583 lines
28 KiB
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583 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-3-standard}{%
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\section{Chapter 3: Standard}\label{chapter-3-standard}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The tragedy of our time, of every time, is that while there is
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power in knowledge there can be just as much in ignorance.''}
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-- First Princess Eugénie of Lange
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\end{quote}
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I watched the Scorched Apostate sit in silence, face solemn, as the two
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healers from the House Insurgent finished seeing to the wound on his leg
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and moved to the larger task of his heavy burns. I'd had him brought
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away from where the last four survivors of the nameless village were
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being looked at by another priest. Grandmaster Talbot spoke with the
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priestess in question -- a fair-haired Liessen girl in her late twenties
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-- before trudging his way to me through boggy grounds. With his helmet
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removed, Brandon Talbot's neatness was even more apparent than usual,
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all the more glaring for the contrast with his worn armour. He sketched
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a bow and I flicked an impatient hand to tell him to cut it out. I'd
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made my peace with a lot of the formalities having put on a fancy hat
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meant for me, but they had no place out in the field.
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``My queen,'' the knight said. ``Sister Cecily says the survivors are
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physically healthy and without disease.''
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If the boy was right about the seeded plague and his eyes were sharp as
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I suspected they were, he might have spared them for that very reason.
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Or it might be he'd simply missed them before exhaustion caught up with
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him and he ended up retreating to the temple.
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``Send a rider ahead to Lord Adjutant, informing him he is prepare a
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quarantined tent for them,'' I ordered. ``Then have them sent back on
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some of your spare mounts, under escort.''
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``By your will, Your Majesty,'' he said, then hesitated. ``Though it is
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unlikely they will know how to ride.''
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``Tie them on, if need be,'' I flatly said. ``They're in no state to
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walk and I'll not have them rubbing elbows with this one.''
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The last two words were married to a jerky nod of the head towards the
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young villain I'd found.
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``Agreed,'' Grandmaster Talbot said, tone heavy with distaste. ``I'll
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see to it.''
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I let him handle the arrangements, gaze lingering on the Named. Two
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healers from the House Insurgent spent thirty heartbeats trying to heal
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the burns, but to no avail. There was less bleeding beneath the
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blackened skin, but no other difference to speak of. The charred ruin
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that'd been made of the Scorched Apostate's face was not something Light
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or sorcery would be able mend, I suspected. I limped up to the three of
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them, the two priests ending their attempts as I approached and falling
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into deep bows. The House Insurgent's priests always seemed to be trying
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to make up for the my significantly more nuanced relationship with the
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House Constant by open displays of esteem and allegiance, which I still
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wasn't quite sure how to deal with. Over my years of ruling Callow I'd
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had good working relationships with a few brothers and sisters of the
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House, but genuine \emph{deference} from people sworn to Above was still
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something I struggled with.
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``A gallant effort,'' I said, ``but those are beyond Light's ability to
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mend.''
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The boy's eyes betrayed no disappointment at my words, only a sort of
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cynical satisfaction. He'd not believed for a moment he'd be freed from
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the burns.
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``I can only apologize our failure,'' the older of the priests said, and
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seemed intent to continue along that line until I briskly shook my head.
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``There is no need for that. It is a natural thing, and not unknown to
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me,'' I said. ``I once had such a scar as well.''
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A long red cut that went all the way across my chest, where the Lone
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Swordsman had gutted me before leaving me to die.
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``Once?'' the boy spoke up, picking up on the implication. ``No
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longer?''
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``It took a death, but I was rid of it,'' I agreed. ``But you're rather
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to young to be thinking of trifling with angels.''
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It'd taken snatching a resurrection from Contrition to wipe the scar
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away, and I was not truly certain it'd been the angelic touch and not
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the victory before it that'd actually done the trick there. I'd ask
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Tariq to have a look at the boy regardless, just in case Mercy might
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feel like living up to the virtue it claimed, but his Name seemed like
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it might just resist the change tooth and nail: he wasn't called the
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\emph{Lightly Singed} Apostate.
