463 lines
22 KiB
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463 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-9-patient-knives}{%
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\section{Chapter 9: Patient Knives}\label{chapter-9-patient-knives}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``No man is an island, Chancellor. We've tried the ritual, the
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result is mostly screams.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Malignant III
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\end{quote}
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We were an hour out of Rochelant when Akua returned to my side. The
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night was still young -- I knew that better than most -- so we'd not
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wasted moonlight by lingering on the outskirts of the city until she
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finished. The sooner we caught up to my drow army the better, as far as
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I was concerned. Still, after she returned in a whisper of power on
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frost I called a halt. My Peerage took the following dismissal
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gracefully, and why wouldn't it? They'd not stood in my deeper councils
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even when I was still their sole mistress, not even Ivah. It would have
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been convenient if there'd been a log or rock to sit on as we spoke, but
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Creation did not seem in an indulging mood tonight. At least getting off
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the damned horse for a moment was a relief to my calves and arse. I'd
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forgotten how irksome the cramps coming with long rides could be, when
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you weren't used to horsemanship. Winter had seen to those, before, and
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my Name taken off the edge before that. Gods, at least it wasn't as bad
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as the return of my monthlies. The surprise had been more than slightly
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unpleasant, when I'd had my first moon blood in years down in the
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Everdark. That Archer evidently found my discomfort hilarious had been
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no help at all.
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I stretched my legs out carefully, leaning on my staff, and my `war
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council' assembled around me. A bird, an archer and the shade of a dead
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woman. There'd probably been Dread Emperors in the old days that had
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more reliable-seeming councils than mine, and wasn't that a troubling
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thought? The shade bowed with exquisite precision, but neither
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crow-Andronike nor Archer took it upon themselves to add even a
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semblance of ceremony to the affair. A sad day indeed, when the Doom of
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Liesse was the best behaved of my companions.
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``Lay it on me,'' I said.
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Usually that would have prompted a dirty joke from Indrani -- whose
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occasional evening in my bed had done absolutely nothing to curb the
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racy comments of, to my mixed amusement and despair -- but tonight she
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kept her mouth shut. I had to force myself not to look at her. This was
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not the place, now was not the time. The thought felt like a betrayal of
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sorts, true as it was. The people in the stories threw aside little
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details like this in the name of friendship all the time, didn't they?
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It'd been a long time since my story had been that clean or pretty,
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though, and sometimes I doubted it ever had been.
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``There are at least eight thousand Helikean soldiers in Rochelant,
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though no more than twelve thousand,'' Diabolist reported. ``No soldiery
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from any other of the Free Cities could be found.''
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I chewed on that for a moment. Old reports from the civil war in the
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League had the total muster of Helike at twenty thousand, but that army
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had sieged three cities since and stormed two of those three. The Tyrant
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might have recruited since, of course, but green troops wouldn't have
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the discipline I'd noticed in the soldiers holding Rochelant. And they'd
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marched through the Waning Woods a few months back, anyway, so further
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losses were to be expected. Assuming the Tyrant hadn't stripped Helike
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itself bare, inside that little Proceran city was the majority of the
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army his city-state could field. Considering Kairos Theodosian was the
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presumed general of the League's united armies, that held interesting
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implications. Who was giving out orders, if not him? Whatever reports
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I'd read about the League's military commanders were likely out of date
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by now, but unless someone had been hiding a very skilled general under
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a rock there should be no one of staggering competence. The other
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reputable professional army in their region was the Stygian slave
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phalanx, but while the Spears of Stygia had officers their orders
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ultimately came down from the ruling Magisterium of that city. Powerful
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warlocks, but not necessarily the most able of generals.
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``The League's going to be a fucking mess if it gives battle unless the
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Tyrant returns,'' I bluntly said. ``Which he shows absolutely no sign of
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doing right now.''
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``Good news, then,'' Archer shrugged. ``Either they'll be thrashed or
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they'll stand back and let us settle the mess.''
