525 lines
28 KiB
TeX
525 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-5-expired}{%
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\section{Chapter 5: Expired}\label{chapter-5-expired}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``It which does not take the knife of mistake by the grip is
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destined to take it by the blade instead.''}
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-- Drow saying
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\end{quote}
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When I'd still been a girl of sixteen, the closest thing I ever got to a
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father taught me the basics of killing mages. \emph{Hit them quick},
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Black had said, \emph{and don't give them time to dig in. Hinder
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visibility and close the distance. Always go for killing strokes, a
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wounded mage is twice as dangerous.} They'd been good lessons, time had
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taught me, though they shone most against Wasteland practitioners.
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Unfortunately, they'd been lessons meant to be used against mundane
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mages. Not Named. Not Revenants.
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Those I'd learned to fight the hard way.
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The Scorched Apostate's -- no, he was just the Revenant now, lest guilt
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slow my hand -- wrist came down jerkily and a strand of brilliant
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mageflame shot out towards me. It was quick for a spell of that calibre,
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both in casting and in movement. I breathed out and let the Night flow
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through my veins, chasing away the cool touch of spring and sharpening
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my eyesight. The properties of that spell were still unknown to me, so
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caution was in order. \emph{Would that I'd believed that just a bell
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ago}, the thought came, bitter and unbidden. Dark power roiled in a
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circle, expanding outwards between myself and the flame as the unstable
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portal into Arcadia came into being with a quiet keening sound. The
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Revenant's other hand rose, flames gathering to it, but I wouldn't fall
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for this shallow a trick. I was already grasping the Night with my will
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when the still-moving strand went around the expanding portal, and I saw
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no need for great subtlety: I broke the strands that made up the edge of
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the portal-gate, leaving the working to violently collapse.
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The detonation of Night did not disperse the flame, to my surprise, but
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it at least established that the Revenant's sorcery was not entirely
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unaffected the power I wielded: it was knocked off its trajectory. My
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sharpened sight picked out the way the Night seemed to unravel when in
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direct touch with the brightly shining flame, much as Night did when in
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direct contact with true Light. A consequence of \emph{source purity},
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Hierophant had once told me: Light was said to be a gift from Above,
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while Night ran from the fountainhead of Sve Noc. There was an inherent
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superiority to the fundamental stuff Light was made of. Magic should not
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have been able to mimic that effect, of course, but people kept telling
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me usurpation was the essence of sorcery for a reason. It didn't matter,
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though. This was a fresh Revenant, not a fully settled one, so when I
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painted surprise on my face and let the flame continue streaking towards
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me -- swiftly joined by a second strand -- it did not look any further.
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It did not notice the fine line of Night I had slithering along the
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ground, the way it formed a loose circle around it.
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When the first strand of bright flame came within two feet of me, I
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breathed out and took a step back through a gate into the Twilight Ways
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before closing it. I did not look at the kinder, softer starry sky above
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and simply kept my mind turned to the Night strand I'd left behind in
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Creation. Using it as a compass, I took five brisk steps forward before
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raising my staff and opening a gate back into Creation. The Revenant had
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the time to half-turn towards me before I unleashed a torrent of raw
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Night from the tip of my staff, aimed straight at its head. Decapitation
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wouldn't kill one of them, it'd take more damage than that to break the
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necromancy animating it, but it \emph{would} blind it. With the sole two
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spells it ought to be able to control still out there it should have no
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-- ah, clever Revenant. Even as I stepped back out into Creation, in the
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same heartbeat it dismissed the sorcery it'd been using and began a
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fresh spell right on its own face. It wasn't quite quick enough, or
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powerful enough: half of my torrent remained untouched and so tore right
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through the left half of its face.
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Even the right side was damaged, because it did not quite have the
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control to detonate one of its spells so close to itself harmlessly, but
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for a Revenant such surface damage was mere cosmetic. I struck the
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ground with my staff, seizing the circle of Night I'd left behind and
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sharpening it to an edge before pulling it tight: like a razor-sharp
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garotte, it sprung towards the Revenant at ankle-height like I'd pulled
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on a noose knot. For a heartbeat the undead Named hesitated. I was
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close, a mere three steps behind it, and it wanted to kill me. But its
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legs were being threatened. It chose, and chose poorly. Two spells
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bloomed, one striking toward the Night-wire and the other towards my
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face. That single heartbeat had allowed me to take a step forward, and
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so before the spell towards me could shoot out I slapped away the arm
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with the side of staff. It knocked the Revenant askew, which disrupted
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its aim with the other spell as well. As it tried and fail to gain its
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footing back, I struck out with my free hand even as the Night-wire
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sliced through its too-large boots -- the box's lid trembled -- at ankle
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height.
