453 lines
21 KiB
TeX
453 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-75-analog}{%
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\section{Chapter 75: Analog}\label{chapter-75-analog}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I assure you, Chancellor, that with but a few words they'll come
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around to agreeing with me. Almost like an incantation, really.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Imperious
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\end{quote}
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\emph{Good grip}, I thought, as he clasped my arm tightly once back
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before withdrawing.
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``I was warned about you,'' the White Knight conversationally said.
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He was a dangerous man, I knew, for heroes usually were. Yet I did not
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feel particularly endangered, for by all reports Hanno of Arwad was not
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the sort of madman who'd draw a sword thoughtlessly. I leaned on my
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staff to push myself up on the low cattle-wall, pressing my cloak
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against the back of my leg with my other hand so it wouldn't bunch up.
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\emph{That's better}, I thought. Took the weight off my bad leg.
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``Were you?'' I replied. ``You don't seem all that worried.''
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``Not that sort of warning,'' he said. ``The Grey Pilgrim called you a
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thresher.''
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My brow rose. I was a city girl to the bone, true enough, but it was
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still a Callowan city. I knew a thing or two about farming, if only in
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principle.
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``Like for grain?'' I asked, cocking my head to the side.
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He had a rather honest face, I decided, for all that it was plain. The
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calm on it wasn't affectation, no. It was just the consequence of being
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so amiably unruffled by all that went on around him, perhaps not even
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something he knew he showed.
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``One that separates the wheat from the chaff,'' the White Knight
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quoted. ``He argued that there are Bestowals that, by their nature, draw
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to them both great loyalty and great enmity.''
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``Sounds like Tariq,'' I conceded. ``Mind you, I've always found he
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throws words like `fate' around a little too easily. Anyone who ends up
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making waves will draw both enemies and allies, there's nothing magical
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about it.''
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``There is, when so many of those allies were once your enemies,'' Hanno
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said. ``I am told that most of your closest companions fought you at
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some point or another.''
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Well, not \emph{that} many. Indrani had introduced herself by ambushing
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me, I conceded. Vivienne too. Juniper and I hadn't exactly begun as
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bosom friends, and there was a reason that I'd ripped Akua's heart out
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of her chest. Shit. Hakram had always been a delight, though! And Robber
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had mostly been other people's problem, which by goblin standards was
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positively saintly. I forcefully refrained from thinking too much about
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how the Everdark had turned out for all involved.
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``Oh Gods,'' I muttered. ``I genuinely can't argue with that.''
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If I'd lost that argument in my own head, I somehow doubted it'd go my
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way spoken aloud. The hero softly chuckled.
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``It is not unlike sculpting, I've found,'' Hanno said. ``What your hand
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knows, what you have crafted, is not what the eyes of others see.''
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``Been mistaken a few times, have you?'' I asked.
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He agreed with a nod.
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``Often it is misunderstood what the Choir of Judgement is,'' the White
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Knight said. ``I've been asked to adjudicate land disputes, to settle
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disagreements over scripture and once even to decide on the rightful
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owner of cattle.''
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He breathed out, as if exasperated by the whole of it.
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``The Seraphim do not attend to earthly laws or even holy writ, Black
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Queen,'' Hanno of Arwad said. ``They render only one manner of judgement
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and it is not fettered by anything of Creation.''
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``That'd be the spinning coin and the,'' I mimed a blade across the
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throat, ``I take it?''
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``If the coin spun for ever soul on Calernia, it would show the laurels
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more often than not,'' the White Knight said. ``The circumstances in
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which it is prone to spinning, however, have favoured the showing of the
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swords.''
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``And that doesn't bother you?'' I asked.
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He cocked his head to the side.
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``Why would it?'' the White Knight asked. ``If only wicked men are
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judged, why would another end come of it?''
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``And you don't think you're passing judgement as well?'' I frowned.
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``That is not my place,'' he said.
