376 lines
19 KiB
TeX
376 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-39-looting}{%
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\section{Chapter 39: Looting}\label{chapter-39-looting}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Thirty-four: it is not graverobbing if it was your destiny to
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have that artefact, just proactive inheritance.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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The Spellblade had taken an awful lot of killing, but he was finished.
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With the Thief of Stars having tried her hand at stealing something a
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goddess had her hand on and gotten about what one would expect for the
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trouble, that left the three of us masters of the field.
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And so I was worried.
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I had a finer nose for trouble than most, given the amount of times I'd
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come a hair's breadth away from death, but it wasn't a physical threat
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that had me growing unsettled. I knew for a fact that the Dead King had
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more than few Revenants to throw into the breach, so why was it two I'd
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encountered before that were guarding Hierophant? And that wasn't even
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getting into the way that I'd bet rubies to piglets we were going to run
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into the damned Skein skulking somewhere around here before this was
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over. No, setting that aside for now why was the King of Death putting
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up dead Named I had some knowledge of instead of any other from his
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millennial treasure trove of undead heroes? The Spellblade hadn't been
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an easy mark, by any means, and it's cost us heavy use of exhausting
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aspects from two aging heroes to put him down, but I didn't buy that
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Neshamah didn't have some Revenant around that wasn't about as much as a
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heavy hitter and completely unknown to me. \emph{Are you tying off loose
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ends, Dead King?} Sacrificing servants I was familiar with so that
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knowledge couldn't be used against him down the line? It seemed
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wasteful, given the calibre of Revenants used. The elf could probably
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have torn through a Lycaonese border fortress by himself, and if the
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Thief of Stars was even half as handy as Vivienne had been when wielding
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a cousin Name she could easily have wreaked havoc on supply lines.
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It was true that the Dead King's method was, in essence, never to leave
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an opening that could be exploited no matter what it cost to play it
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safe. On the other hand, it didn't feel like a coincidence that I could
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feasibly make use of both the Revenants we'd encountered today. The
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Thief of Stars had, back in Keter, wielded an aspect that lit up a
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constellation above her head that was known in Callow as the King's
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Crown. It'd been suppressed by my domain, as Winter could snuff out
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anything given long enough, but if I went digging in our little friend's
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split halves I might be able to seize whatever that'd been. The
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Spellblade, if Tariq was right, had once been a prince of the Golden
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Bloom and presumably heir to its throne. Of seven crowns and one, it was
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perhaps viable to seize the last from either the broken Revenants at our
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feet. If the Dead King was in Masego's head -- and he had to be, to an
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extent, to have been able to pass on so many of my secrets to the Tyrant
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-- then he would know of my recipe to make Larat into something greater.
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Could I assume that, since he'd since had opportunity to speak with
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Kairos, he knew of everything I'd revealed so far? \emph{Yes, it'll be
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safer to}, I decided. So he knew I needed one last crown, presumably,
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and\ldots{} No, that was the wrong way to think about this. Both the
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Revenants couldn't feasibly recent additions to this mess, they must
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have been here for some time.
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So why would the Dead King send a pair of possible crowns into the mess,
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of all his possible guards to post around Hierophant?
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``Black Queen,'' the Peregrine interrupted me. ``We should not linger.''
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``It's a trap,'' I pensively said.
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``What is?'' the Saint flatly asked.
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``I don't know yet,'' I muttered. ``But he laid a trap for us.''
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The last crown, the `one' of the `seven and one', it was the most
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important of the eight. As the Rogue Sorcerer had said: \emph{seven for
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weight but the last to shape.} Was this the nature of the snare the Dead
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King had laid? That if we took a shortcut, attempted to bring a crown
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from outside our little circle rather than surrender one of our own,
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we'd be giving him a foothold into this place? The Revenants, after all,
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were of his make now regardless of what they had been while living. It
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was tenuous thread, to be sure, but given that my opponent was perhaps
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the finest sorcerer to ever grace Calernia and had more than ten
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centuries of experience on me in Namelore even that fine thread might be
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enough. Given the largely unprecedented nature of what I sought to
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accomplish tonight, there was still much that I did not and perhaps
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could not know about it. \emph{Or is that your trick within the trick,
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Neshamah}? I suddenly thought \emph{While I go in circles pondering of
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stories and deep schemes, you use it as shell to strike a more precise
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blow.} Was he offering me a pair of crowns so I would sour on the use of
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them out of fear, and so force a loss? The right to rule of one of three
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would be gone, if so: Tyrant, Pilgrim or Queen. Any of them would result
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in an opponent of the Dead King losing a measure of earthly influence.
