662 lines
29 KiB
TeX
662 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-threads}{%
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\section{Interlude: Threads}\label{interlude-threads}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The finest exercise of war is to interrupt the enemy's plan.
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Therefore, the general without a plan is also without peer.''}
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-- Isabella the Mad, Proceran general
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\end{quote}
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``Archer,'' Roland smiled. ``It's damned good to see you.''
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Indrani flicked a glance at the ripped-up footbridge, large chunks of it
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either torched, cut or otherwise savaged beyond recognition.
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``Same to you, Rogue,'' she replied. ``You've had an interesting day, by
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the looks of it.''
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The rueful smile she got in answer to that was classic Roland, a touch
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of nonchalance facing the constant messes he seemed to get himself into.
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A tall, dark-skinned woman with those famous Wasteland golden eyes made
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her approach, skittish as a cat.
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``Greetings, Archer,'' the Blessed Artificer stiffly said. ``I am-''
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``I know who you are,'' Indrani informed her.
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She was not hostile in tone, even though the heroine seemed physically
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unable to help herself from picking fights with Masego whenever they
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were in the same room. Archer had no need to fight Hierophant's battles
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for him. Besides, she'd made some inquiries and judged that Adanna of
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Smyrna would stay within acceptable bounds even if she got the upper
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hand -- nothing permanent, nothing crippling. If nothing else, the
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Artificer would serve to make sure that Masego didn't got too soft
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during his years away from the front.
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``Pick up the Poet and bring him down,'' Archer ordered them. ``I want
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to ask him a few questions.''
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``You have a healer?'' Roland asked, sounding relieved.
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Someone had done a nasty turn on his cheek -- heated metal, by the
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charred and bloody looks of that wound -- so she could see why he'd be.
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The Artificer was bleeding as well, but it looked mostly like shallow
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cuts. Both heroes were exhausted, though, maybe a quarter hour away from
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the sense of danger fading and the shakes settling in instead. The Rogue
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Sorcerer had a few potions to delay that further, she knew, but odds
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were Cocky would have better stuff below.
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``I brought the Concocter,'' Indrani said. ``She's down there, examining
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the body.''
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``Only the one?'' Roland probed, sounding surprised.
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``It is the Black Queen's,'' the Blessed Artificer bluntly told her.
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``The fae said that she died and they cannot lie.''
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``Knowingly,'' Archer corrected. ``They cannot lie \emph{knowingly}.
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There's a body down there, sure, but I've my doubts.''
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If Indrani was right, though, it begged the question of where the Hells
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Catherine actually was. She wouldn't have left Roland and the Artificer
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to face enemies outnumbered without a good reason, or even just
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disappeared at all for that matter. Indrani had been sent out to get
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answers and she'd yet to bring them back.
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``There will be another prisoner,'' Roland volunteered. ``I crippled the
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Count of Green Apples and tossed him into the stacks on the western side
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of the first story.''
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Archer let out a low whistle, genuinely impressed. Fae didn't usually
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leg it when they'd come for a reason, as these clearly had, so if the
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Count hadn't come back then \emph{crippled} must be something of an
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understatement.
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``I'll pick him up, then,'' Indrani said. ``Can the two of you handle
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the Exalted Poet?''
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The Blessed Artificer was already kneeling at the man's side, she noted
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with approval, already getting down to work. Except the dark-skinned
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woman was grimacing in dismay, finger on the side of the traitor's neck.
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``He's dead,'' Adanna of Smyrna said. ``He has no pulse.''
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Archer blinked in surprise. She'd shot him in the throat, true, but
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she'd avoided the spine. She'd buy unconscious, she'd been banking on it
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really, but \emph{dead}?
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``Isn't he a Levantine hero?'' Indrani said.
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``He was a Levantine \emph{poet}, Archer,'' Roland reminded her. ``An
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occupation not habitually known for its physical fortitude.''
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``It isn't as if being born in the Dominion lends someone greater
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vitality,'' the Blessed Artificer waspishly said. ``Though to my passing
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knowledge of medicine, he appears to have died from choking on his
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blood.''
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``Hells,'' Archer cursed. ``I wanted to interrogate him. How dead is he,
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would you say?''
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``\ldots{} averagely dead?'' Adanna of Smyrna hazarded.
