622 lines
28 KiB
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622 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-20-hook}{%
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\section{Chapter 20: Hook}\label{chapter-20-hook}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Fate is not the river but the fisherman: run wild as you will,
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it will reel you in before the end.''}
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-- Queen Edda Norland of Summerholm, shortly before the surrender of her
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crown to House Alban
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\end{quote}
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I was a city girl at heart so hunting had never been something I thought
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all that fondly of.
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Not that I hated it, either. Out in the country, away from walls and
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merchants, a good stag or a few geese were a good way for my people to
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feed their families. One that'd become increasingly common after the
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Conquest, actually: with the removal of most nobles in the kingdom,
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there were no longer great forests and fields reserved for the sole
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hunting right of aristocrats. The Empire had required a yearly fee in
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silver for the right to hunt in a governor's jurisdiction, but otherwise
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been largely indifferent to the practice. I'd maintained the policy, and
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why wouldn't I? It was a good way for my subjects to put meat on the
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table, especially those who might not have otherwise been able to afford
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it. But that'd been in the country, not in Laure.
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There hunting had been a leisurely pursuit for the wealthy and the
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\emph{noble}, practiced by great trains of riders and multiple packs of
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hounds. Sometimes the animals being hunted were not even edible: by
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ancient law foxes could not be hunted for sport in Callow, but wolves
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and bears could and frequently were. It'd been a great deal of pageantry
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and gold pissed away on reminding people that even under the rule of the
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Dread Empire the rich and highborn were still important and worthy of
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awe. The coin would have been better spent ensuring that the basins the
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street drains emptied in near Nelly's Alley didn't fill up after rain
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and so end up becoming an open-air sewer that stank up a good dozen city
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blocks like you wouldn't believe come summer sun, in my humble opinion,
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but what the Hells did I know?
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I'd had them properly dug anew and done during my first year as queen,
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even though Ratface had howled about the costs.
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Still, general distaste for the spectacle or not it'd been impossible
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not to pick up a few things about hunting being born in Callow. It
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wasn't as simple business as riding a swift horse after a stag and
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running it down with a spear, else highborn would not get to be so
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bloody pretentious about the whole thing. You had to tire out the beast,
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set dogs after it so it'd run itself to exhaustion. Only when it was on
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the edge of collapse would it turn and fight, antlers down as fear
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turned to despair, and only then was the kill to be made. If the nobles
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had gone after the stag themselves from the start, their horses would
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have tired out long before the stag would. I was after a beast of my
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own, here in the Arsenal, so I'd used a method not so dissimilar to that
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of my countrymen: to get the enemy running, I'd sent out a pack of
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baying hounds.
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The Mirror Knight's band was even now chasing down a conspiracy to bring
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it into the light, though perhaps not the conspiracy they believed they
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were. They were a cacophonous bunch, but for all that I believed they'd
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be able to shake \emph{somethin}g loose. They certainly had the power
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and numbers for it: four heroes and the Maddened Keeper, with Adjutant
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to keep an eye on them and ensure they did not end up misusing the
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authority I'd granted them. They'd begun their investigation with the
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Hunted Magician who, all things aside, we could all agree was a shifty
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fellow. Whether or not he'd been up to any sort of wickedness was not of
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too great import, as far as I was concerned: more crucial was that the
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heroes would be seen digging, and word would soon after spread it was
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with my blessing. There was someone in the Arsenal with something to
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hide, and ruby to piglets that little tale would get them moving. With
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such fine hounds out in the woods someone's never was going to crack,
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and they'd want to make sure their tracks were covered.
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Following them should neatly reveal exactly what it was that was being
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covered up.