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``We cannot withdraw,'' the Grey Pilgrim bluntly said. ``It would mean
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the death of three great hosts, and possibly of Iserre itself.''
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``Getting afraid, Foundling?'' Laurence nastily grinned.
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Her, I ignored. We were no longer fighting, which meant she'd gone from
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massively useful to at least something of a pest and possibly a
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liability. The Peregrine I needed to keep his eyes on the prize, though,
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so to him I replied.
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``I'm not suggesting withdrawal,'' I said. ``But the Hidden Horror has a
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game afoot, let's all take a moment to acknowledge that. There's too
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many coincidences beginning to pile up.''
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Tariq was no youngblood, but that had advantages as well as the
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opposite. His eyes sharpened.
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``The Revenant you fought before,'' he said, and it was not a question.
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``Revenants,'' I corrected, flicking a glance at the other mangled
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corpse.
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The old man's face went stiff. Though not, I understood when he began
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speaking again, for the reasons I'd expected.
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``He must hold you in high esteem,'' the Grey Pilgrim blandly said,
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``for having assumed from inception that it would be your arrangements
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that would win out and lead us here.''
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Yeah, now was not even remotely the time for that. The oddly cordial
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relationship I had with the foremost monster in Calernian history was
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not a matter I intended on discussing here -- with Tariq, ever -- so I
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put down my foot as firmly as I could on this before it could lead
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anywhere.
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``Or, more likely, he planned for every eventuality and we're simply
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seeing the contingencies related to my intentions,'' I said. ``You'll
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remember that the Tyrant has been feeding him everyone's secrets for
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months now -- the Dead King's not the kind of creature to have only one
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string to his bow.''
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``And how are we to be sure, Damned, that you're not one of those
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strings?'' the Saint said.
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``You sure you didn't speak with him?'' I mused, forcing my lips to
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stretch into a friendly smile. ``Because starting a fight within the
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band seems like exactly the kind of thing a villain would manipulate
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someone like you into.''
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The old woman's face blanked, the tightening of her features pressing
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the creases together in a way that made them look like some surreal mask
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of flesh for a moment. The loathing she glared at me with was bright and
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burning. I cared little for it, though, since the reminder that by
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turning on me she might just be advancing the Dead King's schemes was
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enough to have her fingers leaving the pommel of her now-sheathed sword.
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A little heavy-handed, as far as handlings went, but I suspected
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anything too subtle would be lost on the likes of Laurence de Montfort.
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``What is it that you suggest, then?'' the Pilgrim calmly asked.
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``I'm going to be taking those,'' I said, flicking a hand at the two
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broke Revenants. ``In case they might be of use. But the identity of the
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third Revenant we encounter will tell us how we need to approach the end
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of our journey.''
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``You have met others, then,'' Tariq said.
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I had. Two more, to be exact. The nightmare that was a Horned Lord with
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oracular insights, the creature known as the Skein. And one I had not
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fought at all, and would rather not: a man who'd once been the Good King
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of Callow, Edward Fairfax the Seventh. If it was the former that was
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waiting on our path to the Ducal Palace, then Neshamah's game remained
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opaque to me. If it was the latter, though? It'd make three crowns that
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had been set in my way, increasingly obvious ones. It was an almost
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insultingly blatant bait, which while shedding no light on what decision
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should be taken at least would make it clear what the crux of the snare
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was. Assuming, of course, that this was not all governed by whim and the
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third Revenant wouldn't either be one I'd never before encountered. Or
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that there would be no third at all.
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``It should be either a rat or a king,'' I said. ``The rat means we're
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in trouble. The king means dice might need to be rolled.''
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``A rat,'' the Saint slowly said. ``Do you mean\ldots{}''
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``Yes,'' I interrupted. ``Like that one you fought.''
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``You've fought one of their kind before?'' the old woman said, eyes
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considering.
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``I survived it, with the help of others,'' I retorted. ``Still on the
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fence as to if whether where we are right now will make it more or less
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dangerous.''
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There was no Threefold Reflection to spin us around with here, but the
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Skein wouldn't be confined to a single room either. It'd had a lot more
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room to manoeuvre, and freedom in choosing when and where to strike.
