527 lines
28 KiB
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527 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{charlatan-i}{%
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\section{Charlatan I}\label{charlatan-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Where there is cause for wonder, there is cause for fear. Only
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through faith and rectitude can the Talent be mastered instead of
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master.''}
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-- Jaquinus the Elder, Proceran monk and scholar
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\end{quote}
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Olivier hadn't meant to end up the family disappointment, but then he
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supposed no one did.
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His parents were not unkind about it, as they were not unkind people,
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but by age eleven Olivier's eyes and ears could no longer deny what his
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heart had been whispering for years. The irony of it was, of course,
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that in most places being the sole member of his family born without the
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Talent would have been seen as blessing instead of a failing. Not out
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here, though. Beaumarais was one of those hundreds of border villages
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that the rulers of the Principality of Bayeux, the House of Chavarel,
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only ever remembered existed around tax season and then promptly forgot
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again. The people hardly minded, as the town had been raised in lands
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that had been claimed by both the Principate and the Kingdom of Callow
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for as long as either had existed, nestled in a swamp long gone dry. The
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people of Beaumarais were loyal House Chavarel and the high throne in
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Salia, of course, though that loyalty's ebb and flow tended to be
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somewhat related to the latest tax rates and whether Callowan raiders
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had been sighted that spring.
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Out here the people were a practical lot, even the priests from the
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House of Light who'd managed to cross someone influential enough to be
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assigned here to languish in obscurity, so having a few wizards around
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was counted as a boon instead of courting disaster. You never knew when
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you might need a few fireballs tossed at bandits or a brew concocted
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that'd see to whatever was sickening the sheep. Olivier's parents were
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both practitioners, his grandfather having been one as well and his
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mother having served as the man's apprentice along his father. The
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continued exercise of magic had seen their family grow into one of the
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prominent ones of Beaumarais, allowed a seat in the town council and
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earning enough coin that they'd been able to afford a small alchemy
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laboratory and their pick of what few books travelling peddlers brought
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for the family library. Olivier, as the eldest, had naturally been
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expected to continue the family trade.
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Until they'd learned he did not have the Talent.
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Were these older days, the boy could have redeemed this lack by taking
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up a spear and becoming one of the town's militia officers. Olivier's
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ability to read and write likely ensured he'd rise in rank after a few
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years, should he not prove an utter craven. But these days it was the
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Dread Empire that held the Vermilion Valleys -- what easterners called
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the Red Flower Vales -- and the people of Beaumarais had found the
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Praesi to be more peaceful neighbours than their predecessors. The
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Legions of Terror did not sally out from the old mountain fortresses to
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raid, the way the riders of the Counts of Ankou had under Fairfax rule,
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which meant people had begun grumbling about paying for a militia that
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spent most its time drinking in taverns and chasing skirts instead of
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guarding anything. The mayoress had dismissed near half their number,
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and those that remained were all real veterans or from better families
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than Olivier's own. There was no future for him in the militia as an
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officer, and hardly even as living decoration holding a spear.
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That had only been the beginning of his troubles.
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It had been one thing for the eleven-year-old boy to know he did not
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have the Talent, but a harder one altogether to realize he did not have
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any \emph{talents}. His parents had sent him out a few weeks with Old
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Alphonse, the perpetually short-handed shepherd outside town, and he'd
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somehow lost both the sheepdog and half the flock. A fortnight under
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Mistress Caroline, the town blacksmith, had taught him that while he
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deeply enjoyed taking things apart to see how they worked, left alone
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with a hammer and anvil he was more likely to break a finger than
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straighten a kitchen knife. The Codenault brewers, one of the few
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families in Beaumarais with a last name and allegedly noble kin as well,
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had only agreed to teach him the trade if he was betrothed to their
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three year old daughter, took their name and his family began providing
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some herbs at a rate that was Callowan robbery. They'd been turned down
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by his parents more for the last condition than the rest, Olivier had
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come to suspect. For two summers in a row he was thrown at anyone that
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might deign to teach him, only to be spat out like a sour apple seed
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within a few days every single time.
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Olivier the Jinx, some people had taken to calling him behind his back.
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Those who kept more closely to the House of Light muttered about it
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being the just comeuppance for the public impiety -- to be understood as
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meaning \emph{magic} -- of his parents, which had been harder still to
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swallow.