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``Thank you,'' I told the priests. ``I would speak with him alone, if
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you don't mind.''
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Deeps bows once more, and murmurs of agreement.
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``Congratulations,'' I told the Scorched Apostate. ``You are Named, and
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the first of this spring to be brought into a treaty backed by almost
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every crown on Calernia.''
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He blinked with his blue eye, uncomprehending.
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``There's a proper formal name for it,'' I idly continued, ``but most of
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us call it the Truce and the Terms.''
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``A treaty about what?'' the boy asked.
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``Not hanging boys like you when we find them,'' I said.
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``I'm not a boy,'' the boy insisted. ``I'm fourteen.''
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I did not betray my surprise. The burns had made it hard to tell his age
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and he was tall for a boy of fourteen. Especially a peasant one.
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\emph{Fourteen}, I thought with muted grief, \emph{and already hundreds
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of corpses to your name.} There were some among the Named he'd be
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rubbing elbows with that would be impressed by this. They wouldn't even
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all be villains.
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``That's the part that trips you up?'' I still asked, dimly amused.
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``Not the hanging, being called a boy?''
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``You can call me Tancred instead,'' the young villain said. ``Or
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Scorched.''
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I did not quite have the heart to tell him no one would ever call him
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the latter save as mockery, though I suspected even Archer would feel a
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little bad about making sport of someone so painfully earnest.
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``Tancred,'' I said, a half-hearted concession. ``You are Named, and
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though there will be an investigation about what took place in this
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nameless village-''
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``Marserac,'' the boy interrupted, tone heavy. ``It is called
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Marserac.''
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I forced myself not to look at the burning wrecks in the distance behind
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us. Only a handful of far-flung houses would survive of what \emph{had}
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been called Marserac.
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``Do not interrupt me again,'' I said, tone calm but firm.
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Tancred bit the sole part of his lip that was not a blackened ruin,
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looking like I'd slapped him. I made my heart ache, but it needed to be
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done. I was not his mother or his friend: I was his patroness, and
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perhaps on occasion I'd be his teacher. Boundaries needed to be set from
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the very beginning.
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``As the Scorched Apostate, you have been approached by one of the Grand
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Alliance's high officers and extended the chance to sign and abide by
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the Truce and Terms,'' I said. ``Though what took place in Marserac will
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be investigated by my people, and your claim of a seeded plague looked
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into, even if you are mistaken in that claim you'll still fall under the
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blanket amnesty that comes with agreeing to abide by the treaty.''
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Tancred's sole blue eye burned with indignation and he looked about to
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boil over, but he kept his tongue. My lips quirked in approval. Good. If
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he could master himself on this day, of all days, then he had some
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promise.
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``Speak,'' I said.
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``That's \emph{rotten},'' the Scorched Apostate burst out before I'd
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even finished the word. ``That I'd still get away with it if I'd just-''
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He shivered, and I could almost see his mind shying away from fully
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looking at what it was he'd done today. There would be a need to nip
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that habit in the bud -- failing to recognize what you were was a
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dangerous thing, for a villain -- but even now I still had enough mercy
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in me to leave that for another day.
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``- if it'd just been slaughter for slaughter's sake,'' Tancred forced
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out, ``murder for sport. That's \emph{rotten}.''
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The boy hesitated.
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``Sir,'' he hesitantly tacked on, half as a question.
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``That'll do,'' I said. ``And it's not a pretty thing, you're not wrong
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about that. The business of survival never is.''
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The indignation had yet to abate, so I flicked out a hand in permission
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for him to speak once more.
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``They say we're winning the war, though,'' the Apostate said. ``Last
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summer the Black Queen and the Iron Prince almost took back the capital
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in Hainaut, and since then the attack midwinter was beaten back. Why
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does there need to be an amnesty for villains?''
