697 lines
31 KiB
TeX
697 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-4-stock}{%
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\chapter{Stock}\label{chapter-4-stock}}
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\epigraph{``It is unseemly to poison an ally in the first month, wear white
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at an assassination or use the same curse more than once per decade.
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Fashions will change with year and season, but always these three will
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be a mark of crudeness.''}{Extract from `The Behaviours of Civil Conduct', by High Lady Mchumba
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Sahelian}
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The way Indrani and I kept sharing a bed was the longest I'd ever been
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involved with anyone.
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It wasn't a love affair, at least not in the sense that I was in love
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with her or the other way around, but it was no less meaningful for it.
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More than that, it'd become a creature comfort of sorts on top of being
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very enjoyable. My part of the arrangement was probably the easiest to
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navigate, which honesty compelled me to admit might be for the best
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considering how things had ended with Killian. My time with my former
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Senior Mage had ended with frozen silence and avoiding each other, which
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didn't bode well since aside from the occasional tumble before I became
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the Squire that was pretty much the sum of my relationships. Indrani
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didn't ask much aside from a place in my bed, which was just fine by me.
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That much I could handle.
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It was what bound her and Masego that I found interestingly nuanced. The
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two of them were distinctly `involved', but it was more an intimate
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partnership than anything like the chaste marriages people without
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inclination to sex sometimes entered in. Masego wasn't inclined towards
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that either. Zeze seemed happy with the arrangement, anyhowm, and
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Indrani certainly was. While she'd let him set the lines, aware he
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hadn't been made of quite the same clay than she and I in this regard,
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she'd not been afraid to speak up when she wanted something. It was how
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they'd come to share rooms in the Arsenal. Masego also considered
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anything she and I got up to as not related to him in the slightest, I'd
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confirmed on the one awkward instance where I'd tried to broach the
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subject with him.
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He'd been confused at my bringing it up in the first place, since it
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struck him as a private affair, and once I'd made sure he was both aware
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and indifferent I'd been more than happy to drop the matter entirely.
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It'd been a relief. I didn't count myself as particularly shy, but as I
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aged I'd noticed that I was getting more closed up about intimacy. There
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were just too many ways it could be used against me if it came to light.
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Indrani's part of this that was the trickiest. She was the one who had
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to draw lines and figure out limits. Distinctions. It was in the small
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things, like the way that after returning from a long trip, as she had
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yesterday, she always spent the night with Masego. She'd also been out
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in the wilds for about two months, though, so pretty early the morning
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after she came to visit me and I strengthened the privacy protections
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around my tent with Night. Quite a while later, we had a breakfast
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together. I was seated at the end of the table on my favourite seat,
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picking at the plate of sliced fruit my attendants had brought in and
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occasionally passing Indrani a cut of mango or passion fruit while I
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read through the papers Adjutant had sent me.
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High Lord Sargon had sent a messenger to arrange talks, much as we'd
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expected he would, and they'd been set for midday on relatively neutral
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grounds. The envoys from the Steppes were settled in, I read, and soon
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we'd have the second round of talks so we had all the details hashed out
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before they left. Hakram would have to be there for those, as I fully
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intended for him to be my envoy up north.
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Indrani was sitting cross-legged on the ground, absent-mindedly munching
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on the pieces I put on a plate in hand's reach as we chatted and she
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carved at the underside of the table. I was careful with my sleeves as I
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devoured the mango -- one of the few sweet things I liked, and so rare
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back home -- since the green tunic I'd put on had long ones. It was a
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little warm for this weather, but I didn't feel like having to explain
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the slight rope burn around my wrists should someone see it. Especially
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when the reasons for it had me in such a boneless, lazy mood. It was a
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rare enough these days, I wasn't going to spoil it.
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``So the two ducklings you picked up,'' Indrani began, knife chipping
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away out of my sight.
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I finished a piece of passion fruit, licking my fingers clean.
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``Sadly,'' I slowly replied, ``you're going to have to be more specific
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than that.''
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She snorted.
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``Really living up to that whole Queen of Lost and Found title, huh?''
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Indrani said.
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I rolled my eye at her.
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``Which ones do you mean?''
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``Razin and Aquiline, the duckling lords,'' Archer elaborated.