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Given that oracles were agonizingly difficult to deal with even when
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they weren't also massive more or less indestructible murder rats, it
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was not promising grounds either way. I was rather hoping for King
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Edward even if that path involved the dice having another go. Shit, if
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it was the Skein then had we been anticipated every step of the way? No,
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I decided. I knew for a fact that Choirs could affect those sorts of
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things, and the Pilgrim was sworn to one. Sve Noc would obscure me to
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most things unless they wished it otherwise, including possibly the
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Skein's weakened remnants of a Name, and there was also the very madman
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that Kairos had been using as a shield this entire campaign: the
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Hierarch. No, it shouldn't be possible for the Skein to have followed
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the entire thread flawlessly given that much interference. It should
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still have been able to glimpse possibilities, though, which would be
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dangerous enough on its own.
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``The rat has something in common with Cordelia's cousin,'' I delicately
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said, glancing at Tariq.
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The old man's lips tightened, and he offered me a nod.
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``I suspect the both of us will hinder that,'' he said. ``Though not
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half as much as Laurence does simply by being who she is.''
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I raised a skeptical eyebrow.
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``What does she do?'' I said. ``Cut the future?''
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\emph{Gods}, I immediately thought, \emph{please don't let her cut the
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future}. She was already ridiculously difficult to handle.
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``Winter was predictable,'' the Peregrine said, ``but never, I believe,
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predicted.''
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My brow rose further up, and I glanced at the Saint -- who seemed
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displeased we were trading information to her. I couldn't honestly blame
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her for that, since a handful of secrets was often the difference
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between Named beating all odds or being buried. The Peregrine seemed to
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be implying that since Laurence had made herself into a domain, more or
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less, then trying to predict her was the equivalent of having tried to
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predict my own domain back in the day. So, the Saint would muddle
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predictions simply by being involved in them. Useful, that, and it went
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some way in explaining why no one had been able to spring an ambush on
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her over the years. The Heavens really had shaped a fine executioner,
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hadn't they? No one would see the Saint of Swords coming until she was
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there and by then it would be much, much too late.
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``Understood,'' I said. ``If the two of you would keep an eye out, I'll
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clean up these loose ends.''
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I dipped my head at the Revenant remains. The Pilgrim's face flickered
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with hesitation until he spoke up.
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``Your Majesty,'' he cautiously said, ``you do not intend to eat them,
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do you?''
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I choked.
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``Do I --``
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\emph{What}?
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``No, I'm not going to eat the fucking corpses,'' I hissed. ``Why would
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you even ask that?''
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``Drow are known to take from the dead in some manner,'' the old man
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said. ``And you are closely allied with orcs and goblins, whose habits
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are well-documented.''
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``Corpse-eating isn't how the Firstborn do it,'' I grunted. ``And for
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the Clans it's actually a pretty complicated issue that's been shaped by
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generations of -- you know what, now's not the time.''
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``The goblins?'' Laurence de Montfort asked.
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She seemed honestly curious, though that didn't mean she wasn't also
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being kind of a prick.
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``Goblins will eat \emph{anything}, Saint,'' I tiredly said. ``It's not
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like corpses are miraculously excluded from that just because it's
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distasteful to think about.''
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`Distasteful' was never a word you wanted to speak when discussing that
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particular subject, as it happened, if Robber was around. He would be
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very swift to inform anyone fool enough to do so that human corpses were
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actually very savory even without being cooked first. And that in Ater
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you could get that sort of meat rather on the cheap if you knew where to
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look, from grave-peddlers whose corpses had not been bought by
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necromancer and were starting to ripen. There was a reason that Black
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had told me never to buy grilled meat off a stall in the streets of Ater
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if you hadn't seen the animal it came from killed and cooked, and it
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wasn't just because it was a possible avenue for assassination.
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Unwilling to participate in that wreck of a conversation any longer, I
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hobbled my way to the nearest corpse -- the Spellblade's -- and knelt.
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Its flesh felt strange to my touch, not like a human's at all. Rougher,
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almost like bark, though I had no notion of whether that was a
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consequence of elvishness or of being made a Revenant. Regardless, even
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a glancing touch was enough to tell me there was nothing salvageable in
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there: none of the three aspects there'd been were in a state to be
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taken. The one Saint had severed was a ruin, and when I'd used Ban on
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the undead's own third it had shattered the former and faded the latter
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beyond use. Fair enough, I thought. Given that I'd already taken from
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him once, I wouldn't have been able to anyway.