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``Not fresh gone,'' Roland noted. ``If you're thinking of fanning a last
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spark with tonics, I'd say that stallion has left the pen.''
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Damn it, just when she finally \emph{had} someone at hand who had those
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sorts of brews.
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``Just toss him down, then,'' Indrani sighed. ``Can't leave the body
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unattended, not with the number of potential necromancers in this
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place.''
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``He's a hero,'' the Blessed Artificer bit out angrily. ``We can't
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just-''
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``He was a traitor,'' Archer flatly interrupted, ``and now he's a
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corpse. Carry him down in a tender embrace, if you feel like it, but
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I've no intention of lending an ear to your praise of a failed
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turncoat.''
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She shot a look at Roland.
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``Don't linger,'' she said. ``That's a nasty wound, best to get it seen
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to as soon as possible.''
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Archer did not bother with goodbyes, instead leaving them to make their
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decision on their own as she headed for the stairs. Much as it rubbed
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her the wrong way not to remove her arrows from the corpses, given how
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precious they were, it would have to wait. After going one story down
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she made her way around the side of the Belfry and found the fae the
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Rogue Sorcerer had handled, brow rising when she saw one of the Fair
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Folk outright unconscious. She'd seen their like wounded and dead by the
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hundreds, but \emph{unconscious}? That was much rarer. What had Roland
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done to screw with it that badly? Screw with him, it turned out as
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Archer got close, but when she turned over the body -- a longknife in
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hand, just in case -- she started at the face.
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``I know you,'' Archer muttered, brow creasing.
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Whatshisname from the Battle of Dormer, wasn't he? The fucker who'd kept
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throwing fire at her and nearly burned Vivienne to death when he caught
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her flatfooted. The Duke of Something Something. Green Trees, Green Yews
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-- no, that was some other bastard Cat and Hakram had murdered while
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she'd been out in southern Callow with Zeze -- oh, Green
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\emph{Orchards}! So the last time she'd seen that face it'd been on a
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Duke of Summer, one who should be thoroughly dead by now. Cat had been
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in a black mood that night and people didn't tend to walk those off.
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Much less turn up a few years later with a different name, yet here we
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were. That had \emph{implications}, according to some of what she'd
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picked up lately.
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Indrani had honestly paid only passing attention to this Quartered
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Season racket that Masego and Catherine had going on, doing her due
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diligence of going through everybody's things more out of habit than
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genuine interest, but she'd picked up a thing or two. The principle, as
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she understood it, had come from a theory Zeze put forward after the
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Twilight Ways were born and he got rid of the petty god in the back of
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his head: that the Court of Arcadia Resplendent, the one born from the
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wedding of Summer and Winter, was an entirely new entity and not
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something flowing directly from either Winter or Summer.
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There were a bunch of complicated explanation for why that was, best
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left for others to dig into, but the heart of it was a division being
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made between `power' and `crowns', the former being the good stuff and
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the latter the formal mantle. Masego believed that Arcadia was one crown
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and Twilight another. Which meant that regardless of where `power' had
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been accrued -- mostly Arcadia with Twilight and the Crows splitting the
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difference, the theory went -- there were still two `crowns' up for
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grabs. It didn't matter if there wasn't much `power' left behind either,
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the way Masego put it, because it was still a functioning godhead. Dried
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up, sure, but functional.
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What he and Cat meant to make of it had been straight out of that brand
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of outrageous that tended to spring up whenever they collaborated on
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something: vicious to the bone and too clever by half. Instead of making
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a giant sharper or even a fine arrow for their good pal Indrani, they'd
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decided to make a gift. So what did it mean, this old face with a new
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name? Someone else would have to figure it out, she supposed, because it
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was beyond her.
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``Might as well bring you down,'' Indrani mused, gazing down at the fae.
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She was wary of waking up one of the fae and interrogating them without
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a warding specialist at hand, but Roland with a few potions in him might
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do in a pinch. There was a need for answers. She hoisted the fae over
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her shoulder, forcing her bow to the side, and finished the trek back at
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the bottom of the Belfry. Cocky was kneeling on the floor, silver knife
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in hand as she studied the insides of the dead body she'd been left
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with, and only vaguely gestured in greeting when Indrani dropped the
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unconscious count.
