435 lines
20 KiB
TeX
435 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-61-reformation}{%
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\section{Chapter 61: Reformation}\label{chapter-61-reformation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Zarei, of short stride}
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\emph{saw the long's pride}
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\emph{and carved, laughing}
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\emph{found them wanting:}
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\emph{chased into shadow}
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\emph{by one mighty blow.''}
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-- Extract from the `Zarei Veste', a Firstborn traditional epic
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\end{quote}
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Night had become my time, refreshing to my tired bones like a cool drink
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on a parching day. I enjoyed the quiet of it, the veil of stillness laid
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down by the dark under the stirrings of creatures nocturnal. Without so
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much spinning my thought came clearer, less cluttered, and these days
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what already lay within my own mind was quite enough clutter already. It
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felt, at times, like I was attempting to juggle half the continent -- it
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felt that way because it was, essentially, what I was trying to do. Yet
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while there might have been quiet awaiting us at the heart of the drow's
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tent-city, there was hardly any stillness to be found: with dusk passing
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the curse of the pale light had passed, and the Firstborn tread under
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the moon's unblinking eye like shifting shadows. After my Lord of Silent
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Steps' report I'd expected for there to be a tautness to the air, but
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that had perhaps been naïve of me. Drow didn't complain or riot or
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indicate their displeasure, because every last one of them was born to
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the knowledge that all it took was irritating someone stronger than them
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once to end up killed. The only drow who were vocal about much of
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anything were the Mighty and even among those only sigil-holders could
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really be said to be outspoken, that cabal of the few who'd spent years
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slaying all comers until they rose to the summit of the pyramid of
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strife. No, instead of a boiling cauldron about to tip over the
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tent-city of the Firstborn looked like half a festival.
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A drow one, anyway.
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Grey-skinned dzulu wearing the colours and signs of their sigils, either
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painted on skin or woven into cloth, had come out under moonlight to
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play. I was used to a soldier's vices of choice being drinking and
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gambling, but those were the favourites of the Legions. Here it was
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instead the old amusements of the Everdark that reigned, and they were
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less bloody in nature than I'd expected. Standing before a tall heap of
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piled stones drow would set on their brow a thin leathery chord set with
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a single small stone and claim in cadenced Crepuscular that their tongue
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was made of flame. Another drow would then step up to them, and call
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them an eight-year-snake, after which they would each sing a couplet
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with the challenger going second. It seemed to me that, more often than
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not, they were citing old and well-known texts with only just enough
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adjusted to brutally mock their opponent or boast of their own obvious
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superiority in all things. Hakram sent me a look that was disturbingly
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pleasing, coming from an orc that hefty, and I allowed our steps to slow
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so we'd catch some of it. One dzulu from the Sudone claimed that its
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opponent was --
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``\emph{Cunning as cattle, fearsome as a trout},
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\emph{Beloved of nerezim, quiet as a shout!''}
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-- which had the watching dzulu laughing in approval. The other singer,
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one of the Jindrich, went the other way instead. Boasting shamelessly,
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it announced it would --
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\emph{``Swallow pale light and make it night,}
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\emph{Harvest from death its very breath,}
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\emph{Weave with loom a second gloom!''}
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Which had a few of the Soln in the crowd and most the Jindrich ululating
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in approval, some even calling out a name: Zarei Stride-Carver. After
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both songs had been sung in full the dzulu cast small tokens --
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trinkets, pieces of cloth, even simple stones -- at the feet of one or
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the other, deciding whose song had been the finest. The Sudone dzulu
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won, that time, and triumphantly called out that for the fourth time its
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tongue was flame.
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``There are traditions much like this in the Lesser Steppes,'' Adjutant
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murmured as we both watched another drow step up and challenge the
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victor.
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The steppes beyond the Wasiliti, I knew that meant. Where the Clans had
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been able to hang on to more of their old ways, further from Miezan
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steel and the Tower's schemes.
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``Duels of singing?'' I asked.
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``And steel as well,'' Hakram said. ``Though there was a time,
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Catherine, when no great warrior would have wielded the axe without the
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verse.''
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I eyed him amusedly.
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``If you want to challenge one them, I could always translate into
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Crepuscular for you,'' I offered.
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He looked genuinely tempted but eventually shook his head, clicking his
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fangs in polite refusal.
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``Too much would be lost in translation,'' he said. ``And though I was
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taught old and cherished words, there are few I can claim as my own.''
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I thought of Nauk, in that moment, Nauk who'd written \emph{In Dread
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Crown} and whose song was still sung even after the warpriests of the
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Dominion had taken him from me. I caught the exact moment Hakram thought
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of him too, and we watched the Firstborn trade singing barbs in silence
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as we shared in the same grief. I half-smiled at the defending
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champion's verse -- it'd just claimed it would make a tomb for the
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Tomb-maker -- and we let it flow out of us, like a mouthful of wakeleaf
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smoke offered up to the wind.
