371 lines
19 KiB
TeX
371 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-70-dawning}{%
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\chapter{Dawning}\label{chapter-70-dawning}}
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\epigraph{``For light blinds just as surely as the dark, and hatred binds
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just as surely as love.''}{Sherehazad the Seer, Taghreb poet}
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I woke up to the feeling of bony elbows digging into my ribs. It
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surprised me not because I'd forgotten that Indrani and I had ended up
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in bed -- I still felt pleasurably sore from those exertions, so it'd
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have been a shame to -- but because she was still here. In my bed,
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though for once she was only mildly hogging the covers. The gift of
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awareness Sve Noc had granted me, I sometimes suspected without strictly
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\emph{meaning} to, had me mindful that dawn was a little more than an
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hour away. It'd not been a long night of sleep and to be honest I still
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felt a little drunk, but worse come to worse I'd take a nap come the
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afternoon. I might need to whatever my intentions, if raising a gate
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into Twilight was as exhausting as I suspected it would be. My mind
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recoiled at the thought of it, for I would need the guidance of the
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Sisters to see it done and that was rarely pleasant or gentle thing. I
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stretched and yawned to keep my thoughts moving instead of lingering on
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the coming unpleasantness, sliding out of the blanket and sitting on the
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edge of the bed. Indrani began to stir awake and I smoothed away a
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puzzled frown. I'd wondered if our arrangement would be set aside until
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she'd resolved whatever she was going to resolve with Masego, but truth
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be told I'd not been entirely surprised we'd ended up in bed after the
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rough few days we'd had.
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Honesty compelled me to admit I'd not needed much convincing when she'd
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offered, either.
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That she'd stay afterwards, though, that had me wondering. Not at
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whether or not this was blooming into something more romantic in nature
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-- for all that Akua had once claimed I had difficulty separating
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bedplay from attachment, Indrani and I had always been very clear that
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neither of us was likely to ever fall in love with the other -- but at
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the nature of whatever accord she was trying to reach with Zeze. I
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doubted a man raised by the Warlock and an incubus would be all that
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inclined to give a single thought to what people might or might not
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consider proper, but I disliked not knowing what I was involved in. Even
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if only peripherally. That was on a personal note, anyway. As the
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nominal leader of the Woe, there were concerns about what all this
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fumbling might mean for our little band. \emph{Though in all fairness},
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I grimly thought, \emph{if it's such a great concern I probably
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shouldn't be sleeping with Archer.} I bet Black would never have -- huh,
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no, he most definitely had. With Ranger, of all women. I cast a
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speculative look at Indrani as she opened her eyes. Comparisons between
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the Woe and the Calamities had begun before the Queen of Summer had even
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granted us the name, so if I was to be my generations equivalent of
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Black and Indrani of Ranger? Ugh. That did feel a little sordid.
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Indrani took my lingering gaze for something else entirely, and just so
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happened to stretch in a way that pushed back the covers and arched up
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her breasts. Pure coincidence, no doubt. Well. It would have been rude
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not to appreciate the sights, really, if you thought about it. Best not
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to mention that earlier thought about equivalences, I decided. Archer
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was not, as a rule, all that opposed to sordidness. She did like to rub
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my nose in it, though, so no need to hand her a full quiver.
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``Don't suppose I could convince you to stay in bed a little longer,''
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Indrani said, voice still husky from sleep.
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And perhaps something else as well, though that might just be my
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continuing look at the smooth expanse of brown skin laid out before me.
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``Any more of that and we'll break the cot,'' I smiled. ``Wasn't made
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for two people, much less that sort of\ldots{} exercise.''
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``Wouldn't be as an issue if I tied your wrists again,'' Indrani airily
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said.
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Now that was just unfair. And surely I could spare a bit of time before
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leaving the tent. Or perhaps half my time. Unfortunately, my awareness
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of looming dawn made it clear that was not the case despite my body's
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insistence otherwise.
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``I'll need time to prepare the grounds for the ritual,'' I reluctantly
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said.
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She sighed, though from the sly look in her eye I'd say my hesitation
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had been the prize she'd been after from the start. Indrani always
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turned pixie, after a shared night, as if the shedding of clothes
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brought out her vainest sort of guiles.
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``Boring,'' she said, waving a hand in dismissal. ``Still, I'm already
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up. No point in going back to bed alone.''