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``The coin doesn't flip on its own, you know,'' I pointed out. ``And as
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far as I know, you don't toss it for everyone you meet.''
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The hero looked frustrated, but only in passing. I supposed I hadn't
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been the first person to say as much to him. He was one of the great
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Names of our generation, true, but he was also a pretty personable man
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all things considered.
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``You are Queen of Callow,'' the White Knight said.
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``Don't suppose you could get me that in writing?'' I drily said.
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If getting the Sword of Judgement to put it to parchment didn't end up
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settling the legitimacy of my rule, nothing ever would. He blinked,
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visibly bemused.
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``Ignore that,'' I sighed. ``Yes, I am Queen of Callow. Couple other
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titles too, but that's the highest one.''
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``Then, unless I am mistaken, you have right of high justice over all in
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your kingdom,'' Hanno said.
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That was slightly more complicated an issue than you'd think, actually.
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High justice -- essentially the right to sit in judgement of anyone no
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matter how high their birth and the severity of their crime -- had been
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moved around some these last few decades. Before the Conquest the answer
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would have been a straightforward yes, as the ruling king or queen of
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Callow had been one of the few figures able to sit in judgement over
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anyone. Under Black the right of high justice had in theory devolved to
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the imperial governors, though in practice he'd been the one holding it:
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though his authority came from the Tower and not a crown, he'd been the
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only man in the kingdom would could sit in judgement of both governors
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and the remaining nobles. It was no without reason that when I'd called
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my teacher the crownless king of Callow not even the Choir of Contrition
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had gainsaid me. These days my kingdom's laws were a messy jumble of old
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Praesi decrees and dusty Callowan laws, but as the anointed Queen of
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Callow I did in principle have right of high justice. If I started going
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after the few nobles left through even legal means, though, I'd have a
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rebellion on my hands. I'd allowed my court to squeeze the northern
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baronies in their coin purse but nowhere else, and Gods forbid I ever
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try to pass judgement on Duchess Kegan even if she ate a full cartload
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of babies in broad daylight before a hundred witnesses.
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``By law I do,'' I conceded.
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``As one with the right to pass judgement over any Callowan,'' Hanno
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said, ``did you then proceed to drag every man and woman you encountered
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before a tribunal?''
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My brow rose.
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``You don't stand judgement in Callow without having broken a law,'' I
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said.
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``And I do not bring into the gaze of the Seraphim every soul I
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encounter without reason,'' the White Knight replied. ``Nor would I
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stand benumbed and allow a life to be taken before my eyes while I asked
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for their verdict. I do not judge, Catherine Foundling, because I
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recognize the fallibility of what I am and what I know. It does not mean
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I am blind or helpless: it means that where others have no choice but to
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be burdened with uncertainty, I am not.''
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That was rather more reasonable than I'd expected of the man, I admitted
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to myself. My brushes with Choirs had been less than pleasant, most of
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the time, so I'd been predisposed to seeing lunacy lurking in one who
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had openly sworn himself to do the bidding of one. Black had been less
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than flattering in his assessments of the man, too, though he'd also
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cautioned that the White Knight was both intelligent and an exceedingly
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dangerous and versatile killer. Then again, I could hardly imagine my
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father ever sitting down to have a polite chat with a hero -- or the
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opposite, in all fairness. Over two decades of the Calamities smothering
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heroes in their narrative crib had rather thoroughly burned that bridge
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for both sides. I still found the notion of the Seraphim being
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considered an authority over even a chamber pot rather revolting, but
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hardly enough to draw a blade over it. So long as that authority was not
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forced on anyone, and it stayed well out of my kingdom, it fell under
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the category of `someone else's problem'. If the nations of the west
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wanted to grant the right of high justice to the Choir of Judgement,
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that was their decision to make.
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Of course, there was one little issue with all this.
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``And villains?'' I asked. ``Don't they always get a flip, White
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Knight?''
