417 lines
20 KiB
TeX
417 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-65-convivial}{%
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\section{Chapter 65: Convivial}\label{chapter-65-convivial}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Note: while the assertion that one's friends `are an anchor'
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held up to examination, said individuals (either dead or alive) seem no
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more effective in that purpose than a stone anchor of the same weight.
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The popularity of the saying remains baffling.''}
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-- Extract from the journal of Dread Emperor Malignant II
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\end{quote}
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With seven expectant gazes remaining peeled on me, I was starting to
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feel a mite cornered. Just a mite, mind you. I'd gotten out of tighter
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corners than this through cunning use of diplomacy.
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``I was,'' I began, ``perhaps less than correct.''
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Without missing a beat the crowd began to boo me, and that vicious
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little wretch Robber even threw something at me over the fire. I didn't
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quite manage to catch it but it slid into a fold of my cloak and I
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picked it up there. I blinked, finding a rather fancy glass eye looking
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back at me. Where had he even -- no, I didn't want to know. It had to be
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someone of stature, though, part of it was painted but there was also
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coloured glass and that'd expensive as all\ldots{} No, if I asked then
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he won. I'd get Hakram to find out later. Still, I pocketed the eye
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without any qualms. He could make a tidy little sum from selling that,
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if he got around to it, so we'd just call this a\ldots{} pre-emptive
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fine. Hells, maybe I could get General Abigail to believe I'd had one of
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those on the whole time.
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``Do the apology, at least,'' Aisha called out, too well-bred to grin
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but with suspiciously twitching lips.
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I sighed.
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``Archer,'' I began, ignoring Indrani's enthusiastic affirmation of
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`that's me, you know', ``you peerless beauty whose approval I secretly
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crave, and that's why I'm so mean to you-''
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``That sounds about right,'' Hakram gravely agreed.
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The filthy traitor. I was surrounded by treachery of the worst tonight.
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``- I retract any implication that you are incapable of abstract
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mathematics,'' I valiantly soldiered on. ``There. Finished.''
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There was a heartbeat of silence. Masego, swaddled in a rather
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unnecessary amount of blankets, leaned towards Adjutant.
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``Is it on purpose that she did not apologize at any point in that
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sentence?'' Zeze asked.
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Godsdamnit, now even Masego was getting in on it. The little shit
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absolutely did know that I'd done it on purpose, I pulled this on him
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all the -- ah, and suddenly his sordid betrayal made a little more
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sense.
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``Ask to be made a countess,'' Juniper suggested to Indrani. ``Even odds
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she'd take that over actually saying the word `apologize'.''
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That was a lie. I wouldn't go any further up the ladder than baroness to
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get out of this. Honorary, mind you, not landed. I shuddered to think of
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what Archer might get up to with regular tax revenue.
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``I apologize all the time,'' I protested.
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I got a few skeptical looks in return.
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``Here's one for the road, then,'' I sneered. ``I'm sorry you're all so
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thin-skinned you need apologies in the first place.''
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Alas, the resuming of the loud booing was the herald of diplomacy's
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failure. Sometimes, I sadly reflected, the other side simply wasn't
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willing to take the very generous and reasonable terms you offered them.
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That was not on you, it was on them, I reminded myself. Robber once more
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tossed something at me, though this time I caught it -- it was, to my
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surprise, another \emph{glass} eye. Just as prettily made, although the
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heft was lighter and oh Night the iris was brown on this one instead of
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blue. And angled in the opposite direction, implying my Special Tribune
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might have murdered not one but \emph{two} foreign highborn officers
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just so he could use their glass eye as toy. For once the actual
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specifics of something he'd done had managed to surprise me, though the
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spirit of the affair I was painfully familiar with. I pocketed it too,
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because the little bastard would have hit me with it on the chin if I
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hadn't caught it. It was decided by a tribunal of the people that I
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would have last pick of a cut from the pig that was nearly done
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roasting, my threats to have them all tried for treason leaving the
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unruly mob indifferent. Truly, they had gone mad with power.
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Juniper insisted on making the cuts herself when shed judged the meat
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properly roasted, ignoring Indrani's protests that it should have
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another quarter hour of being turned with spices sprinkled on the
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searing fat. I sided with the Hellhound, half out of spite for Indrani
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knowing all about Stygian abstracts when she'd been raised in the
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\emph{middle of the damned woods} and half because I rather did miss the
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taste of a pig roasted in the College way: mostly unseasoned, and still
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juicy the way orcs preferred meat to be if it couldn't be bleeding
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outright. Adjutant squatted by the fire with plates while Robber was
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charged with bringing the communal plate of biryani. Aisha was, to my
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mild amusement, the first to receive a plate and by sheer coincidence
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got some of the choicest cuts. Masego requested belly meat and the
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Marshal of Callow allowed him a fat slice, which Robber claimed to be
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blatant favoritism, and as bickering exploded I reached for my pipe with
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a smothered smile. Indrani sidled up to me casually, leaning on my
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shoulder like a pest as I stuffed and lit a packet of wakeleaf.
