516 lines
25 KiB
TeX
516 lines
25 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-wicked}{%
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\section{Interlude: Wicked}\label{interlude-wicked}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Inexorable is the end of the journey; choose wisely how you
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spend your steps.''}
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-- Ashuran saying
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\end{quote}
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``Look, I'm not saying half a hell won't come howling out if you
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disappear instead of attending like a good Choir boy,'' Queen Catherine
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said. ``But this whole serene thing you've got going on? That's the look
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on the face of someone about to have it slapped right off.''
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Hanno was not certain what was more surreally amusing: that the most
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prominent villain of their age was expressing sincere worry for his
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well-being, in her own rough way, or that the First Prince of Procer was
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seemingly unable to decide what part of this she found the most
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appalling. The three of them were riding ahead of the rest of the column
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and at brisk a pace, though Lyonceau would not be in sight for some
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time.
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``I have fought the Tyrant before, Your Majesty,'' the White Knight
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replied. ``I am not unaware of the danger he represents.''
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``You fought Kairos when he was sowing the seeds of a hundred
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enmities,'' the Black Queen flatly replied. ``Now he's reaping his
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harvest, Hanno. He's going to burn every favour and story he's got up
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his sleeves so he can snap Judgement over his knee.''
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``Damned or not, he remains a single man,'' Cordelia Hasenbach carefully
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said. ``Surely you do not mean Kairos Theodosian could face a single
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angel alone, much less an entire Choir.''
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``I've been in brawls with two Choirs, Your Highness,'' Queen Catherine
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reminded the other woman. ``It can be done, and without losing a finger
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if you're quick and careful enough.''
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From the look on the First Prince's face, Hanno mused, she had finally
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happened upon the part she could find the most appalling. The White
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Knight was less offended, for though the touch of Contrition always
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served a purpose it was not often gentle in pursuing it. As for
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Endurance\ldots{} Hanno cleared his throat.
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``Fuck off, you bottom feeders. This one's been claimed fair and
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square,'' he quoted, drily amused.
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Some of the last words the Stalwart Paladin had ever heard. That life
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had perhaps been the most useful to call on, when studying the Black
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Queen. The Lone Swordsman had been the rival of her youth, and her
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struggles there too far removed from the woman she'd become, and none of
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those who'd died at the Battle of the Camps had seen much of her aside
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from the terrifying foe that'd been the Sovereign of Moonless Nights.
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The Stalwart Paladin, though, had walked among the people of the
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Callowan city of Dormer and then spoken with the Black Queen for some
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time. It had been fascinating, hearing through him the offer she'd
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extended. \emph{Go home}, Catherine Foundling had offered, looking so
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very exhausted. She'd offered peaceful means, and bared steel only when
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pushed.
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It was not his place to judge, yet it had troubled Hanno that he could
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not easily decide what his answer would have been, had he truly stood in
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the other hero's boots.
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``Shit,'' Queen Catherine said, cheeks darkening. ``Went fishing for
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that, did you? In my defence, they tried to snatch the man after I'd
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already put him down hard. It was unsporting, is what I mean.''
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``You cursed at angels,'' Cordelia Hasenbach slowly grasped. ``You
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called them \emph{bottom-feeders}?''
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``It wasn't about the bird wing thing,'' the Queen of Callow assured the
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other royalty. ``I can't stand puns. It was about the kill-snatching.''
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``Perhaps,'' the First Prince said, voice choked, ``we might return to
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the matter at hand.''
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``As I was saying, Your Majesty,'' the White Knight calmly continued,
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``your worry is appreciated yet I speak not in arrogance. I understand
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what it is that the Tyrant of Helike seeks to achieve through this
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purported trial.''
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``He's going for Judgement,'' the Black Queen agreed. ``And any other
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day I'd say the Seraphim lose a feather before they eat him, but
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\emph{today}? We get a curse on the way out, White Knight, and it
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\emph{sticks}. Even when it has no right to.''
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For once, the memories that set his mind astray were not another's.
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\emph{Gods of my ancestors, grant me due}, his mother has once snarled.
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And as the blood-soaked tile through which she had honoured Below for
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many years shattered, the heavy weight of a curse had filled the air.