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``The formula they speak, at the start,'' Hakram said.
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``My tongue is made of flame,'' I quoted, then my lips quirked. ``You
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are but an eight-year-snake.''
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He inclined his head.
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``What does it mean?''
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``I honestly don't know,'' I said. ``Rumena, care to share?''
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I felt the general's mild irritation through the Night at having once
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again failed to approach me unnoticed and savoured that for the very
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petty victory that it was. The general of the Southern Expedition strode
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to my side in silence, filling the empty space at my left.
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``It an old story, Losara Queen,'' Rumena said.
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``Oh,'' I said, sweetly similing. ``So you were there?''
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``I see,'' General Rumena gravely said. ``Now that you have servants to
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flatter you again, you have resumed your delusion of being amusing. I
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had thought your cured of this ailment, Queen of Lost and Found.''
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``Careful, buddy,'' I said, jutting a thumb at the singing drow. ``One
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of those just promised to put you in a tomb, are you sure you want to
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spend your last moments failing to get the best of me?''
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Rumena glanced at Hakram, pale silver-blue eyes lingering on the missing
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hand.
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``The orc has only one hand and still a defter touch with words,'' it
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told me.
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``He hasn't even said anything,'' I protested.
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I winced the moment I said it, feeling the sense of mocking satisfaction
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wafting off of it into the Night. The prick.
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``One of these days,'' I told it. ``One of these days, Rumena.''
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``It is true,'' the Tomb-maker conceded, ``you might truly have a
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chance, if I am asleep.''
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Ouch. Well, it was probably a good thing I wasn't going up there to sing
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with the old bastard anytime soon.
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``It is from a legend of the ancient days, before the Twilight Sages,''
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the old drow told Hakram. ``There was once a manner of snake that was
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said to be born with the favour of the Shrouded Gods, manifest as stone
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on its head. Should it live for nine years, and devour flesh every day,
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it would grow to become \emph{izmej}. That is, flame-tongued and
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immortal, swimming through stone with on its brow the shine of pale
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light.''
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\emph{Dragon}, I thought, but it was not like the dragons I knew of --
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which were, anyway, all but disappeared these days.
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``And so an eight-year-snake is one that could not become
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\emph{izmej},'' Hakram thoughtfully said. ``What happens, if a singer is
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the victor nine times?''
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``None who cast token in the contest may kill the nine-year-snake for a
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span nine nights,'' Rumena said. ``Immortality, Deadhand. For a time.''
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It murmured in Crepuscular, after that, citing the Tenets of Night.
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\emph{For glory fades and stone crumbles, no victor forever crowned.}
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The words were sobering, for they brought to mind the reason I'd come to
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the tent-city in the first place. Under the currents of celebration here
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there was a lit sharper that'd blow unless I put out the fuse quick
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enough.
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``The Zoitsa Sigil is still under control?'' I asked.
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``The children that were disciplined have recovered,'' Rumena said,
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``yet word of your impending arrival has stayed hands for now. The
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Lutesuk and the Vachikna will require adjudication as well, if your
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intent is to prevent killing between all Mighty.''
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``Between all Firstborn,'' I sharply corrected. ``Take me to them,
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then.''
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The general's pale eyes flicked to Hakram.
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``The Adjutant's presence will be commented upon,'' the old drow said.
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``Let them comment,'' I grunted. ``He can't understand Crepuscular
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anyway, I'm bringing him as an advisor.''
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``\emph{Ade Varul},'' Rumena said, eyes narrowing. ``Yes, this would be
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accepted.''
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It's sounded the same, to an extent, but the meaning had been different:
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truth-bearer, or truth-keeper maybe? It was from an older form of
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Crepuscular, the one drow tended to use for formal titles.
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``\emph{Mais encore?''} I said in Chantant, just to show it wasn't the
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only one who could speak all fancy.
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``When the Empire Ever Dark still stood, it was the title given to those
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who learned precedents of law and bore old scrolls of histories to
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provide these during adjudication,'' General Rumena said. ``A learned
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servant.''
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``In service of who?'' I asked.
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``The Twilight Sages,'' the Tomb-maker. ``Or those they appointed to
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pass judgement in their stead.''