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He smiled, though it was a distant sort of smile. One straddling the
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line between reminiscence and the aloofness of professional attending
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their trade. He stood before me, little more than a well-built man in
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cloth, and still he spoke with an authority that could not be denied.
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Conviction was at the heart of Names, I knew, and this one did not lack
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faith. Black was one of the finest hero-killers Calernia had ever known,
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and he'd gone after Hanno with the full roster of the Calamities while
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the White Knight led a disparate band of greenhorns. And the man stood
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before me still. Some of that could be laid at the Bard's feet, at her
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schemes, but only so much. Even the Intercessor could not make a sharp
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blade out of straw.
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``Are all those that worship the Gods Above to be called Good?'' Hanno
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replied.
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``No,'' I said. ``But worshipping Below is against the scriptures, isn't
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it? Heresy.''
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``Do you worship Below?'' he asked.
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``I curse in their name, mostly,'' I drawled, rather amused. ``But I've
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been called an odd duck amongst my kind. Most villains do in fact keep
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to the Gods Below.''
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I knew Hakram did, though it was in the orc way under the name of the
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Hungry Gods. He wasn't particularly pious, though, and considered it a
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private matter besides. Indrani's utter indifference to all things
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religious probably counted as \emph{some} sort of heresy, I was pretty
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sure, and while Akua worshipped the Hellgods in that very Praesi way
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that did not exclude attempted murder and usurpation that worship was
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not less sincere for it. That her growing fondness for heroics had not
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been paired with conversion to the ways of the House of Light had been a
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source of some amusement to me, particularly since even if she was a
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Wasteland aristocrat she knew her way around the Book of All Things
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better than I did.
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``The Choir of Judgement does not follow scripture,'' Hanno reminded me.
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``It was written by mortal hands, a fetter like any other.''
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``But if a villain, say, made a carriage out of skulls,'' I said, then
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let the sentence hang.
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``Graverobbing is not a particular concern of the Seraphim,'' the White
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Knight replied, sounding almost amused. ``Especially when it is only
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presumptive.''
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``But you'd keep an eye on them, after that,'' I shrewdly said.
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``As I would keep an eye on a man walking into a house with a bared
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sword,'' Hanno said.
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While the man in front of me was far from an idiot -- I suspected he'd
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be deeply unpleasant to argue with -- I wouldn't assess him as the kind
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of silver-tongued schemer I'd come across more than a few times. Oh, it
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was possible a long game was being played even if he was a hero. But my
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instinct was that he was much as he put himself forward, and I'd stayed
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alive this long by listening to that little voice when it tugged at my
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attention. And right now that voice was telling me that the White Knight
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didn't have to be my enemy. I didn't relish the notion of angels passing
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judgement through someone else's hand, and I very much doubted that
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Hanno would stay his work even if I asked him to pretty please do so,
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but he could be accommodated. If he worked within the bounds of the
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Accords, and even worked to \emph{enforce} them? Hells, he might be a
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legitimate boon. Heroes would follow the Grey Pilgrim out of respect for
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the man, but if the White Knight endorsed something a lot of people
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would take that as the blessing of the Choir of Judgement. There were
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parts of the continent where that carried a great deal of weight. Even
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now, after the Tenth Crusade and the fury that'd followed the Salian
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conclaves, Callow was still one of them.
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Everything he'd said fit with what I knew of his actions. He'd come to
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be involved in the Free Cities because the Tyrant had started a war, and
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as far as I knew never fought where there wasn't a villain involved.
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He'd come as part of the southern crusade, which was a mark against him,
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but it was largely Black he'd been there for. And while I loved my
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father a great deal, I couldn't deny that he was a monster twice over. I
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believed him to be the man who'd stood between Praes and its worst
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impulses for decades, and perhaps the monster needed to reform the Dread
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Empire into a nation that wouldn't vomit its poison over the rest of
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Calernia every few decades, but that in no way made him a good man. It
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was not \emph{unjustified}, to want to kill him. That didn't mean I'd
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allow it, or that it would not make things objectively worse if it
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happened, but I wouldn't delude myself into thinking that Amadeus of the
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Green Stretch was not a monster. He was other things, too, but that
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didn't expunge the first truth him. In the end, I didn't have a lot of
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axes to grind with the White Knight and he'd proved one of the more
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reasonable heroes I'd come across. Hanno had even gone north to fight
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the Dead King and only returned to prevent the Tyrant from having a
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continent-collapsing tantrum.