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All it had taken for it to seize men by the throat was for a knife to
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kiss a throat, and Hanno of Arwad to become entirely an orphan. The
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White Knight knew a thing or two of curses spoken with one's last
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breath.
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``I speak not in ignorance either, Your Majesty,'' he softly said. ``I
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understand that Kairos Theodosian is perhaps the closest thing to a high
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priest of Below that draws breath on Calernia, and his passing will not
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be a gentle thing. Yet it is your own past, that drags your eye away
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from the truth of this.''
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She considered him with those clever, serious eyes that ever belied the
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casual manner of speaking she wielded as club and scalpel both. Honestly
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examining herself for where she might have made a mistake, a misstep. A
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refreshing thing, this. The willingness to entertain she might have
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erred.
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``You think it doesn't matter what he comes at you with,'' she slowly
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said. ``All he's accomplishing is giving the Seraphim a good, clear shot
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at him.''
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Judgement had already been passed on Kairos Theodosian, on a floating
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tower in sight of the walls of Delos. That verdict had not waned or
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weakened for the passing of months, and still resounded like a whisper
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in the back of Hanno's mind. The Tyrant of Helike had ran across half
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the continent hiding in the shadow of great hosts and great needs, yet
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now he was delivering himself to the Tribunal of his own free will.
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There was no escaping that judgement, once it had been passed.
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``Even as Queen of Winter, you did not wield your full might,'' Hanno
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said. ``You understood, then and now, that strength without restraint in
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a villain is a call to the grave. Yet I am not a villain, Catherine
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Foundling.''
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He met her gaze, serenity untroubled.
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``I am the Sword of Judgement,'' the White Knight said. ``If Evil seeks
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to end me, I will break it. Should the Enemy seek to struggle against
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the Tribunal instead, then what heeds not justice will be put down with
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overwhelming might.''
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``Using strength on Kairos Theodosian is like trying to strangle a
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stone,'' the Black Queen warned.
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``Yes,'' the White Knight agreed. ``And crow he might, that he will not
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lack for air. Yet it will not matter when the grip shatters rock.''
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He watched her watching him, saw the eyebrows narrow and the thoughts
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adjust. She had understood, without him speaking a word of it, that
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there was more to his certainty than she knew. From he could almost see
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her passing through a list of possible allies, now as nimble in her
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thinking as William of Greensbury had found her to be on her feet. Her
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eyes almost flicked behind them, to look where the other guests were
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riding, and Hanno nodded in assent. Yes, she'd understood correctly. It
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would be not one but two Choirs the Tyrant of Helike would face, should
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he bare his fang against the Tribunal. The Black Queen clicked her
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tongue against the roof her mouth.
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``I've given you warning,'' she finally said. ``I have nothing more to
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say on the matter.''
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Her gaze moved to the First Prince, whose face had remained inscrutable
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for some time as she followed the conversation closely.
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``Your Highness, I extend offer from Sve Noc to weave\ldots{}
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containment over Lyonceau, in case the Tyrant's last surprise is meant
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to spread.''
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Cordelia Hasenbach smiled pleasantly.
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``A kind offer,'' the Warden of the West -- though only the shadow of
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what that might have been, to his sorrow -- replied. ``Yet I wonder at
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the price of it.''
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The Black Queen grinned.
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``No cost,'' she said. ``Call it a gesture of goodwill between allies
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against Keter.''
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The First Prince seemed even less pleased, which took Hanno some time to
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grasp. Ah, it had been horse-trading. Cordelia Hasenbach would have
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preferred this to be a transaction, bought and paid for. The Black Queen
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offered instead a favour, to be repaid in kind one day. It was a bargain
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that demanded little of Procer yet would benefit the drow in the
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currency they would need the most after the Tenth Crusade came to an
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end. The blue-eyed princess turned to him, and already he could hear the
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question on the tip of her tongue: how likely would it be that such
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protection would be needed? Yet she never spoke the words and looked
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faintly ashamed for a flickering moment.
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``Procer will be grateful for the aid, First Under the Night,'' the
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First Prince of Procer said.