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``For heroes as well,'' I plainly said. ``We've no sole claim on bloody
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swords.''
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It was somewhat refreshing not to have been recognized, I found, but
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this perception that we'd achieved anything but a bloody stalemate
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against the Dead King -- the ruling champion of wars of attrition --
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needed to be put to rest. This summer we might just begin turning the
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tide, Gods willing or out of my damned way, but the sole front that
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could be said to have truly gained victories until now was the Lycaonese
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one. Those hard fuckers up in Twilight's Pass were making all of us
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proud.
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``There is a truce, Tancred, because that first summer offensive in
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Hainaut nearly lost us the war,'' I said, tone serious. ``Because the
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midwinter attacks would have broken through the defensive line if the
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Fortunate Fool hadn't sacrificed himself to take out the Lord of Ghouls,
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or if the Witch of the Woods hadn't flattened one of our own fortresses
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with two thousand of our soldiers still in it. Because we need every
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Named, even the worst of them, and each one that hides from us out fear
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might end up raised into the Dead King's ranks instead if he gets his
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hands on them.''
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The young villain looked at me as if he'd never seen me before. My
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assessment had been stark, true, but I'd wager that was not the reason:
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I was not speaking as an officer would, but as someone who had a seat at
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the kind of table where there were precious few warranting one.
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``So crimes committed before joining the treaty are granted amnesty, no
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matter how foul,'' I said. ``Heroes and villains are to observe the
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peace of the Truce with each other until Keter falls, no matter past
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enmities. Should conflicts arise, or accusations need to be made about
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breaches of the Truce, they are to be brought to their representative
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under the Terms.''
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I nodded at his inquisitive look, granting leave to speak. Indignation
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had gutted out, looked like, as it tended to when it was cast against
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the abstract instead of something you could see or hear. Curiosity was
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more tempting a mistress than arguing with me, at least for now.
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``And who are they?'' the Scorched Apostate asked.
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``The White Knight, for heroes,'' I said. ``The Black Queen, for
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villains. Those who claim to be neither can choose who they would appeal
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to. A band was assembled under the Archer that has a degree of legal
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authority as well, but they are wanderers.''
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Tancred slowly nodded, seemingly not unfamiliar with the Name. Indrani's
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reputation had made it this far north, then. She'd be pleased to hear
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it, vain creature that she was.
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``Under the Terms are also set out obligations that must be fulfilled to
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remain protected by the Truce,'' I continued. ``I'll let you paw through
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the lot of them later -- actually, can you read?''
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Tancred looked away, then shook his head.
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``Something else to see to, then,'' I said. ``They'll be read to you in
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detail by a sworn representative until you can read them yourself. The
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crux of them is simple: follow the laws of the land and serve in the war
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against the Dead King. If there are lesser grievances or breaches,
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punishment will be meted our by your representative under the Terms.''
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Quite a few of the heroes had howled at that last detail, a few like the
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Blade of Mercy and the Blessed Artificer even threatening to walk if it
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was upheld, but with both the White Knight and the Grey Pilgrim in my
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corner we'd had the clout to ram it through. Not that Tariq hadn't had
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his reservations, but we were all aware that precious few villains would
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even consider Truce if joining it meant they were under heroic
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jurisdiction. On my side of the deal the trouble had been making it
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clear to the Named that I was actually serious about enforcing the
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Terms. The Pilfering Dicer hadn't really believed me, and so Hakram had
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held out his hand on a stump as I hacked a finger off as chastisement.
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There'd been another sort of challenge too, unsurprisingly: two other
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villains had lost little time before trying to take my place as
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representative by force of arms.
