361 lines
18 KiB
TeX
361 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-62-pledged}{%
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\chapter{Pledged}\label{chapter-62-pledged}}
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\epigraph{``Power is as wealth; that which is yours has always been snatched
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from another.''}{Dread Emperor Venal}
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General Rumena had sent for them and they had come.
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The Firstborn, I'd understood since my first steps past the murk of
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Gloom, were the ruin of a people. Even the name of their realm was the
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remnant of olden nights: from Empire Ever Dark to a brutal tapestry of
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sigils haunting the last gasps known simply known as the Everdark. They
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had been, when I journeyed through their ancient broken cities and their
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endless tribal wars, little more than a desperate ritual masquerading as
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a people. Sve Noc had bargained for their salvation of their people,
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made a pact with Below, yet it was \emph{survival} they had sought and
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there their ambitions had ended. Wise of them, perhaps, given how
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insistently the Twilight Sages had courted the doom of their kind until
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they were slaughtered in their own seat of power to earn audience with
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those the drow called the Shrouded Gods. Under the auspices of Komena
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and Andronike the Firstborn had carved out their old glories and made of
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them hovels and walls, forgotten how to read their own sacred writings
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and traded steel for obsidian. Cut after cut, they'd forgotten what they
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used to be until what they'd become was but distant kin to the people
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who'd raised the great works I'd seen but the barest fraction of.
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I'd taken me some time to understand how much more they'd lost than
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things like knowing how to build sewers or make steel tools, or a
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hundred other small practical bits of knowledge that made life easier
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for people who knew them. No, the wound was deeper than that. There'd
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never been a day in my life where I did not know that if I sought the
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right books, or the right stories, I could not know the history of my
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people. Who we had been in ages past and through that how we'd become
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who we were. What it meant, when a well-dressed Proceran tread a street
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and my people began humming the tune of \emph{Red The Flowers}. Why at
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every summer fair there was an evening where primroses were hung form
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the tallest tree or roof and comical plays were had under them until
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dawn -- a last defiance in the name of the Albans, smothered in madness
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so long ago. Hells, I'd even been able to find out why early in the
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spring so many grizzled old men and women filled the taverns of Laure
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and that'd actually been fairly dangerous to openly acknowledge. That
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old soldiers still mourned the last defeat of the Conquest drink in hand
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had not been one of those things people talked about fit they didn't
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want to draw the attention of the Eyes. Not too loudly, anyway.
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Even during Black's decades of occupation the old histories had not been
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burned. Oh, he was a cannier man than that. He'd restricted grimoires
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and weapons, eradicated every legacy of the paladins of the White Hand,
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but the histories he'd not even tried to torch. Viciously elegant as
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always, he'd simply made the histories he preferred cheaper and easier
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to obtain before letting human nature do the rest. Yet for someone
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designated enough to digging, Callow's past was there to find. Even
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under the Praesi, I'd known more of the truth of my people than any drow
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born in the last thousand years could claim to know of theirs. I'd seen
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the truth of that laid bare between the Lord of Silent Steps and the
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Tomb-maker, Ivah and Rumena. The younger looked at the Firstborn and saw
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the only thing it had ever known, a history that was closed circle of
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murder under the Night, while the older drow held a rank in the host of
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an empire that no longer existed, commanding soldiers that were long
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dead. Rumena treated even other sigil-holders as children because that
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was what they were, in its eyes: children putting on the regalia of the
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empire that'd birthed them, thieving magpies making a nest of rubies and
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golden bracelets. It wasn't wrong, I thought, to believe that. It was
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true, that the Firstborn born of this era wore old honours and spoke old
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words without knowing the truth of them, having made mystical of mundane
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through the passing of the years. And still, looking at this host of
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magpies before me, I could not deny that they were beautiful.
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Fifty thousand strong, spread out before me as a sea that'd swept away
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tents and bedding and distractions until all that stood in the moonlight
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was flesh and bone. They were a riot of colour, these warriors sworn to
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a hundred sigils: red and silver, yellow gold and radiant green and deep
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azure blue. Few sigils shared the same colours, and none the same
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symbols. My own Losara, stayed mine through even Winter's death, had
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taken to drawing the silver tree down the ridge of their nose and
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encircling their eyes to finish the pattern. The effect was striking, a
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mask of purple and silver whose roots were the lips and teeth of
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warriors. The golden sunflower on ochre that was Rumena's own
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sigil-symbol was more often tattooed with needles on cheeks or necks,
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though every drow out there seemed to have their own manner of bearing
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their sigil. Their manifold banners traced the air lazily under the
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trailing fingers of the wind, each speaking a claim or story or boast,
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and even their armaments were as works of arts. Oh, the dzulu bore
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spears and shields and practical tools of killing, but the Mighty? Every
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one of them treated both their body and armaments as works of art.