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``What about them?'' I said, cocking an eyebrow.
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``Shouldn't they be married by now?'' Indrani said, then clicked her
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tongue.
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She dipped deeper under the table, knifepoint scratching against the
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wood furiously. Missed a detail, had she? I pushed a few more slices of
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fruit onto her plate and slid it across the table closer to her.
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``They're going through with it after we take Keter,'' I informed her.
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``Bold,'' Archer said, tone approving.
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Actually very cautious of them, and so likely Razin's idea. He tended to
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be better at that part. If they got married right now, they'd be a power
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bloc that the other two great lines of the Blood -- the Champion's and
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the Brigand's -- would feel strongly threatened by. With the Pilgrim's
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Blood gone the way of dust, the Dominion no longer had an even
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theoretical ruler. Which meant after the war Levant would either
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fracture into smaller warring fiefdoms or another bloodline would take
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the Tattered Throne. An alliance between the Osena and the Tanja would
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be the clear frontrunner in the race, always a dangerous position to be
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in. As things stood, though, Lord Yannu and Lady Itima were a lot more
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likely to bet on one of them biting it in the war than try a knife in
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the back.
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Why take the risk, when the Dead King might yet do the work for them?
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``It'll make for a damn good story, if they pull it off,'' I admitted.
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It was the kind of foundation a dynasty could be built on if they played
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it right. Indrani made an approving noise.
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``You ever wonder what stories they'll tell about us?'' she asked, tone
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light.
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``Probably that fucking story about me castrating an ogre,'' I grimly
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said. ``That one'll follow me into grave, mark my words.''
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``Don't undersell yourself,'' Archer said, and I heard the grin.
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There was a beat of silence.
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``You castrated him in \emph{single combat},'' she said. ``That makes it
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all the more impressive.''
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I groaned, making an obscene gesture she didn't even bother to look at.
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``Our jaunt to Keter's going to make a good one, I think,'' Indrani
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mused. ``It's got all the good ingredients. The five of us and Akua, a
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journey into the Hells and the worthy enemies.''
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Metaphorical Hells, since it'd been Arcadia we traipsed through.
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Hopefully chroniclers wouldn't ask too many questions about the plan in
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Keter. I'd yet to live it down, though in my defence it had sort of
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worked?
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``The Princess of High Noon,'' I suggested. ``That was a good one for
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retelling. Masego found his eyes and all five of us had a hand in that
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win.''
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It'd ended on a sour note, but that was war for you.
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``Still can't believe Vivienne didn't even try to pawn that sun,''
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Archer grumbled. ``What kind of a thief was she? It would have fetched
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us a fortune in Mercantis.''
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``I think in a way she did,'' I said. ``It's on her personal arms now,
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did you know?''
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A white sun on Fairfax blue. If there was to be a Dartwick dynasty after
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me, I figured they were as good arms as any.
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``My sources informed me,'' Indrani mysteriously said.
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The effect was somewhat spoiled by the way she groped blindly above the
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table to steal a few pieces of fruit I'd laid out to scarf them down
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noisily. Well, that and we both knew that by sources she just meant
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Hakram. The gossipy bitch.
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``After Zeze pulled out that echo of the sun in Hainaut, people started
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telling the story again,'' I mused. ``Pretty sure it's spreading quicker
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than it naturally should, too.''
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Indrani's head popped over the edge of the table, brown face openly
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curious.
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``Hakram's building her a legend?'' she asked.
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``He probably is,'' I said, ``but I don't think it's entirely
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\emph{natural}, if you catch my drift.''
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Names could form in a lot of ways, but one was the most common: like a
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boulder rolling downhill, gathering weight and momentum. In that moment
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in Hainaut, when the hour had been at its darkest and she'd ridden out
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to turn the tide, I believed Vivienne had sown the first seeds of a
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Name. I had mixed feelings about that, to be honest. It would be the
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final nail in my hopes of having the Liesse Accord ban Named rulers,
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should my guess turned out accurate. But if I was going to trust anyone
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Named with my home, it'd be Vivienne Dartwick. \emph{And the chances of
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that measure going through are getting slimmer by the day, so I might
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just have to water my wine there.}
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``I did notice people called her a princess even before you made that
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official,'' Indrani said. ``But it can be a thin line between the start
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of a Name and simple reputation.''
