365 lines
19 KiB
TeX
365 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-71-verge}{%
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\section{Chapter 71: Verge}\label{chapter-71-verge}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I am told awe is made half of reverence and half of fear. Let us
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find out, knights of the Callow, if terror alone will be enough to teach
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it to the likes of you.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Nihilis I, the Tanner
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\end{quote}
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The last of them arrived half an hour before dawn's start.
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Since I'd been granted my first command in the Legions I'd gotten used
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to the way that large-scale ritual magic tended to require more people
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than you'd think, at least when it needed to be done quick and dirty --
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as was usually the way, when on campaign. It was often a question of
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needing to pool power so no one died or burned out feeding the ritual
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though I'd lucked out more than I'd realized when Masego, in those days
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still the Apprentice, had joined the Fifteenth. There was a reason that
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Black had preferred massed spells to the old standard of ritual cadres
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when he'd rebuilt the Legions of Terror from the ground up after the
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Praesi civil war: it standardized the arsenal of a legion's casters.
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It'd become increasingly clear over the years that the way it was mostly
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Wasteland highborn that used cadres of ritual mages along with their
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personal armies wasn't a coincidence. The heart of the matter was that
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for a circle of sorcerers to be able to use a ritual together without
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significant preparations it required for them to be highly skilled,
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familiar with each other and learned in that particular ritual. That
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meant keeping mage cadres together, for the Legions, which Black would
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very much try to avoid since by simple odds it'd mean a lot of Soninke
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and Taghreb officers of noble birth forming cliques with
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disproportionated influence inside a legion.
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One set of rules for the aristocrats and another one for the soldiers
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was something my teacher had spent decades trying to dismantle, he
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wouldn't tacitly endorse its resurrection in the very institution he'd
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spent so many years shaping. The Fifteenth, and later the Army of
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Callow, had avoided much of these issues by simple virtue of having
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Masego along. I'd not understood the importance of the role he played in
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large-scale battlefield sorceries until our last campaigns, where his
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absence had effectively made disappear half our ritual arsenal into thin
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air and robbed me of the High Arcana savant I'd turn towards for answers
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whenever some strange phenomenon appeared. Oh, Zeze had taught my mages
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some rough and relatively simple rituals to use on battlefields: his
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Lightning Strikes and the Spears of Fire remained a staple of the Army
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of Callow, who unlike the Legions simply didn't \emph{have} enough mages
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to be able to afford massed spells as a tactic. But even with those,
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without his presence there was significant drop in range, power and rate
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of fire. It wasn't just that he'd used to have rather impressive
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reserves, but rather that having Masego standing among a ritual was like
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having someone to conduct a choir. He made up for the imprecisions of
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others, guided through the stumbles and kept precise the manipulations
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in the way that someone who wasn't him just\ldots{} couldn't.
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Akua had once compared it to having one of the finest swordsmen on the
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continent running recruits through formation drills, and she wasn't
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entirely wrong. Still, with the Dead King's cut those days had seemingly
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come at an end and the crowd that'd gathered was not a throng of
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half-awed young mages taking Masego's every word for sorcerous gospel.
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With the mere arrival of Hierophant and Archer, our company had grown to
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the sort of dawn tales were made of. Two black-winged goddesses,
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silently looming atop raised stones in the shape of great and terrible
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crows. The Doom of Liesse, veiled and silent but not grown much the
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lesser from her hour of folly. Hierophant, stripped of sorcery but still
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vivisector of miracles and the kind of man whose insights even gods
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flinched from. Archer and myself were perhaps lesser figures, for what
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mattered. All that was required from me in this thinning darkness was a
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steady hand and the wielding of Night, while she was here as the hand
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propping up Masego as well as one who had more than once tread the
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demimonde between Creation and the Twilight Ways without needing any
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guidance. Should the Pilgrim demur from coming, it would be Archer whose
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intuitions would be relied on when the burn was made. Yet Tariq did
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come, in the end, though not alone: bleary-looking and huddling inside a
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thick cloak of fur, the Rogue Sorcerer was with him. And with those last
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two there were none left to await, so I drew first blood against the
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silence.
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``Morning,'' I said. ``Or close enough.''
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Only Masego, I noted, was kind-hearted enough to reply with a full
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return of the courtesy. Roland shivered inside his cloak, and the
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Peregrine merely nodded. His face bore the manner of calmness that one
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wore around a foe, I thought, and though I'd known provoking a return to
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that was necessary to tie the Intercessor's hands I still regretted it.