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Most days it seemed like the only thing Olivier was any good at was
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reading. He'd taken to both letters and numbers swiftly, and in those
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days where his parents had still believed he might have the Talent
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they'd always praised his ability to understand and recall whatever it
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was he read perfectly\emph{. You'll make a fine wizard someday, with a
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mind like that}, Mother had been fond of saying. The boy had been
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methodically going through every book in the family library ever since
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he could recall. He'd read through it all, whether they bestiaries,
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histories, alchemical primers or even his favourite, the precious first
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tome of the ten making up the \emph{Louvroy Encyclopediae}. There was
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not a thing under the sun between beginning with a letter between A and
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C he did not have some knowledge of. And the truth was that, even after
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it was known he was without magic, his parents had encouraged his
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erudition. It was only proper, given his family's trade, and once a week
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he was even allowed to light a candle to keep reading after dark.
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A few days after he turned eleven, though, for the first time in his
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life Olivier found himself denied a book.
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``There'd no need for that, lad,'' Father said, clapping his shoulder.
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``Best you spend your time helping your mother around the house, the
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sooner she finishes the sooner she can start brewing.''
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``I'll read only after chores are done, then,'' Olivier promised. ``I
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wanted to borrow the Herbal Compendium now so that I wouldn't have to
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disturb you later.''
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His father sighed, withdrawing the hand.
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``Roland's apprenticeship begins today,'' he said. ``I won't be lending
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you books anymore, Olivier, save those that are for entertainment. A
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wizard must have a broad mind and that means reading as much as one can,
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especially when still young. I won't indulge you to his detriment.''
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Olivier's little brother was nine years old. He was quick and clever and
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charming, so all who knew him said, and good with his hands. Three days
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ago, he'd also set accidentally set fire to a bush after being stung by
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a bee. He had the Talent, and it ran powerfully in him: it'd taken years
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for Mother to be able to form a ball of flame while Roland had done it
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by accident.
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In that moment, Olivier saw the years spreading out before him: his
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brother always in the light, him ever in the shadow.
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In that moment Olivier grasped a heartbreaking truth: his own parents
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saw him doing the only thing he was good at as an \emph{inconvenience}.
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Olivier the Jinx had struck again.
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He ran out of the house, and though Father called out the man did not
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follow.
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---
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The townsfolk called the small valley the Knightsgrave.
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Legend had it that, on those very grounds, hundreds of years ago a band
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of militiamen had stood their ground against a charge of Callowan
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knights with only spears and pitchforks. They would have lost to the
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mighty riders, though, had the small river at the heart of the valley
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not suddenly swelled up and swept over the knights. Unhorsed, the
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knights been slaughtered to a man while they stumbled around in the mud
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in their heavy armour. The continuing swell of the river had forced back
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the militiamen, though, and they'd had to abandon the corpses in the
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valley as they fled the water. The story went that deep in the riverbed
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the armoured knights were buried in graves of mud, awaiting only the day
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they were dug up. Whatever the truth of it, it had become tradition for
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the daring among the town's children to sneak out during summer nights
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and plant seeds of red anemones by the river banks to honour the ancient
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victory -- and prove neither wolves nor ancient ghosts were enough to
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scare you.
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Decades and decades of that practice had seen the Knightsgrave turning
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into a stirringly beautiful sight by night: a small valley split by a
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quiet mountain spring, bordered on the slopes by tall grass touched by
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droplets shimmering under the moonlight, the green turning red as
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anemones and marigolds grew thick closer to the waters. It was
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considered bad luck to let cattle graze where dead had been buried, so
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the people of Beaumarais had left the valley largely untouched. Olivier
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had gone there, after he'd run out, as he simply did not know where else
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to go. He had a few friends in town, but none so close that their family
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would host him should his parents ask for his return. Gods, if they even
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asked for his return. Perhaps he was going to stay here forever, he
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thought as he lay down on a bed of red flowers, eating wild berries and
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drinking from mountain springs. It was cold out, but it need not be:
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from his failed apprenticeship under Old Alphonse he'd learned how to
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make a fire with little but sticks and stones.