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``So?'' Archer probed.
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The Concocter withdrew her hands, stripping them of some sort of gauzy
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transparent film they'd been coated in and throwing it aside. It melted
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a beat later, leaving behind only the filth and blood it'd soaked up.
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``I was going to have to ask you if the Black Queen was misassigned, but
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it won't be necessary,'' Cocky bluntly said. ``Whoever this boy was, he
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was not finished going through puberty.''
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Indrani felt her shoulders loosen. She'd believed, she had. Believed
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that Cat wouldn't go out like this, to a nobody and a few fae, that this
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plan had been of her own making and that meant she still had hands to
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play. But Archer also remembered the stillness of ice around her, the
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utter silence of creeping death, and shed known that sometimes there
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just wasn't anything you could do. Sometimes the world got the last
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laugh, and all you could do was take it. \emph{But not today}, she
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thought, breathing out. She wouldn't be losing anyone today.
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``Keep that between us,'' Archer said. ``You couldn't identify the
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body.''
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``I know the Rogue Sorcerer professionally,'' Cocky pointed out. ``He is
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aware I am not, in fact, a complete imbecile.''
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Indrani swallowed the theatrical \emph{my Gods, how long have you been
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lying to him?} that'd come to her tongue unbidden, an old habit not
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quite shed, and forced herself to focus.
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``He'll also know to keep his mouth shut,'' Archer replied. ``We
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understand each other.''
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While the dark-haired Named had no idea why Cat wanted to pass herself
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off as dead, she didn't feel all that inclined to spread knowledge of
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the trick around now that she'd figured it out. Presumably there were
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reasons for this, another round of deep games that Indrani had long
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given up trying to figure out. Archer could catch the scent a story when
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it was around, and she'd been taught how to avoid those that'd get her
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killed, but she just didn't have the knack for that sort of thinking
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that Catherine did. It took a peculiar sort of madness, to master those
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arts, and not of a sort she envied.
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``Did you get another prisoner upstairs?'' the Concocter asked. ``I have
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serums readied, if it is the case.''
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``He, uh, died,'' Indrani said.
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A beat passed.
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``You killed him, didn't you?'' Cocky said, and it wasn't really a
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question.
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``Let's not get hung up on who did what,'' Archer evaded. ``Do you have
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something that would compel fae to speak?''
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Her brow rose, and she now seemed interested.
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``Magically compel, no,'' the Concocter said. ``But there are other
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ways. I have a substance than should be able to lull him into a pleasant
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trance and make him receptive to inquiries.''
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``That'd do it,'' Indrani approved. ``They're hard to break with pain,
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but they're not immune to gentler methods. Thanks, Cocky.''
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The purpled-eyed woman eyed her with something like wary surprise, as if
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expecting a barb to follow, and only nodded after a few moments had
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passed.
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``I can wake him up now, if you'd like,'' the Concocter said, gesturing
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at the prisoner.
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``Best to wait for the Rogue Sorcerer for containment,'' Archer replied.
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As it happened it was not long before Roland and the Artificer were
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there, the two of them carrying the Exalted Poet's corpse by the arms
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and legs. The arrow had been removed, but the wound was visible.
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``\emph{Really}, Indrani? An arrow to the throat?'' Cocky murmured.
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``Quite the capture method.''
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``He's Dominion,'' Archer defended, ``they're supposed to be hardy.''
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``I'm sure that fact was a great comfort while he choked to death on his
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own blood,'' the Concocter replied, sounding deeply amused.
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Everyone was getting snippy, these days. The heroes set down the corpse
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without much ceremony -- it was heavy and they were tired -- before
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Roland straightened his coat and the Artificer wiped her hands clean on
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her apron.
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``Rogue Sorcerer,'' Cocky greeted the Proceran as she rose to her feet
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She let a full moment pass.
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``Artificer.''
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Indrani, no stranger to the art of petty slights, had to smother a smile
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at the refinement of that particular bit of pettiness.
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``Concocter,'' the Blessed Artificer replied, tone flat.
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``Let's get that cheek healed up,'' Archer cheerfully said. ``Maybe
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something for the fatigue as well, unless Rogue's been drinking?''