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The Barrow Sword had been pleasantly straightforward about it, telling
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me outright he intended to use me as a stepping stone to rise high
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enough he could bargain with the Dominion to be named as the founder of
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a line of Blood. He'd just as straightforwardly submitted when I'd
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struck him hard enough with Night to blast him through two carts and a
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palisade. We'd had drinks after, and while he was a ruthless bastard he
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was also halfway decent company if you didn't get him started on the
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Silent Slayer's line. The Red Reaver had not been so respectable in his
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ambition. He'd tried to slit my throat in my sleep only to be caught by
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Indrani while trying to slip through my tent's wards, and after that
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I'd\ldots{} made an example. A warning to anyone else who might have
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similar ambition and lack of sense. There had not been a challenge
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since, though I'd no doubt that the longer this war lasted the more I'd
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end up having to face.
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``I will fight the Hidden Horror,'' the Scorched Apostate solemnly said,
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``on that you have my oath. I will march north and face the dead.''
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``You'll be headed to the Belfry for a few months, Tancred, unless
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there's a pressing need for your talents,'' I drily told him.
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While the smouldering remnants of Marserac behind us were testament to
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the power the young villain was capable of wielding, I had no intention
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of sending a mage so spectacularly untaught straight into the nightmare
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of the northern defensive line. That was a recipe for either losing a
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company to an uncontrolled blaze or serving up Keter a fresh Revenant.
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Named lost a great deal of power after the Dead King got to them, and
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some aspects Neshamah either could not or would not maintain in death,
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but a Revenant spellcaster with this much of a bite to him would be a
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rough ride to deal with even if he ended up having only one trick.
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``The Belfry, sir?'' the boy hesitantly asked.
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``This isn't the kind of war that can be won with boots on the ground
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alone, Tancred,'' I said. ``The Grand Alliance understood that well
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before it began mobilizing. There would be a need for fresh sorceries,
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for unprecedented warding schemes and artefacts. A safe haven would have
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to be built for those scholars who would study the Hidden Horror's
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tricks and learn how to unmake them, too, one beyond his reach. And so
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the Arsenal was ordered raised.''
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I let a moment pass, gauging how much I should truly say. There'd been
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some of us, at the beginning, who'd argued that the Arsenal's existence
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should be kept a secret. Princess Rozala had been one of the more ardent
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partisans of that belief, arguing that against Keter the best defence
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was secrecy, and the Grey Pilgrim had backed her -- which meant the
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Blood had as well. In private with me, Tariq had argued that by keeping
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the Arsenal secret now we would later get the benefit of revealing it
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when tipping a pivot one way or another, but I'd been unconvinced then
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and I was unconvinced now. As it happened Hasenbach and I had, for once,
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been in complete and utter agreement. Even if one was willing to write
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off the effects on morale that knowing such a place existed would have
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on the rank and file of the Grand Alliance, which neither of us was, the
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fact remained that practically speaking keeping it secret would be near
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impossible.
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Too many people would be involved in its construction and its upkeep.
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Whether it be building the towers and laboratories, bringing in food by
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cart or even something as simple as making the beds in the rooms there
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would be a need for workers and servants to handle the labour. That we'd
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gathered some of the finest magical minds in Procer, Callow and Levant
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before going further by bringing in scholars, priests and artisans meant
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that numbers alone would make disappearances glaringly obvious anyway.
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And it wasn't like the Dead King wasn't going to expect us to have such
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a facility. No, better to lay false trails by the dozen and keep the
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\emph{location} secret rather than attempt the improbable outcome of
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utter secrecy.
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``There are two societies within it, the Workshop and the Belfry,'' I
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continued. ``The Workshop concerns itself with the making of artefacts,
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armaments and alchemies. The Belfry's mandate is broader in scope: study
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of the Dead King's creatures, war magic and warding, experimental
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research.''
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I let a beat pass so the details could sink in. The part that mattered
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most I'd consciously split from the rest.
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``The Belfry also concerns itself with teaching mages,'' I told the boy.