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Artifacts shaped in Night likely older than some Callowan cities had
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been painted or polished or touched with strips of cloths and ribbons.
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The warlord in me, the general, looked upon them and saw only chaos. An
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army of wild folk, without standardized equipment, the doctrine to use
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them and the discipline to do so well. But part of me I'd stolen back
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from eternity along with my death, the one that could savour a good
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smoke and a sunny day and the chill of cold against my cheeks, that part
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looked at them and saw that even though they were the bastard children
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of the Empire Ever Dark the Firstborn were nothing less than splendid.
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Like a precious vase shattered and made into mosaic, still imperfect and
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broken but no less lovely for it. I would not forget that, I told
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myself, looking upon the proud ranks of the Mighty and their dzulu
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warriors behind them. In some ways I knew less of their people than even
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the least of them, and if I was to have a hand in the shape their kind
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would take long after my death I would move that hand with aware of my
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own ignorance. \emph{Our ways are harsh, but they are not without
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graces.} Malicia had told me that once, years ago, because even what she
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hated about the Wasteland was still part of Praes. And so it'd been part
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of her bones and her flesh and her breath, taken in with her mother's
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milk. I could not mold the nature of the Firstborn like clay, uproot
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everything that was at the heart of them because it displeased me.
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I was a cold-eyed stranger speaking hard truths, not any kind of
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saviour. And truth was, the closest the Firstborn would ever have to
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watchful angels was the pair ink-feathered crow slowly circling above us
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all, high under the stars. I breathed out, watching the mist and
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whishing it was smoke instead, but I could hardly nurse a pipe
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throughout this. \emph{Merciless} \emph{Gods, I wish.}
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``Are you worthy?'' I asked, and it rippled across the night.
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Thousands of lips spoke the same question I had asked of the Mighty
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before the Twilight Crown: \emph{sa vrede}. The tale of that moment had
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already spread through the throng last night, when it was still fresh.
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Not to all, but to enough. And though my question found echoes aplently,
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none dared to answer it.
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``The Mighty Zoitsa was slain, and its Night awaits a worthy taker,'' I
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said. ``Yet it was decreed under Night that no Firstborn may slay
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another before the Southern Expedition has ended. And so now I am asked
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who is worthy of that Night, who is worthy to \emph{rise}.''
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I laughed.
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``Did we not answer this question already, you who were born of blood?''
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I sang out. ``Did you not learn that answer well?''
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Fear and anger and uncertainty wafted up in the Night, a sea of emotion
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I could hardly touch lest I risk drowning in it. High priestess or not,
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I was only one woman and a mortal one at that.
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``I wonder, you who claim might,'' I said, ``are you ashamed now to
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speak again before dzulu what you admitted in the shade of dusk? Is
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\emph{vanity} the truest answer you have to give?''
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That stung them, as it had been meant to. No, some said. I did not
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reply, and in the silence they were forced to confess the word again and
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again, louder and louder until none among the entire host of the
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Firstborn could claim they had not heard it. It was Mighty who had been
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questioned, but it was all who answered in the end -- for if the great
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among them could not be said to be worthy, which of the lesser dared
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claimed themselves to be instead?
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``There is no shame in this,'' I said. ``I am First Under the Night, and
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I do not claim to be worthy where you are not -- else would it not be my
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right, my due, to rip the Night out of every single one of you?''
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Fear strengthened, but also respect. The drow were not a people to
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resent threats, or for that matter to think well of weakness. A reminder
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that my power towered over that of even their greatest Mighty made
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everything else easier to swallow, for was it not the privilege of the
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strong to do as they would of the weak? That was the principle, anyway.
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As it always was with those, the reality was rather more nuanced.