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The stars twinkled above him, and Olivier wondered what it was he was
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meant to do. He was drowning, in Beaumarais. In his own family. He was
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drowning and he saw no way out.
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The sound of the tall grass being passed through woke him from his glum
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reverie, Olivier rising to his feet and closing his fingers around a
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sharp stone. If wolves were out hunting around here there would have
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been howling, which he'd not heard, but wolves were not the only
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dangerous thing to lurk in the Vermillion Valleys after sundown. Except
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that it was not a beast lurking out there but something entirely worse:
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his little brother. Roland emerged from the greens looking a little
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harried but otherwise fine, gaze sweeping the valley and finding Olivier
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within moments. He cursed, but it would have been petulant to run when
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his own blood had come out to find him. The older brother tossed his
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rock into the river, helplessly, and sat back down amongst the flowers.
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Nine years old, and Roland had made it to the Knightsgrave. Olivier had
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been ten when he'd done it. Was there even a single thing his brother
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was not better at? Gods, it must be some sort of sin to be so furiously
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envious of your own blood. Roland stepped up carefully, and eventually
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sat down at his side.
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``I'm sorry,'' the other boy said.
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Olivier breathed out.
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``It's not your fault,'' he said. ``I'm not even sure it's theirs.''
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\emph{Yet it is not mine, either,} he wanted to scream up at the moon,
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\emph{so why am I suffering for it?}
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``If I lend you the book in secret, they can't stop us,'' Roland
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offered.
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``It's not about the book,'' Olivier tiredly replied. ``It's about what
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it means that they refused.''
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``I'm not going to throw you out just because you don't have the Talent,
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Ollie,'' Roland softly said. ``When the house is mine, it'll be yours
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too. Family keeps.''
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\emph{I don't want to just be your family}, Olivier thought. \emph{I
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want to be someone.} But that was a lie, wasn't it? He looked up at the
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round eye of the moon in the sky above, the sea of stars spreading as
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far as he could see, and Olivier felt small. More than anything, he
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wanted to have magic. Not for what it would bring him but for what it
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would bring to the eye of Mother and Father when they looked at him. So
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here he was now, tears in his eyes sitting by the side of the brother he
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was so ashamed to resent, and he wondered if that was to be the sum
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whole of him. A bitter husk of a person, forever envious of what others
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held that he did not. And Gods forgive him, but was there not so
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\emph{much} to envy? The Talent most of all, but also all the other
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things where he always seemed to fail where others succeeded.
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It would swallow him whole, Olivier realized. It would twist him into
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something ugly, if he let it.
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Moonlight bearing down on the both of them, he cast a look at his
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younger brother and found that Roland was shivering from the cold. His
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short-sleeved woolen shirt was not meant for the cool nights of the
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valleys. He felt a surge of affection for his little brother, then,
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who'd braved darkness, cold and treacherous mountain paths to seek him
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out when their own parents could not be bothered. He could choose,
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Olivier knew, to resent Father and Mother for this. For the callous
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indifference of assuming he would return, cowed and knowing not to act
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out like this again. Or he could choose to love Roland, instead, for
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having come. It was such a small thing, such a small choice. And yet it
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felt like the whole world, right now. \emph{What is it you want to rule
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you, Olivier of Beaumarais?} he asked himself.
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He took his brother's hand.
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``Let's find our way back,'' Olivier decided. ``Together.''
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Under the silent gaze of the sea of stars they went home, hands clutched
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tight like they were the only people left in the world.
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---
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It had lit a fire in him, the crossroads he had glimpsed that night.
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There was no other way for Olivier to describe the vigor that'd grown in
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him from that evening onwards, the way he woke up rested and eager to
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seize the day where before mornings had been a slog. His parents caned
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him four times for having run away, but he stepped forward when Father
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mulled disciplining Roland the same way -- they'd gotten caught coming
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back in, though consequences had waited for morning. He took those two
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canes for his brother, and part of him felt only disgust at the
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approving look in his father's eye as he dealt the blows. \emph{I do not
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do this for you,} he thought, but kept his mouth shut. That same
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afternoon, Roland smuggled him the Herbal Compendium and they sat
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together in the sun as his bruised back ached: turning pages when they
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were both finished reading, and not a moment sooner. It would not be
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enough, Olivier, knew, to simply read. If his parents had no future to
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offer him, he would have to make his own.