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It was easy to forget, I thought, that there'd been a time where the
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Firstborn had known laws more elaborate than the rule of the hardest
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hand. I nodded my assent, though in truth even an oblique tie with the
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fools who'd nearly destroyed their entire race for fear of death had me
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uneasy. Very few would remain that had known those days, I reminded
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myself. And of those that did, only Rumena had come south instead of
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marching with the Sisters themselves. We moved as swiftly as my limp
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around, eyes lingering on the distractions that'd seized the camp. Small
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packs gathered around the small colourful tiles that were the
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centrepiece of a game of \emph{inic cin}, carefully placing down their
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own to make or break patterns according to the labyrinthine rules of
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their game -- hardly any two sigils allowed the same set of patterns,
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and drow from the outer rings would rather kiss a dwarf than begin the
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game with a \emph{lizard-fish prowling} pattern already on the floor
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instead of empty space, the way Firstborn from deeper in the Everdark
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insisted the game was meant to be played. There were more earthy
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entertainments as well, ones I was more familiar with: javelin-throwing
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and wrestling, as well as the madman's bargain that was the \emph{por
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neroc}, the axe-fortune. I'd yet so see anyone play that game without
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bleeding, and not for lack of trying.
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Firstborn were more prone to indulging in luxurious meals or elaborate
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concoctions than hard drinking, as a rule, since liquor was usually
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reserved for the very powerful or the very much powerless. For the
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former it was a statement of might -- that even drunk they could take
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all comers -- while for the latter it was a tacit admission that their
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lives could be reaped at any time and there was nothing they could do
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about it. That might change, in time, at least if the drow were guided
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towards ways that bled them less often and eagerly by their own hands.
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Still, I doubted they'd ever become great drinkers of the wines and
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liquors of Calernia, anymore than the nations of the surface were at
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risk of becoming enamoured of the drow's own drinks. I suspected that
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the Firstborn tasted things rather differently than we did, because some
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of the things they ate and drank\ldots{} Ugh. There was a reason that
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I'd sometimes used their mushroom-based liquor on Archer as a
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punishment. I set the ponderings aside as we found the heart of the
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tent-city, and the Firstborn that awaited us there. What must have been
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the entire Zoitsa Sigil -- which would keep that name even after Mighty
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Zoitsa's death until another Mighty claimed the sigil -- was patiently
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standing and awaiting us. An open space had been cleared on the snowy
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grounds, fitting the thousand or so drow in what I could only call a
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hierarchy laid bare. Four rylleh were seated at the front, then jawor
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behind them, then ispe behind those, leading to what must have been nine
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hundred and change dzulu. The Zoitsa were not a large sigil, though
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given that they had twelve jawor among their number I could see why they
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wouldn't be taken as easy meat either.
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``You stand in the presence of the Queen of Lost and Found, the First
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Under the Night,'' General Rumena called out. ``\emph{Kneel}.''
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They did. And they stayed kneeling, as I considered the approach I
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wanted to take. Ivah's report had mentioned Rumena savaging the two most
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prominent claimants, and through the Night I could easily tell who those
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would be -- they were significantly stronger than the other two, though
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not so much that the weaker pair allying against one would not see that
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particular rylleh killed. Unless they had a particular lethal Secret,
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anyway, but that struck me as unlikely. Drow that lucked into one of
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those tended to rise quickly through the ranks until they either died or
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became sigil-holders. I limped forward, leaning on my staff of yew as I
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cast a cursory glance around us. This was no Legion camp, there was no
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such thing as restricted sections of it: anyone brave enough linger
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where they could either hear or see could, unless someone chase them
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away. And there were plenty of curious Firstborn, though I noted they
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were largely ispe. The lowest of the Mighty. Sigil-holders, I grasped,
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were sending people to keep an eye on the judgement I was meant to
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render. Whatever decision was handed out tonight, it would not be long
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before the greatest Mighty of my host knew of it. That was trouble, for
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already I'd once denied them the prize that had been the Twilight Crown.
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If I further chipped away at their ways I might begin to encounter
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resistance, which given the hold sigil-holders had on their followers
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would be\ldots{} more than inconvenient.
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``You who would claim the Zoitsa Sigil, rise,'' I said. ``And come
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before me.''
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I'd fully expected all four rylleh to rise, but instead it was only
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three. One of the weaker pair, I thought, must have been convincing
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enough to earn the other's backing. The drow came to stand before my
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scrutinizing gaze, calm-faced and straight-backed.
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``Decree was given,'' I said. ``The Southern Expedition is as one great
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cabal, and until it has ended no Firstborn may slay another. Yet I am
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told you would have broken the edict, if not for General Rumena's
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reminder. Explain yourself.''
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The weakest of the three kneeled.
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``Losara Queen,'' it said, ``I am-''
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``Bereft of a name or my mercy, until you have given me an answer,'' I
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mildly said.
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It didn't flinch at my words, though its face blanked and I felt the
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malicious pleasure of the other two rylleh through the Night. It'd
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earned the rebuke, I thought, the moment it tried to smooth-talk me out
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of anything.
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``Night cannot be left to fade, O Great One,'' the rylleh said. ``Mighty
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Zoitsa must have successor, and when strife is had over who that Mighty
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should be there is only one manner of settling the claims known to us. I
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aim not to break the Night's decree, only to obey the Tenets of Night.''