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It would have been pleasant, to be on decent terms with the unspoken
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doyen of Above's champions.
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``Dawn's just around the corner and it'll make everything more difficult
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when it comes, so I'll spare us all the small talk,'' I said. ``Most of
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my advisors in matters eldritch say this is where making a stable gate
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into Twilight will be most straightforward.''
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``You'll need an anchor for the other side,'' the Sorcerer said.
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``If the aspiration was a clean cut followed by material shoring up,
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perhaps,'' Masego dismissed. ``Night is not so precise, from what I've
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observed, and none of the appropriate ritual substances have been
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gathered here.''
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I glanced at Roland, who unlike most people subjected to Zeze's mild
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puzzlement at their `ignorance' did not seem to have taken offence in
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the slightest. If anything, he rather looked like he wanted to have ink
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and parchment on hand. That ought to take care of itself without my
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intervention, then. Good. The Rogue Sorcerer was by a significant margin
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the friendliest hero I'd encountered, and I had no intention of letting
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academic rivalry get in the way of that.
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``The Hierophant is right,'' I said. ``What I'll need, though,
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is\ldots{} a sense of where to aim for. Which I don't have, unlike some
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of you. Archer might be able to help, but the person atop this barrow
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with the deepest tie to Twilight should need no introduction.''
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Namely the man who had once borne the Twilight Crown, for however short
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a span. Bearing a mantle like that left marks, I'd know that better than
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most. It was no coincidence that I'd been able to feel this very place's
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affinity with Arcadia long after having divested myself of the last of
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Winter within me. The Grey Pilgrim eyed me warily, though he did not
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outright decline. As expected of the man, he could already tell where
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this was headed and was less than enthused.
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``Oh,'' Roland said, shivering from the cold. ``Resonance, to shape the
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depth at which the damage will be inflicted. Yes, that would work. A
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brute force solution, though.''
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Archer could serve that purpose as well, but her ties were nowhere as
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deep. She'd tread the grounds of Twilight for longer than any of us,
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journeyed through its nook and crannies and even stood open-eyed while
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the transition from stolen shard of Arcadia to a realm took place. None
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of these were small things. But the Grey Pilgrim had given the last
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crown and borne the burden of giving the Twilight Ways their face and
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shape. The difference was extensive and would likely make a difference
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in my being knocked out for a day or a week. Figuratively speaking, one
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hoped, though my advisory triumvirate had not been willing to commit to
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it.
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``Fine tools come from refinement over years and decades,'' Akua said.
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``This is work without precedent, Sorcerer.''
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The last word she spoke with the faintest hint of dubiousness. Had I
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been worried about the wrong Soninke, then? Shit. She was usually better
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about this stuff than Zeze, but then this one was a hero as well as a
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practitioner.
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``He is correct,'' Masego noted. ``This is not unlike making a gate by
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melting stone and shaping it into a threshold.''
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``And we've so many people observing to establish if there's a better
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way to do it, next time we must,'' I said, cutting in before pride could
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get anything started.
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Mages, huh. And I thought it was the brawlers like Indrani and myself
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that had troubles with surfeit of swaggering.
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``And how is this resonance to be acquired, Black Queen?'' the Grey
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Pilgrim asked.
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I suppressed a grimace.
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``A close look at the traces Twilight left on you,'' I said.
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``Soul-gazing,'' Tariq flatly said.
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Little thick, coming from a man I was pretty sure had an aspect
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essentially dedicated to that and constantly used it on everyone, but
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I'd cut him so slack considering who'd be doing that gazing. Namely the
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Sisters, who for all my occasional appreciation for them were not the
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kindest or best-inclined of entities on Creation.
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``An intermediary will be provided, should you so wish,'' I said,
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inclining my head towards Akua.
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Wouldn't be as precise a reading, as for all her talents the shade did
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not benefit from the indescribable senses and perceptions that sprang
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from apotheosis, but she \emph{was} talented. What she did pass along to
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me would be more than enough, and as she was not sworn to serve the
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Sisters the scrutiny might be more acceptable. Maybe. I wasn't sure
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where Mercy would fall on that, much less Tariq himself.
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``And who would you be?'' the Pilgrim openly asked, eyeing Akua
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cautiously. ``We have met before, that much is undeniable. And yet I now
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see you standing as a bound spirit before me.''
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They'd met? I frowned, raking my memories and finding no instance. Even
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during the Princes' Graveyard there should have been no acquaintance.