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My fingers sunk into its chest, coated with Night, and I went looking
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for an aspect should there be any to take. Two-half formed, I found with
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cool disappointment, but nothing I could make my own. I still ripped out
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the shapeless bundle that tasted vaguely of sight, dust trickling down
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my fingers as I drew back and let the Revenant hit the ground. It had, I
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found, decent combat sense for one so freshly raised: it'd shot out the
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two spells after all, and instead of trying to form others from scratch
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it was now guiding both strands of bright flame straight towards my
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torso. It would have been a proper monster, I thought, if given time to
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sharpen. Instead I whisked out all the Night still flowing through me,
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shaped it and tapped the butt of my staff against its chest once before
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taking a limping step back. The black flames I'd birthed ate through the
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flesh as if it were dry kindling, though not so fast that I did not have
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to take another two painful steps back to evade the strands of bright
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sorcery still chasing me.
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The strands of flame gutted out suddenly, after the second step, but
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this wasn't my first Revenant fight. I left my own flame to its work
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until it was undeniable that more than half the body was gone, only then
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smothering them out with a twist of will. I breathed out, leaning
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against my staff, and felt my leg throb with violent pain. It was an
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almost welcome distraction from the way I'd taken a boy of fourteen
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under my protection and then he'd not even lasted through the
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\emph{fucking night}. Though she made no sound at all, I felt Akua's
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presence in the Night as she hurried at my side. Too late for the fight,
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which had felt like it lasted an hour but in practice couldn't even have
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lasted a long prayer's length. The hem of her dress sweeping the wet
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grass and stoe as she slowed her pace, the shade came to stand at my
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side. She followed my gaze, which had dipped beyond Tancred's broken
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corpse to the mutilated remnants of the ghouls who'd eaten and
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impersonated my escort.
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If she offered me sympathy -- pity by another name -- Gods forgive me,
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but I'd find a way to put her back into the godsdamned cloak. I was in
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no mood for platitudes.
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``A new breed of ghouls,'' Akua said, tone calm. ``Impersonators?''
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I breathed in, breathed out. Good. Yes, there were more important
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matters at hand than the way I felt like screaming.
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``Yes. They were slightly off,'' I said. ``Too small, maybe? It was hard
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to tell.''
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``It might be a matter of mass,'' she suggested. ``It tends to be one of
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limitations for shapeshifters.''
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``Sisters make it that those are too expensive to make often,'' I
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grunted back. ``They weren't anything to boast of in combat, not like
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the war-breeds, but that's clearly what not they're meant for.''
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``The presage boxes the Arsenal makes can be used to weed out such
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impostors,'' Akua noted. ``Assuming those ghouls are, in fact, still
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necromantic constructs.''
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``They are, the Dead King was able to speak through one. But the boxes
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glow when there's \emph{any} undead within a hundred feet, Akua,'' I
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skeptically said. ``Sure, this far behind our lines that'll work as a
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test but out there on campaign? I'll be damned if they don't be turn
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into lanterns you can't even put out.''
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``We might need to rely on priests until more precise instruments can be
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created, then,'' the shade said. ``Regardless, as a preliminary to
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deeper studies you've left enough of the corpses that they can be tested
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for baser weaknesses.''
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``Back to camp, then,'' I said, keeping my voice steady. ``We'll put the
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bodies in the Night. Do the same with the villagers, and some of the
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building materials as well. We're trying to recover more than the seeds
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now: we'll have to see if they can reproduce the Revenant's sorcery as
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well.''
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``Agreed,'' Akua said. ``It can be done within half an hour, I'd wager.
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If you would retrieve your mount?''
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I breathed in, breathed out. The horses, the one's that'd not moved
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much. They still hadn't, so they'd probably been killed, but I'd have to
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make sure.
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``Yeah,'' I said. ``Yeah, I can do that.''
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The golden-eyed woman stood at my side, still as only a shade could be.
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Waiting for me to move first. I took a step, fingers taut around the
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yew, and caught sight of the horse blanket still on the flat stone where
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the boy had been sleeping.
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``\emph{Fuck},'' I hissed out.
