338 lines
19 KiB
TeX
338 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-38-pinnacle}{%
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\section{Chapter 38: Pinnacle}\label{chapter-38-pinnacle}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``For the left hand is strife and the right hand is ruin, and only
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one may be clasped. The worthy take, the worthy rise; all else is
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dust.''}
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-- Extract from the Tenets of Night
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\end{quote}
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The Saint of Swords wasted no time and no words: forward she went, an
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arrow shot. There was not a motion wasted to the way she moved, a sort
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of flowing gait that was neither run nor walk. The Spellblade simply
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walked barefoot through the ruins to meet her, utterly indifferent to
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the sight of one of the most dangerous heroes alive with her blood up.
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``A known weakness?'' the Grey Pilgrim conversationally asked.
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His eyes had never left the Revenant, and neither had mine.
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``Not ice, I'll tell you that much,'' I muttered. ``Or stabbing. To this
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day I'm not even sure if I baited an aspect out of it or if it's just
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that ridiculously powerful.''
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``He, I suspect, not it,'' the Peregrine noted.
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There'd been nothing particularly male about the dead elf to my eyes,
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either now or then, so he probably knew something I didn't.
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``Suspect?'' I repeated.
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``There is an old story,'' the hero said, ``about Death taking the
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Forever King's only son.''
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I'd never heard anything like that, and unlike Tariq I'd been born in a
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kingdom that bordered the Golden Bloom. On the other hand, he had
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decades of going around Calernia nudging villains to their deaths and
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unearthing secrets as well as the Choir of Mercy whispering in his ear.
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So, the Spellblade had been a prince once. Assuming elves saw kingship
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as we did, which was anybody's guess: what went on in the depths of that
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forest was a mystery to anyone but the elves.
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``Doubt the dangling parts are going to affect this any,'' I shrugged.
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``But good to know.''
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``Knowledge is always of use,'' the Peregrine agreed. ``No particular
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weakness, then. Unfortunate. That will prolong the matter some.''
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I almost told him he had a gift for understatement before I caught sight
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of the look on his face and realized he was deadly serious. That, to
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him, a millennia-old elven Revenant was simply a vexing delay on our way
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to the end of this journey. The serenity on his tanned, creased face was
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not forced or posturing or an attempt to reassure. It was simple
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certainty that he would be the victor, regardless of the odds. I was
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surprised, still, by how utterly infuriating I found the sight. Because
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if a hero that old, that seasoned, could feel that way? Then there was
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some truth to the attitude. And though that strength on my side tonight,
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there was still something at the heart of me revolted by the nature of
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it. \emph{No wonder it's impossible to bargain with you, when you have a
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mandated from Above to always get your away}. I was, I supposed, my
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father's daughter in the regrettable ways as well as the rest. I took my
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hand off my staff and it stayed still and standing as I rolled my
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shoulders to limber them.
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``Let's get this going, then,'' I said.
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A moment later, two of Calernia's finest swordsmen had their first
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clash. If I'd not woven a sliver of Night into my eyes, I would have
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missed half of it. It was not that they moved that quickly, I thought,
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though while the Saint was drawing on her Name and the Spellblade made a
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mockery of mortal means simply by being who he was. I'd faced fae
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quicker than them, and likely some with more strength behind their
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swings as well. It was, for lack of a better term, the timing of their
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movements that was at their craft's pinnacle. The Saint feinted high and
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right, the Revenant stepped to the side and somehow that led him to be
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behind her and swinging at her neck: then, even as the Saint pivoted on
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herself and aimed a cutting blow at the side of his own neck, the both
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withdrew a step. I took me a heartbeat longer than them to understand
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why. It would have been a double kill, I realized, if they'd both
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finished the arc of their swing. So instead they'd withdrawn, and gone
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for a second pass. I almost let out a whistle. I doubted I'd ever like
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Laurence de Montfort even if I didn't end up killing her but I could
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certainly admire her skill.
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Black was the one of the few people I'd ever seen move like that -- it
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was how he'd beat Captain when they sparred, even though she'd been
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massively stronger and quicker on the swing -- though on occasion Archer
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got close to it as well. She still relied on an aspect to get there,
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though, her \textbf{Flow}. Ranger would be more than match for either of
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these, I thought, but though rather skilled with a blade I'd never been
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even remotely in their league. Impressive as the spectacle of the two of
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them trading not-blows like dancers was, I'd not come here to be a
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spectator. The tricky part would be, I knew, intervening without getting
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in the Saint's way.