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``We're missing some people,'' Archer said.
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Her tone wasn't quiet, not exactly, but it was pitched not to carry.
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``Vivienne will come when she's done with the Jacks,'' I said.
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``Whenever that happens to be.''
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``Not who I meant,'' she replied.
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I craned back my neck just to glance at her. Indrani looked down at me,
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eyes serious, though face to face like this I felt the urge to kiss her.
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I set aside the impulse.
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``Akua can't really be here if Vivienne is,'' I murmured. ``And if she's
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allowed to sit with us just until Vivienne arrives that's worse than not
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being invited, I'd wager.''
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Not the last because it made plain the tensions between my appointed
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successor and the monster I'd absurdly enough come to like -- and more
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importantly, rely on. I could expect Akua to take such a situation with
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a degree of elegance, if not necessarily enthusiasm under the mask, but
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I doubted Vivienne would be so agreeable.
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``I think they'd both surprise you,'' Indrani said. ``It's personal,
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between them, but our little thief also knows a thing or two about
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sitting around a fire with people you were trying to kill not so long
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ago. Still, once more not who I was speaking of.''
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Ah. Her. I lowered my head and breathed in through the shaft of my pipe,
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the acrid smoke filling my throat and my lungs. I let the taste and
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warmth of it stick with me, and only then breathed out a long stream. I
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should learn to do tricks, I decided. With the smoke.
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``I bet Hakram's been tiptoeing around it all careful-like,'' she
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drawled. ``Like he doesn't want to needle tender skin. But you're made
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of rougher stuff than that, aren't you?''
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Tiptoeing wasn't the right way to put it. A perch had been offered, on
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occasion, and my refusal to grasp it had seen the matter implicitly
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closed without it ever being outright put into words.
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``You'd know,'' I murmured, not wagging my eyebrows but conveying the
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sentiment by voice. ``Although it's been a while, so maybe you forgot.''
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``Godsdamn,'' Archer whistled, sounding impressed. ``You never get that
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racy where people might hear. You \emph{really} don't want to talk about
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it, do you?''
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``There's nothing to talk about,'' I stiffly said. ``She declined twice,
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I don't see the need to keep inviting her.''
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I wasn't a bloody widower in desperate need of a second wife, in so dire
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a bind I'd buy a white stallion and learn to recite Valencian poetry
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just to impress. Cordial disregard suited me just fine, and to be honest
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it was probably safer for her. Enemies wouldn't bother going after a
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love affair gone cold if trying to get to me, not when there were deeper
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and more obvious bindings in my life.
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``You won't even say her name,'' Indrani grunted, undertone amused.
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``Yeah, you're \emph{totally} over how that went down. How dare I
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suggest otherwise.''
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``Senior Mage Kilian can be fetched, if you require it so deeply,'' I
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replied in a clipped tone. ``If she declines, shall I have dragged in
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chains? She doesn't fucking want to be here, Indrani.''
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``It's a bad habit, that thing you do,'' Archer seriously said. ``When
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if it's not a blade at your throat, you let relationships stay ambiguous
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by doing nothing. Bet she might have changer her tune, if you'd let a
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few more months pass before asking again.''
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``It's been quite a bit longer than that,'' I coldly said. ``I won't
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open up a casket just so you can sate your curiosity, `Drani.''
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``Oh, that one's probably cracked beyond mending,'' she casually
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replied. ``But it doesn't have to be that way all around. Send for Akua.
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And make her stay, even when Vivienne joins.''
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My eyes narrowed.
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``You don't give a shit about Kilian, do you?'' I said. ``You just
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wanted me to feel raw enough I'd agree to this.''
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The ochre-skinned woman grinned, sharp and pale.
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``Sure,'' Indrani admitted. ``But that doesn't mean it isn't true.''
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We should have gotten her started on the liquor earlier, I darkly
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thought. Might have spared me all this. I turned to meet her gaze,
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unflinching, until our silence was interrupted by Hakram sliding a plate
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full of pork and biryani on my lap. He glanced at us, dark eyes missing
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nothing.
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``Juniper cracked open a bottle of aragh,'' Adjutant said. ``Or do you
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two need to take a walk?''
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``Nah,'' Indrani smiled. ``Aragh sounds good. We're done here.''
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She broke our stare first, strolling away nonchalantly, and Hakram
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cocked a hairless brow at me in her wake. Underestimating them both, was
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I? I doubted it, but beyond that assertion I saw a truth she'd not
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mentioned. If there was going to be strife, when would we next have so
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relatively safe a moment to handle it? Certainly not in Salia, or up
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north fighting the dead. \emph{Fuck}. I really hated it when Indrani
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pulled the whole incisive insight thing on me, but now that I knew I was
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taking a greater risk by not handling this now I couldn't really justify
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not doing it. Knowing Archer had manoeuvred me didn't make it any less
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effective.