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I snorted. Yeah, she hadn't been expecting me to accept then. It was
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still night out, and so it was not all that difficult to spin black
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flames around the stone basin to the side of my bed until the water
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within it was warm. I took the cloth to the side of it and began by
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washing my face, though I ceased when I felt Indrani looking at me.
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``Not happening,'' I said.
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I swept my unbound hair back over my shoulder as I spoke, aware from how
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frequently Indrani liked to grip it that she had something of a
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fascination there. I didn't have curves to display, unlike my friend,
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but I was hardly unattractive to her. It was my arms, though, that she
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was looking at.
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``You're getting wiry,'' Archer said, sounding fascinated. ``Haven't
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seen your body change that much since the Folly.''
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Had I gained muscles? Strange, since I wasn't walking around in plate or
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sparring regularly anymore. Some of my surprise must have shown on my
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face, as she continued to speak.
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``You were bulkier when we first met,'' Indrani said. ``Warrior-framed.
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You look more like a hunter now, made for the long stride instead of the
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shield wall.''
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``You're feeling rather poetic this morning,'' I drily said.
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``Been a while since slept in the same bed,'' she smiled. ``Don't get
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used to it.''
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I wet the cloth again, for the wetness had cooled, and wiped the lower
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half of my face to hide my hesitation. Ah, well. If I waited for either
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Indrani or Masego to tell me what was going on, I'd still be waiting on
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my deathbed.
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``Should,'' I delicately began, ``I get used to \emph{this}?''
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I flicked a few fingers at the messy bed we'd been sharing. Her
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expression was difficult to parse, and not for the lack of light in the
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tent: a sliver of Night had seen to that.
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``Not sure yet,'' she said. ``But I did tell you, back in Great Lotow --
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that is that, and this is this.''
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\emph{For you, maybe}, I thought. I wasn't sure exactly what she was
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trying to have with Masego, but any manner of pairing would rather imply
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he could have an opinion as well. It wasn't that I expected Zeze to
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suddenly make like an Alamans priest and condemn the pleasures of the
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flesh as wayward. Mores aside, he was not above those himself: me might
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not have any interest in bedplay, but I'd seen him dig into fresh apple
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tarts like a starving orc would a pig. He'd not been overweight when we
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first met without reason. Still, I honestly had no idea of what he'd
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want of a relationship -- any relationship -- that wasn't friendship or
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family. Didn't help that I'd never heard him express a desire for one.
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His fathers had been married and a closed circle, as far as I knew, and
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among the rest of the band of Named who'd raised him Sabah had been
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happily wed and mother while Black had his\ldots{} rapport with the Lady
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of the Lake, though I'd been made to understand that they only met every
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few years for a short span. Gods, none of us had been raised in a
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traditional family, had we? Orphan, diabolist and incubus,
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\emph{Ranger}. Vivienne's mother had been assassinated by the Empire,
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after all. Although, now that I thought about it, Hakram's childhood had
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not been all that unusual by orc standards. He'd simply been an ill-fit
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for his clan, and later the College.
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Hells, that might actually go some way in explaining why he tended to be
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the most stable of us.
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``Still, I'll not be offended if our company lapses until you have your
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house in order,'' I told her.
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She ought to know already, but sometimes it was best to have those
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things stated outright.
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``And who will you work out your tensions with, then?'' she grinned. ``I
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suppose our shady friend might be up to scratching that itch, but you'll
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have to train her up to snuff first.''
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I frowned.
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``That's thrice now that people have commented on that,'' I said.
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Hakram had asked me directly, and though last night Aisha's question had
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been a great deal more circumspect it'd been of the same vein.
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``Come off it,'' Archer said. ``It's hardly the first time I've jested
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about the Mighty Shadow Lass' neckline plunging whenever she thinks
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you're looking. No need to be troubled over it, Cat: she's a looker, and
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invites the looking. It's hardly a sin to accept the invitation now and
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then.''
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On occasion it felt otherwise, though that voice was the same that
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reminded me there could be no just reason for allowing the Doom of
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Liesse to breathe free air. That a hundred thousand souls demanded, if
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not lasting torment, at least as painful an execution as I could carry
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out. I could not entirely articulate why it was worse that I found her
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attractive added to the rest, but it'd always had that taste against my
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tongue. That I'd grown to like, and in some ways even trust, Akua
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Sahelian was worse still. The fate I meant for her was just in the ways
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that mattered, I truly did believe, but I suspected many would disagree.