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``I won't forget,'' Roland whispered when Father came looking and they
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had to part.
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His little brother's eyes had gone flinty, even as he spoke.
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``I won't forget that you took the blows,'' Roland whispered, then his
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eyes turned to the house. ``Or who dealt them out.''
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They were children, the two of them, but in these parts children grew
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swiftly. Those were not idle words.
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Yet for all that, the path ahead suddenly seemed brighter. Roland took
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to his studies with exceptional ability, though Father said his true
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calling lay in elemental magics and not subtler branches like alchemy or
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healing. He did, however, display a burgeoning talent for enchantment
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that had their parents utterly delighted: neither of them had good skill
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in it, but it was known to be the single most lucrative way to practice
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sorcery. Their joys in teaching their younger son had them keeping only
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the lightest of eyes on the older, which was the way Olivier preferred
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it. It allowed him the right to spend his hours as he wished, so long as
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chores were seen to in the morning. He began by knocking at Master
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Laurent's door, the man who was the mayoress' brother and the town
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scribe. Master Laurent had no interest in training a boy of another
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family in his skills when he had two daughters of his own to pass down
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the trade to, naturally, but Olivier already knew how to write.
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What he offered, instead, was to serve as the man's copier.
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Books were rare this far out -- the closest city, Apenun, was two weeks
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away on horse -- and what the peddlers brought was fought over by the
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two literate families in Beaumarais. Transcribing a book would be
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difficult work, requiring a good writing hand and attention to detail as
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well as many hours to sink into the work. It'd also be somewhat
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expensive to even try, given the sparsity of parchment, but if anyone in
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the town had any to spare it was Master Laurent. The older man was
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intrigued by the offer, as Olivier had thought he might be. His eldest
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daughter would be the one taught the written courtesies and forms
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necessary to see to the town's sparse formal correspondence with the
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taxman and the few dignitaries who might claim to have some right or
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responsibility over the town, but the scribe had another child. Finding
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her a good trade that would not conflict with her older sister's must
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have been a tempting prospect.
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``Clever,'' Master Laurent said, dark eyes sharp. ``Yet risky and costly
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to attempt. And you are not needed for it, strictly speaking.''
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The man had books of his own, after all.
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``I am, if you want to able to copy any of the books in my family's
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library,'' Olivier replied.
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``I am not a fool, boy,'' the scribe sharply said. ``They do not let
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those out of the house, it is well-known.''
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Olivier, in lieu of a retort, recited the first two pages of the first
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tome of the Louvroy Encyclopediae by rote without once hesitating,
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stumbling or missing a single detail. The three hours he'd spent with
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Roland practicing his pronunciation had paid off, he saw on the older
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man's face.
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``I'll want to see a page's worth of your hand first,'' Master Laurent
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finally said, ``and my younger daughter Elise will share in the work.''
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So this was what it felt like, Olivier thought, to win.
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---
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When peddlers came that spring, after the snows melted, for the first
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time since Beaumarais' founding they were books waiting to be sold to
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them.
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Two copies of the same alchemical primer -- it was both short and rare
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-- as well as single manuscript of the lengthier \emph{Annals of Bayeux}
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by the famous monk-historian Brother Lucien. The primers went for ten
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silvers each and the Annals for sixteen. As per their arrangement, as
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both a source of books and a copier the now twelve-year-old Olivier made
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a copper on every silver, leaving him with twenty-six copper coins
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filling his pocket. Master Laurent, even after the costs of ink and
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parchment were considered, had made a profit almost equivalent to half a
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year's worth of scribing. Olivier began to be invited at the town
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scribe's house for meals, Mayoress Suzanne referred to him as a
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\emph{promising young man} the sole time she visited her brother for
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supper. Careful inquiries were made as to whether he got along well with
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Elise and as to what his marriage prospects were.
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Elise was a sharp girl, and though not as lovely as her older sister she
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was quite lovely enough for anyone, but Olivier did not intend to spend
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the rest of his life copying manuscripts. Though he made it known that
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his winter hours were theirs for the taking at the same arranged rate as
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before, a few days after he received his coppers he parted with two for
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the right to hitch on peddler's wagon all the way to Ploncheau, the
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nearest town to the east. One meal a day included, if he kept watch and
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fetched firewood for the peddler, which he agreed to without hesitation.
