It might be time to
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go back, Catherine.''
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She was right, I knew. The Pilgrim had promised that the manner of his
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death would assure there was no war between the Grand Alliance and my
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own armies, but his death would still be catastrophic to relations
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between my people and the opposition. The Tyrant of Helike, by now,
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would not doubt have crawled back to his armies and begun his hasty
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retreat. There would be fears to quell, explanations to give, and more
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duties to see to than there were hours to either night or day. I
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\emph{should} go back, for though the triumvirate of Vivienne, Juniper
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and Hakram could see to much of the situation there were parts that
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could only be settled by my own intervention. Fearsome as those three
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could be, my reputation loomed taller still.
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``Go,'' I said. ``I'll follow.''
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Indrani cast a look at me, half worried and half hesitant.
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``Are you sure that-''
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``Go,'' I repeated, a tad more sharply.
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Her jaw tightened with displeasure, but she did not test me further. I
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did not have it in me to be furious at Indrani for getting in my way
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tonight, not right now -- it was like the Pilgrim's death had replaced
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sentiment in me with some manner of exhaustion -- but her actions there
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would not go unanswered. It would be a thorny knot to untangle, this
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mess we'd made together, for she had died and we'd both need knives
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sheathed if we were to help Masego out of the worst of his grief. But
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she'd not trusted me, in the end, even if her intentions had been guided
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by love of me. That would need to be addressed, lest the wound fester
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between us.
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``Archer can guide you out,'' I told Roland. ``She has a knack for paths
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like these.''
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He nodded, though his face was unsure.
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``Come along, Rogue,'' Archer said, tone thick with forced cheer.
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``We're all in a need of a stiff drink after a night like this, and
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there's none to be had here.''
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No elaborate farewells followed, as they simply disappeared into the
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city below. Indrani would find a way out, as she had first found a way
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in when seeking Masego. The Lady of the Lake had shared knowledge with
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her I'd not asked the lay of, long aware that the keeping of her
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teacher's secrets was one of the few things Indrani considered sacred. I
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sat, after they'd gone, resting my bad leg against the rough granite
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steps. But for all that I was tired, it was a restless of weariness
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that'd settled over me. Before long I was hobbling down into Liesse,
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through the broken palace of the proud and ancient House of Caen -- gone
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from Callow, like the city they'd once ruled. Above me, shadows among
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the shade, crows flew beneath the starry sky. I had no destination in
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mind to guide my steps, little more than a wandered in a realm of
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wanderers. Feeling the breeze stirring my hair, cooling my sweat in the
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crook of my neck, I passed through the garden that'd been made of
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Liesse. I trailed my fingers through luminous bushes bearing wine red
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flowers, limped through fields of soft grass made silver by starlight.
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It was a surreal city, and one where it would be easy to become lost.
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Yet I came upon a place, in time, where the scent of old deaths
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lingered. It'd been a basilica, once, before the walls were shattered.
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Now all that remained of whatever beauty there'd been were tall panes of
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stained glass whose colour had faded, whatever scene they'd once
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depicted now instead a mere game of blue shades. There had been pillars,
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within, and though half-crumbled they'd become intertwined with thick
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and twisty trees bearing small red fruits. Yews, I thought, and what had
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once been a temple of worship to the Gods Above had instead become a
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manner of shaded grove, leading to a yew elder and larger than any of
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the others. It towered tall and broad, its branches spreading out far in
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a great crown of leaves. The wind set something akin to chimes tinkling
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when it passed through the branches, and it was when I saw the face of
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those chimes I understood the source of the taste of death. The ragged
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remains of a tabard that'd once depicted the golden bells of House
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Fairfax trailed like streamers, tangled among them the broken shards of
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the armour last borne by the Good King Edward. Halfway sunken into the
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earth at the foot of the great tree the last Fairfax's sword shone from
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an errant ray of light, the blade still pristine and sharp. I slowly
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approached, in almost reverent silence: the King of Callow had cowed the
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Hells themselves, for a time, and done it with little more than will and
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spite.