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``But there is shame,'' I spoke, and there my voice sharpened, ``in
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knowing yourself unworthy and \emph{remaining} so. There is shame in
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sloth, in apathy, in seeing the flaws in what you are and not seeking to
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be more.''
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A fine line I must walk here, for though the sentiment I spoke was old
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and beloved to their kind it also went hand in hand with the spilling of
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blood. At least, I wryly thought, I was by now an old hand at riding
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tigers and I'd yet to be eaten for it.
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``I see before me hands hallowed in blood and little else,'' I said.
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``What have you offered the Night, save for strife?''
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I struck my staff against the snowy ground, the yew hitting it with a
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clapping sound and kicking off a gust of wind.
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``When the Last Dusk comes to take you all and tally is taken of the
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deeds of the Firstborn,'' I said, ``what will any have you fill the
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pages with, save for death?''
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There I sneered.
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``Death,'' I said. ``Every creature's given end. No great gift, to hurry
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what is certain.''
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And there came the turbulence, for I had begun to speak of worthiness,
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of who was fit to hold a sigil, and now I was sneering down at the only
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measure the drow knew how to use: the long arm and blade it wielded. If
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not killing and claiming Night, what then was to be the path taken? And
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there, there I could not bestow upon them an answer like a saving grace
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made flesh. Because I could hardly see to my own soul, most days, and
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dared not speak to an entire people's. Because I still knew so little of
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the Firstborn, of what they were and might yet be. Because I would not
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be my father, a well-meaning tyrant with a blade in hand intent on
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cutting out the ugliness of a culture until no imperfections remained.
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The drow were not children, to be led by the hand. I could speak to them
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of a horizon, but it they chose to chase it that decision would be of
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their own making.
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``Those of you who hold sigils stand only below Sve Noc and those they
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have raised of their own hand,'' I said. ``You possess deep wells of
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Night, have bloody deeds of valour and cunning to your name. You have
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the weight of many years behind you, and an edge honed by as many
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victories. Yet the keen blade you have made of yourself goes unused. It
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was sent south in these lands to teach the Burning Lands the return of
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the Empire Ever Dark, yet what will follow our victory?''
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I paused, my gaze swept the crowd.
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``Rust,'' I said. ``Rust awaits you. Your sharpness will grow dull, your
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fire gut out. Lest you find higher purpose and seek it with those of
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like soul.''
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I raised my voice, pitched it to resound.
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``The Mighty Zoitsa was slain,'' I said, ``and its Night awaits a taker.
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None under this sky are worthy, yet it must not remain so. And so,
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Firstborn, I charge you to \emph{strive}. To seek excellence in all
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things, and through this conquer eternity.''
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I felt the feather-light touch of the Sisters against my thoughts, like
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a finger sliding down a page. My patron goddesses perceived the shape of
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my thoughts, the decree I would pass down to their people. I felt them
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brush up against me, those great looming presences, and taste of their
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judgement. Komena sat astride the wall, the remains of the woman who'd
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once commanded soldiers displeased but the idol of sacred strife
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pleased. It was Andronike whose attitude would settle the scale, and her
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judgement came more slowly than her sister's. Beyond even my own
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thoughts she gazed upon the many ends such a decree might lead, the
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scattered strands, and where she went I could not follow. One who had
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touched the godhead, as the Sisters had, could follow the strands in
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ways beyond my comprehension. In silence, Sve Noc drifted down from the
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darkened sky on long wings. Down and down they went, until they dropped
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on my shoulders with sharp talons. I had their blessing, silent as it
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was, and the simple act of them perching on my shoulders had fifty
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thousand drow shivering. This was not an omen or an oracle, some
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religious text interpreted through the lens of years.
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Sve Noc was true to them, true as snow or shadow or obsidian's edge, and
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they had granted me their blessing beyond dispute. I raised my hand,
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palm up, and on it coalesced in Night what I had taken from the corpse
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of the Mighty Zoitsa. Power, given the shape of the sigil-symbol: a
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heavyset key, whose four teeth were as tortured antlers.
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``This is the sigil of the Zoitsa,'' I said. ``It will be held before
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the pale light comes.''
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A shiver, a ripple. Excitement like a crowd awaiting the first blood of
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a duel.
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``All of you who are Zoitsa,'' I said. ``May lay claim to the sigil.''
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I leaned forward.