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``I refrained,'' Roland said. ``I would be in your debt, Concocter, if
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you would oblige.''
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That stroked Cocky's fur the right way, as courtesies tended to, and she
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got to work without quibbling. It was quick work sewing up the cheek
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with needle and thread then applying the salve and having him drink the
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potion that back in Refuge they'd called the Pardon. It was red and
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thick, almost more molasses than liquid, and it smelled of death --
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which is was partly made of, Indrani suspected, or at least flesh -- but
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within moments of drinking it Roland was looking better. The bleeding on
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his cheek ceased and the charred skin began to flake, though this wasn't
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a miracle brew: skin did not grow back, and it'd take more than a drink
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to fix his carved cheek muscles.
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The Artificer got seen to as well, if less comprehensively, with a small
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vial ending the bleeding in her cuts and an elongated pill for the pain.
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The heroine grimaced as she swallowed the latter, not without reason:
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Cocky didn't coat hers in honey or extracts, unlike a lot of
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medicine-peddlers.
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``Feeling up to a bit of a talk, Sorcerer?'' Indrani asked.
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``What about?'' Roland asked.
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``Not you and me,'' she laughed, then pointed a boot at the unconscious
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fae. ``I've questions for our friend here.''
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``I can run containment, if you want,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said, ``but
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it should not be necessary. He should barely be more physically capable
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than a human, at the moment.''
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Archer's brow rose. While she was damned curious about how he'd pulled
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that off -- everyone and their sister knew Roland had sticky fingers
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when it came to tricks and artefacts, but there was quite a leap between
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that and hollowing out a Count of Autumn -- that seemed like it might
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infringe on the nature of his aspects, and that\ldots{} just wasn't
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something you \emph{asked}. It was fair game if heard, or fought, but
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asking someone to just hand out one of three words at the heart of them
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a different story.
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``Keep an eye out anyway,'' Indrani said. ``Cocky, the fae's all
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yours.''
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``Joy,'' the Concocter muttered, rolling her eyes.
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Backtalk or not, it was with poorly veiled eagerness she knelt at the
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Count of Green Apples' side and forced his mouth open. Odds were she
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didn't often get to ply her trade on the likes of him, Archer mused. Her
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own eyes wandered a bit, coming to rest on the dead body that was not
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Catherine's. Roland hadn't asked, though she suspected that when they
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got a moment to talk without people to overhear he would, and evidently
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the Blessed Artificer still believed herself to be correct. Whose body
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was it? It couldn't be the Fallen Monk's, she thought, even though it
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was his knife that Cocky had taken out from the neck and laid down next
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to the body.
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Wait, why \emph{was} the knife there?
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Indrani could recognize it on sight, she'd seen it make quite a few
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cuts. The Monk had always been sharp in a bad way, but she hadn't
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thought that he would\ldots{} Well, you couldn't always see it coming.
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There were nights ahead of her where Archer would examine whether she
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ought to have seen that betrayal coming, but not now. Last blood had not
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been spilled. \emph{The knife was placed here so I could see it},
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Indrani decided. The rest of her band was here, but dispersed and
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unlikely to come here in the Belfry without reason. Cat must have left
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it there as a message. Not recrimination, that wasn't her style. It'd
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been stuck in the corpse, though, so what was it that was important
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about the corpse?
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\emph{Oh}, Indrani thought, and put it together. \emph{You're listening
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through it, aren't you? You're waiting for my report and for whatever we
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dig up here.} Breathing out, Archer knelt by Cocky's side even as the
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fae's eyes fluttered open -- glazed, unseeing -- and Roland took
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position behind the Count of Green Apples.
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``It's working?'' she asked the Concocter.
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``It should,'' Cocky said, finger forcing open an eye and looking at the
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dilation. ``Try asking him a question.''
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``Who are you?'' Archer asked.
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``I am the Count of Green Apples, of course,'' the fae said, sounding
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surprised.
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``Dreamlike state,'' Cocky said, sounding satisfied. ``It took hold
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properly.''
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Indrani nodded her thanks, then took to interrogation.
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``Who sent you here?''
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``The Prince of Falling Leaves,'' the fae said.
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The Blessed Artificer flinched at the words, all eyes save the Count's
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turning to her in surprise.