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I grunted in agreement.
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``Pretty sure I'm standing in its way, whatever it is,'' I admitted. ``I
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think it'll only coalesce properly when she's got the crown.''
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``I wouldn't be so sure about that,'' Archer said. ``You're looking at
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Names and Roles of Old Callow, and sure enough she doesn't fit those
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properly, but if you go \emph{simpler}-''
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A guard popped in his head through the tent's flap, and I realized with
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mild embarrassment I'd never loosened the Night-workings I'd put around
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the tent. I wouldn't even have heard it if there was a hurricane
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outside.
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``The Concocter to speak with you, Your Majesty,'' the legionary said.
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Ah, good. She'd finished her tests then.
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``Let her in,'' I replied.
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The Concocter's appearance had changed since she'd accompanied us to
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Praes, which I'd been told was a regular occurrence with her. Her hair
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was now aquamarine blue, pulled up in a bun behind her head, with
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matching lips and golden-yellow eyes. Though often sullen, for once the
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alchemist seemed in a pleasant mood. She offered me half a bow and
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Indrani simply a droll look, which Archer returned with an indolent wave
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of her hand before helping herself to the rest of the fruit.
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``Your Majesty,'' the Concocter greeted me.
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``Concocter,'' I replied. ``You have results for me?''
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``I do,'' she said. ``Of the three products we salvaged from Sudden
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Abjuration before shutting it down, two proved functional in the water
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of the aqueduct. The amaranthine salt rock dispersed too easily,
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however, so I would recommend the use of the evanescent powder
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instead.''
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I pushed down a grimace. The salt rock would have bee easier to carry
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and less would have been needed, but I wasn't going to be take risks
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with this. Well, not more than the plan involved in the first place
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anyway. It, uh, wouldn't be the safest thing I'd ever done.
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``How many bags of powder will be necessary?'' I asked.
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``At least eight, standard Arsenal measurements,'' the Concocter said
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after a moment, calculating in her head. ``Assuming the dimensions given
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by Lady Sahelian are accurate.''
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``They should be,'' I said. ``Just in case, I'd request you make us ten
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bags. Better to have a margin of error.''
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``It can be done by tomorrow morning, if I don't sleep,'' the villainess
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replied, sounding almost enthusiastic the thought. ``As for the
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breathing potions they're already done. Four doses, as you asked.''
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Good, it was all coming together. Indrani let out a noise of surprise.
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``The underwater breathing brew, you actually got it working?'' she
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asked.
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``I did,'' the Concocter preened.
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``Damn,'' Archer said, sounding impressed. ``It's been what, over ten
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years? Congratulations. What was missing?''
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The Concocter cleared her throat, seemingly embarrassed. I could
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understand why.
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``Powdered dragon bone,'' she said.
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Which made each of those four vials she'd brewed me worth more than
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their literal weight in gold. My pipe was dragonbone, and that little
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artefact alone would be enough to buy you a large mansion in Ater.
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Thankfully, at least part of the bill for this was being covered by the
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Grand Alliance. Indrani laughed at the answer and the Concocter subtly
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tensed.
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``Yeah, not a lot of that going around Refuge,'' Archer said. ``Makes
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sense you wouldn't have figured it out there.''
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``I'd had good results with drake blood, it was a hint,'' Concocter
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admitted. ``Mind you, those pigs still drowned.''
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The tension in her shoulders loosened, and I wondered if Indrani
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realized how precarious the entente she'd reached there still was.
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Having the Silver Huntress in camp had been as much a help as hindrance
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there. Cocky and Alexis tended to argue when left to their own devices,
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and the Concocter then often sought out Indrani, but the Silver Huntress
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was openly resentful of that and it was leading to friction between the
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three -- Archer wasn't the kind of woman who took kindly to being
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snipped at when she didn't believe she deserved it.
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``Encouraging,'' I drily said, and she looked a little embarrassed for a
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moment.
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``It'll work, Your Majesty, I tested it myself,'' the Concocter said.
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``Your work has given me no reason to doubt you,'' I calmly said.