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Leaving my staff to stand unnaturally upright in my wake, I strode away.
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Even with only one woman for audience it would have felt childish to
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throw it down. Yet the urge to just break something was consuming my
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hand, the desire so strong Night was flickering around my hands without
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having been called upon.
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``I should have caught it, Akua,'' I said. ``\emph{I should have
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godsdamn caught it}. I'm getting slow on the uptake. Worse yet I'm
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getting sloppy. I should have dragged him back to camp immediately even
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if he had to ride with the survivors the whole way. Instead I waited
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here for you and the kid got killed because I figured we could take it
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slightly easy just once.''
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I was starting to make mistakes, and I couldn't afford mistakes.
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``Yes,'' Akua Sahelian frankly said. ``You should have.''
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It should have angered me, the way she confirmed my disgrace without so
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much as a speck of hesitation, but it didn't. I wouldn't have allowed
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myself to lose my grip around her if I'd not been willing to suffer that
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sort of appraisal in the first place.
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``I wouldn't fallen for something like this in Iserre,'' I said. ``Or
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even in Salia. I'm losing my touch.''
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I'd run rings around the Pilgrim and the Tyrant, but now a pack of fresh
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ghouls was enough to snatch a boy under my protection? I would have
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called it humiliating, if the greater failure here wasn't that a kid had
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been slain and put down again, so instead I just called it shameful.
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``The Graveyard was the span of a single night,'' Akua said. ``Salia of
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a few evenings -- the parts that mattered, at least.''
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I turned a hard glare on her, but she did not bat an eye. Why would she?
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She'd faced me down when I'd come at her with steel and Winter, with
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Name and host. She had no fear of my temper, this one.
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``If you use even the sharpest sword in the world every single day, it
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is only a matter of time until its edge grows dull,'' the shade told me.
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``We've all been in the same war, Diabolist,'' I snarled. ``That's not
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an excuse.''
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Because the heroes weren't faltering, were they? Or Archer, or
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Hierophant, or even grizzled old Klaus Papenheim -- who'd lost so much
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it sometimes beggared my comprehension as to how he got up in the
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morning.
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``You have been the preeminent general in Hainaut's defence for more
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than year,'' Akua evenly replied, ``while also acting as captain and
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peacemaker for Named or Blood of every stripe, serving as one of the
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chief strategists of the Grand Alliance and, all the while, being the
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diplomatic broker between it and the Empire Ever Dark.''
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``That-''
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``I am by no mean excusing you, Catherine,'' Akua interrupted, meeting
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my anger without blinking. ``This \emph{is} a failure, and an even
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starker one is the way you came to make this one in the first place. You
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were warned by Adjutant that you could only take so much on your
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shoulders without running yourself ragged. You did not heed his words.''
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``Didn't I?'' I snapped. ``I as good as handed over Callow and the
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negotiations for the Accords to Vivienne. Hakram sifts through every
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single report and letter before they make it to my desk, culling what
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doesn't need me in particular -- Hells, I haven't seen an actual list of
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our supply stocks in a year, only summaries. Indrani and her band are
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handling finding the new Named, Masego and Roland are running the
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Arsenal. I don't even strike beyond our defensive lines anymore: we send
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out bands of five!''
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I panted quietly, the tirade having set my lungs aflame.
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``How much more can I possibly delegate?'' I asked. ``I'm not whining,
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Akua, I'm genuinely asking -- how much more of this can I \emph{possibly
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delegate}?''
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``Turn over full command of the Third Army to General Abigail,'' the
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golden-eyed shade answered without missing a beat.
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``She's not there yet,'' I said. ``Not against-''
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``Then demote her, or name someone able in her stead,'' Akua said. ``You
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are making, dearest, an old mistake of my people.''
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``Haven't raised any flying fortresses, have I?'' I scoffed.
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``You have warred with the same enemy for too long, fought him too
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often,'' she said, tone flat. ``The Dead King is learning your back of
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tricks, your art of war. You are teaching your strengths and weaknesses
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to the Enemy, Catherine, and it is learning. That you tire, that you
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grow impatient, that sometimes kindness is what moves your hand instead
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of practicality.''