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Hanno's esteem for the woman, which had already been set high by the
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laurels branded onto her palm, rose a notch. She'd preferred owing a
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favour than to gamble with lives in her charge, even on the finest of
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odds. The Black Queen nodded in acknowledgement, then flicked him a
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glance.
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``Mind you, they're not coming any closer even if things go south on
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your angels,'' Catherine Foundling said. ``I'm not risking their
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feathers on the Tyrant of Helike's chosen grounds.''
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``The grounds were our choice, Queen Catherine, not his,'' the First
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Prince reminded her.
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``That doesn't mean they're not his chosen grounds,'' the Black Queen
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grimly replied.
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Both she and the White Knight moved in unison when there was a tremble
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of sorcery ahead, though when the silhouettes revealed became clearer
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the tension went out. Antigone could hardly be taken for anyone else,
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riding Lykaia's broad back as she was, and Roland's eternal leather
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longcoat was almost as familiar a sight. The other two he recognized
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only by description. The tall woman in mail with a long green coat and a
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half-hidden face must be the Archer, a guess that the massive longbow on
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her back seemed to support. The blind man with dark skin and long
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trinket-woven braids must be the Hierophant, a warlock who when
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enthralled by the Dead King had very nearly killed every single living
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thing in Iserre. Hanno cocked his head quizzically at Antigone, who
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replied in the same Gigantes stance-speak.
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\emph{Respect, dislike, danger.} The dislike had implication of
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arrogance, not offence, which was interesting. So was the danger, for
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the corresponding tilt spoke not of `past danger' or `potential danger'.
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Antigone's opinion was that the Hierophant, even stripped of his sorcery
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as he currently was, might be able to kill either of them in a fight.
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That spoke to the respect, for the Gigantes prized not a single virtue
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should it be accompanied by weakness.
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``You both seem untroubled by those approaching,'' the First Prince of
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Procer mildly said.
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Unlike them, her eyes could only discern details so far.
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``Archer, the Rogue Sorcerer and Hierophant,'' the Black Queen said.
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``And if I'm not mistaken?''
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``The Witch of the Woods,'' Hanno agreed. ``I expect they will have word
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of Lyonceau for us.''
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Simply because the Tyrant of Helike had kept his cards hidden until the
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last moment did not mean they would enter the trap blind. The White
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Knight had learned much from his own defeats, from studying the dooms
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and triumphs of his heroic predecessors. And this particular method,
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which he had once discussed with the Peregrine, often served: sending a
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companion out with only vague mandate when the enemy was afoot. It was
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creating an opportunity for providence to smile upon them, for as all
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other things providence must be helped along lest if fail. That Roland
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had been chosen as an instrument along with Antigone was no great
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surprise, and neither was the Archer's presence. Like her storied
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teacher the Lady of the Lake, she was likely cast in Roles either heroic
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or villainous by circumstance.
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Her allegiance to the Black Queen put a hand on the scales towards
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Below, it was true, but then Catherine Foundling had often sailed dark
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ships to pale shores -- terrible shores, it was true, but pale
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nonetheless. The Hierophant's presence was more surprising, and
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ill-omen. For providence to have offered a stirrup to his foot, his
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particular knowledge must have been needed. The four approached, and
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though the First Prince's armed escort neared they were not so uncouth
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as to take defensive positions. Cordelia Hasenbach's horse was shaken
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but not put aflight by the massive shape of Lykaia, which he noted
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approvingly. It was a well-trained beast.
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``I don't suppose you just happened onto Lyonceau by accident,'' the
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Black Queen tried.
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``Warded up to the Heavens,'' the Archer said. ``Literally, even!''
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The Hierophant stirred.
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``Inaccurate,'' he said, voice mildly irritated. ``For the third time-''
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``Greetings, Your Majesty, Your Highness,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said,
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bowing. ``What my companions are attempting to convey is that the town
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is heavily warded with an eye as to the angelic.''
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\emph{Accurate}, Antigone silently told him. \emph{Secrets, Dead King.}
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``Are any of the wards harmful in nature?'' the White Knight asked.
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``No,'' the Hierophant said. ``Not in the slightest. They command and
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retain attention, and so in function have similarities with the initial
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part of a ritual Breach-''
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``As in devil summoning,'' the Black Queen flatly interrupted.