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Meaning that none of the three were willing to back down and let one of
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the others harvest the Night from Zoitsa's corpse, which meant duels to
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the death were the traditional solution as established by Sve Noc.
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Lovely. The leftmost rylleh knelt.
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``Losara Queen, this one recognizes the truth of the great cabal binding
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us,'' it said. ``And so this one implores your holy judgement in
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deciding who is worthy of rising, in place of strife.''
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And there it was, my opening. All I needed to do was accept the
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invitation and this could all be settled in moments without blood being
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spilled. That this particular rylleh had been clear-eyed enough to
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realize both that I wouldn't allow blood being spilled and that easing
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my way to judgement would incline me well towards it made it a strong
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candidate for sigil-holder, I thought, though also someone to watch. And
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yet I stilled my tongue, because what I did here would echo. Through the
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ears and tongues of the ispe lingering at the edges of this clearing,
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yes, but also through the years to come. I was setting a
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\emph{precedent}, and it was not something I should do lightly. I turned
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my eyes to the third rylleh, the last one still standing.
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``And you?'' I said. ``What words would you speak?''
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It knelt, smoothly.
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``None, Losara Queen,'' it rasped. ``I do not presume to reach beyond my
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grasp.''
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Tasting its words through the Night, I decided it was speaking the truth
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-- or at least that it believed what it was saying. If I was to wade in
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an make an appointment through the awarding of Zoitsa's corpse, then
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this one was the safe bet. Not too ambitious, steady. Likely more set in
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the old ways than either of the other two, but with enough deference for
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Sve Noc and through them myself that it would broadly balance out. This
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one, I decided, was the choice if I wanted to avoid making waves among
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sigil-holders. If I appointed the second speaker, it'd be seen as my
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raising ambitious lickspittles. Those not willing to become my creatures
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would feel threatened and react accordingly. The first speaker, the one
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I'd chastened, was trickier to parse in implications. It was the weakest
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of the three, which would ruffle some feathers but perhaps also raise
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the hopes of Firstborns who'd hit the limit of what they could claim
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with their own strength that in my service they might rise further
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still. I wasn't one to particularly enjoy a smooth-talker, and this one
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reminded me a little of Praesi highborn, but vague dislike was not
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reason enough to exclude them as a candidate.
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``If you had the pick of three highborn for a lordship,'' I said in
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Kharsum, ``what measure would you use to weigh the right choice?''
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Adjutant was at my side, a towering presence of calm that passed on a
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portion of that serenity to me.
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``The three,'' he replied in his native tongue. ``Are they the only
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people I can pick?''
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``Without making a mess, yes,'' I said. ``And no matter which I choose,
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I'll have intervened in the succession of a noble line -- while using
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royal authority.''
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Religious, in truth, but it would not be too inaccurate to compare the
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kind of influence I now commanded among the drow to what a Good Queen
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might have commanded in the Old Kingdom.
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``Letting the succession pass without intervention isn't in the cards,''
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he half-asked, half-stated.
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``They'd go at each other like Wasteland nobles over it,'' I said.
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``Only without the subtlety. It'd be setting an even worse precedent, as
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far as I'm concerned.''
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If I exempted strife over the succession of sigil-holders from the ban
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on drow killing each other, then the gate would be cracked open. As far
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as I was concerned, any possible benefit to be obtained from a higher
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concentration of Night in some former rylleh's hands was far below what
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I got by keeping the drow who knew how to use their own tricks in
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possession of those tricks. And that was in a military view, anyway. The
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moral aspects of it were\ldots{} well, I couldn't keep raising my nose a
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ritualized murder for power being a central tenet of drow culture if I
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simply allowed it to keep going on when I could do otherwise.
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``If you are bound to rancor for any intervention at all,'' Adjutant
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pragmatically said, ``appoint the most apt candidate. At least you'll be
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getting the most out of what it cost you.''
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Sound advice. Following it, all that remained before passing down
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judgement was considering which of the three rylleh would be most
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valuable to my intentions. Gods, probably the first of the three. They'd
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-- no, that was the wrong way to think about it. The most apt candidate
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was the one that'd best serve the interest of the sigil it led, not
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necessarily my own. \emph{Ah}, I thought, \emph{but why appoint a lord
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at all?} I thought of a thin man in ragged robes, keeping records no one
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would read for a revolution that pulsed out of him like a titan's
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breath. \emph{How many of us are there, tyrant,} he'd asked, \emph{and
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how many of you?} I could not use old means save to reach old ends.
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``General Rumena,'' I said. ``Send for the Firstborn.''
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The old drow's head bowed by a fraction.
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``Which sigils?'' it asked.
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``All of them,'' I said. ``Every last one of you.''
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If I was to hand down judgement, it would not be to seek the least of
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three evils.
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I would try to do \emph{better}.
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