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I frowned, not so sure about that. Kairos wouldn't be crippling his own
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army this early in the dance, it was his most valuable avenue of
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pressure on everyone else. If anything, he'd want to preserve its
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strength while the Grand Alliance and my own hodgepodge coalition
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bloodied each other for a bit. If he held command of the only mostly
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intact host on the field, everyone else would have to step carefully
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around him. On the other hand, if I was reading him right, he couldn't
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just stay out of the melee either. He had to prove to be \emph{some}
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sort of threat, if his way to victory involved both himself and the
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First Prince at the same negotiation table. The Hierarch was a forest
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fire in the making, sure, but the man alone wouldn't be enough to have
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the likes of Cordelia Hasenbach flinching. \emph{Unless he stops
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haunting small cities and stirs up larger pots}, I mused. Which would be
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difficult to implement, since the Hierarch should need to be in whatever
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city he stirred and the Helikeans didn't have fairy gates to quicken
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their advance. As far as I knew, anyway.
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``We'll see,'' I finally said. ``Akua, you studied the
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Hierarch's\ldots{} pull?''
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Diabolist nodded, face calm but gaze visibly unsettled.
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``I am nearly certain this was an aspect,'' she said. ``And absolutely
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certain this was not the result of using some entity bound and bargained
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with.''
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Archer spat into the snow, and I shared the sentiment.
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``No one gets that strong a boon from their Name without a cost,'' I
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said. ``It's not a city-killer he's wielding, not exactly, but it's
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almost as bad. William had to put his life on the scales and call down a
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bloody Choir to attempt something in the same league.''
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``Contrition's touch was stronger than this, practically speaking,''
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Akua dispassionately noted. ``Closer to absolute in its effect, a result
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of the Choir's own nature. The Hierarch's influence seems to be closer
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to a nudge than a decree -- I would wager it relied on grievances
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already existing.''
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``Useful, but not what I'm asking you about,'' I said.
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Diabolist inclined her head in concession, then hesitated.
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``This is not fact, only supposition,'' she warned.
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I simply cocked an eyebrow. Her suppositions were usually rather solid,
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as they should be. Even before I'd ripped out her soul and bound it to
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Winter, broadening her horizons, she'd had an education in matters
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eldritch that likely less than a dozen people on Calernia could boast of
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surpassing. And even then, not in every subject.
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``The nature of the aspect might be extremely situational,'' Akua said.
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``That is usually the case with more powerful aspects -- either that or
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they are outright uncontrolled.''
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My lips thinned. Uncontrolled did seem possible, since I doubted
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Anaxares of Bellerophon had done much experimenting with his abilities.
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But when I'd spoken with him, the pull had lessened while he engaged
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with me. Until I'd irked him, anyway. Reaction to emotions, maybe? That
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was hardly unusual with Named.
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``Situational,'' I repeated, implicitly inviting her to elaborate.
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``I saw more of the city than either of you, I believe,'' Akua said.
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``It struck me that, aside from the tribunals, there seemed to be no
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unnaturally-driven actions taking place.''
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Archer snorted out a laugh.
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``So his trick is only good at making trials?'' she said. ``Takes all
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sorts, I suppose.''
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I was a lot less amused. Considering Kairos was the hand behind the
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Hierarch, I didn't believe for a moment that even an aspect so narrow
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couldn't be used to birth a hellish mess. There were a lot of important
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people -- important entities, even -- that would leave a disaster in
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their wake if they ended up getting behead by an alleyway tribunal. By
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now I was nearly certain the First Prince's neck wasn't what the Tyrant
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was after, but if I entertained the notion that it \emph{was} for a
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moment? Using the right pivot, civil war could be sown in the Principate
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just as the Dead King started making gains up north. There was no need
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to expand on what kind of a disaster that would be for the rest of the
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continent.
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``Judgement,'' I said, honing in on what I considered the important
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kernel. ``You think his aspect is bound to the concept. Stronger when
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he's standing in judgement, or inciting others to do the same.''
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Akua nodded.
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``I am not certain how much you know of Bellerophon,'' she delicately
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said.
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Unlike Masego, she was usually more diplomatic than to outright call me
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ignorant to my face.
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``They rule by popular vote and appoint officials by drawing lots,'' I
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replied. ``Terrible at war, though their city-state is too much trouble
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for anyone to want to seriously attempt annexation. They hate Penthes to
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the bone and they've got some sort of mage order that suppresses
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internal rebellions. Like to execute each other a lot, so I can see
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where the Hierarch gets it from.''