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``The first segment of such a ritual, yes,'' the Hierophant peevishly
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replied. ``As I was saying, Catherine, if you had let me finish.''
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``Surely that must be harmful in some manner,'' the First Prince said,
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looking sickened.
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``Not unless you want to argue that attracting angelic attention is
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harmful,'' Queen Catherine drily noted. ``Which I'm guessing might be
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less than popular a stance with some of your subjects.''
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``Simply the act of warding makes such a meeting place suspect,'' the
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blonde princess insisted.
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``Salia's warded,'' the Archer said.
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``What Lady Archer means, Your Highness, is that making such an argument
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given the nature of the wards might be considered by some a breaking of
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faith,'' Roland delicately said.
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Which was a peril that Hanno would not lightly risk, as it would expose
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all those that had broken faith with the Tyrant of Helike to the
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vengeance that would follow. In a stroke, the heads of all signatories
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Grand Alliance would be in the villain's reach. There was no
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understanding of this situation that was acceptable, for even if the
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White Knight was certain to die in such a trial his life would weigh
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less on the scales than that of Catherine Foundling and Cordelia
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Hasenbach: without those two, the war on Keter was lost. The cause would
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be weakened by his own death, but hardly irreparably.
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``We must proceed,'' the White Knight said. ``Though given the
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circumstances, I believe the presence of great mages among our number
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could not easily be made into a slight.''
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``I don't care if the Tyrant gets snippy about,'' the Black Queen
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snorted, ``Hierophant is coming. Archer, I need you in Salia.''
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``You can't be serious,'' the Archer replied, tone hardening.
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A swift exchange in Kharsum followed, neither of them apparently aware
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he'd used Recall to learn some of the tongue months ago. Queen Catherine
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was insisting that should they all die in Lyonceau then Vivienne
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Dartwick would need both the Archer and the Adjutant at her side to
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keeps things from collapsing, while the Archer argued not untruly that
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if the Black Queen died the talks were dead anyway. The discussion ended
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when the Archer informed her queen that she'd stick around `Zeze' to
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watch his back and stay out of trouble, if that was what it took, and
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Queen Catherine angrily conceded. Neither of them paid any attention to
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the Hierophant's protest he had no need of a bodyguard.
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Antigone inclined her head in question, but he dismissed it. Best for
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all if she started with them, as far as Hanno was concerned, and Roland
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as well. He was not as powerful a spellcaster, but he was cunning and
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his knowledge broad in scope. And so they resumed the ride forward to
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Lyonceau, into the jaws of the beast waiting to gobble them up.
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It was, for a hero, one of the most practical places to be.
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---
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It had made for a serviceable temple, if to admittedly asinine Gods and
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the occasional feckless Choir, but it made for a rather dignified
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courtroom.
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Kairos Theodosian had seen to it, assigning his most trustworthy
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servants to the task. Sadly most of the gargoyles that could tell
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colours apart with their beady little stones eyes had been merrily
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massacred by Catherine when they'd had their little tiff at twilit
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Liesse, which had made for a charmingly eclectic selection of paints and
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cloths. Even as the latest of his esteemed guests passed the threshold
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of the wards encircling Lyonceau, the Tyrant of Helike leaned back
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against his throne and cast a critical eye on the stained glass before
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him, which was depicting the first elected First Prince being crowned by
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what appeared to be a flock of naked giggling cherubs. One of his
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trusted servants had painted over the face of Clothor Merovins a bright
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red beaked nose and touched up his hair with bright blue spikes, which
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one might venture to say was a fetchingly clashing addition, yet it was
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lacking a certain \emph{je ne sais quoi}, as the Alamans said.
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``Naked angels?'' the Tyrant of Helike said. ``'tis most obscene, my
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loyal minions. Possibly blasphemous as well, I'd have to inquire with a
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priest.''
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Inquisitive chittering was his answer, his last gaggle of gargoyles
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gathering to hear his regal proclamations.
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``You shall have to clothe them,'' Kairos decided, touching his lip with
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his scepter. ``In undergarments, naturally.''
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More chatter, increasingly inquisitive.