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``All is Night,'' I murmured in Crepuscular, wrist flicking outwards.
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``The left hand is strife and the right hand is ruin, only one can be
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clasped: I call on you, Komena, war-bringer and red of deed, breaker of
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spears and devourer of hope. In your name I curse my foe.''
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A brush like feathers of my cheek, the flap of wings, and distant cawing
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laughter. She approved, it seemed, as she was want to do when I spoke
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words from her Tenets. Night flowed through my veins, like a cool shadow
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cast on a spring morning, and I released the working on the two fighting
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in the distance. Tariq stiffened, for the barest moment, though the
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tension ebbed when he saw that the Saint had not been hurt by what I'd
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done. It was a subtle touch, at first. The shadows of the ruins where
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they were duelling lengthened a little, and the air began to swell
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unspeakably in that way it did before a storm. Neither of the combatants
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took notice, for after four bouts they'd now taken each other's measure
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and were now going for blood. I waited patiently, and only struck when I
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found my opportunity: the Revenant's bronze blade had been cut through
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by the Saint's longsword, and when it burst in a flash of flame that
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blinded Laurence she drew back. The elf's hand extended and the air
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began shuddering as rust-like flecks were attracted to its open palm and
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began to form a fresh blade.
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``No,'' I replied.
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And the flecks went grey, the shivering air went still and the
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Revenant's eyes snapped straight to me from across the field.
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\emph{That's right}, I thought. \emph{Look at me. I just swung decay and
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entropy at you look a bludgeon,} \emph{look at how irritating I am.} The
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burst of flame hadn't even finished dying when tip of the Saint's blade
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went straight through, going half an inch into the Spellblade's throat
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before he could react. Laurence's footing shifted, she began to pivot on
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herself, and even as the elf took a fluid step back she finished tearing
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her sword out through the right side of his throat. Too shallow to have
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caught the spine, I saw with disappointment. Eyes flashing with fury,
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the Revenant's left hand shot out and with an open palm he struck at the
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Saint's arm -- there was a thundering sound of iron being bent and she
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flew back a dozen feet from the strength of it, the angle of her upper
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arm making it clear the bones must have been broken badly enough it tore
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up through skin and muscle. The Revenant's other arm rose horizontally
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and moonlight clustered around his fist.
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``Still no,'' I replied.
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The Night clustered around his fist smothered the gathering glow before
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it grow strong enough to contest that ending. Visibly irritated, the
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Revenant shook its fingers free of the power and took a step forward
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that brought it in front of the Saint -- just as her arm snapped back in
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place, wisps of Light swirling around it as the Pilgrim's work bore
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fruit. The heroine was ready when the blow came, nudging aside the elf's
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forearm with the pommel of her sword and then angling her wrist. Her
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foot circled back, her body twisted, and the Saint of Swords swung her
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blade halfway through the neck she'd already cut before a familiar
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shiver of power began. I knew that feeling. Last time I'd felt it my
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entire face and the forward half of my body had ended up vaporized
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because I'd been too close, and whatever this was the Revenant had been
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able to use it again on the massive pile of blocks Hierophant had tried
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to bury it under. \emph{Come on}, I thought, and gathered the Night to
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pit it against the shiver. There was maybe a tenth of a heartbeat where
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the forces were even, and then to my horror the Revenant's working
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plowed right through. All the Night I'd sunk into the area went into
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smoke, fully and instantly and harshly enough it felt like someone had
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ripped off a chunk of my skin.
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``\textbf{Shine},'' the Grey Pilgrim hoarsely said.
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I forced Night into my eyes even though the sensation was unpleasant and
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it felt like they were boiling, as I was wary of being blinded even for
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a moment and the radiant shine of the star the Peregrine had just
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unleashed would have robbed me of sight without it. It almost did
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anyway, for even though Tariq had unleashed only the palest shadow of
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the morning star he'd hung in the sky in Creation even that shred was
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terrible to behold. A ghostlike shimmering globe had appeared between
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the Saint and the Spellblade, for an instant, and some sort of massive
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pressure had swatted the Revenant trough the paved ground. I still
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caught a glimpse of the heroine's face and saw that all the way to the
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bridge of her nose the flesh of her face looked like a blanket of acid
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had been laid over it. It was the same with the entire flank of her body
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that'd been facing the Revenant most fully, though strangely her clothes
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were untouched. In the moment where the Night had fought the shiver I'd
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learned one thing for certain, that it was in fact an aspect, and taste
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of the nature of that power. Looking at the Saint's tabard and tunic I
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frowned: they were, I thought, looking too pristine. And with the harsh
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taste of the power I'd fought still resounding, I suspected I'd put my
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finger on the face of that aspect: it related, one way or another, to
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`purification'.