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Mind you, the hand behind the opposition was not some ingrate prince
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with more greed than sense or a heroine fresh off her first nemesis'
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death and looking to sink her teeth into another victory: it was the
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Intercessor pulling the strings here. Just because she'd already struck
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blows didn't mean she was going to stop hitting me below the belt. If
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anything, it'd be the opposite. So I had to see to my own defences,
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which meant keeping the goblinfire away from any open flames. The Red
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Axe was a natural target there but seeing to her protection myself would
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make me directly involved in her death if it happened, which would be
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\emph{considerably} worse than her simply dying. No, someone else needed
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to be charged with that else I was running into the risk that my
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personal involvement had been the desired object from the start.
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The Kingfisher Prince was of high rank, popular with heroes and his word
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would mean a great deal to the likes of the Mirror Knight if he vouched
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for me. That he'd been demonstrably competent and receptive to the
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concept of the manner of war being fought over the Arsenal had sold me
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on the notion for good, and so off he went to sae the Red Axe with a
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signed set of orders from me granting him permission to do so under the
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Terms. Gods help him, mine and maybe even Above if they were to share a
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win instead of pissing in the communal porridge bowl out of principle.
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Now, it wouldn't be enough to simply wait and see now that the hunt had
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been sounded. Which was why Archer was hitting up her old acquaintance
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the Concocter for answers, a conversation that should end up with the
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latter spitting out a part of the Wandering Bard's design here. It had
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to have been a long-term scheme, I figured: the Red Axe and the Wicked
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Enchanter had been tools of opportunity, but the tools to use
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\emph{them} had already been in place. The smuggling, the precise timing
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used to guide the Enchanter onto the path of the heroine that'd kill
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him? That'd been arranged long before, one of no doubt many levers to
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nudge along the happenings within the Arsenal. After that it was just a
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matter of the Intercessor getting the right Named close enough, and she
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could get it all to begin rolling downhill.
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The Concocter wouldn't know the whole web, I was aware of that: there
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should be at least one outright accomplice to the Bard in here, as well
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as several agents unwitting and not. But by dragging into the light what
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she knew, I could get a glimpse of what the levers were meant to
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accomplish. And once I knew that, well, I could smash the Intercessor's
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game to pieces with a sledgehammer and force her to swallow the broken
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shards with a smile. So there we were, I'd considered after the
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Kingfisher Prince had set off. The Mirror Knight's band were out there
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turning over primarily -- one hoped, at least -- stones, Archer was
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finding me a thread to tug at so the net might unravel and the charming
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Prince Frederic was making sure this wasn't about to violently turn on
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me.
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Now, the Bard would see those stories in motion same as I did. The
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question was: if I was her, where would I strike at?
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Setting the Mirror Knight after the Kingfisher would have been obvious,
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except my little letter and Frederic being trusted had cut that disaster
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off before it could start looming. The Concocter wasn't officially one
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of mine, but with what Indrani had told me about her I could easily
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unmake any attempt to claim that `the Black Queen's agent was
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persecuting a heroine'. The Mirror Knight's band could be tricked I
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figured, even with Hakram keeping an eye on them, but there wasn't a lot
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that could physically threaten them. At this point I'd be willing to let
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them encounter an early setback without intervening, anyway, since that
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should ensure they later brutally crushed whoever had beat them this
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early in the pattern.
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My trouble, right now, was that I could not see an easy way the arrows
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I'd loosed could be made to swerve. Out in the open the Intercessor
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couldn't beat me, because even if I was distrusted I was still
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recognized. A figure of authority, backed by other figures of authority.
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Yet Archer should be unearthing part of her machinations where I'd sent
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her, and using violence to prevent her of doing that would reveal part
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of the machinations as well: whoever struck at Indrani would be one of
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the Bard's trusted hands, and pumping them for information would be even
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more useful than shaking some insights out of the Concocter. There
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probably were ways to beat my hand, but I didn't know what they were and
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that meant I couldn't prepare for them. Or, at least, prepare in
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specific.
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There was going to be an answer, and I would have to react to it. While
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I could not prepare for the specifics for the unknown, I could prepare
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\emph{for} the unknown. Practically speaking, that meant assembling a
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team to handle whatever came crawling out of the woodworks on the
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Intercessor's behalf. Calling back anybody I'd sent out would be a
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mistake, unmaking the story they were playing out, which meant if I was
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to gather some sort of bastard band of five I'd need to pick from the
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rest of the Arsenal's Named. Four comrades, huh? I could do that. First,
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I'd naturally needed a trusted second.