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The Battle of the Camps, I realized. Akua had run around wearing my body
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while I'd been stranded in an endless Winter nightmare and she'd even
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fought an assembled band of heroes. The Pilgrim would have had a look at
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her then, and though she had body of her own now I supposed the
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substance of what she was had not changed too much.
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``I am one in the service of the Black Queen of Callow,'' Akua smilingly
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said. ``Naught else is of import here.''
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``You chose this appearance,'' Tariq frowned. ``But are not bound to it.
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What are you, spirit? I have never seen the likes of you, not even in
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the olden-most barrows of the Brocelian.''
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``Dawn's coming, Peregrine,'' I flatly said. ``She's bound to me and can
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wield Night without being in the service of Sve Noc. There will be no
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more offhand a manner to see this done, if you'll accede to it at all.''
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``Presumably the Ophanim would slay all here, if attempt was made to
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wound your soul,'' Roland pointed out in an aside.
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``That is a presumption, yes,'' Masego calmly agreed.
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Archer smothered a smile, and to be honest so did I. It was hardly the
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time, but the earnestness he'd spoken what would be a boast in another
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man's mouth made it amusingly endearing. The Pilgrim's eyes were closed,
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no doubt conferring with the Ophanim, and glimmered still with Light
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when they finally opened anew.
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``So be it,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Trespass not, spirit, lest you
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find more than you bargained for.''
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``Worry not, Peregrine,'' Akua amicably said. ``I've always held angels
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in high esteem.''
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It was an effort not to choke. I supposed she technically wasn't lying,
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considering she'd wanted to use one of the Hashmallim as fuel for her
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doomsday fortress. After all the posturing I'd expected some degree of
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ceremony, but what unfolded instead was the shade striding forward and
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silently asking for permission before laying her hand on the Pilgrim's
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shoulder. He acceded with a nod, and closed his eyes once more as hers
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remained wide open. After a long moment she let out a long breath and
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jerkily nodded towards me. I hobbled forward and raised my hand, which
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she caught by the wrist: the sliver of Night she'd called on seeped into
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my own. I'd expected this process to be far beyond my ability to fathom,
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but to my surprise found it rather familiar. It was not unlike the
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sensation of opening a fairy gate, the sense of the needle going through
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the fabric and being\ldots{} fated, for a lack of better term, to leave
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the cloth again in another place. What Akua had sensed from the Pilgrim
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and passed to me was not so sharp and narrow, but it was kin to that. A
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way to put it, I thought, would be that fairy gates under Winter had
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been the act of needling while what the shade had shared was having
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touched the cloth. I already knew from experience that trying to grasp
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the knowledge perfectly would result mostly into a searing headache, so
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I let it linger half-known and instead breathed out.
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``For I have seen crowns broken and forged anew, snatched a star from
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the starlit sky and traded a season for half the world,'' I whispered in
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Crepuscular. ``Now that dawn crawls forward unbid, o Sve Noc, grant me
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might to wield and the conceit to wield it fearlessly. Where there is
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rampart let my hand make a road, and Creation deny not my will.''
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The crows cawed, a resounding cry like the crack of a whip against the
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night sky, and Night flooded my veins thick and pure. I almost lost my
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foot but at my side Akua held me up by my elbow, having left Tariq to
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stand alone, and I gasped as I forced my staff of yew to rise.
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``\emph{Deny not my will},'' I hissed once more.
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Night struck out, like a wave and a strike of thunder, like a flood
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raging down a riverbed long gone dry. And where it found resistance, I
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clenched my fingers against the long haft of few and \emph{burned}
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Creation. Scarred it, so that the blackened and bleeding scabs would
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stand at the threshold and mark the path to be taken. It was like riding
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a tide, every moment a struggle, and I swallowed a scream as I felt my
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strength ebbing. I would not break, not before the work was done. Not
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even when the coolness of Night lazed like smoke in my veins, tainting
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my every sense, and in the far distance I felt the distant glare of
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light marching like a harsh vanguard.
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``Catherine,'' Akua whispered against my ear. ``Catherine, you have to
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stop.''
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Was she holding me? When had she? Some pried off the hand that'd gone
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around my waist and it was put around a shoulder at least. Someone
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taller than I. I grit my teeth, for all the distractions had loosened my
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grip on the Night -- the work had slowed, suffered. Long and delicate
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fingers joined mine on the staff, and like a miracle the veil on my eyes
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lifted. Ironclad will became intertwined with my own and I shared a
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feral, savage grin with Hierophant without either of us ever looking
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away from the howling darkness before us.