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Gods, elves were such assholes. It looked like Ranger had come by it
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honestly.
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Body unmarred by any of the wounds that'd been inflicted on it, the
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Spellblade leapt out of the wreckage it'd been smacked into, a
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half-formed blade of light green scales in hand. My working had been
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scattered, so there'd be no shutting that shutting the door on that
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quick enough. Time to go on the offensive, then, I grimly thought. A
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panting Tariq strung healing Light around the Saint once more, and as he
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did I snatched up my staff. Or would have, were it still there. For a
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surreal moment I looked to see if I'd simply missed it while reaching
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but no, the alarm welling up in my stomach was quite warranted and it
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was nowhere to be seen. \emph{Shit}. With the amount of power I'd sunk
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into that, over the months, this was not the kind of artefact I would
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want in anybody else's hands even if it wasn't also my contingency for
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the Saint. I tapped a foot on the ground, sending out a pulse of Night.
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If it was close I should get something out of that.
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``Pilgrim, there's another-''
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I had gotten something out of the Night pulse, though by the time I did
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it was pointless because my eyes had done the work already. I'd glanced
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at Tariq, when beginning to speak, and so caught sight of the Revenant
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standing behind him. It was hard to even tell she was dead, truth be
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told, for her tanned leathery skin and the single blond tress going down
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her back were strikingly lifelike. This one too was an old friend: the
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Thief of Stars looked no worse for the few hours she'd spent as one of
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my own Thief's possessions. Though, if the harsh look she flicked at me
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was any indication, she hadn't forgotten that bad turn either. More
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interesting was the way she was holding my staff, pointing it directly
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at the Grey Pilgrim's back. Strange, since in her hands it might as well
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be a walking stick: she wouldn't be able to do anything with it. Well,
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unless she had -- and there it was, the shiver of an aspect being used.
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Something to facilitate using what she'd stolen maybe? It didn't matter.
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I raised my hand as the Thief of Star roused the Night in my
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staff-that-was-not-a-staff, baring my teeth savagely.
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``Mistake,'' I said in Crepuscular, and snapped my fingers.
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Night lashed out viciously and the sound of talons rending flesh rang
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across the plaza. The Thief of Stars' upper half splattered the ground,
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entrails trailing like grim garlands, but there was no hiding that a
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gaping chest wound had split her in two. As if some great bird's talons
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had snapped out of the sea of Night awaiting within the staff, where
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they had been waiting. They must have thought I was a fucking idiot,
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making something that dangerous without putting in contingencies -- like
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the attention of the angrier half of the goddesses that artefact was
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linked to. She might have managed to flee with it, though certainly not
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remain hidden. Using it, though? That was opening a door for Komena to
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express her displeasure. It'd had absolutely nothing to do with my
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fingers being snapped, but given such a beautiful opportunity to pretend
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otherwise why would I \emph{not}? Posturing aside, I sent out a
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simmering coil of Night to catch the staff before it fell and dragged it
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back to me. I'd just slapped into my palm when I slammed onto the
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ground, biting down on a scream as my bad leg gave and rolling
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fruitlessly to the side. A vivid green sword seemingly made of scales
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was swung down at my head, though with a grunt the Saint carved through
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the damned thing. Foul-smelling droplets flew everywhere and I wove a
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spinning top of Night above me that proved to be the right reflex:
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wherever the liquid fell, it smoked and ate at whatever it'd touched.
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``\emph{Move}, Foundling,'' the Saint of Swords snarled, slapping aside
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a blow with the side of her sword.
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I almost did, but then I paused. This slugging match with an effectively
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indestructible and inexhaustible demigod wasn't going anywhere, and it
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was a losing fight for us. Sure we were pulling slightly ahead right now
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but both the heroes would tire eventually and the Peregrine had already
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dropped an aspect once. Engaging the Revenant like we were storming a
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bloody wall was just going to get us killed. What did I know about my
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allies? Tariq I had a read on, could play off of, but the Saint\ldots{}
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\textbf{Sever}, I realized. She had that brutal little aspect still. If
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she was given an opening, she could use I to remove the source of our
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troubles. I just needed to\ldots{} Halfway into rising to my feet, I
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theatrically groaned and flopped back to the ground. The Spellblade saw
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that as the opening it was and struck again, so it'd just made a
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tactical mistake. I was prone and crippled, the Saint was having an
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increasingly harder time fending off its blows and I pointedly did not
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get up. I stayed there on the ground, hilariously unarmored and
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basically just asking to get killed. The Saint, though it must be said
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she did so with considerable ill-grace, heroically defended her fallen
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ally in a doomed venture. I suspected she was going to cut her losses
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soon, but that was fine. I'd gotten what we needed.