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Thankfully I had a spare lying around.
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---
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``I've just had to put out a library fire,'' Roland of Beaumarais, also
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known as the Rogue Sorcerer, mildly told me as he washed his hands free
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of ash. ``I don't suppose you'd know anything about that?''
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``I know lots of things, Roland,'' I vaguely replied.
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His hands left the now-clouded water of the basin and he methodically
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dried them with a cloth.
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``Books, Catherine?'' he said, sounding agonized. ``Castles, armies,
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ancient architectural wonders, I can make my peace with them all. But
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\emph{books}, Catherine? A line has to be drawn somewhere.''
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``If such a thing had been done, it would not have been done lightly,''
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I said.
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``You haven't even been here a whole day,'' he complained.
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Actually, I mused, this could also work.
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``You're right,'' I said. ``I'm a reckless, dangerous woman who'll do
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anything to win.''
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He cocked his head to the side.
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``Have you been drinking?'' he asked.
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Well, yes. But that was not related to this. I decided, for the sake of
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tactics, to ignore his rejoinder.
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``Which is why you should come with me,'' I said. ``Be the voice of
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reason, keep me out of trouble. Prevent me from burning more
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libraries.''
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A beat passed.
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``Not that I've done that,'' I added.
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Another beat passed.
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``But hey, the day's young,'' I added with a hopeful smile.
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He twitched a little. Still, under the harried exterior I could see
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something sharpen in his eyes. The understanding that none of this was
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as casual as it looked, or without calculation.
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``The way Archer tells it, your last designated voice of reason once
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stole the entire sun,'' Roland said.
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``She's still complaining we never got to pawn that off, isn't she?'' I
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sighed.
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``I expect sooner or later the litany will be put to verse,'' the Rogue
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Sorcerer said. ``Still, large boots to fill.''
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He shrugged.
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``I've nothing else planned for the day, however,'' he said. ``So I
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supposed I might as well.''
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``That's exactly the kind of spirit I'm looking for,'' I said, clapping
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him on the shoulder. ``Come, Roland, we have an important task ahead of
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us.''
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He shot me a steady look.
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``I don't suppose you could tell me a little more, that I might equip
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myself accordingly?'' he asked.
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I hummed, then thoughtfully clasped my chin.
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``We're going to cram as many potential traitors as possible into a band
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of five, then dabble into some stirring heroics,'' I replied.
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``Ah,'' Roland of Beaumarais nonchalantly said. ``We'll have to take a
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detour through the Workshop, then. It's where I keep my war artefacts.''
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\emph{Good man}, I thought, and smiled.
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---
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``Her name is Adanna,'' Roland said as we walked, ``and she was born, as
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she tells it, in Smyrna.''
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``It's got roots in Mtethwa,'' I noted. ``Not a common Soninke name,
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though. You said she's highborn?''
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``She certainly behaves like it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``Though
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there is a distinct Ashuran bent to her manners.''
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``What colour are her eyes?'' I asked.
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``Golden,'' he replied. ``It is quite unusual, even for a Chosen.''
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I let out a low whistle.
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``That's not just highborn, that's from one of the old lines,'' I said.
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Born in Smyrna, was she? It was one of the two cities of the
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Thalassocracy of Ashur, its capital. Hells, that must have been quite
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the tale. It would have been a point of pride for the Wasteland family
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they'd fled to have them assassinated, and old families like that tended
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to have a few grimoires' worth of nasty tricks to pull.
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``She's made her disaster for the Dread Empire and all those who dwell
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within it quite clear,'' Roland said. ``It has been one of the reasons
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she so frequently clashes with Hierophant.''
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Which was why Masego wouldn't be part of this band, among other things.