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``The colour will be of your choice, I would not lightly infringe upon
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your artistic integrity,'' the king of Helike assured them. ``Yet if I
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might venture a suggestion as to the appearance? \emph{Lacy}.''
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The chittering turned rather enthusiastic, matching his mood perfectly.
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Even as he ordered his porters to move him away, his heart already
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warmed in anticipation of the fresh abomination those incompetent little
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mongrels would create in trying to paint something as delicate as lace.
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The House of Light was coming along nicely, in his opinion, and all it'd
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taken was knocking off the roof. And large swaths of the walls, and
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rearranging most the insides. Also desecrating the consecrated grounds,
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as the delightful outrage from Above at his presence thundering in his
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ears sadly hadn't been worth the constant migraines. Yet now the temple
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was a lovely piece of work, raised platforms with benches and seats
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surrounding what he liked to think of as an \emph{arena}: the altar to
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Above turned into the defendant's stand, and the splendidly shoddy table
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and chair the Hierarch of the Free Cities had spent several days making
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with his own hands, as Anaxares despised the notion of using
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\emph{tyrannica}l Proceran tables and chairs instead.
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Gods Below, Kairos had not regretted having the man elected even once.
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The sole standing walls that remained were those encasing the tall
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panels of stained glass, casting colours lights on the ground that mixed
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with that which the afternoon sun carelessly shone through the gaping
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swaths. The Hierarch of the Free Cities was already seated on his
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rickety three-legged stool chair, methodically scraping any ink off the
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parchment that'd been used to send messages to him, avoiding the need of
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in fact using any such scroll not given unto him by the People -- which
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was perhaps for the best, as to Kairos' understanding of Bellerophan law
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he would then have to report anyone having gifted him such parchment to
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the \emph{kanenas} for having paid tribute to a Foreign Despot, namely
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the Hierarch himself. The laws of the Republic were as a splendid maze
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made entirely of trapdoors, to the Tyrant, most of which led to a pit of
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spikes but some instead to a mob of angry crocodiles. That there would
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be a dead body at the end of the journey was perhaps the only part of it
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not in doubt. Truly, the people of the Free Cities could all learn a
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lesson or two from the Republic.
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They were significantly better than anyone else at spontaneous
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lapidation, for example.
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``It's all the practice, I think,'' Kairos told his trusted attendants.
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``It is fascinating,'' the Dead King said. ``Even now, I cannot tell if
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you are mad or feigning.''
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The Tyrant's good eye found the skeleton-thing that claimed kingship of
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death and Keter, and to his continued distaste found nothing at all. Oh,
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the body was there. A shell, pretty enough if a little too pretentious
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for his tastes, but he couldn't see \emph{in} it. Even if he leaned into
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the aspect, in that way that allowed him to glimpse past that first
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burning wish at the heart of everyone into that myriad of lesser ones,
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all that there was to be found in the Dead King was a darkness. If he
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saw the first body, the true one, Kairos believed his sight would not
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fail him so. It had not failed him with the Wandering Bard, after all.
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Yet Trismegistus was ever a cautious one, a creature of brokers and
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emissaries and intermediaries. All of them the same old horror, but as
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the name went it was intent on remaining hidden. How unsporting of it,
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really. How was he to break what the Dead King wanted most in the world,
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if he knew not what it was?
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``How boring life would be, if there were only ever two choices to be
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had,'' Kairos lightly said. ``Our guests have come, dear friend.''
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``Yes,'' the Dead King said. ``I can feel the Hierophant. Soon, now.''
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``It is a shame the Empress could not attend,'' the Tyrant sighed.
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The old thing laughed, for the both knew Kairos would have betrayed her
|
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as eagerly as he intended to betray Ol' Bones himself. Sadly, Malicia
|
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had decided that after wringing him dry of every use she had of him and
|
|
cutting the grass under his feet among his beloved allies she no longer
|
|
had a need to humour him. The Dead King himself was here because the old
|
|
thing was under the impression the only one that could make him bleed
|
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was the Intercessor, and that these games in Salia were a passable
|
|
amusement until he retired to his domain. What splendid arrogance, this,
|
|
what sumptuous hubris! Truly, was the King of Death not among the
|
|
greatest of their ilk?