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I knew more than that, but little relevant to our conversation. It was
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mostly anecdotes from histories which as a rule tended to take an
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amused, tolerant and slightly condescending view of the city. Good for a
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laugh, but not people to take too seriously. The rest of the League
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seemed content to leave them to their own devices in their dirt-poor
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holdings, only intervening for a cursory slap on the wrist when they
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agitated at the borders.
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``It was not a city my education covered in great detail,'' Akua
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admitted.
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Which was pretty damning, since the Sahelians would have gone out of
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their way to thoroughly brief her on any nation of importance.
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``That said, there is one detail to their democracy that my tutors found
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of interest,'' Diabolist continued. ``While it well-known that all
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citizens of Bellerophon have the right to cast a vote in the city's
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popular assembly, not so that the Gods Below have one as well.''
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I cocked an eyebrow, reluctantly amused.
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``One vote,'' I said. ``For the whole lot of them?''
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``Indeed,'' Akua replied, without a speck of humour to her voice. ``A
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droll detail, in most situations, though the Hierarch's abilities change
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matters. You see, this makes the Gods Below honorary citizens of
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Bellerophon according to their own laws.''
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A heartbeat passed.
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``You can't be serious,'' I said. ``They think their laws apply to the
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Gods?''
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``Half of them, anyway,'' Indrani snickered. ``Wonder if they ever took
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the bastards to court?''
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``Archer,'' I hissed. ``\emph{Think} about this. The Hierarch's mad as
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can be, but he believes in that tripe. Believes it hard enough it
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ripples across a whole city -- and he's under the impression he has a
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right to put even Gods on trial.''
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I bit my lip, glancing at Akua.
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``If he made an attempt,'' I said. ``What would happen?''
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The shade looked dismayed.
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``I have no idea,'' she admitted. ``There has never been a precedent as
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far as I know.''
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\emph{Ah, Catherine, that's the entire point}, Kairos Theodosian told
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me. \emph{Finding out.} Would he turn on Below like that? He might, I
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grimly admitted to myself. Akua herself had told me that when the
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Hellgods had taught the Wasteland about `sacred betrayal' they hadn't
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excluded themselves from the chain of treachery. I had no reason to
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believe their teachings in Helike ran along different lines. And if the
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man truly bought into Evil, he might not even see it as a betrayal. Or
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rather, he'd think about betrayal very differently: a holy thing, an act
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of worship. Which didn't mean in the slightest that the Gods Below
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wouldn't answer it by making a crater wherever the offence was given.
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The size of that possible crater, though, was the part worrying me most.
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A city, a province, a realm? A \emph{continent}? It was one thing to
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make a play of the alleged purpose of Creation, as the Liesse Accords
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were meant to but quite, another to take a swing at the Gods who'd
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actually created the world. I wasn't opposed to the act in principle, to
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be honest, but if all it took to end Above and Below was a pair of bold
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madmen we'd be long rid of them.
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``Well, there's a new name on the list,'' I finally said.
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``Which one?'' Archer drily asked.
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``The one with the people we need a solid plan to kill,'' I said.
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``Akua, I want a record of everything you observed of the Hierarch and
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his abilities. We'll start from there. He might be like Malicia, a Named
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with little combat weight. That hardly means he'll be easy to kill, but
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at least he's away from his seat of power. That ought to make it
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possible, at least.''
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\emph{Unless}, I suddenly thought, \emph{he's carrying his damned seat
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of power with him}. Did he just need to be near a mob, any mob? Was his
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aspect really that versatile, for all its apparent narrowness? I set
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that consideration aside for the moment. We wouldn't get a proper
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assault plan done standing out here in the cold anyway, and preferably
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I'd want more than just us contributing to it. It'd be best if the full
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Woe could be involved, it'd rather broaden the toolbox we could call on
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to get it done. This was still speculation anyway, I reminded myself. It
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might be the Tyrant and the Hierarch would settle for some lesser
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madness behind the headsman's axe they'd be swinging. But expecting the
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worst was only good sense, at this point, and you could never have too
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many plans to kill dangerous madmen. Oh Gods, I was starting to sound
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like Black. Which reminded me\ldots{}
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``I'll see it done,'' Diabolist replied with a nod.