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The crows threaded through the branches and took perch with only the
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slightest murmur of a sound heralding them, their shadowy feathers
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melding into the penumbra of the great yew. They looked, I thought, as
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if they belonged here. My fingers softly lid across the grip of the
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sword once wielded by Edward Fairfax, and I smiled mirthlessly.
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``In northern Callow,'' I said, ``the yew is known as the tree of death.
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In the south and the heartlands it's the elder trees they claim to be
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that omen, but even in Laure the story was told different.''
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I flicked a glance upwards and found my patron goddesses silent yet
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watchful.
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``It's because of the Deoraithe,'' I told them. ``Their longbows,
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they're made from yew. And for a very long time, there was no sight half
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as dreaded in Callow or Praes as a company of Daoine longbowmen. There
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were older superstitions, too, but in my eyes it was the centuries of
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reaping lives that hung death on the branches of yews.''
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And still my only answer was silence.
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``So this is how it goes,'' I softly said. ``I take up again the sword I
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lost in the Everdark, and bring war to the Crown of the Dead. It's an
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old story. Well-worn, and strong for it.''
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King Edward had been taller than me, I thought, with broader shoulders
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as well. And yet, I suspected that if ripped that sword free from the
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earth it would fit my hand perfectly. Better than any other blade ever
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hand.
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``The world spins on,'' I said. ``No matter who lies buried. And so that
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is the sum of us: we fight and we die and if we're lucky we're
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remembered for a while still.''
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All we'd schemed and struggled and bled, and still this night hadn't
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belonged to any of us. How could it? When the crabs dragged each other
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down the only victor to be had was the bucket.
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``No,'' I murmured. ``I think not.''
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My fingers left the sword I would not claim.
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``Am I not your high priestess, Sve Noc?'' I said. ``First Under the
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Night?''
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``So you are,'' Andronike said.
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``In this, we are satisfied,'' Komena said.
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``Then as your priestess I make this claim -- we can do \emph{better}
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than this,'' I called out to the twin shadows among the branches. ``Than
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a ruin of a victory, handed to us by kindly hand. I don't care if we've
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been tricked and tripped by the Intercessor or the Dead King or even
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fate itself. We can do better than this, and so this story has not come
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to an end.''
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I laid my palm against the rough bark of the yew, looking up through the
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branches.
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``I heard you, Good King,'' I whispered. ``Your warning. I hear and
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heed, so lend me your aid when I yet stumble.''
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Under the twilight sky the great yew groaned and twisted, the scent of
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death in the air thickening until I could taste it on the tip of my
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tongue. From the crown of the tree a branch dropped, slender desiccated
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deadwood still echoing of defiance in the face of the end. I knelt to
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take it, and found it was of excellent height and yield for me to lean
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on as I walked.
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``We will not go gently,'' I promised to the tree-grave of the last
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Fairfax. ``And we are not yet done.''
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Turning my back to the grove abruptly, I limped away leaning on the yew
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branch-staff. The grounds I had tread I tread once more, returning to
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the summit of the City of Twilight. Through grass and grove, through
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thorns and flowers and streets of worn stone. Behind me, as if trailing,
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Sve Noc followed on inky wings. I climbed the great steps of granite,
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and as I forced open the great gates of bronze I had never closed two
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great crows claimed my shoulders as their perch. Within awaited silence
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and something else, for though the Grey Pilgrim still sat dead on his
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throne with the Saint sprawled at his feet they were not alone.
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Like a solemn tribunal, or some aerie of angels, the Choir of Mercy
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stood vigil over its fallen champion.
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Under the stars a multitude of tall and thin silhouettes stood, the only
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marks of their presence silhouettes like a heat shimmer and
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ever-spinning eyes like wheels of flame. There were dozens and dozens of
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them, all bent as if in grief. None turned as I entered the throne room
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and my own back was coated in starlight, but the weight of their
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attention was felt nonetheless. I could almost hear a song being sung,
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as if the wind was carrying to my ear parts of a faraway refrain, and
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what little I could make out was\ldots{} heartbroken. Melancholy in a
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way I was not sure I -- or any mortal -- could truly understand. The
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barest fraction of that feeling was enough to put a stutter to my step.