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It'd been a struggle to pull away Masego from his attempts to establish
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his proof of concept for Quartered Seasons and the other half dozen
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projects he'd picked up, but the results had been well worth the hassle:
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he'd trained up a few talented Proceran practitioners to what he called
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`acceptable' scrying ritual standards, which was maybe two decades ahead
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of what anyone west of the Whitecaps had previously been capable of.
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That cadre now served as permanent teachers for the hedge talents the
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First Prince was sifting through Procer for, sent in by bands of twenty
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for teaching. The scrying network for the Grand Alliance was arguably
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the largest and widest-reaching on the continent at the moment, if
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likely still inferior in quality and reliability to Praes'.
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Communications grew harder the closer we were to active warfare against
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Keter, too, now that Neshamah had begun using disruptive rituals.
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Adjusting our rituals so that the disruptions wouldn't affect them was
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exactly the kind of puzzle the Belfry had been assembled to solve,
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though, so we'd see how long that lasted.
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Getting a training camp running for war magic had been a great deal less
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successful, unfortunately. Even after lowering the bar of used sorcery
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to the standard of the Legions of Terror we'd proved incapable of
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reliably training up mages in that manner. We were running thin on
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instructors, true, but at the end of the day the unpleasant truth was
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that there was simply a limited amount of people in Procer with a Gift
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that was strong enough to be useful for war. The total number of mages
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living in the Principate was likely higher than that in the Empire, by
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simple dint of population, but the \emph{quality} of those talents was
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the trouble. Massed sorcery remained beyond our grasp for now, though at
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least training up a handful ritual cadres had proved a workable
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alternative. Standardization remained the largest issue there, since no
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two cadres were capable of doing the same things and there was only
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haphazard overlap.
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``Are you not going to teach me?'' the boy quietly asked.
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His face was hard to read, which I supposed was a feeble silver lining
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to the scorching of his face. His voice, though, his stance? He was
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fourteen and, Named or not, he'd seen precious little of the world. He
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might as well be an open book to me.
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``There are things you'll learn from me,'' I said. ``Magic, however,
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isn't one of them. I don't have the Gift. I do happen to be acquainted
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with a few of the finest practitioners of it alive, though, so rustling
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up a good tutor for you shouldn't be all that difficult.''
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Who to send him to would be something to consider. Masego's interest in
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teaching could best be described as passing, though he was a rather able
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tutor when talked into it. Hierophant also had so much on his plate the
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meal could feed two and he'd lost the ability to practice magic. Roland
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might be a better fit, anyway, given that his tendency to be a
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generalist meant he always had common grounds with pupils. The Rogue
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Sorcerer was a hero, though, and the way he ended up saddled with the
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work that no one else was particularly good at meant his days were
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nearly as filled as Masego's. The Hunted Magician owed Indrani a favour
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which I might be able to call in for this, but the Proceran villain was
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an enchanter for the Workshop and just\ldots{} generally unpleasant. I'd
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rather the Scorched Apostate be taught by a Named mage instead of a
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Nameless one, but we'd have to see.
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``But I will be sent to this Belfry,'' Tancred said, hesitant.
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``Not alone,'' I replied, taking a measure of pity on him. ``I'm to head
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south myself before long, and I meant to pass through the Arsenal. I'll
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be accompanying you there, at least.''
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Indrani had been riding me about physically setting foot at the Arsenal
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for a few months now, though until today I'd been on the fence about
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taking the detour there after the council. This settled it, though,
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since I'd want to settle the boy comfortably under someone able to teach
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him before moving on. Archer wasn't wrong, either, when she said that it
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was sloppy of me to have never met so many Named on our side, including
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villains I represented under the Terms. How many were there nowadays,
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between the Workshop and the Belfry? Ten, twelve? Less than half of that
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were of mine, since it was harder to find villains willing to play nice
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with others than heroes, but even getting a good look at the currents of
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the place might not be a bad idea. If we lost the Arsenal, the war would
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begin a death spiral downwards in a matter of months: best to make sure
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it wouldn't shatter itself from within.