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I also wanted him free to be a source of knowledge and wisdom for any of
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the three stories I'd loosed, which he couldn't be if I was dragging him
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along for mine.
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``Hierophant's not here,'' I said. ``And she requested an audience with
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me, you said. We can have words as we move.''
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``I expect that was not quit what she wished for,'' Roland said, ``but
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regardless, here we are.''
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That last part had not been an outburst of fatalism on the Blessed
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Artificer's behalf but instead Roland informing me we'd reached the
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Artificer's quarters in the Workshop. We'd already picked up the Rogue
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Sorcerer's artefacts, which were now stuffing his pockets and sleeves,
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and it'd not been a long walk from there. The bare stone hallways here
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were little different than anywhere else in the Arsenal, and though I
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would have enjoyed visiting the great workshops of \emph{the} Workshop
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-- birthplace of wonders that it was -- there was no time for
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sightseeing. Instead we found ourselves in front of a neat wooden door,
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and without ceremony I knocked against it with my staff a few times.
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Mere moments later it was wrenched open to my surprise.
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``I've told you already, I won't-''
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Adanna of Smyrna, wearing small spectacles over her golden eyes and
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garbed in clothes I would have expected more of some kindly toymaker
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than a powerful Named, was visibly taken aback when she realized who it
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was standing at her door. Realizing that the Rogue Sorcerer was at my
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side did nothing to help he confusion.
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``Good evening,'' I said. ``I see that look on your face means I won't
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have to bother with introductions, Blessed Artificer.''
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``I am, yes,'' the dark-skinned woman said. ``I know of you, Black
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Queen. And Roland as well.''
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``Splendid,'' I said. ``I've need of your services for a bit, as it
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happens. I'll give you a moment to change and equip yourself.''
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``Equip myself?'' the Blessed Artificer blinked. ``For what?''
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``Trouble,'' I vaguely said.
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Yeah, looking more closely at her she had that highborn look down to the
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bone: quite literally, as those high cheekbones were one of those
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telltale marks of Soninke nobility. This Adanna of Smyrna had not quite
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inherited the inhuman good looks of Wasteland aristocracy, though she
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was far form ugly. I supposed having met Malicia in person and spent
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years in Akua's presence had rather skewed my standards when it came to
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beauty, anyway. She'd definitely not inherited the Wasteland social
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schooling, anyhow, as it took her a full three heartbeats before she
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recovered from the onrush of surprises.
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``I do not recall agreeing to lend you my aid, Black Queen,'' the
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Artificer said, chin rising. ``And if you believe that the Rogue
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Sorcerer's presence will be enough to bully me-''
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``I do believe you've just indirectly called me a tool,'' Roland noted,
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though he sounded rather good-humoured about it.
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``- into compliance then I assure you, you are sorely mistaken,'' the
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heroine finished.
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She had that look about her, like a cat ready to hiss the moment a hand
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was extended, but then that in the first place she'd assume I would need
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Roland to bully anyone told me exactly how I needed to handle her.
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``Please lend me your aid,'' I bluntly asked.
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Ah, so she \emph{had} been taught to hide her emotions some. She wasn't
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great at it -- Gods, but they would have eaten her alive in Praes -- but
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she did smooth out her surprise after a moment.
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``It is for a noble purpose,'' Roland told her.
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Noble might be a bit of a stretch, I mused, but did not contradict him.
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``And you requested an audience, as I recall,'' I said. ``We can see to
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some of that as we walk.''
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The golden-eyed Named hesitated.
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``What is it you require of me, exactly?'' she asked.
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\emph{Gotcha}, I smiled.
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---
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In what I hesitated to call a stroke of luck, given the amount of Named
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in the Arsenal, the last two Named I'd decided on were in the same
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place.
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``You know I respect your judgement a great deal,'' Roland murmured,
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leaning towards me.
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``People only ever say that sentence with a but implied,'' I said.
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He shrugged, not denying me.
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``This seems like it will make a terrible band of five,'' the Rogue
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Sorcerer assessed.