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``Kindly send me word as soon as you've finished preparing the powder.''
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The other villain understood it as the dismissal it was, and after the
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usual round of courtesies she was on her way out. I'd kept Indrani's
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attention, though. I'd figured mention of the water breathing potion
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would do the trick.
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``So, I see you've got plans,'' Archer said. ``Going somewhere, Cat?''
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``I am,'' I said. ``And taking people with me, too.''
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``Oh?'' Indrani said, with transparently affected nonchalance.
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The potion would be a new experience, something she craved like a
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drunkard craved the bottle, and on top of that she knew I wouldn't be
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mauling my treasury paying for those for just any old place. I was going
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somewhere interesting, and she wanted in. Which made it good thing I'd
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planned to bring her from the start. While I could have teased her and
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strung this out, I decided to reward her having interacted with a fellow
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pupil of Ranger without anyone getting angry or bitter.
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I was going to train it into her, I swore.
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``Hey,'' I asked with a winning smile, ``wanna to come with me and Akua
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to rob a secret Sahelian vault full of horrors beyond comprehension?''
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She choked in surprise and delight, hazelnut eyes alight with pleasure.
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``You say the sweetest things sometimes,'' Indrani grinned.
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---
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There was no one in the world like the Soninke and their highborn
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gloried in that.
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Our party had come to the orchard first so that we would be able to look
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for traps before High Lord Sargon arrived. Hierophant led a mage cadre
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in combing through the spread of tall lemon trees, boots crinkling
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against the dry earth as the sun pounded down on all our heads. There
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was not so much as a hint of breeze today, the heat was suffocating.
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We'd agreed on bringing no more than thirty guards each, so twenty
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knights of the Order of Broken Bells sat the saddle in good order behind
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me. Inside those shells of polished and hymn-inscribed steel they must
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be cooking alive, but they made for an impressive sight. Decked in plate
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from head to toe, their chargers wearing carapace in black and bronze,
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they kept their shields close and their lances raised. Their banner hung
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by my own, dead for the lack of wind.
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Masego had wandered off to sit under a tree after looking around,
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popping open a book larger than my head in what looked like an older
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dialect of Mthethwa, which left Akua and I to stand under the shade of a
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tall lemon tree halfway through the orchard. She had decided to wear my
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colours, today. The dress was a long one, going down to her feet, and it
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was of a traditional Wolof cut: the neckline was narrow and though it
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went beyond her collarbone it did not venture far. It clung loosely to
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her body, tied up at the waist by two sleeves of cloth that were part of
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the dress. It was black, though from the top of her collarbones to well
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below her tight there was broad silver-and-gold embroidery. It looked
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almost like a stole, though it was part of the dress, and the intricate
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patterns there matched those at the end of her sleeves and the cloth
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tied around her waist.
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There was, as had become her habit, not a single piece of jewelry on
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her.
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Stunning as she was, I might as well have worn rags for the difference
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it'd make. Still, I'd humoured the notion of royal splendour: though I
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wore a breastplate and greaves, because I wasn't a fool, I'd put my hair
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in a long braid and worn my crown. The Mantle of Woe and my staff served
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as the regalia of my rule, truer to me than anything I might have
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dragged out of some dusty Fairfax vault, and instead of an aketon I had
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worn a thick black tunic touched with silverwork around the edges.
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Nothing as intricate as what Akua had on her, but then my bloody
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clothing wasn't made out thin air. We made a memorable enough sight, I
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figured, and drew the eye enough that the little surprise I'd kept up my
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sleeve shouldn't be noticed.
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Then Sargon Sahelian's party came riding into the orchard, and it was an
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effort not to stare.
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All thirty of the high lord's bodyguards were mounted on pale horses, a
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breed short-backed with a high-set tail, but little of the coat could be
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seen: long quilted armour in red, black and white covered them all the
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way down to the lower leg. The patterns were eye-pleasing, sharp
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triangles and long stripes colourful enough the thin strands of copper
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woven into the quilt were hard to make out. Enchanted, I thought. Those
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were definitely enchanted. The riders themselves were no less splendid.