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The thing was, Merciless Gods, that she might just be right. I wanted to
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dismiss her, to ask who if not me, to tell her that insisting on seeing
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Creation always through the eyes of the Wasteland would lead her to
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mistake after mistake. Except she'd not been the one to slip-up, had
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she? And she might not have been the only one to notice I was getting
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tired, either. Was that why Razin and Aquiline had started pushing me
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again, testing boundaries I'd thought settled? The Dominion's nobles, as
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a rule, were not the kind of people who'd let a weakening warlord keep
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the reins. My own people hadn't said anything, but would they? To
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Callowans, I was still the Black Queen. If it looked like I was
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slipping, how many of them would simply assume a fresh game was afoot?
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``You need to step back,'' Akua said. ``Sharpen your edge once more and
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return to the field only on your own terms. Else you will bury yourself
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in a grave you insisted on digging every shovelful of yourself.''
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I gestured sharply at her, before limping back to my staff, and she did
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not say more. Adjutant, I thought, would have gently kept prodding until
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I either agreed or dismissed. Unlike him, Akua Sahelian was
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well-acquainted with the sin of pride: the shade said nothing that would
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further bruise mine. She would not bring this up again, I knew, for
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which I was almost grateful. I'd turn to Hakram for advice over this,
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trusting in the clarity of his gaze where mine grew muddied, but I would
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be able to move towards the decision on my own terms. For the grace of
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Akua's approach I was almost grateful, yes, but also bitterly angry.
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Because if I could have had this, the best of her, without the rest?
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``Sometimes,'' I said, tone low and fierce, ``I wish you\ldots{}''
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She'd been a master at keeping her thoughts away form her face even
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before she'd gained the ability to shape it at will, but the sudden
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stillness of it gave her away. Surprise.
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``It doesn't matter,'' I said, shaking my head.
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A hundred thousand souls, for which there would be a price long in the
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taking. That much was an absolute truth, a bedrock. A look passed
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through the golden eyes, one that straddled the line between loathing
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and yearning. I had, once more, offered artless cruelty. Akua Sahelian
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was too good a liar not to have caught it'd been genuine feeling that
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moved me to speak.
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``I'll find my horse,'' I said, cutting through the stillness. ``And
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take care of the corpses here. I'll leave Marserac to you.''
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Golden eyes met mine and only then did she incline her head.
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``As you say,'' Akua Sahelian murmured.
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---
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We took the Twilight Ways back to camp, laden with corpses kept in the
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Night.
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That sort of capacity was one of advantages the bounty of my patronesses
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boasted compared to the Light, which tended to be its superior in direct
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applications and confrontations. Dimensional pockets were usually the
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province of talented mages, who required significant power and resources
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to establish them, or of Named -- Black, for example, had been able to
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carry quite the arsenal in his shadow when he'd still been the Black
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Knight. It was a rarer ability in heroes than villains, though not
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unheard of. The Myrmidon had one, as I recalled. Having a domain could
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allow Named to cheat, too, if they were clever enough and its nature
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allowed. It was still a rather rare skill, in the larger scheme of
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things, and one priests were patently incapable of learning. In
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contrast, knowledge of how to create such a space in the Night was
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considered a useful but hardly uncommon Secret among the Mighty. It
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required a certain amount of power not held beneath the lesser ranks of
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the Mighty, but aside from that little was needed to have one save
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knowledge of the trick.
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The warm breeze of the realm I'd seen the birth of turned into outright
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wind, when flying on Zombie's back, but I hardly minded. The noise of it
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against my ears was drowning out all thoughts save for the most
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disjointed, too much of a distraction for a brooding mood to truly seize
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me. Akua, once more on swan's wings, was keeping pace with me further
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down. We'd used the same crack to slip through into Twilight, so like me
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she'd not need the use of a gate to return to Creation -- or, indeed, to
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be guided towards an exit beyond what the starlit compass provided. It
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was the subtler means of using this realm, though in some ways also the
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most difficult of the two; for there were two ways to use the Twilight
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Ways for travel, at least that we'd grasped so far.
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The first was rather similar in nature to using Arcadia, the making of a
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gate using power. The crux of the difference was in the ease of use: to
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enter Arcadia there'd been need of either a powerful ritual by mages
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taught in that branch of sorcery, or that a sufficiently powerful fae
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intervened. Oh, there were natural places of alignment between Arcadia
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and Creation where anyone could cross through freely -- there was one
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near Refuge, and allegedly one in the deeps of the Brocelian Forest --
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but those were rare and the fae often made sport of those who ventured
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though. In contrast, the Twilight Ways had always been meant to be used
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for travel: they welcomed such use, encouraged it and enabled it. Mages
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found it easy to open a temporary small gate without even a ritual if
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the fabric of Creation was thin enough where they tried, and even
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elsewhere the amount of power needed to form such a gate was
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significantly smaller than if one had tried the same with Arcadia. More
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importantly, it required less skill. It'd been described to me as the
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Ways reaching out and meeting the spellcaster halfway, helping
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them\ldots{} anchor, for lack of a better term.