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``Yes,'' I grinned, ``just genuinely terrible, wouldn't it be?''
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He cursed under his breath in what I recognized to be tradertalk.
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``Last time I saw you that savagely enthusiastic, I was thrown off a
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balcony,'' he complained.
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``If a villain throws you off it, it's really more of a cliff,'' I said,
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echoing an old foe.
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One who'd deserved both better and worse than what she'd got, but that'd
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been the lesson of the Proceran campaign hadn't it? That I was not
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facing righteous steel things glinting of Light but people of flesh and
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blood, with all the complexities of character that implied. Though we'd
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been quiet in our little talk, we'd not been \emph{that} quiet: the
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Blessed Artificer overheard, and was not shy in offering up her own
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assessments.
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``One's useless, the other is \emph{drunk} and useless,'' Adanna of
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Smyrna said.
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Well, I couldn't deny the drunk part at least. The Arsenal held within
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its walls hundreds of people, who while they might not have been forced
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to come here had not been aware of exactly how long or \emph{where} they
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would be. Given the concerns about the Dead King's inevitable interest
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in this place and the fact that relative secrecy was the Arsenal's best
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defence, we'd known form the beginning that people would only rarely be
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able to leave once they'd been brought into the fold. As a consequence,
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aside from what had been tacked onto the seat of Grand Alliance's
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research and artifact-crafting to fill its secondary role as a
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communication relay for rulers and high officers, thought had been given
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to the \emph{entertainment} of all the men and women we'd cram into here
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possible for years on end.
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That was the niche the Frolic was meant to fill, in essence. Accessible
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only through the central halls of the Knot -- as well as a discreet
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tunnel coming from the Alcazar -- that part of the Arsenal had been
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built as a sort of ring made up of diversions. One section was
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essentially a sprawling tavern, another a private little brothel, a
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gaudy strip was a gambling house and there'd even been a fighting pit
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tacked on. Callowans and Procerans were fond of dogfights, but the more
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exotic beasts Levantines liked to throw into pits had been deemed too
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expensive and dangerous for consideration. Duels and brawls, though,
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were allowed. Only to first blood and with healers in attendance, but a
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few hundred people could not be squeezed in tight between walls for
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years without some fighting erupting.
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Better to give a clear and controlled outlet for that strife than let it
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erupt out of sight, where there'd be no healers waiting.
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What I was looking at, though, was not anger being settled with first
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blood. It was a crowd of maybe half a hundred cheering at one of the
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sloppiest fistfights I'd ever seen. The part of me that remembered
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fighting for coin in another pit was almost offended by how fucking
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terrible these people -- these Named! -- were at hand-to-hand combat.
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The three of us stood in the shadows of the entrance hall, looking down
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at the fighting pit and the rafter above it, and let the sound wash over
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us.
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``Fallen,'' the crowd howled. ``Fallen, Fallen, Fallen.''
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The Fallen Monk was one of Indrani's band, and one of the villains on
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our rolls that heroes tended to react the most violent to. That was not
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because his sins were so great compared to the rest of Below's lot, but
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because once upon a time he'd instead been known as the \emph{Merry}
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Monk. A Proceran hero from their southern lands, whose very public fall
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from grace had been the talk of Salamans for year: it wasn't every day
|
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someone force-fed one of the Holies until her belly literally burst.
|
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Archer counted him as better at sneaking around than Vivienne had been
|
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back in the day, and good as a bloodhound when something needed to be
|
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found in a town. When it came to fighting, though, aside from being able
|
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to take some punishment and being quite useful against Light-users she'd
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never considered him anything all that special for a Named.
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Fortunately for the overweight and very clearly drunk middle-aged man in
|
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cloth robes, his opponent was even worse a brawler.