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The head and leg that'd been cut off I put back in place, though mending
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those wounds was beyond me save in the most gruesome of ways. I wove
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Night in a pall over the elf's still form, and as the veil of darkness
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thinned and dispersed so the sight of the body disappeared was revealed.
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I leaned on my staff to rise, feeling the Pilgrim's patient gaze and the
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Saint's belligerent one. The heroine idly strolled up to me as I headed
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towards the remains of the Thief of Stars.
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``Melted it, did you?'' she said. ``Useful knack.''
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It was difficult for her to seem as casual as she clearly thought she
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was being when she was clearly itching to get at me. I almost looked t
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Tariq -- was this some misguided attempt to insert a little cordiality
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into this relationship? \emph{Go on, Laurence, go up to the Black Queen
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and say something nice about her wicked and blasphemous powers.}
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``I'm keeping them in the Night,'' I said. ``Matters of burial can be
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addressed when this is all over.''
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``So it's a pocket trick, like a sorcerer,'' the Saint unpleasantly
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smiled. ``Like I thought. So why, Foundling, did you make the Rogue
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Sorcerer carry your crowns?''
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\emph{Because I needed bait for Kairos, juicy enough to ensure it was
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the Sorcerer he struck at}, I thought. \emph{Because the only way I'm
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getting my father's soul back from you people without a fight is if I do
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not, in fact, get it back from you people.} So I let out a little noise
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of surprise, and smiled all regretful and dim at the Saint of Swords.
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Eyes a little wide, like I was a touch slow but all harmless.
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``Oh Hells,'' I ruefully said. ``It completely slipped my mind.''
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``You're up to something, Foundling,'' Laurence de Montfort quietly
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said. ``And I won't let you get away with it.''
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``Right now,'' I said, coming by the mangled halves of the second
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Revenant, ``what I'm up to is having my time wasted. Walk it off,
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Saint.''
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I flicked a dismissive hand at her, which from the way she went red in
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the cheeks was more insult than anyone had tossed her way in a long
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time. Gods, if they'd had Black around her for weeks or months they must
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have kept him gagged the whole time: given the ease of her temper and
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how viciously he could spin a sentence, if they hadn't the body I'd
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claimed would have fewer limbs. Another painful crouch and ah, it seemed
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that the feel of the other one's skin had been on account of elvishness
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after all. The Thief of Stars's flesh was like a fresh corpse's, which
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was rather uncomfortable to think about so I did not linger over it. Her
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I could still take from, I found. One of the aspects tasted like\ldots{}
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flight, cold and in the dark. The starlit one? Hard to tell, my senses
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in this were hardly exact. The second I studied tasted familiar, and I
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immediately judged it to be what she'd called on in her attempt to use
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my staff. It felt like the last piece of a jigsaw puzzle clicking
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together, though there was something else. Rarity? Some sort of limit, I
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thought, though given the way I made of aspects artefacts with a single
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use that didn't particularly matter to me. Still, if it was like I
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suspected and this was a trick that allowed one to use most anything
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then it didn't particularly appeal to me. Boots scuffed the ground at my
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side, but I bit my tongue at the last moment when I caught a glimpse of
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them and saw it was not the Saint who'd returned but the Pilgrim.
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``She wasn't always like that,'' the old man quietly said.
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Oh, were we going to have that talk now, under cover my seeing to the
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body of a fallen foe? I wasn't interested in being sympathetic to the
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Saint of Swords, so he was barking up the wrong tree. What Laurence de
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Montfort might once have been weighed less on the scales than what she
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now was, and that was trouble. The third aspect, I found, had been
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ripped out. And the\ldots{} fabric around it had been almost burned, for
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lack of better term, perhaps to ensure that not even a speck of what had
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been there before remained. Interesting, I thought. Neshamah's work?
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That implied a much greater degree of control over how Revenants became
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what they were than I'd assumed he had. And, more intriguingly, that
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whatever that aspect of the Thief's had been he'd judged it trouble
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enough he'd cut it out before making her into one of his undead. That
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aside, my remaining choice was being the aspect that tasted of running
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away and the one that felt like well-placed hands. \emph{You can never
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have too many ways to leg it}, I decided, and took the first. I leaned
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forward, allowing my cloak to drape over me and hide the sight of the
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small carved wishbone the aspect had taken the shape of from the Pilgrim
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even as I palmed it. My other hand moved to distract him, pulling down a
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veil of Night over the broken body.
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``If you insist on having this conversation,'' I said, ``let's have it
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on the move. I'm done here.''
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