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And so the wheel spun, the endless loop of wondering if I being swayed
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or played or if the whispers were black and brutal vengeance indignant
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at being denied. I'd wondered these wonderings before, and no truth had
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come of the spinning. Which had me glancing thoughtfully at Archer,
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curious if that'd all been a skillful to steer the conversation away
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from a subject she was not yet ready to speak of. Given her enduring
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reluctance to simply state as much -- for which I blamed Ranger, who'd
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beaten into her head while young that admitting anything of the sort was
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naked weakness -- I wouldn't put it past her. Best let those sleeping
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dogs lie for now, then.
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``You can't lecture me about sin, you wench. Who's the priestess here?''
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I lightly replied.
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That devolved into petty bickering, not that there'd been any doubt, and
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we washed up and dressed in quick order after that. Hakram was sleeping,
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for once, but we still found a fire going outside my tent and a pair of
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legionaries awaiting by it with breakfast. We chatted over the porridge
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as cuts from last night's meal -- horse, by the smell of it -- were put
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over flame. The two were lieutenants, one from General Istrid's old
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legion and the other one of mine since Marchford though she'd first seen
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combat when Winter struck at my demesne. The lieutenant from the Sixth
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was an old Soninke and quite obviously a bastard from some noble line by
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the cultured, highborn manner of speaking. They were both respectful but
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neither gazed at me with the near-awe I got from so many young
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legionaries these days. It was both a great deal more comfortable and
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made conversation easier. Archer left early after stealing half my horse
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meat, alleging she was going to have a look at Masego.
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``Bring him, if he's awake,'' I said.
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Pilgrim might not like it, but I was less than charitably inclined
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towards the man right now. As for the Sisters, unless they wanted to be
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present at every gate-crafting then the knowledge of how to craft it
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would have to be passed and I could think of none more fitting than
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Hierophant to hold it. Their last talk had, uh, not been all that civil
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but no grudge should be kept over that. They'd acted like carrion and so
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been treated as such, and it was doubtful Masego would keep a grudge on
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his side. I felt Sve Noc's attention, brought by the thought pertaining
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to them, and their silence was implicit agreement. They gained nothing
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from being at odds with Hierophant, though I doubted it was writ in
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their fates they'd be bosom friends anytime soon. I finished breaking my
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fast, thanked the officers and claimed a steaming cup of the herbal
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concoction Adjutant had arranged to be waiting for me before I began my
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trek back up the slope of the barrow. My fondness for the place had
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grown with the use I'd made of it, but Sve Noc and Akua were all
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adamant: the heart of the old Mavian prayers was where the boundaries
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were thinnest. It'd be significantly easier to make a passage there,
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though sentimentality aside I'd had more practical objections.
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The raised stones would make it more difficult for large amounts of
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people to pass through, and this gate into the Twilight Ways was meant
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for my armies to use. The footpaths up the slope were difficult, which
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meant there were no roads for supply carts and siege engines to feasibly
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employ. Besides, unless we knocked down the stones it'd be effectively
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impossible to take them through. My advisory triumvirate of assorted
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crows and shade had uncertain when I'd asked them whether after the
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passage was made it'd unmake it to bring down the stones. Akua insisted
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that it was a `boundary echo' that made the place appropriate, and so it
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wouldn't matter, but Andronike had disagreed. Something about an indent
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having a particular shape, and not existing without that shape. I was a
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decade of schooling in sorcery short to understand Akua's opinion and
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short an apotheosis to properly understand Andronike's. Still, even if
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the entire thing proved unworkable without the stones then at least we'd
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have a working pathway into Twilight for small groups and schematics for
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the second one to be made. The wards and workings around the tumulus had
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been removed, so there was nothing keeping the cold bite of the night
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wind away as I limped up the hill. I drew on Night to chase away the
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cold, though it was more an illusion cast on myself than true warmth.
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I'd been able to feel her through the Night even before calling on it,
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so my face betrayed no surprise when after passing between the circle
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stones I found Akua Sahelian waiting atop the barrow. She'd eschewed
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dresses for a heavy yet elegant cloak line with fox fur, its deep red
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tones perfectly married to the heavy velour robes she wore below. She
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did not turn as I limped forward, nor when I came to stand by her side
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and sipped at the herbal brew in my hands.
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``Deep thoughts?'' I said. ``I've a copper or two to spare for them.''