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``You can still wield,'' I whispered.
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Ashkaran, I dimly realized.
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``A god rode my mind, Catherine, for many months,'' Hierophant whispered
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back. ``I have \emph{learned things}.''
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Power billowed out, and I was no longer a fool of a girl clinging to a
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tiger: we were Woe, standing side by side, and though we were battered
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things no creature in this world or any other had ever earned
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\emph{submission} of us. We painted in Night with bold strokes, feeling
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those around us flee backwards for the storm in the making. Komena
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laughed in the back of my mind, and it was eagerly that she opened the
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floodgates between us. Andronike hesitated, until a splash of Night
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boiled stone like water and we shaped it like clay without ever glancing
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-- after that there was a well of hunger, and Gods Below but the power
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they granted us. Raised stones melted away into liquid strings like
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festival banners, spinning into roiling winds of Night. With four hands
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we sculpted the stone prayer to long-dead gods of Arcadia and usurped
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the old sacraments like thieving masons in the garments of priests. Two
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tall pillars, covered with words that were a godless prayer in a dead
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tongue, were molded and carved. And atop them dropped down the closing
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of the threshold, a stone like door being slammed shut. Woven from the
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scabs and burns, sealed in rock where the nature of it could be
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obscured. Power would fade in time, we knew. But the hurt, the scar?
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Some transgressions had weight by virtue of being what they were. This
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would hold for a very, very long time.
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After an eternity we half-fell to the ground, Masego's fingers clumsily
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leaving my staff as I used it to steers us away from tumbling down like
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drunks. We still crouched, exhausted and exhilarated, as the sense
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robbed from us by the scale of what we'd wielded and built slowly began
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to trickle back into our minds. We'd felt something like this once
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before, in Dormer. There'd been more of us, though, Adjutant and Archer
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as well. We'd marched forward into the heart of the enemy, bearing the
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story of the Woe like a banner. This had been a smaller thing, I
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thought, the Queen of Lost and Found and the Hierophant crafting a
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miracle out of power and pride. But, Gods\ldots{} it'd been like a drink
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of the sweetest of wines, like honey on the soul, and some part of me
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almost wept that it'd ended.
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``Look, Cat,'' Masego croaked out. ``Look.''
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I followed his trembling finger and beheld the gate of stone we had
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raised. The runes inscribed on the two great pillars that I knew, just
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\emph{knew}, were twenty feet tall and twenty apart were no as gibberish
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to my eye where before I had known them as if they were my native
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tongue. But the thrum of them, the crawling flow of power going up them
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through the barrow like they were rooted there, it sang to me. Of the
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Twilight just beyond, a mere smear of blood on stone away. And all that
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power was kept bound, kept locked, by the rough and massive stone
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pressing down -- and the scars it held within, like a secret under seal.
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``It's beautiful,'' I said.
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And it was, in its own terrible way. We stayed there in the snow for a
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long time, at the heart of a circle of raised stones we'd unmade and
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forged anew, a barren barrow-top caressed by the winds. We stayed there
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until dawn crested in the distance, the faraway lights that'd be the
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final touch on our work.
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``'lo and behold,'' I murmured.
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The first rays of the sun struck the stone and, as if reflecting from
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the spiralling runes and stretches of ancient symbols, spun like a dust
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whirl between the tall pillars. Just long enough a glimpse could be had
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of the realm beyond, of the endless starlit sky and the shady hills that
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could be journeyed to any journey's end.
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``There's always something more, isn't there?'' Masego whispered.
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``Another horizon, another wonder. Another threshold to cross into
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deeper unknowns.''
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It was his own truth he spoke, I thought, but in I heard the echo of
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Indrani's as well. But what was restlessness in her, wanderlust, in him
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was instead awe.
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``We're not done yet, Masego,'' I said. ``We've bled to get where we
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stand, and when we come out on the other side we'll not be the same
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people who began the journey. But we are so very far from done.''
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He nodded, slowly
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``Tomorrow will be ours,'' the Hierophant agreed, tone tranquil the way
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old and dark waters were tranquil. ``And if there are any who would deny
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us that, we will \textbf{Wrest} it from them with bloody hands.''
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The word sang, and the world with it, as my old friend found the truth
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of third aspect and we sat silent in the warm light of dawn.
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