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``Good,'' the Scorched Apostate said, perking up. ``I have-''
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I wasn't riding Zombie this time so her discomfort could not serve as
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warning for the closeness of the Beastmaster, but the old trick I'd once
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taught Vivienne still worked. Someone had been looking at me intently,
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too intently. It'd been an attempt to sneak up on me, I decided, and
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there were few who'd attempt that against me in broad daylight.
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``Beastmaster,'' I interrupted, ``have you grown shy? Come out properly,
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introduce yourself.''
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The man bedecked in furs and leather let out a grunt and circled away
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from my back, only then catching Tancred's notice. Only one hawk was
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still on his shoulder.
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``Your pet witch sent word,'' Beastmaster said. ``She makes haste, as
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you ordered.''
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``Have you called her that to her face?'' I asked, morbidly curious.
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I almost hoped he hadn't, just so he might try it before me: it'd been
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too long since I'd seen Akua flay someone alive with her tongue. The
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Beastmaster spat to the side.
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``Better to embrace vipers than speak with witches,'' the Named
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dismissively said.
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\emph{So}, I thought amusedly, \emph{you've most definitely called her
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that to her face and the predictable ensued.} Slow learner, was he? Not
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that he'd been the first. It never ceased to amaze me that some people
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somehow ended up thinking \emph{Akua Sahelian} would be an easy prey for
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barbs or bluster just because she did not have a Name while they did. It
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was like sticking you hand in a wolf's maw and expecting the teeth not
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|
to wound because they weren't a bear's.
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|
``That hawk,'' Tancred said. ``I've seen it before.''
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``She saw you,'' Beastmaster replied.
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Since apparently Ranger's education in Refuge had not extended to basic
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|
courtesies -- and Gods, I'd meant that as a jab but now that I
|
|
\emph{thought} about it -- I saw to the introductions myself.
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``Tancred, this is the Beastmaster,'' I said. ``He's a former pupil of
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the Lady of the Lake, and now a mercenary in the service of the Grand
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|
Alliance.''
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|
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|
Paid not in coin, which I would almost have preferred. The Beastmaster
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|
had instead bargained for certain rights and permissions, as well as
|
|
guides to be provided to show him paths to ancient places in the depths
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|
of Brocelian Forest. Coin meant little to the Named of Refuge, used as
|
|
they were to barter instead, and the relative modesty of the man's
|
|
demands meant he'd gotten near everything he'd asked for. He'd simply
|
|
been too useful an asset to be carelessly tossed aside, and even with
|
|
Refuge having effectively collapsed it wasn't like he'd not had other
|
|
places to go. The fighting in the Free Cities was far from over, despite
|
|
General Basilia's streak of victories.
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|
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|
``Greetings,'' Tancred said, though he was frowning.
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|
``Beastmaster, this is the Scorched Apostate,'' I said. ``He has agreed
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|
to abide by the Truce and the Terms.''
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|
The older Named looked the younger up and down, seeing no longer the
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|
villain who'd caused the blaze in the distance but a boy a fourteen with
|
|
most his face lost to burns and clothes that were well on their way to
|
|
being rags. He was visibly unimpressed.
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|
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|
``Another one plucked out of the mud?'' Beastmaster said with a hard
|
|
bark of laughter. ``At least this one has fight in him.''