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``Invite Akua up,'' I sighed.
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He cocked his head to the side.
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``Ought to make for an interesting evening,'' he simply said.
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Adjutant moved away, boots crinkling against the icing snow, to tread
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downslope until he'd cross the wards and send one of the legionaries to
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pass the message along. Ah well, it wasn't even guaranteed she'd come. I
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glanced down at my plate and frowned.
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``Tenderloin?'' I called out at Juniper. ``Really, the
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\emph{tenderloin}? I should have you hanged.''
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I saw Indrani pout and flip Robber a silver as Aisha hid a smile behind
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her hand.
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``Let me go halfsies with Aisha's cuts,'' I wheedled.
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Robber cursed in Taghrebi and flipped back the silver to Indrani, who
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took an overly showy bow. No one seemed particularly inclined to
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consider my suggestion, the bastards.
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``None of you are ever becoming a countess, mark my words,'' I bitterly
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said, and dug into my pork.
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Pickler passed me the bottle of aragh, though, so maybe at least one of
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them would make it to baroness.
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---
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My wakeleaf was half-finished by the time Akua glided her way through
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the raised stones of the Mavian prayer. She'd chosen a rather
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conservative appearance, by her standards: a high-waisted dress with a
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long ruffled skirt, in red and yellow touched by eldritch patterns of
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gold brocade. Given that it was long-sleeved and went up to the
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beginning of her neck, it was one of the tamer things I'd seen her wear.
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Still, it was well-fitted and on a woman who looked like Akua Sahelian
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did that was enough to draw a lingering second look. I puffed out a
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mouthful of smoke as she approached the fire, bowing slightly towards me
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as she came to warm hands that needed no warmth against the roaring
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fire. I nodded back, and both of us pretended not to notice every
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conversation had died the moment she arrived. I took a moment to study
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reactions -- Indrani was pleased, Hakram pleasant and Masego\ldots{}
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staring with fascination at her torso? Must have been an arcane pattern
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that interested him. Those I'd anticipated rather well, though, so it
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was the others that got me curious. Robber was grinning, one of those
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needle-filled offerings that meant amusement so sharp it might as well
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have been spite. Pickler was indifferent, though the way she'd shuffled
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on the bench implied surprise and maybe a little curiosity. Aisha had
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put on the highborn face, a mask of pleasantry so perfect if might as
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well have been made of marble. Her I wouldn't get much out of unless I
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asked. Juniper's face was disgruntled, and without any hint of the
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respect I'd expected an orc to bear for someone who'd faced more than
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half the armies of Praes and Callow on the field without flinching.
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Robber would test her, then, which I wasn't all that worried about.
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Juniper, though? Contempt might be more dangerous there than antipathy
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and I suspected that was the way she was leaning.
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``Spooky Saddie, sit your ass down,'' Archer called out. ``You're not
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fooling anyone with the warming hands thing, you're a damned ghost.''
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``How have you not run out of those by now?'' I said, reluctantly
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impressed. ``Also, shade. Shade is the word you were looking for.''
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``What can I say,'' Indrani mused, blitherly ignoring my correction,
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``I'm just a giver at heart.''
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``She has a list,'' Akua slyly said. ``She keeps it in her arrow-bag and
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her next one is Revenant Rags.''
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Archer spluttered out it was lie, Robber cackled loudly before swearing
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to steal it and just like that the spell of silence was broken.
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Conversations resumed. Wasteland highborn, huh. I suspected she'd be on
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decent terms with half the people here before the night was out. She had
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a knack for charming others, even those who should know better. I let
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the warm chatter wash over me as I leaned back into my seat and smoked
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my pipe, following the threads of two different conversations at the
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same time. Juniper and Pickler had dragged a highly amused Indrani into
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a debate about whether or not her bow, due to its ridiculous size and
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the way her arrows were closer to javelins, was still a bow or in fact
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an exotic siege weapon. Pickler's insistence that it was a derivative of
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a ballista by any reasonable set of principles ran into Juniper's flat
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reminder that `she draws the string, with her arm, because it's a bow',
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while Archer's insistence that while she was a trebuchet in the sack she
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was also handy with a string did absolutely nothing to help.