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``Care to share?'' Archer lightly said.
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``The Hunted Magician,'' Adanna of Smyrna replied. ``He's had dealings
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with that creature before.''
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\emph{Fuck}, Indrani thought. This better not end up being blamed on Cat
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because a villain had been the way in and not one of Above's shiny
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helmets. Interesting that the Artificer would know that, though. She'd
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have to remember to look into it later.
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``Why did you come to the Belfry in particular?'' Archer asked.
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``To destroy the works of the Hierophant,'' the Count said. ``And so
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settle half our debt.''
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Indrani's fingers clenched in triumph. That sounded like a proper
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scapegoat being set out for her, didn't it?
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``Who is the debt owed to?''
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``The Wandering Bard.''
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Cocky stiffened at her side, beginning to grasp the depths of how badly
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she'd miscalculated by making a bargain with the Intercessor. The
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Artificer looked mostly confused, Roland grim.
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``Where did the prince go?'' Indrani asked.
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``To get his due,'' the Count of Green Apples proudly said. ``To break
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the sword.''
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And there it was, Autumn's plan laid out. The dark-haired killer rose to
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her feet, stretching as she did.
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``Archer?'' the Rogue Sorcerer tried.
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``Knock him out and bind him,'' Indrani ordered. ``We're got work to
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do.''
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Now, Archer thought, how was she going to keep giving her report to a
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dead body subtle? Any notion of her guess there being wrong was put to
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rest, after all, by the way the corpse's neck had slightly turned so it
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would be able to \emph{watch} the interrogation.
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---
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Christophe de Pavanie took the blow without flinching, angling his
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shield so that it would slide to the side and giving answer with a slice
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of his sword. The fae drew back with a scream, having tasted of the
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Light running along the blade's edge and found it to be a thing of pain,
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and in a flash of orange-red wings it withdrew. The creature fled down
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the hallway to the right, the faint squeeze against the hero's ankle
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informing him glamour had been woven against him, but the Mirror Knight
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did not pursue. He halted his steps, for though Christophe himself was
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not tired in the slightest the same could not be said of all his
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companions.
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Lady Eliade was suffering the worst of it, by his reckoning. Between the
|
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wounded leg, the fresh break of her shoulder by one of the Lords of
|
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Dwindling Warmth and the exhaustion of continued spellcasting, she was
|
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reaching the end of what her body could take. She might be able to use a
|
|
few more trinkets, but no more great spells. The Repentant Magister was
|
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not like the Witch of the Woods, a war mage meant for the killing
|
|
fields. Her gifts were gentler in nature, for all her sordid past, and
|
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she grew exhausted significantly more quickly than her savage
|
|
counterpart. Sidonia was helping her keep pace, the Vagrant Spear the
|
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only one among them confident she could react swiftly to ambush even
|
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one-handed. Frustratingly, Sidonia had also refused healing after
|
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looking directly at the Duchess of Red Sunset with an eye that was now a
|
|
blackened ruin.
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|
|
|
Christophe was not certain whether she was refusing because he'd been
|
|
the one to suggest healing or because some fool Dominion code of honour
|
|
forbade it, but neither answer would do anything to abate his anger over
|
|
the matter.
|
|
|
|
Antoine was keeping pace for now, slightly behind and to the Mirror
|
|
Knight's left as was their habit, but he could recognize that his
|
|
compatriot was quickly headed towards collapse as well. The Blade of
|
|
Mercy's nature was to prove dangerous beyond his years, as was only
|
|
proper of a young man the Saint of Swords herself had once deemed `built
|
|
for killing Damned', but though his strength was explosive it was also
|
|
short-lived. He'd used \textbf{Kindle} earlier, so by now he should be
|
|
drawing on true Light and not the one contained within his aspect: the
|
|
way Antoine heavily relied on Light and Choosing to move and react meant
|
|
he was now headed faster towards collapse with every fight. He'd used up
|
|
\textbf{Flicker} as an offensive strike, too, so he wouldn't be able to
|
|
use it as a life-saving trick. That fact would be weighing on him, a
|
|
lingering distracting fear.