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|
``I shall have refreshments brought to you,'' Kairos smiled, for he was
|
|
an impeccable host.
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|
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|
It should be interesting to see if the Dead King would in fact drink
|
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from a cup of human blood, even though he had no throat or stomach or
|
|
any real need to. Still, with the guests so soon to arrive the Tyrant of
|
|
Helike had his porters bring him to the highest point in the old temple,
|
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atop the platform in the back. A more discreet snap of the wrist had
|
|
another cup of Valiant Passing brought to his hand, and he drank the
|
|
brew fully though the taste was horrid. It was a necessity, sadly.
|
|
Without it the fits came every half hour and he was blind in one eye,
|
|
though the old recipe was only a temporary reprieve. Soon, Named or not
|
|
there would be enough of the poison in his bones that no purging trick
|
|
would see him through it unharmed. Ah, but the harm had been done long
|
|
before the drink and there'd never been any purging of \emph{that}.
|
|
Tossing away the cup in a corner, Kairos allowed his loyal attendants to
|
|
drape him in the formal regalia of the kings and queens of Helike: the
|
|
cloths of purple and gold, the heavy bejewelled crown that Theodosius
|
|
has adorned with the jewels of defeated royalty, the pearl-incrusted
|
|
slippers.
|
|
|
|
He was ready before the first of his guests arrived, passing through the
|
|
open and unhinged gates of the former temple. Catherine, bold as ever
|
|
strolled in first. The Queen of Callow still bore one of the strongest
|
|
wishes he had ever seen, pulsing with her heartbeat: \textbf{peace,
|
|
peace, peace}. It was like watching a flower bloom anew with every beat.
|
|
Even now it was all he could do not to laugh until his throat bled, for
|
|
what an exquisite jest it was that one of Below's finest servants in the
|
|
long history of Calernia was at heart one of Above's! At her side that
|
|
boring little thing the White Knight tread, all desires his own faded
|
|
while that horrid thing intertwined with the Seraphim -- \textbf{I wish
|
|
to be just} -- tainted everything. Most of the others that followed
|
|
behind were tedious to behold, Cordelia's implacable \textbf{duty} and
|
|
ugh, the Blood was all \textbf{honour and glory} as always and oh,
|
|
wasn't that Itima Ifriqui craving \textbf{revenge}? Ah, what a proper
|
|
villain that one would have made with a little prodding.
|
|
|
|
Neither Rozala Malanza nor Vivienne Dartwick were attending, which was
|
|
amusingly cautious of Catherine and Cordelia, though it seemed the Witch
|
|
of the Wilds and the Hierophant had been dragged along. Reading the
|
|
latter was always amusing for the splitting headache it gave him, the
|
|
Hierophant's path to \textbf{apotheosis} being so deeply steeped in High
|
|
Arcana that trying to understand the concept was like driving nails
|
|
through his own forehead. The Witch was intriguing, for a hero, her wish
|
|
for \textbf{completion} too complex and driven in notions he did not
|
|
understand to properly grasp, but she was still a passing fancy compared
|
|
to the Archer and that delightfully strange and nuanced
|
|
\textbf{horizon}. The wonder of discovery, of the fresh and new, of
|
|
doing things no one had done before. It was not all-consuming like
|
|
Catherine's craving for a peace that would justify all the horrors or
|
|
the White Knight's childish need to have his hand felt, but it was
|
|
deeper in some ways.
|
|
|
|
It was not always the wish that commanded her, but it was so deeply
|
|
ingrained abandoning it would kill her sure as dawn.
|
|
|
|
The Tyrant of Helike gestured for his porters to take flight, though
|
|
until more of the flock joined in to even the sides his throne was
|
|
slightly askew in the air and Theodosius' crown, always too large for
|
|
his brow, went askew with it. His rise caught the eye of everyone in the
|
|
room, even the Hierarch.
|
|
|
|
``Greetings, friends,'' Kairos Theodosian grinned, ``and welcome. Now
|
|
that all are in attendance, it seems we can at last begin the trial.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{At last}, he yearningly thought. \emph{At long last}.
|