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The Exalted Poet's face paint, which had been a neat affair of black and
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red when I first saw him today, and since been damaged by a purpling
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black eye and an amount of sand that really could only have come from
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having his entire face \emph{shoved} into it. His lack of shirt made it
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clear that they made them muscled in the Dominion, but for all that he
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was built like a warrior he certainly wasn't performing like one: the
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punch he threw at the Fallen Monk's face was met with a mirror on the
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other side, the two of them rocking back when they hit each other. The
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Monk stayed up though, if rocking on his feet, while the Poet took a
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dive and had to hastily push off the sandy ground of the fighting circle
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before he could get kicked in the ribs by the fat fallen priest. By the
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amount of empty bottles the audience had carelessly left around in the
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stands, they must have been at this for some time now.
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``It is written in the Book of All Things,'' the Fallen Monk shouted
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red-cheeked for the audience, ``that those who are worthy of the love of
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the Heavens will be blessed with their golden love. Bless me, you mighty
|
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asses!''
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|
The watchers cheered on, and someone threw a wineskin at the villain for
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what was evidently not the first time this afternoon. The former priest
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guzzled down what looked like some pale wine, even as the Exalted Poet
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got back on his feet and charged -- even when tackled in the belly, the
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Monk kept drinking as he went down.
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``They are perfect,'' I solemnly announced. ``Exactly what I was looking
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for.''
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``It cannot be that hard to find a fool and an idiot,'' the Blessed
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Artificer replied.
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``The Monk has a body count of over a hundred, as I hear it,'' Roland
|
|
noted. ``Though I suspect close quarters were not involved.''
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|
Actually, the more I watched those two the less I was convinced that he
|
|
was right. Sure, the Monk stumbled around a lot and got tackled and took
|
|
punches. Yet, almost as if by happenstance, never at an angle that'd
|
|
hurt him much: bruises might ensue, but little more. Either was damned
|
|
good at taking hits, or he was a better fighter than what he was letting
|
|
on here.
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|
``If I fetch them myself, Black Queen, can we then proceed to more
|
|
important matters?'' the Blessed Artificer asked me. ``You have yet to
|
|
hear the complaint I mean to lodge.''
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|
Somehow, I suspected that if I let her handle that we'd not have five
|
|
Named up here but three down there. Roland suddenly stiffened, which
|
|
caught my attention, and he discreetly gestured to our common right --
|
|
though somewhat behind me. Up there, sitting on a bench and leaning back
|
|
against the wall, another Named was reading a book. Sallow-skinned and
|
|
thin-haired, the Sinister Physician had always looked to me like the
|
|
last person you'd ever want to let cut you open. His skills as a healer
|
|
were beyond dispute, though, if not his occasional indulgence in taking
|
|
vitality or souls as payment or even his clear obsession with
|
|
immortality.
|
|
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|
``They've observed the rules, then,'' I murmured at Roland. ``They're
|
|
meant to have a healer at hand.''
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|
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|
I saw no need to seek the other villain out, as it happened. I'd not
|
|
come for him. But that he was here, though, was interesting: at the very
|
|
least, it meant he wasn't \emph{elsewhere}. At first glance anyway.
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|
``Check if it's an illusion,'' I told the Rogue Sorcerer.
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|
``Discreetly.''
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|
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|
``You are ignoring me, Black Queen,'' the Blessed Artificer impatiently
|
|
said. ``If that is all you sought me out for-''
|
|
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|
``I'll see to it myself, Artificer,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
Her open irritation I didn't particularly care about, or even the threat
|
|
to leave she'd obviously been building up to. I knew an empty threat
|
|
when I heard one: for all that the heroine at the very least disliked me
|
|
and had some axes to grind with Roland, she was too curious about where
|
|
this was headed to leave now. I'd not missed her constant
|
|
not-quite-subtle glances at my staff, either. While it was my
|
|
understanding that Light and miracles where her wheelhouse and the
|
|
length of yew I'd retrieved from the heart of Twilight after its birth
|
|
was not exactly either, neither was it simply a staff. And as there was
|
|
no sorcery at the heart of that difference, perhaps her interest in that
|
|
undefined otherness should have been expected. A halfway clever Named
|
|
could to a lot, with the undefined.