|
|
|
|
The man Antoine had used the boon to protect was near spent as well,
|
|
Christophe suspected, though the Adjutant hid it better than most. The
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|
orc had to have called on at least two aspects when tangling with the
|
|
Fair Folk in that last melee, and he was slower on his feet now if you
|
|
knew what to look for: the Adjutant was simply tall enough that even
|
|
slowed his stride was quicker than most humans'. That was ill news, as
|
|
the Mirror Knight was aware that Hakram Deadhand had not been a stranger
|
|
to their successes thus far. The orc could not be called silvertongued,
|
|
he did not have the\ldots{} cunning mien for that, but he had a calming
|
|
and orderly way about him. Christophe, who half the time seemed to
|
|
infuriate when he meant compliment and praise when he meant to insult,
|
|
could only envy that.
|
|
|
|
He even envied the man's Name, he would admit to himself. Though like
|
|
him the Adjutant had been blessed with endurance, unlike him the orc was
|
|
just as deadly on the attack. It was an impious thought, to envy one of
|
|
the Damned, and half-heartedly Christophe chided himself for it. A lot
|
|
of what he'd believed to be truth in the beautiful shade of the lakeside
|
|
of orchards of Pavanie had not taken well to the harsher glare of the
|
|
world beyond them.
|
|
|
|
Of the Maddened Keeper he thought little, knowing from Cleves that she
|
|
hardly ever tired -- it was as if her body resisted any change at all,
|
|
be it good or bad. Christophe also knew that she was no comrade in the
|
|
shield wall, no sister-in-arms. She would come and go as she wished, and
|
|
though she did the work of Above in swallowing whole the evils that she
|
|
did the manner in which she bound those within her made her not unlike
|
|
the carrier of a sickness: there was nothing that the Keeper kept within
|
|
her that was not a mere finger's touch away from Creation. Had she not
|
|
been in the city when he gathered Chosen to head out to the Arsenal and
|
|
end the plot revealed to him, he likely would not have sought her out.
|
|
Yet she'd been invaluable in navigating the Twilight Ways and finding a
|
|
path into the Arsenal that would not take them months and months to
|
|
travel. In some ways he sympathized with the Keeper: her Choosing, like
|
|
his, had made her into someone to use instead of someone to honour.
|
|
|
|
``Keep your guard up,'' the Mirror Knight said. ``We should be nearing
|
|
the Severance.''
|
|
|
|
``It might have been broken by the time we arrive,'' Antoine said, tone
|
|
bleak.
|
|
|
|
``They would not still be ambushing us if that were the case,'' Adjutant
|
|
said, his voice rough as stone.
|
|
|
|
A far cry from that eerie, beautiful tune he'd sung in some Praesi
|
|
tongue as the fae stormed around them.
|
|
|
|
``They must be buying time for the prince to break through the wards,''
|
|
the Repentant Magister said. ``Those were put up by the finest mages in
|
|
the Arsenal, they won't fall easily.''
|
|
|
|
Obvious. That had been \emph{obvious}, so why hadn't he seen it? All
|
|
these blessings, but what were they really worth in his hands? The Dames
|
|
had chosen him, back home, but he'd wandered a long way from that home.
|
|
Would they choose him again, he wondered?
|
|
|
|
Somehow he doubted it.
|
|
|
|
``We push on with all haste,'' the Mirror Knight grimly said. ``We
|
|
cannot allow a weapon that might be able to take the Dead King's head to
|
|
be broken.''
|
|
|
|
No life here was worth that price. That blade might save hundreds of
|
|
thousands of lives, \emph{millions}. Some of the Named would balk at
|
|
what he'd said, or perhaps how bluntly he'd said, but it was the truth
|
|
nonetheless. What was one Chosen, in the face of that many innocents? Or
|
|
even all five of them, and the Damned one too. It might rub them raw, to
|
|
hear it starkly said, but it was Christophe's people who were dying in
|
|
droves holding the fronts. It was his countrymen who'd been forced to
|
|
flee their homes and now sickened and despaired in great refugee camps,
|
|
who gave up harvest and coin to keep Calernia from Keter's reaching
|
|
grasp. So often he'd had to watch his people beggar themselves with
|
|
gratitude as the foreign armies that'd come to lend their aid, and the
|
|
sight of it sickened him.
|
|
|
|
Whose lands was it that were burning, bleeding, trod upon by the dead?