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|
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|
``Not half an hour ago,'' I mildly reminded him, ``you were wary of him.
|
|
Did you boldness perhaps travel by foot, to be arriving so late after
|
|
the rest of you?''
|
|
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|
His face darkened. I met his gaze squarely. Like Archer in the early
|
|
days, he'd take any attempt at diplomacy as weakness and continue to
|
|
push his luck. But he wasn't Indrani, and I was not a Squire well out of
|
|
her depth. I'd killed harder men then him and done it with a great deal
|
|
less power than I could now call on. Confident in his strength as he
|
|
might be, he'd be looking at the trail of corpses left in my wake and be
|
|
forced to admit that were Named among the lot that would have butchered
|
|
him without batting an eye. And so he backed down, or at least as close
|
|
to that as his character could afford to let him.
|
|
|
|
``There is nothing left to hunt,'' the Beastmaster said. ``I take my
|
|
leave of you.''
|
|
|
|
I could sting him further, but there would be no point to it save
|
|
passing pleasure. Not that I'd let the retreat pass entirely without
|
|
comment, lest he take that as relief on my part.
|
|
|
|
``By all means,'' I replied. ``The conversation was getting stale.''
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|
|
|
Beastmaster's lips thinned, but he strode away without speaking any
|
|
further. I glanced at Tancred, who'd been following all of it with wide
|
|
eyes and now was looking at me a little guiltily.
|
|
|
|
``I'm sorry,'' the Scorched Apostate said. ``I didn't mean to get you in
|
|
trouble.''
|
|
|
|
``Trouble?'' I echoed.
|
|
|
|
``Won't he complain to the Black Queen?'' the boy asked. ``You've made
|
|
an enemy of a powerful Named on my behalf.''
|
|
|
|
He seemed genuinely worried, which was a little touching.
|
|
|
|
``You seem to have misunderstood the nature of my relationship with
|
|
him,'' I said, smoothing away any trace of my amusement.
|
|
|
|
Tancred looked appalled, and a little sickened.
|
|
|
|
``I am sorry, sir,'' he said. ``I did not mean to insult your lover.''
|
|
|
|
I choked. Beastmaster, of all men? Gods, I'd rather sleep with the
|
|
Mirror Knight. The man might be an insufferable prick, but at least he
|
|
bathed regularly.
|
|
|
|
``He's not my lover, he's my \emph{subordinate},'' I said.
|
|
|
|
In the boy's defence, he seemed pretty mortified by the mistake. His
|
|
embarrassment passed soon enough, though, and left behind only the
|
|
latest hint in a series of them that'd been growing the longer we spoke.
|
|
|
|
``Those priests and horsemen,'' the young villain said. ``They were
|
|
Callowan. And yet they bowed to you.''
|
|
|
|
``So they did,'' I agreed.
|
|
|
|
My hand reached within my cloak to extricate the long dragonbone pipe
|
|
Masego had gifted me so many years ago, then producing a satchel of
|
|
Orense bitterleaf from another pocket. Sadly the bitterleaf enough had
|
|
come to replace wakeleaf as my vice of choice as it was much easier to
|
|
get your hands on this far north. The smoke was heavier than wakeleaf's,
|
|
and it was often mixed with sweeter herbs to take the edge of the
|
|
sourness off, but it scratched the itch well enough when stuffed in a
|
|
pipe.
|
|
|
|
``You implied you were a high officer of the Grand Alliance,'' the
|
|
Scorched Apostate continued. ``But that's not all you are, is it?''
|
|
|
|
I passed my palm over the pipe, flames flickering within through a twist
|
|
of the Night, and pulled at the mouth a few times before spewing out a
|
|
steam of smoke.
|
|
|
|
``Who \emph{are} you?'' Tancred asked.
|
|
|
|
``The Firstborn named me Losara, the Queen of Lost and Found,'' I lazily
|
|
replied. ``To the Wasteland I was the Squire, the Carrion Lord's sole
|
|
apprentice. The fae knew me by many names, though the last I ever bore
|
|
was that of Sovereign of Moonless Nights. On this side of the Whitecaps,
|
|
though? It's a simple name I am known by.''
|
|
|
|
``The Black Queen,'' the boy whispered hoarsely. ``The leader of the
|
|
Woe.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye,'' I said, with a crooked smile. ``And now let's find you some
|
|
boots, because I refuse to keep wincing every time I look at your
|
|
shoes.''
|