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He'd sought the permission of his parents before leaving, and they'd
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granted it almost eagerly. Suggestions were several times made that he
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seek a position in Ploncheau's militia while he was there. Roland
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clutched him tight, and unlike their parents actually asked why he
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needed to go.
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``Last autumn,'' Olivier whispered back, ``remember when the mayor of
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Ploncheau visited?''
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``To warn about the werewolf and trade some goods,'' Roland agreed.
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``And to get two dozen documents written by our town scribe,'' Olivier
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said. ``Testaments, a request for the seneschal to repair a road, all
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things we have Master Laurent handle for us.''
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``They don't have a scribe,'' Roland caught on, but his face fell. ``Are
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you leaving?''
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``I'll be back before summer's end,'' Olivier reassured him. ``I'm just
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selling them something.''
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``Selling them what?'' Roland asked, frowning in confusion. ``You don't
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own anything.''
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``Literacy,'' the older brother smiled.
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The journey was to Ploncheau short and pleasant, two days and nights
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spent in the company of the most well-travelled man Olivier had ever
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met. The peddler was free with stories, and pleasant in demeanour. They
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parted on good terms, and with Olivier having put to memory the way to
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Ploncheau. Between that, the meals and the stories the coppers felt well
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spent. Knowing better than to bite the hand that fed him, when Olivier
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went to the mayor and offered to teach one of the townsfolk how to read
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and write he offered nothing that Master Laurent might have earned
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coppers for. Most of the rules of formal correspondence and legal
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documents were unknown to him, besides. Mayor Guy of Ploncheau was quick
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to recognize the advantages in being able to read received letters and
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for the town to keep its own records, though, so after that all that was
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left was the haggling. Five months later, having been offered free room
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and board by the Mayor as he taught his oldest son to read and write,
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Olivier hitched a ride back to Beaumarais with ten silvers in his pocket
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and a sickly young goat in his arms.
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The goat he traded to another peddler for a faded hand-drawn map of the
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villages and roads of the region as well as a pot of ink and a nice roll
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of scraped vellum. The vellum went some way in thawing the rather cool
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reception he received from Master Laurent at his return, and a precise
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description of what exactly he'd taught the mayor's son further warmed
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relations. Olivier returned to his little brother with a map and more
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than a few stories, the two of them laughing at tales of their months
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apart swapped back and forth in a quiet corner.
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Mother and Father were disappointed to hear he'd been unable to find a
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position in the Ploncheau militia.
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Olivier copied manuscripts during the day, and when he dreamt at night
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the fire in his belly only burned brighter.
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---
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By the age of fifteen, Olivier was surprised to find himself moderately
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wealthy.
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He'd ventured out four more times to trade literacy for silver and
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goods, seeing his savings grow and his reputation with them. On the
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second of those trips the town scribe whose monopoly he threatened by
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teaching another family's daughter how to do rival records sent a few
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ruffians to beat him halfway to death and steal the payment. The fools
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chased him into a mountain pixie nest without knowing they would get
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riled up by the noise, though, and more importantly that rubbing
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bilberry juice against one's skin would keep them away. Bilberries,
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according to Sister Ostace's ponderous \emph{Common} \emph{Bestiary of
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the Parish}, was poisonous to the little creatures and so they fled the
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smell. The toughs fled back to town with swollen faces, and after
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hesitating Olivier returned to lay accusations. The roughs were
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threatened with a beating by the mayor and swiftly began pointing
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fingers, which gave Olivier right to make demands of reparation.
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Sensing an opening, he passed the right over to the leading brother of
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the House of Light, to the visible approbation of many townsfolk: the
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scribe was forced to apologize and match the silver reward he'd tried to
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|
have stolen. More importantly, a charmed Brother Albert from the House
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wrote him a letter of commendation worth more than everything else he'd
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gotten that trip. The piece of parchment singing his praises marked him
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as a friend of the House of Light, who should be received as a guest in
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any temple. It would open so many doors it really ought to be called a
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|
key.