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In all honesty, that put him pretty high up my list of people who hadn't
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severely fucked up in the last year. He had Black beat, for one.
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``You don't take issue with mortal laws, then,'' I said.
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``It would be absurd to,'' he noted. ``Lest the Heavens themselves rule,
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what other way is there?''
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``And if those laws applied to even Named?'' I pressed.
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``A law need not be just,'' Hanno of Arwad said. ``It need only be a
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law. I would no more bend my neck to such a wrong than any other
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threat.''
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``I'm not talking about settling right and wrong for all of Calernia,''
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I said. ``That's doomed. Howling Hells, let's not even talk about Good
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and Evil -- not even all of Good agrees on the same boundaries. No, I
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mean basics. You can't tell Named that regicide is over, neither heroes
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nor villains would obey that. But limiting the means by which it can be
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done? That might work. And it'd end the practice of burning down half a
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city to kill a tyrant or usurp a throne.''
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``Not laws, these,'' the White Knight said, eyes curious, ``but rather
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rules of engagement.''
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My veins thrummed with excitement, because unlike Tariq he'd not needed
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to be led to that. He'd grasped it, quickly, and did not seem opposed in
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the slightest. The dark-eyed hero let out a little noise of
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understanding.
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``Ah,'' he said. ``I see now your cleverness in making such rules so
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basic. If the expectation placed is so low and Named still fail to clear
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it, none will desire to support them. Neither others who bear mantles
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nor the powerful without, for only the erratic would break such bare
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bones rules. The vast majority of Named will see their lives go
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untouched, with only the most radical being restricted.''
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He paused, looking at me with an expression I found difficult to place.
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``This is more than rules of engagement,'' the White Knight said, ``this
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is a blade swung at the most callous servants of Above and Below. Within
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a few generations of grand gestures being harshly answered by all other
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powers, you would excise that entire manner of thinking from the Named
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on Calernia.''
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Not even Black had caught that, I thought. Oh, he'd seen parts of the
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Accords as being meant to restrain the most destructive aspects of
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Praes, but he'd not really gotten it because at the end of the day he
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did not think of stories the way I did. He'd stayed alive as villain
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occupying my home, a hotbed of rebellion, by avoiding ever getting
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caught in a story or pattern that'd get him killed. Unlike me, unlike
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Akua even, he only rarely wielded like a weapon. It was the same with
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the Pilgrim, I though, in his own way. Tariq carried around on his back
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the weight of all his tragedies but at heart he was a guest in the
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stories of others. Sometimes a guest who ended that story before it
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could grow into something dangerous, others a wise old man who nudged it
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to something more acceptable, but the Peregrine as an entity
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remained\ldots{} constant. Always playing the same few roles in
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different stories. He'd know a great many of those, but it would be his
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nature to think of them as a landscape he'd travelled far and wide. Not
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something that could shift and change.
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``If the flying fortress crowd and the Contrition-ritual crowd always
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die, always fail? People will remember that,'' I quietly agreed. ``Gods
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know it'll be public enough when the hammer's brought down. And when
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it's been happening for long enough, well, everyone will `know' that
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sort of thing doesn't work. Same way heroes don't die when they're
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thrown down cliffs or villains don't get beaten on the first step of
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their plan.''
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``And with most Named having a stake in ensuring at least the barest of
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civility is maintained between their kind, the odds are strong that your
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rules will last long enough to make that mark,'' Hanno said. ``It is a
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sound notion.''