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``Speaking of dangerous madmen,'' I said. ``Black's still alive
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according to the Tyrant.''
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My two companions held their tongue, but I caught them sharing a look.
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``\emph{Yes}, he could be lying,'' I sharply said. ``But Kairos also
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mentioned him to be a prisoner of the Grey Pilgrim, which strikes me
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more as an attempt to send me after the man than dangled false hope.''
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``It could be both,'' Indrani bluntly said.
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``We know there's no heroes with the Levantine armies,'' I pointed out.
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``Which, if the Pilgrim was in Iserre to intervene in this fight, is
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where he would attach himself. If he's actually in the principality --
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and the Tyrant wouldn't send me on wild goose chase when he could send
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me into actual danger instead -- then there's a reason for it. Escorting
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a dangerous prisoner to Salia would fit. Unless either of you has a
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better explanation?''
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``Speculating with this little information is rather pointless,'' Akua
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said. ``The Pilgrim's schemes run deep.''
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I was a little impressed that she, of all people, had the gall to say
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that about someone else.
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``Still not sure why the old man wouldn't just slit the Carrion Lord's
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throat, to be honest,'' Indrani said. ``Not like he's been shy about
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that sort of thing until now.''
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``Bait,'' Diabolist suggested.
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``We're already here,'' Archer snorted. ``We have to be, to get anything
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done. I guess he could be after the other Calamities, but why borrow a
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torch when the house is on fire?''
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I couldn't disagree, though I really wished it were otherwise.
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Especially if the Pilgrim was actually headed for Salia, which was the
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only destination making sense if they were traipsing through Iserre.
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Sure the Principate's capital was massive and well-defended, but it was
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also the most populated city on Calernia bar none. Somehow I doubted
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Warlock would care all that much if he had to incinerate a few hundred
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thousand people to get my teacher out of a cell, but in principle the
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Grey Pilgrim \emph{was} supposed to care. I supposed a funeral pyre of
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dead innocents by the thousands might set in stone the story of those
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who'd committed such a massacre being righteously slain by heroes, but
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that was a damned dark way of going after an end that could be reached
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through other methods.
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``Indrani,'' I hesitantly asked. ``If he was killed, how would the Lady
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of the Lake react?''
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She grimaced under her hood.
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``Can't be sure,'' she said. ``Odds are she'd cut whoever wielded the
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knife, at least, but she's not his keeper. If he sailed his ship into
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the reefs on his own, and it sounds like he did, she might not see
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reason to take revenge. She's not a Calamity anymore, Cat. She didn't go
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after the heroine that killed Captain either.''
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That might have been because she considered the remaining Calamities to
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have a better claim to that death, I had privately thought, but if
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anyone would know the truth of this it was Archer. It irritated me a
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little that the Ranger could band with people for years and then leave
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those bonds behind when it suited her, but then she'd not struck me as a
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woman dripping with tender sentiments.
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``Which leaves diplomatic leverage,'' Akua said. ``The Empress' deep
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fondness for her right hand is no secret. Neither, to be frank, is your
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own attachment. Hostage-taking to secure the left flank of the
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Principate while war is waged against the Kingdom of the Dead would be a
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gamble, but if successful then well worth the costs. And if a single
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individual could be used for that purpose, it would be the Black
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Knight.''
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``He burned through quite a chunk of the Proceran heartlands not a year
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ago,'' Indrani whistled, sounding impressed. ``If Hasenbach thought up
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that scheme, she's got ice in the veins and no lack of nerve. Her people
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are going to be howling for his head.''
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The First Prince did have both, I silently conceded. And this was the
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best explanation I'd heard so far, assuming this wasn't actually
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\emph{Black's} plan and we were all swinging at mist -- which I wasn't
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quite ready to discard as a possibility yet.
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``We'll find out sooner or later,'' I said. ``Regardless, if the Pilgrim
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is in the region you should know what that means.''
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Akua's face was the picture of serenity, but she did not speak and that
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was telling. Indrani had been with me for longer, though, so she
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followed the thought to the conclusion.