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Their segmented steel lamellar bore a single pauldron on the right
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shoulder lined with lion's fur, while from the left hung a long sash
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whose patterns matched those of horse's armour -- if you did not pay
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attention, your eye might be tricked in thinking them a single creature.
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They each bore a spear, a shield, and curved sword and three javelins.
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All glittered with rubies and ivory. \emph{Light cavalry}, I thought.
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They'd break under a charge of my knights, but my men would die of
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exhaustion before catching up and those javelins looked nasty. Javelins
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could punch through plate, if you knew how to throw them. Ornate helmets
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added the final touch, rounded tops bearing bright red feathers with an
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eye-catching mouthguard made of two ivory tusks atop a coloured veil of
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mail.
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Splendid as they were, though, the soldiers were nothing to the three
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nobles that had come. To the sides of Sargon Sahelian were mage
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nobility, amber-eyed and smiling. Over silk coats they wore breastplates
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entirely decorative -- they went only halfway to the belly -- but
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beautifully crafted, inlaid with gold filigree and rib-like white enamel
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stripes. They wore gorgeous red cloaks bordered in gold, and at their
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sides were jewel-encrusted swords too pristine to have ever seen use.
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Each wore a king's ransom of artefacts as earrings and bracelets,
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necklaces and trinkets. Beautiful and poisonous, they laughed as they
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pressed forward their horses.
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The High Lord of Wolof made them both look like beggars. For half a
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heartbeat I thought he had dressed severely, a simple painted scale
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armour over a red coat, but then the `scale' caught the light. It wasn't
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painted, I realized. It was made of precious stones, every last scale:
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garnets and tourmaline and rubies, sapphires of every tone and colour,
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onyx and chalcedonies and amethysts. I found the sheer \emph{waste}
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fascinating, in a repulsive sort of way. The hem and sleeves of his coat
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were embroidered with black and white maze-like patterns that were
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dizzying to look at -- enchanted, probably -- while High Lord Sargon's
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shoulder-length black hair was flecked with pale feathers longer than
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any bird I knew could grow.
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Golden eyed like his cousin, the High Lord of Wolof rode in the shadow
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of the lemon trees and his retinue followed. The dappled light danced
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lightly across the colours, making it seem as if they shivered like
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waves on a pond, and my breath caught in my throat at the sight of them
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all. Beautiful and terrible, as Akua had once proclaimed at the Doom.
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There really was no one in the world like the Soninke, was there?
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Sometimes, about some things, their arrogance was not unwarranted. One
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of the two nobles peeled ahead of the rest, reining in his mount thirty
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feet or so away from us. I felt the weight of his gaze sweeping across
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us for a moment before he offered a short bow.
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``You stand before High Lord Sargon Sahelian of Wolof, he who rules over
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the temples antediluvian and the vaults of forbidden knowledge,'' the
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man announced in Mthethwa, his voice pleasantly rich. ``You may kneel in
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awe.''
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How nice of him to give us permission. We were a stiff-kneed bunch,
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Callowans, so no one took him up on the kind offer. To my surprise, Akua
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took a step forward. The noble's eyes moved to her, gone wary the way
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you would when encountering a venomous snake.
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``You stand before Queen Catherine Foundling of Callow, the Black
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Queen,'' Akua announced, tone light and amused, ``she who has broken
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gods and bargained with them, stolen the sun and contended Choirs three.
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Your boasts are \emph{shallow}, Naiser Mutinda.''
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The man sneered down at her.
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``The once-proud daughter of Wolof returns a lackey,'' he said.
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``Disappointing.''
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I drummed my fingers against the side of my staff.
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``You're wasting my time,'' I mildly said, staring at the man.
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He hesitated but Naiser, since that seemed to be his name, wasn't quite
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brave enough to mouth off to me to my face.
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``High Lord Sargon blesses these talks with standing of truce,'' the
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nobleman said.
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The actual reason he'd come, this. Making sure we couldn't take swings
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at each other without consequences.
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``So do I,'' I said. ``Now let him talk for himself, lackey, before I
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begin to lose patience.''
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``There was no need for that sort of talk, Naiser,'' an urbane voice
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chided. ``My cousin's return is something to celebrate, not take offence
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to.''