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And it was not only mages who could succeed at this. It was possible
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with Night as well, though the Mighty had admitted to me that drow
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seemed to need a certain knack to be able to do so no matter how
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powerful they were. Said knkack seemed, to my amusement, to run
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particularly strong among the Losara Sigil as well as another band of
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familiar souls: the Longstride Cabal in the far north, who'd once tried
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to hunt me in Great Strycht. Light could open a gate as well, though
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once more there seemed to be some ineffable requirement we poorly
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understood: the Lanterns could create such gates almost to a man, while
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Procerans struggled greatly and my own House Insurgent had proved
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incapable of consistent results. No matter the provenance or power,
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though, all had the benefit of what some Arlesite poet had named the
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`\emph{starlit compass'}. Anyone entering the Twilight Ways with a clear
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destination in mind would feel the call of that destination ahead of
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them, and known where to weave a gate out. Not so accurately as I had
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when I'd been Sovereign of Moonless Night, but usually within a mile of
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where they intended to arrive.
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This was also the method by which permanent gates could be established,
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though we'd found that to be chancy business. A physical, permanent gate
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tended to disrupt every other kind of gating in the region around it and
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they were finicky beasts besides. Hierophant had nearly lost an arm
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trying to make a second one, afterwards telling me that the Ways had
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somehow been \emph{displeased} by him being the architect of more than
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one. The Witch of the Woods, on the other hand, had forged one on the
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outskirts of Salia in an afternoon's work and without any difficulty
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whatsoever. We still knew so little about the Ways, in the end, and
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perhaps come better days we'd be able to spend the scholars to plumb the
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depths of the secrets but as it was the Belfry had too much on its plate
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to be able to spend many hours on it. Besides, I was disinclined to
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complain too much of the eccentricities of Twilight when one of them was
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the realm's active antipathy for the Dead King and all his works.
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The second manner of using the Ways was the one Akua and I had used
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tonight, which Archer -- who'd effectively pioneered it, and still
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remained a finer practitioner of than anyone save perhaps the Grey
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Pilgrim himself -- had named \emph{sidling}. Those of us with senses
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that were not entirely physical could often sense where the fabric of
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Creation thinned, but with practice it could be learned to feel out
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where there were\ldots{} cracks between Creation and the Twilight Ways.
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Cracks one could slip through when they were found, though they were
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ephemeral things and particularly capricious where gates of any sort had
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been recently used. It could take some time to find the cracks, and
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often required some luck as well as fine senses, which was why near
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everyone using the method was either Named or nonhuman. Given the
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difficulties involved one might be tempted to dismiss \emph{sidling} as
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an inferior form of travel, save for two facts: sidled paths through the
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Ways were measurably faster and more precise than those come of gates,
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and there were also completely traceless.
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|
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|
A Twilight gate, even only a temporary one, could found by scrying,
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rituals or even just having a sufficiently sensitive entity close when
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it happened -- whenever we used them to deploy troops against the Dead
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King, the surprise was strategic and almost never tactical. Our presence
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|
was known ahead of being seen, always. Archer, on the other hand, had
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once sidled out of the Ways with her entire band with only a crumbling
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|
wall between her and the Prince of Bones and the Revenant hadn't had a
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|
clue before she shot it in the back of the head. Not that it'd killed
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the thing, but it'd been a gallant effort. Beneath me, the black swan
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Akua had shapeshifted into began a graceful arc downwards and I led
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Zombie into the same. The wind's howl picked up, until my mount landed
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at a gallop and obeyed the touch of my hand by folding in her wings. I
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|
pressed down against her mane even as Akua's graceful form passed
|
|
between what seemed to be two raised stones and disappeared.
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|
|
|
Zombie navigated the slope leading down to the raised stones and slipped
|
|
between them: a heartbeat later, after a sensation like a hand passing
|
|
through my hair, we were on Creation again.