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She did not immediately reply. Unlike with the drow, I could not taste
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of Akua's emotions through the Night. The Sisters had told me it was
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because she partook of their bounty only through me, and the nature of
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that tie was older than the touch of the Night itself. It'd been
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inherited through the Mantle of Woe and Winter's last gasps, which made
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things rather more complicated. Amusingly enough, in some ways my patron
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goddesses were as much in the dark as I: there was no precedent to any
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of this, and no understanding of sorcery or power was so comprehensive
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that this extraordinary an unfolding would be perfectly grasped. A
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reminder, perhaps, of the unbridgeable gap between gods and Gods. The
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shade's eyes were not on me or even the dry riverbed of what had once
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been a place halfway to Arcadia: she was, instead, gazing at the now
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empty firepit that'd been dug yesterday.
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``Do you remember Barika Unonti?'' Akua suddenly asked.
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Truth be told, for all their high birth and purported importance most of
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the then-Heiress' helpers had half-faded from my memory. Sneers and
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tittering and arrogance could only have so many flavours without my
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keeping them in my remembrance only as some Wasteland brat who'd
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insisted on crossing me until death ensued. Barika, though? Her I
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remembered. The way I'd broken her finger, the first time I attended
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court in the Tower, and been punished for that mistake. More for the way
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she'd died. Convinced she was untouchable, even after helping Akua open
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a Lesser Breach straight into Liesse. I'd put a crossbow bolt in her eye
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as she knelt, and she'd died before she could even be surprised. And
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that death I'd made into salt to rub into Akua's wounds that day, when
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I'd ordered her buried in consecrated grounds so that nothing of her
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could ever be brought back from the afterlife.
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``I do,'' I said. ``She taught me a valuable lesson.''
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``Looking back now,'' Akua said, ``I suspect she might have been my
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friend. Or as close to that as our understanding of the sentiment
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allowed.''
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And still, I thought, the young Heiress had left her behind as an
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illusory decoy knowing I might very kill her for what was about to be
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unleashed. Part of me scorned her for that, though another wondered of
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the cold choices I'd made sending some of those I loved into battle and
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wondered if the difference there was not shallower than I'd wish. I did
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not answer. In part for my role in how Barika Unonti had died, no matter
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how worthy of that death she had been, but also in a moment of wonder.
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I'd suspected, even back then, that of all her followers Unonti was
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likely the only one she had any degree of real fondness for beyond that
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which usefulness garnered. It'd been years since I killed the girl, much
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less thought of her, but her mistress remembered her still. It was a
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small thing, and fragile. And it tasted like triumph to my tongue, for
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the fate I had promised Akua Sahelian was beginning to take shape.
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``I used to think you lacked the knack for cruelty, did you know?'' the
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shade smiled. ``Oh, you've a way with the striking: to evoke fear or
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loyalty with an act and turn of phrase. Yet I always found your ways to
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be\ldots{} clear. Lacking that touch of malice my people drink along
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with mother's milk.''
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A moment passed, wind stirring both our long cloaks.
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``But not anymore,'' I said.
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``Last night,'' Akua pensively said, ``might be the single most cruel
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act I was ever subjected to.''
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I did not protest. Because it was true. Because this was the sound of
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bile being bled out of tainted veins.
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``I cannot even muster rancor, Catherine,'' she said. ``For it was a
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misery entirely of my own making, and exquisitely brought besides.''
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``It doesn't have to be that way,'' I said.
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She laughed, bleakly.
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``Doesn't it?'' Akua said. ``For I was allowed, for just a moment, the
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taste of something I might have had. And oh it was a \emph{heady} thing,
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my queen. A place by your hearth, partaking of the warmth and belonging
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that radiates from it. And though they love you and have long despised
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me, your favour alone was enough for me to be made welcome. For them
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to\ldots{}''
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She turned to me with burning golden eyes.
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``Do you not understand that the laughs should have been empty?'' she
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hissed. ``That it should have been artifice, at show put on for purpose.
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I am a better liar than any of them, Catherine Foundling, than any of
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you. I know the face of truth. After years of enmity all it took for
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them to make room for me by the fire was a word from you. \emph{I could
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have had all of this years ago}.''
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``Yes,'' I agreed, ``you could have.''
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``The closest I have to match to last night is a girl I sent to die,''
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Akua bitterly said. ``You've devised a poison so sweet I will crave the
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taste of it.''
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I looked at her, in the dark before the dawn, and knew that in that
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moment either I had been made of fool or I had won. Once more I chose
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silence, knowing that the slightest hint of what might be taken as gloat
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would send the entire delicate edifice tumbling down.
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We were silent still, when the others arrived.
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