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Sargon Sahelian had dismounted while we entertained his man, the
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noblewoman to his side having followed suit, and as Naiser deferred to
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his liege lord I took a moment to study him more closely. The precious
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scale armour somehow didn't look ridiculous when worn on foot, which
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surprised me, but not as much as the realization that the High Lord of
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Wolof wasn't actually good looking. His chin was a little weak, the arch
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his eyebrows uneven and his nose too large for his face. He was far from
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\emph{ugly}, but I'd gotten used to unearthly beauty being the norm
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among Wasteland aristocrats. The pageantry called attention away from
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it, though, and for a moment I thought of Cordelia Hasenbach.
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``Do I pass muster then, Black Queen?'' the High Lord of Wolof amusedly
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asked me.
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Huh. It'd been a while since someone had called me out on studying them.
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``I'm just amazed your armour doesn't actually seem to be
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uncomfortable,'' I replied, half-serious.
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He laughed, revealing white but slightly crooked teeth.
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``My great-grand uncle was vain but not foolish,'' High Lord Sargon
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said. ``He knew he'd have to wear the artefact after ordering it
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crafted.''
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``He also ate tiger hearts for supper every other day,'' Akua noted.
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``Let us not hasten to the conclusion of wisdom.''
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While I was morbidly curious as to why anyone would eat a tiger heart,
|
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much less a regular supply of them -- I bet it was a virility thing,
|
|
always was with wealthy older men -- Sahelian family anecdotes weren't
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why I'd come out here. I lightly slapped my staff against the side of
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the tree I stood under, claiming their attention.
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``You wanted talks, High Lord,'' I said. ``You have them. I recommend
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against wasting that chance.''
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The dark-skinned aristocrat nodded, seemingly unconcerned.
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``I could dance with words over Wolof not having warred on Callow under
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my rule, but I imagine that would go against the spirit of your
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|
recommendation,'' Sargon said.
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``Malicia's my enemy,'' I said. ``You're one of hers.''
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If Wolof followed the Dread Empress of Praes, I would treat it
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accordingly.
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``That is unfortunate,'' Sargon said. ``Though I would convey that she
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does not wish to be at war with you anymore than I do. She seeks to
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|
offer peace terms, Queen Catherine.''
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``It's more than a few corpses too late for that,'' I sharply replied.
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``Are you truly so petty you would not even listen to the terms,
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|
Catherine?''
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|
My fingers clenched. Among the riders, one of them had taken off her
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|
helmet. It wasn't Malicia's real body but the cadence of the words, the
|
|
presence? The body she was possessing with that ritual of hers smiled at
|
|
my anger, but I didn't let it burn hot. It went cold instead, frozen,
|
|
and I raised my hand to snap my fingers. Malicia's mouth opened, but
|
|
before she could speak so much as a word there were a few flickers of
|
|
light. An arrow streaked through layers of enchantments and tore right
|
|
through her throat. She fell over, gurgling, and already halfway into
|
|
the grave. Archer did not miss, not at this range. Even as the retinue
|
|
began to raise their spears and my knights lowered their lances, I met
|
|
Sargon Sahelian's eyes.
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|
His calm had not broken and neither had mine.
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``I trust you have a good reason I shouldn't just burn you all alive for
|
|
bringing her to these talks,'' I conversationally said.
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|
He didn't even flinch, which reluctantly raised my esteem of him a
|
|
notch.
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``I have on my person three artefacts known as the Weeping Snares,''
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|
Sargon replied. ``They contain demons, and I have had an artificer bind
|
|
all three seals to a command artefact in my possession.''
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|
``I have the Hierophant,'' I said. ``Any leash you have on them will be
|
|
mine before the first incantation's finished.''
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|
``There are no leashes on them, Catherine,'' Akua quietly said. ``It is
|
|
why my ancestors left them in the vault instead of using them for war.
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|
They are simple containers, forged in cruder times.''
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|
I hummed and thought for a moment, Sargon never blinking as he watched
|
|
me. I could see sweat beading on the back of his neck. Not worth the
|
|
risks, I eventually decided. Even should I weight that it was worth the
|
|
damage to my reputation to break truce and kill the High Lord of Wolof,
|
|
there was no guarantee that his successor would be more pliable -- or
|
|
that they'd negotiate with me at all.