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``We'll run into the old man at some point,'' she mused. ``And with
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blades out, most likely.''
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``Vivienne figured out one of the quirks to his Name,'' I said. ``We
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confirmed it at the Battle of the Camps -- to put up his stronger stuff,
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likely to avoid getting killed, he needs to intervene on someone's
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behalf. Assuming we manage to assemble all our forces in the field
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before we run into him, the weak link is obvious.''
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Andronike, still on my shoulders and interested enough in the
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proceedings not to interrupt so far, stirred with displeasure at the
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thought yet unexpressed. That made it, I told her silently, no less
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true.
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``The drow,'' Akua said. ``The consequences of dawn are a dangerously
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exploitable weakness.''
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``If he knocks out the southern expedition we lose a lot of fighting
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power,'' I said. ``The Legions have held ground against him before -- at
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a cost, but we held. If he wants to cripple us, he'll be going after the
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drow.''
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``That means he'll take the offensive,'' Archer mused. ``Or at least,
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his soldiers will. That way he has people to save.''
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And it might just be that the more people in peril there were, the
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greater the power granted to save them would be. He'd been no pushover
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at the Battle of the Camps, when he got going. Considering the amount of
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troops running around Iserre that was not a pleasant notion to
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entertain.
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``He's a tricky sort,'' I said. ``But his arsenal isn't endless and
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we're not without backing of our own. If he strays too far from his Name
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we can slap that down. I'll pit Night against Light any day, when we've
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got our lovely goddesses along on the field.''
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``Aspects, then,'' Indrani frowned.
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``He's not going to blast an entire drow army into oblivion in a storm
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of Light,'' I agreed. ``I don't care how much miracle wine the Gods make
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him drink, no one can stomach that kind of power without burning out. So
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he'll hit us where it hurts, with something he's personally strong in.
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And back at the Battle of the Camps, when he got all miraculous on us he
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was using a very specific kind of light.''
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``We cannot kill him without ending chances of any diplomatic agreement
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with Levant,'' Diabolist reminded me.
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``No,'' I agreed. ``So that's not what we'll go after. The opposition
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isn't the only side with miracles, these days, even though ours need to
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be bought and paid for.''
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I met the shade's golden eyes.
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``Make me a well, Akua Sahelian,'' I ordered. ``I don't care how many
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Mighty you have to rope in, get it done and \emph{quick}.''
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Diabolist flicked a glance at the silver of godhood on my shoulder, but
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found nothing there to fear. She wouldn't, I thought. After all,
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Andronike's crowing laughter was echoing in the back of my head with no
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sign of ceasing. She \emph{would} be amused by that, I supposed. There
|
|
was a degree of irony to my plan being, in essence, the first teaching
|
|
of the Sisters. I rolled my other shoulder, limbering the muscles in an
|
|
attempt to distract from the dull of throb of my bad leg. The staff
|
|
could only help so much.
|
|
|
|
``All right, that's enough for now,'' I said. ``Let's get moving, I want
|
|
to cover as much ground as possible before dawn catches us. If I'm not
|
|
wrong, we'll be joining General Rumena just in time to kick the hornet's
|
|
nest.''
|
|
|
|
``That's why good boots are important,'' Indrani laughed.
|
|
|
|
I was gladdened her mood had shifted, though I had to wonder how long
|
|
that'd last.
|
|
|
|
``Also crushing one's enemies,'' Akua seriously said, then paused. ``For
|
|
justice, of course.''
|
|
|
|
I rolled my eyes and left them to it, heading back to my horse. I
|
|
slipped onto the saddle, then waited for the sounds of their bickering
|
|
to fade as they pulled ahead.
|
|
|
|
``Andronike,'' I said. ``If I needed you to look south for
|
|
something\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Not until my sister is at my side,'' the crow said. ``Something clouds
|
|
my sight.''
|
|
|
|
Yet another reason to reunite with the southern expedition as fast as
|
|
possible, I thought, spurring on Zombie to catch up with the others.
|
|
|
|
If Cordelia Hasenbach had gone grave-digging, I needed to know what she
|
|
was digging \emph{for}.
|