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``Then you'd be in favour of such a set of rules?'' I asked.
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He half-smiled.
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``They did warn me,'' the White Knight pensively said.
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I almost cursed. Gods, let this not turn into a damned flop where by
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simple nature of having been proposed by a villain this entire concept
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was to be dismissed as a plot of Below. That would be bitterly
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disappointing after the rest of this conversation.
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``I've not spoken a single lie,'' I said.
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``Which makes you singularly dangerous,'' Hanno agreeably replied.
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My fingers clenched until the knuckles went white under the gloves.
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``Ah, you misunderstand me,'' the White Knight said. ``That you are
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silver-tongued and perhaps one of the most dangerous people alive does
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not mean I am dismissing your proposal, Black Queen.''
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``Then what \emph{does} it mean?'' I asked.
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``That I understand what the Grey Pilgrim meant, now,'' Hanno of Arwad
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said. ``You have a pull, Catherine Foundling, that drags others into
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your wake: either as followers or as wreckage. I am glad to have seen it
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myself before we first met on formal terms. It would have been
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startling.''
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That last part he spoke ruefully, as if mocking himself.
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``There doesn't need to be anything mystical about this,'' I insisted.
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``I don't have sole claim to the Accords, not in the slightest. I speak
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for them because I'm in a position to, not because they're solely my
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horse to ride. I don't know what you think-''
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``I very nearly agreed,'' the White Knight amusedly said. ``Just now.
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Without thinking twice. After speaking with you for not even an hour.
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Because you are reasonable, well-spoken and even charming in what I
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assume to be a rough Callowan way.''
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That last one was kind of insulting, I decide, but the rest pretty
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flattering. I cleared my throat.
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``Still not too late to agree now,'' I gallantly tried.
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``No, perhaps not,'' Hanno calmly replied, ``but it is certainly too
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early.''
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He suddenly twitched, head turning to look at the far south. I couldn't
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hear or see anything, at this distance, and it might be a little gauche
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to call on Night to aid my senses next to the Sword of Judgement so I
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refrained out of politeness.
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``My friend is returning,'' the White Knight said.
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It took a moment for me to place it.
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``The Witch of the Woods?'' I asked.
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He dipped his head in agreement.
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``A great she-wolf walks with her,'' he said. ``Neither are fond of
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cities.''
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``I'll take my leave, then,'' I said.
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I could on occasion recognize a hint when it was sent my way. I dropped
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down onto the snow, softening the blow with my staff, and tightened my
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cloak around my shoulder. Wouldn't be too long a walk back to camp and I
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probably should head to bed -- I had quite the day ahead of me tomorrow.
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``Good night to you, White Knight,'' I said, dipping my head in salute.
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``And to you, Black Queen,'' he replied, doing the same.
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I cleared the path, though as I crossed back into the plains I was
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stopped by a call.
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``I expect they will not grow fonder of cities overnight,'' Hanno said.
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He wasn't speaking loudly, but his voice carried perfectly.
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``Might be I go for a walk, then,'' I replied without glancing back.
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The yew staff dug into the snow as I limped back home -- thump, thump,
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thump -- and I wondered if it truly should go. There might come a day
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where the coin went up spinning in judgement of me, after all. Not this
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winter, not this year, maybe not even this decade. But one day? Oh,
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there'd been a shiver of that going through the conversation. Violence
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coiled and controlled but never too far from the surface. As a younger
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woman that might have disturbed me, but these days it simply marked him
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to my eye as someone able to handle strength properly. Still, I now
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understood why many heroes deferred to that man: he was so utterly at
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peace with the power he wielded and what he wielded it for that looking
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on the surface of that placid pond you'd only ever see your own doubts
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reflected. I wondered if he'd hesitate, if on that day the coin showed
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swords. I wondered if I'd hesitate to kill him before the coin ever
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began spinning.
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Neither yew nor snow held answers for me, save that when night came
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again I would return.
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