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|
The fourth venture saw the first time he ran into bandits, though they
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|
called themselves a company of \emph{fantassins} in the employ of the
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|
Prince of Bayeux, simply collecting tolls on his behalf. They took what
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|
few copper coins he had on him as well as his writing implements, but
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|
Olivier bargained for the latter back when he offered to write for them
|
|
an official contract of employment with the prince that they might
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|
show\ldots{} doubters\emph{. Just so that unthinking violence might be
|
|
avoided}, he told them. They agreed eagerly, though much was taken on
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|
trust as none of them could read. Two months later, a troop of horsemen
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|
from Apenun caught them on flat grounds and killed them to a man, having
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|
been out looking for them. Olivier had, after all, noted on the piece of
|
|
parchment that the bandits were not \emph{fantassins}, had boasted of
|
|
taking coin from the Dread Empire and that anyone reading this ought to
|
|
see it as their patriotic duty to report these facts to the authorities
|
|
in Apenun. Eventually a peddler must have seen the `contract', he
|
|
assumed, and brought word back to the city in hope of a reward.
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|
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|
Olivier's own reward came when the horsemen rode into Beaumarais a week
|
|
later and their highborn commander asked for him by name. The man
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|
revealed his trick to the befuddled townsfolk and added that the last
|
|
line of the `contract' was in fact Olivier noting exactly how much
|
|
copper had been taken from him by robbery, then politely requesting that
|
|
the sum be returned to him should the bandits be brought to justice. The
|
|
nobleman returned him the coin, amused and impressed, then threw in a
|
|
silver for his `laudable honesty'. Ironic, considering that when writing
|
|
Olivier had added a copper to the sum actually stolen to account for the
|
|
way he felt personally inconvenienced. The soldiers stayed for a few
|
|
days more, and though most people these days were buying him drinks and
|
|
calling him Witty Ollie -- a pleasant change, he mused, from Olivier the
|
|
Jinx -- the sudden fame was not enough to blind him to the way that the
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|
highborn officer, Captain Alain, was regularly visiting the Beaumarais
|
|
House of Light.
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|
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|
The soldier did not seem all that pious, which only added to the
|
|
mystery. Still, Olivier found little occasion to pursue the affair and
|
|
had other preoccupations besides: he would have to venture much further
|
|
out if he was to keep his teaching scheme, and the returns would be
|
|
diminishing. Best to move on to something else, but what?
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|
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|
``You've some coin, now,'' Roland said. ``And I can enchant passably. We
|
|
could open a shop together.''
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|
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|
His little brother, now thirteen, had grown by leaps and bounds. They
|
|
were near of a height with each other, though Roland's cocksure grin and
|
|
quick laughter had seen him grow popular with the town girls -- and even
|
|
some boys -- in a way that Olivier's plainer looks had never quite
|
|
managed. Kissing games and fumbling under clothes were the least of what
|
|
Roland had been up to, though. As he'd said, he was now capable of
|
|
enchanting appropriately prepared granite stones to glow like lamps for
|
|
up to three weeks, and the enchantment could be rejuvenated repeatedly
|
|
afterwards for perhaps up to a year before the stone crumbled. About
|
|
half the time he could make a blade immune to rust for six turns of the
|
|
moon, and he was beginning to work on enchanting iron rings to put
|
|
vermin like rats and insects to flight.
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|
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|
``Not as long as you live under their roof,'' Olivier said.
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|
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|
``Buy a shop and we can live in it together,'' Roland insisted.
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|
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|
``There's still much you can learn from them,'' he told his younger
|
|
brother. ``Finish your learning first, Roland. I'll still be there when
|
|
you're finished.''
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|
|
|
They argued over it several times after, but Olivier did not budge. The
|
|
notion of a shop, though, remained with him. The question was of what he
|
|
had to offer. Already he'd learned that one could make their own trade,
|
|
their own way if the old ways failed them -- but what manner of a shop
|
|
would he able to make and man? Before he could settle the matter in his
|
|
mind, however, his peaceful life was troubled by something rather more
|
|
urgent. On a sunny autumn morning, Sister Maude of the town's House of
|
|
Light came knocking at their door with three armed men in livery.
|
|
|
|
She bore with her an ultimatum: Olivier's family was to cease practicing
|
|
sorcery for coin, or it would be expelled from town.
|