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``You actually loved him, didn't you?'' I said, voice wondering. ``Or as
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close to that as you can.''
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They answered not. Whatever manner of mourning the angels bore, they
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would not share it with me. It took a single step forward, and as if a
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sword had been unsheathed a myriad of burning, spinning eyes turned to
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me. I swallowed dryly, for though Sve Noc were at my side and I knew
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well their power the Choir of Mercy was older and colder both, when it
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deemed it necessary.
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``You can't bring him back,'' I said. ``I understand. There's
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\emph{rules}, and it's not in your nature to make exceptions.''
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The attention never wavered nor lessened in intensity.
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``But I'm not you,'' I said. ``Your rules don't bind me. And if you let
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me, I will.''
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I suspected, that if not for the Sisters sinking their talons deep
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enough into my flesh I bled I would have passed out. The blinding light
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and heat I felt, for just a moment, would have seen me fall to my knees
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if not for the staff in my hand. And yet it'd not been strike, for
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within that heat and light I'd heard whispers and while the words I'd
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not understood their meaning I'd somehow grasped anyway.
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``Why?'' I repeated.
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It was a fair question, I supposed.
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``Because I can, so I should,'' I said. ``Because even when he was my
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enemy I did not believe him to be a bad man. Because\ldots{}''
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I struggled to find the words to express it, but perhaps the simplest
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truth was best.
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``Because I don't want to be at war with you or him,'' I quietly said.
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``And the moment you choose to believe that, the war's over.''
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And I supposed I was a fool, thinking I could make peace with a Choir
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even if its virtue was that of mercy, but I owed it to all of us at leas
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to try.
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``We kill you,'' I said, ``you kill us. The wheel keeps spinning, the
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world keeps bleeding. And maybe that can't be mended, maybe there's just
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something about mortals that's all teeth and hunger and it'll never go
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away no matter what we make of ourselves -- but we can do \emph{better}
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than this!''
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I gestured at the room around us, the realm around us, but I meant more.
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I meant the armies below, at each other's throats even in the face of
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annihilation. I meant the Named scraping each other raw until even the
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noblest beginnings and the finest intentions became knives to hack at
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each other with. I meant Praes, hungry and wealthy, and Callow, sated
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and poor, each capable of helping the other but forever clawing at
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themselves instead.
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``Please,'' I said. ``I know you don't make exceptions, and I won't ask
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you to. All you need to do is to stand aside.''
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We stood there, the Choir of Mercy and the Arch-heretic of the East, and
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a long moment passed.
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They stood aside.
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Heart beating wildly I limped forward, until I stood by Tariq's corpse.
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He would have looked to be sleeping, if not for the sword through his
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heart. Night flickered through my veins, strengthening my limbs, and the
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Sisters flew up cawing like grim omens. I eased out the Saint's blade,
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spilling blood all over myself, and dropped it to the side. And then,
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without warning, I stuck my arm into the Grey Pilgrim as the thief of
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Bestowal that I was. Three aspects awaited: a star, an eye and a prayer.
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It was the last I ripped out, a whisper of \textbf{Forgive} touching my
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mind. My fingers withdrew a small receptacle of wood, which I slid open
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with shaking fingers. There was a fine red powder within, and a power
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that would have blinded me if I'd tried to gaze upon it.
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``Time to rise, pilgrim of grey,'' I murmured. ``There's still work to
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be done.''
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I blew out a breath, and the powder scattered across the dead man's
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face. A long moment massed, once more, and my stomach tightened.
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Then, above us in the sky, the pilgrim's star winked out.
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Tariq's mouth opened to a ragged gasp, and within the depths of Liesse
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death was cheated for the third time at my hand.
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