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``What are you-'' Laurence started, but she was interrupted by the Grey
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Pilgrim nailing our opponent.
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It was easy to forget that, for all his power, Tariq was not meant to be
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the tip of the spear in a band or even the healer. He was, by Role, a
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helping hand. He was at his strongest and ablest when serving as that
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hand, as demonstrated by the fact he'd been able to once more use an
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aspect that he should have thoroughly exhausted earlier to save the
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Saint's life earlier. Now, the radiant beams of Light bit into the side
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of the Revenant harshly and as the better part of his left shoulder and
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kneecap were incinerated, it called on its favourite trick. The air
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shivered as it drew on its aspect, and the Saint of Swords' own blade
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fell on the floor with a clang. Breathing out sharply, the old woman
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swung nothing at all and the Spellblade \emph{screamed}. That aspect had
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cut Winter, elf or not he wasn't getting through that with a shrug. And,
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while we were at it, I killed the pain in my bad leg with a sliver of
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Night and pushed myself up with my staff. The Revenant was staggering
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back in apparent pain -- and disbelief at the fact that it could
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\emph{feel} pain, I suspected -- while the Saint looked like she was
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about to keel over. She'd be out of it for at least a bit, so best to
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tip the scales a little further. The Spellblade's eyes fell on me just
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as I leaned forward and rammed my hand through his chest.
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``What,'' he croaked. ``What are you-''
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``\emph{Restocking},'' I replied with a feral grin.
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I'd had a knack for taking from my foes even \emph{before} I'd become
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the herald of goddesses who'd made theft of might the central tenet of
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their culture. Now? I'd had tutors in the art, patrons who'd touched the
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godhead and a Wastelander of the old blood. My fingers, coated in Night,
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dug through its soul and skimmed over the raw ruin the Saint had made of
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the first bundle. Another two were there for the taking, one still
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faintly vital and the other necrotized for centuries if not millennia. I
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could only get a vague idea of what it was I was taking until I'd taken
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it, but there was no room for hesitation. The aspect still in use felt
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like some sort of wheel, or maybe a kaleidoscope. The dead one felt
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like\ldots{} nothing. Absence, maybe. Denial or gamble? \emph{Double
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down,} I decided. A little too late to start playing it safe. Letting
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out a hissing breath, I withdrew my fingers from the Spellblade's chest
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and found they were holding a slim branding iron. \textbf{Ban}, I knew
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sure as my own breath, and cackled. I called on the Night, and began
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pushing it into the iron.
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``Hold him,'' I yelled.
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The Pilgrim wove shackles of Light around the Revenant's limbs but we
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were the winning side, now -- it tore through them effortlessly. But
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where Role and story failed, Laurence de Montfort instead scathingly
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said something in Tolesian and carved straight through the elf's right
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knee with the longsword he'd already picked up. But already it'd formed
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a blade out of some eerie pulsing red haze, and instead of attacking one
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of us he stabbed himself -- only the blade broke, and fresh flesh began
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to sprout where the Saint had cut him before the severed limb even began
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to fall. But I'd been sinking Night into the brand this whole time, and
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though the symbol it depicted hurt my eyes to try to discern I could
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still see smoke was wafting from it. It should suffice. Even as the
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Revenant dipped forward from the sudden loss of limb, I shoved the
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branding iron against its chest. The moment it touched the satin shirt
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it went straight through, and though I saw the Revenant's skin blacken
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around where the brand touched the flesh it did not react. It would not
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feel pain from this, I thought. Or, indeed, anything else. The red pulse
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shattered, the flesh ceased growing and the elf flinched back once more.
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I supposed it was rather in shock at the way I'd used his dead aspect to
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kill the other one. I stepped back and smiled.
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``All yours,'' I told the Saint.
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She was a fearsome one, but he was still an elf and an old one.
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It took her seven blows, before his head rolled on the ground and the
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Dead King lost his second Revenant of the night.
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