|
|
|
|
``So?'' I pressed the Rogue Sorcerer.
|
|
|
|
He released what he'd been clutching in one of his pockets, breathing
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
``Not an illusion,'' he confirmed.
|
|
|
|
Good, that was one more Named accounted for. Time for me to get bring in
|
|
our last two comrades, then. The audience that'd been cheering for the
|
|
two brawling Named all the while had not noticed the three of us, as
|
|
we'd stayed in the shadows of the hall, but when I began to limp down
|
|
the stairs a few caught sight of me. My face might not have been all
|
|
that recognizable, but even this bare a crown and the Mantle of Woe were
|
|
enough for exclamations of Black Queen to shiver through the crowd. I
|
|
ignored the attention and made my way to the edge of the pit, looking
|
|
down at the two Named whose brawling had ceased when silence spread. I
|
|
flicked a look at the people up here.
|
|
|
|
``Dismissed,'' I said, voice ringing.
|
|
|
|
Not one argued otherwise, and they filed out with a rather subdued mood
|
|
hanging over them. Of the two Named below, only the Exalted Poet looked
|
|
embarrassed at having been caught slugging it out in the sand with a
|
|
stranger.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' the Fallen Monk jovially greeted me, his Lower Miezan
|
|
crisp and perfect, ``a pleasure to meet you in person.''
|
|
|
|
He raised a wineskin, not even the same one I'd seen thrown at him
|
|
earlier.
|
|
|
|
``I hear from a common friend you're partial to the pales, so it would
|
|
be my honour to surrender this triumphant bounty to you,'' he continued.
|
|
|
|
I snorted.
|
|
|
|
``Tempting,'' I said, ``but I've had enough to drink for a while. I'm
|
|
here to inform you that Archer has lost you to me at cards.''
|
|
|
|
The middle-aged man cocked an almost incongruously delicate eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``On a good hand at least, I hope,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Half a good hand,'' I said, then added, ``seen double.''
|
|
|
|
That startled a laugh out of him.
|
|
|
|
``I am in your service for the day, then,'' the Fallen Monk bowed,
|
|
adroit for all his impressive girth. ``Though I cannot think of what you
|
|
might require an old priest like me for.''
|
|
|
|
``You'd be surprised,'' I said, and turned my stare to the Exalted Poet.
|
|
|
|
Sadly enough, he'd put a shirt on again. He bowed very graciously,
|
|
though, so I'd allow it.
|
|
|
|
``We meet again, Black Queen,'' the Levantine hero said.
|
|
|
|
Yeah, that voice was still like getting honey poured in my ear -- and
|
|
drawing on Night just the slightest bit ensured there was no sorcery
|
|
adding on to the impression this time.
|
|
|
|
``So we do,'' I replied. ``As it happens, our common acquaintance the
|
|
Monk was not the only man I am here to look for. I've a need for your
|
|
particular skills.''
|
|
|
|
``Indeed?'' the Poet replied, sounding surprised. ``I am most flattered,
|
|
Honoured Queen, yet also befuddled. What is it you might need them
|
|
\emph{for}?''
|
|
|
|
I reached for my pipe, in the inner pockets of my cloak, and took it in
|
|
hand while I went fishing for a packet of wakeleaf. I was about to tear
|
|
it open, when a tremor went through the Arsenal. A second happened a
|
|
moment later, stronger, and I felt the very stone around us shiver.
|
|
\emph{You horrid wench}, I thought towards the Bard, \emph{you could
|
|
have waited until I actually lit the damned pipe.}
|
|
|
|
``Don't you hate it when a question answers itself?'' I said, matching
|
|
the Exalted Poet's eyes.
|
|
|
|
I had my answer about how it was the Intercessor would avoid the story
|
|
arrows I'd loosed at her, at least.
|
|
|
|
If you couldn't move the arrows, I supposed instead you could move
|
|
\emph{everything else}.
|