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``I took oaths from some of you, once, and though those nights are
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passed there was truth to our ways,'' I said. ``To hold this sigil is to
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make an oath, to strive to be worthy of the honour bestowed. And through
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this oath, power is gained, for the oath is the promise of a deed to
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come.''
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I grinned, sharp and mean.
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``Yet there can only be one oath, and many will be posed,'' I continued.
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``And so there must be a beginning and an end, for no victor can ever be
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crowned\ldots{}''
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\emph{And in the end, all will be Night}, the drow returned, finishing
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the verse from the Tenets of Night I had cited. I had thought of the
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terms, as Rumena assembled all the sigils, and found that the irony of
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them please me. It ran deeper than that, of course. A foundation set in
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song was set in something deeper than stone, more poignant than law. And
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if you knew the right song, the right stories? All you needed was to
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give the first push, and stone would tumble down the slope on its own.
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``The oath will hold for nine years,'' I said. ``And upon the last dusk
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end, the sigil open to claiming once more. The keeping of oaths and
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bestowal of Night is a duty I bestow upon my own sigil, for the Losara
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are the children of the lost and found.''
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I raised a hand.
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``That burden will be the duty of the Losara, to discharge without
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friend nor enemy so long as there is empire,'' I said, ``and so in the
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keeping of oaths they will not rise or fall so long as they remain
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Losara.''
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Balance, balance must be had. If I was going to make Ivah and my
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warriors the priesthood that harvested and bestowed the Night, then they
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could not partake of that bounty -- otherwise I might as well simply
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name the Losara the founding nobility of the Empire Ever Dark, saving
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their kind a few centuries of intrigue and treachery before we reached
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that result anyway. My sigil would serve as a priesthood, taking no
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sides in the discharge of their duty, and that meant barring them from
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the greater games of power.
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``Which oath will be worthiest,'' I said. ``You wonder this, do you not?
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If I will speak for the Night when every great one passes, choosing
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oath.''
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I laughed harshly.
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``Are you children, Firstborn, that you must be held by your hands?'' I
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said. ``Are you without eyes, without ears, without tongue? Can you not
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choose your own path?''
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I struck down my staff once more.
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``I give you nothing save for tenets under the Night,'' I said. ``To
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perish or flourish will outcome brought by your own hand, and the
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Shrouded Gods take any who speak otherwise.''
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My grin returned, for it had been some time since fate had last allowed
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me to bask so deeply in well-tailored irony.
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``Any who are Zoitsa may lay claim to the sigil,'' I said. ``And so any
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of the Zoitsa may offer oath that will be sought for nine years as they
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hold the sigil.''
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I let that sink in, then struck again.
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``And it will be the same hands as it has always been, that will tell
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between snake and \emph{izmej},'' I said. ``For when oaths are offered,
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it will be the Zoitsa who choose which will own their sigil with
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tokens.''
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They would, in the end, vote on the oath that would bind their sigil
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together for nine years with the elected sigil-holder keeping the Night
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for that duration. It would, I believed, forced the strongest of ay
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sigil's Mighty to care for the weakest -- lest, when nine years had
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passed, they find the strength that had led them to the summit lent to
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another for another purpose. There would be more, beyond this. The
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sigil-holders that still lived would be charged make oaths as well,
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though they would keep their Night when the nine years had passed. It
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would only be the rulership that would be open to challenge on that
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night, though it would be decreed than any sigil-holder that died while
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in that role would see their Night turned into oath-Night. The trick to
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all of it, what they wouldn't care about until it was too late, was that
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it would be sacred under Sve Noc for any drow to leave a sigil whenever
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they so wished without violence being visited upon them. Sigils would
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still make their own laws for those they allowed into their fold, but no
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longer would Mighty be able to keep other drow in their service by
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force. I meant to hang tyranny with the rope of expedience, for if
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sigil-holders treated their followers like animals what drow would
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willingly remain in their sigil? Still, the deeper workings could wait
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for a time still.
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``You who are Zoitsa and would put an oath to the Zoitsa, step
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forward,'' I said.
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I smothered a madwoman's grin, when this time instead of three
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candidates I got thirty-nine.
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``Hear that?'' I murmured, low enough only the Sisters could hear.
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``That's the sound of your people taking an axe to the old order.''
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I was hearing it too, and it warmed the cockles of my damned villainous
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heart.
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