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Robber was spinning an elaborate yarn about smuggling an ass -- a
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donkey, not the other kind -- in a cadet-captain's room back his War
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College days for the benefit of a seemingly amused Akua, with the
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occasional dry correction by Hakram. Masego and Aisha, significantly
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more sober than most people around this fire, were discussing whether
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the old Alamans legends about the \emph{morions}, barrow and
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underground-dwelling creatures that had a rapacious hunger for gold,
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silver and jewels, were an extinct people or simply dwarf-sightings made
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legend by the passing of time. It seemed the subject was of particular
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interest to Aisha, because I was bestowed the rare sight of Hierophant
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knowing visibly less about a subject than his interlocutor. As the one
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of the few people here who'd actually seen and spoken with dwarves I
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contributed a few details, though mostly I enjoyed the sensation of
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closest thing to home I'd felt in a very long time. Still, I was not so
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much at ease I'd not kept an eye and ear on where the first knife would
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come from. And as expected, two yarns later Robber turned a sharp grin
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and sharper words on Akua.
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``Mind you, the fun didn't end when we left Ater,'' he drawled. ``There
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was this one time -- this was when you were still Governess in Laure,
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before we murdered your every ally and broke everything you ever strove
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for -- when the Boss sent me south to kill your buddies as they moved
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west. Would have kept it up for even longer, except I was torturing this
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guy named Mulin who claimed to be under your protection and-''
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Akua's brow rose.
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``Mulin,'' she said. ``Would you happen to mean Mulade Humin, by any
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chance?''
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``Friend of yours?'' Robber grinned.
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``No, but the Lady of Salizan sent a cart's worth of gold ingots with
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him,'' Akua mused. ``Never did get these. He was the heir to the
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holdings, so his mother was rather cross, but I did wonder what had
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happened to him.''
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``Borer slit his throat,'' the goblin said. ``And I'm not saying we ate
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him, but Hells we were low on rations and if it's Wasteland highborn
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anything goes, right?''
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He was, I thought, looking to shock her. To get a reaction out of her.
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But then Robber had known little of the Empire's high nobility, save
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when standing against them on a battlefield. As a student in the War
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College, he would have been considered under the protection of my father
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back in the day -- who was known to brutally murder any highborn
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meddling with the College, and quite publicly at that. He believedt he
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knew what Akua Sahelian would be like, I thought, but he rather didn't.
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``Was he a screamer?'' she asked.
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Robber blinked.
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``When you tortured him,'' Akua clarified, ``was he a screamer? Because
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there's been these persistent rumours about the Humin-''
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``Oh, come off it,'' Aisha interrupted. ``Even if spice birds did exist,
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which no one has ever proved-''
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``There's Miezan records, Bishara,'' Akua solemnly said.
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``By \emph{Calavia},'' the Taghreb replied, sounding deeply offended.
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``The same hack who wrote about giant crabs living in the Wasaliti and
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insisted the Blessed Isle was a nest for crocodiles that spoke riddles
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in High Tyrian. She wrote to entertain patricians in Mieza, not as true
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historian.''
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``I can't comment on Calavia's accuracy in all things,'' Akua said,
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``yet I once shared a table with Mulade Humin when we were nine, and by
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the noises he made when I ate the last spice cookies you'd think I ate
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his firstborn using only forks.''
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``Is it me, or is it kind of titillating when those two argue about
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things?'' Indrani pensively asked.
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\emph{Godsdamnit, Archer. If you're going to say things like that, at
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least say something I don't kind of agree with deep down.} So both of
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them were rather good looking, and them getting heated over debate was a
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good look. It wasn't my fault I had eyes! Still, best not to say that.
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Akua hardly needed the encouragement and trying to get Aisha into bed
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had terrible idea written all over for all sorts of reasons. I set aside
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the distracting though but focusing on more practical matters. The more
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the two of them spoke, I saw, the more out of his depth Robber looked. I
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sympathized, but then trying to take the shade on in courtly games like
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this was not the wisest choice he'd ever made. I'd seen few people
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outright chew through Akua when it came to this, Vivienne most vividly
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coming to mind. Even Black's attempt to humiliate and terrorize her into
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doing something unwise by making her nail her own hand to a table had
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not borne the fruit he'd wanted it to, back in the day, and Akua in
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those years had been nowhere as smooth as she now was. Without having
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ever drawn blood as he meant to Robber was turned aside, and the
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conversations moved on. When lively debate over the kind of riddles in
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High Tyrian a talking crocodile might have feasibly asked -- Archer, the
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filthy show off, started quoting riddles from `Tyrant and the Fool' in
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the play's original tradertalk, a tongue that had common Baalite roots
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-- I found Aisha elegantly sitting at my side.
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``My queen,'' Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara said.
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``I thought I'd trained you out of that,'' I sighed.
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`'It's been some time,'' she smiled. ``And this is a serious enough
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affair.''
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My brow rose, and I decided to pass the last of the aragh to a
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distracted Hakram instead of drinking it.
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``I'm listening,'' I said.
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Aisha's lips thinned, then she leaned forward and lowered her voice.
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``Do you mean,'' she softly asked, ``for Akua Sahelian to be Dread
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Empress of Praes?''
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