|
|
The Principate had been made into the shield of the rest of the
|
|
continent, just like he'd been made the shield for the rest of the
|
|
Chosen: they were both expected to keeping taking the hits and keep
|
|
their mouth shut, as if it were an \emph{honour}. No, the Mirror Knight
|
|
would spend every life here without hesitating a beat if it meant saving
|
|
the innocent. There was more to being Chosen than Light and tricks: it
|
|
was a burden as well as a privilege. Too often only the privilege was
|
|
remembered.
|
|
|
|
``We don't all have your\ldots{} stamina,'' the Vagrant Spear said, tone
|
|
faintly mocking.
|
|
|
|
Or was it lurid? He itched to answer but took hold of himself. Now was
|
|
not the time for this.
|
|
|
|
``Then some of us will pull ahead, and the others will have to catch
|
|
up,'' Christophe said. ``I do not like splitting our numbers, but it
|
|
must be done. We will draw the attention of the fae as we advance, which
|
|
will flush out ambushes.''
|
|
|
|
``Unless they slip behind with the intent to strike at the laggards,''
|
|
the Repentant Magister pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``You are free to retreat, if that is your wish,'' the Mirror Knight
|
|
replied. ``I expect they will not follow.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps,'' Antoine hesitantly said, ``Lady Eliade could seek
|
|
reinforcements?''
|
|
|
|
``That would be wise,'' Christophe agreed, cursing himself for not
|
|
having thought of such a delicate way to send her away.
|
|
|
|
Must he always give insult? It had not been meant as one even if it
|
|
sounded like an accusation.
|
|
|
|
``Vagrant Spear, Adjutant, Keeper, with me,'' the Mirror Knight said.
|
|
|
|
``Christophe?'' Antoine said, blinking in utter surprise.
|
|
|
|
``You're nearing the end of your rope,'' he replied. ``I can't take you
|
|
into the thick of it. Besides, someone needs to see to Lady Eliade's
|
|
protection.''
|
|
|
|
``I am still fit to fight,'' Antoine insisted. ``I promise you-''
|
|
|
|
Anger flared.
|
|
|
|
``Don't promise me anything,'' Christophe forced out, ``just do as I
|
|
say.''
|
|
|
|
The stricken look on the younger man's face had him regretting his tone
|
|
immediately, but did the Blade not realize what he was doing by arguing
|
|
with him in front of the others? How could they heed his orders when his
|
|
own second contradicted him? The Vagrant Spear, uninterested, instead
|
|
cast an uneasy look at the woman she'd been supporting for some time
|
|
now.
|
|
|
|
``Nephele-'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``Go,'' the Repentant Magister said. ``I am sure the Blade of Mercy will
|
|
see grandly to my safety. We will make haste and return with help.''
|
|
|
|
``The Forlorn Paladin won't be far,'' Sidonia said. ``He's an odd duck,
|
|
but steady. He'll listen.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm sure,'' the sorcerers smiled. ``Shall we, Antoine?''
|
|
|
|
The Blade of Mercy cast him a look and Christophe nodded jerkily, hoping
|
|
his eyes could carry the apology he could not allow himself to speak
|
|
before this company.
|
|
|
|
``It would be my pleasure, Lady Eliade,'' the Blade of Mercy stiffly
|
|
replied.
|
|
|
|
The Adjutant was watching them all, face unreadable, but the orc said
|
|
nothing. Christophe did not know whether he should be disappointed or
|
|
grateful for that.
|
|
|
|
``Form up,'' the Mirror Knight said. ``We must move quickly.''
|
|
|
|
They would kill the Prince of Falling Leaves, he swore it. And if none
|
|
of their blades could do it\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
Christophe of Pavanie would do what he must.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
She was not surprised to find herself awaited.
|
|
|
|
Deftly, the other woman began to shuffle a deck of cards and cocked a
|
|
sardonic eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``You took your time,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
Slowly, careful not to aggravate her injury, she lowered herself into
|
|
the seat across the table before replying.
|
|
|
|
``I had some catching up to do,'' Catherine Foundling replied, making
|
|
herself comfortable. ``But I'm about ready to begin. You?''
|
|
|
|
``Just about,'' the Intercessor smiled, and began to deal out the cards.
|