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|
|
|
As a testament to the accuracy of sidling, we'd emerged a mere twenty
|
|
feet away from the camp's main gate. Akua's elegant landing had seen her
|
|
rise into human shape again, and she caught up to me after I reined in
|
|
my horse's heady gallop to a halt. By the time the shade was once more
|
|
at my side, a frown had made its way onto my face: I was looking at the
|
|
camp, and not liking what I was seeing. The outer defences were
|
|
untroubled, remaining both well-manned and vigilant. The army camp's
|
|
layout was a recent advance, a merging of the Belfry's advances in
|
|
temporary warding and the demands of military efficient: four
|
|
interlocked squares, all sharing the same initial lines of defence.
|
|
First a ditch dug into the ground, followed by a thing stripe of solid
|
|
ground leading to a second ditch, itself leading directly into a
|
|
traditional Legion palisade, bolstered by watchtowers. The stripe of
|
|
solid ground between ditches had stone markers wedged in at regular
|
|
intervals, carved with a runic ward that would produce a loud bell-like
|
|
ringing sound as well a begin glowing should there be movement within
|
|
the span of the ward.
|
|
|
|
The teeth of the defence were at the bottom of the second ditch: spikes
|
|
might not do much against undead, but the gouts of flame from enchanted
|
|
metal rods and the Light-infused stones could turn the bottom of the
|
|
palisade into a brutal killing yard.
|
|
|
|
The warding stones had not been activated, and atop the palisade the
|
|
watchful gazes of a mixture of Callowan and Proceran soldiers were not
|
|
something I found any fault in. It was the pulsing lights at the heart
|
|
of the camp, where the four squares interlocked, that had me frowning.
|
|
Each of the squares held its own separate set of three large-scale
|
|
protection wards -- against scrying, vermin and illusions -- but they
|
|
were also connected to the central array near my own tent. That array
|
|
was mostly there to serve as a stabilizer, but it could also be used to
|
|
forcefully purge power that accumulated in any of the wards because of
|
|
imprecisions in how they were laid. Essentially it was a pressure valve
|
|
we could activate before the wards started breaking down from the
|
|
impurities, though the act of release itself sent out a pulse of power
|
|
that tended to screw with all the lesser enchantments and wards within
|
|
the camps so we very much avoided using it if we could. Yet it'd been
|
|
activated tonight, that much was clear from the way there were still
|
|
glimmering lights above the centre of the camp.
|
|
|
|
Likely more than once, too, for the leftover sorcery to be this visible.
|
|
|
|
``Akua?'' I prompted.
|
|
|
|
``It was activated when there were no accumulated impurities to purge,''
|
|
the shade said, sounding displeased.
|
|
|
|
She would be, having personally set down the central array this ought to
|
|
have turned into a proper mess.
|
|
|
|
``And what would that actually do?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Still send out a pulse of sorcery,'' Akua said. ``Yet it would be
|
|
weaker, and the sorcery would be drawn from wards that are functioning
|
|
as intended. Likely it would damage them, perhaps even crack the
|
|
wardstones.''
|
|
|
|
I vehemently cursed in Kharsum. The materials for those were damned
|
|
expensive, as you couldn't just carve runes and lay enchantments on any
|
|
slab of sandstone grabbed from the side of the road if you wanted to
|
|
make proper wards: you had to get materials from places where power of
|
|
one sort or another had flowed for a long time. Even worse, it was the
|
|
labour of weeks if not months to both anchor the ward in the stone and
|
|
then align that ward with the rest of the wardstones so they'd bolster
|
|
each other instead of conflict.
|
|
|
|
``Unless my general staff and Princess Beatrice suddenly went mad,
|
|
they'll have an explanation for it,'' I said, in a tone that implied
|
|
they damn well better have an explanation for it.
|
|
|
|
Ahead of us the watch had seen us lingering in front of the gate, and by
|
|
the sounds of it recognized our admittedly distinctive appearances.
|
|
Hails were sent out and I answered with my raised staff, which was
|
|
enough to get the gates open. A group of five Lanterns, twice as many
|
|
Proceran fantassins and what looked like one of the Third Army's mages
|
|
bid us to approach, the mage holding a presage box in her hands.
|
|
|
|
``There is someone else with the authority to order such purging,'' Akua
|
|
pensively said.
|
|
|
|
She was right, I considered as we entered the camp and the gates
|
|
thunderously closed behind us. There was one more.
|
|
|
|
Which meant, like as not, that the White Knight was back early.
|