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|
``Clever,'' I finally said. ``Talk, then. We both know you came to make
|
|
an offer.''
|
|
|
|
``You have seized Sinka and Jinon,'' the High Lord said, ``and this
|
|
tightens the noose around my city. Yet we are each aware that Wolof
|
|
could withstand a siege for longer than you can afford. I do not believe
|
|
that you want to storm my walls anymore than I want them stormed, Black
|
|
Queen.''
|
|
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|
He shrugged, offering a disarming crooked smile.
|
|
|
|
``Would you be terribly offended if I offered you a bribe to go away?''
|
|
he baldly asked.
|
|
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|
\emph{It's the teeth that give you away, Sargon}, I thought. \emph{They
|
|
were just one step too far.} Even in Callow there were hedge mages in
|
|
some cities that could straighten your teeth. There was no way that the
|
|
High Lord of Wolof couldn't get his own fixed, which meant keeping them
|
|
was a choice\emph{. How many of your countrymen fell for that little
|
|
smile, Sargon? Its just honest enough to trust, to believe coming out of
|
|
a lesser branch's son. How many saw it coming before you slid the
|
|
knife?} Aisha had warned me once, about charming Sahelians and the dooms
|
|
they wrought.
|
|
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|
``We can call them war reparations, somewhat overdue,'' I mused. ``I'm
|
|
interested.''
|
|
|
|
``That is\ldots{} pleasing to hear,'' Sargon admitted.
|
|
|
|
He looked faintly relieved, though I wondered how much of it was
|
|
feigned.
|
|
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|
``I'll want your granaries,'' I idly told him, ``your treasury and a
|
|
pledge that Wolof will withdraw from the civil war.''
|
|
|
|
With each addition his smile grew more strained.
|
|
|
|
``Some of this can be haggled,'' Sargon tried. ``The last cannot. If the
|
|
Webweaver is truly one of your followers now, I imagine you know why.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia had soulboxed him and was unlikely to be pleased if he abandoned
|
|
her cause. Terrible torture would ensue, presumably. It was an opening
|
|
I'd been waiting for, though, and half the reason I'd made the demand in
|
|
the first place.
|
|
|
|
``Hierophant can cut the city off from scrying,'' I said. ``She wouldn't
|
|
know until much too late.''
|
|
|
|
I saw him hesitate a fraction, then push through.
|
|
|
|
``Wolof has secrets beyond the ken of Wekesa the Warlock's knowledge, or
|
|
that of his son,'' Sargon said. ``Your premise is untrue.''
|
|
|
|
I hid a smile. I'd given something by revealing Masego could put them in
|
|
a box if I wished him to, but without knowing it he'd given me something
|
|
too: he was afraid of Malicia \emph{personally}, not as an abstract. Not
|
|
through scrying, assuming I even believed his vague talk of secret
|
|
Wolofite magics that Hierophant couldn't dismantle. \emph{She still has
|
|
another body in Wolof}, I thought. My fingers clenched with something
|
|
that was neither quite fear or triumph. It was too strong an investment
|
|
for me to be the sole reason for it. I had put out my bait in the right
|
|
place.
|
|
|
|
``It seems we're at an impasse, then,'' I shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``I can still offer great\ldots{} reparations of gold and foodstuffs,
|
|
Queen Catherine,'' High Lord Sargon said. ``Can a bargain not be had?''
|
|
|
|
``Of course -- I'm a reasonable woman, High Lord Sargon,'' I lied. ``I
|
|
just want your entire treasury and all your food.''
|
|
|
|
I paused.
|
|
|
|
``And also the armour you're wearing,'' I whimsically added. ``As a
|
|
polite reminder that if you ever try to bring a Named capable of mind
|
|
control to truce talks again, I will brutally murder you as an object
|
|
lesson.''
|
|
|
|
I was going to have to get everyone checked for hooks in their minds,
|
|
which would be a pain. That'd cost him.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' High Lord Sargon muttered, ``at least it is a \emph{succinct}
|
|
sort of extortion.''
|
|
|
|
``And to think they tell me I can't do diplomacy,'' I brightly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``I can't imagine why,'' Sargon amiably replied, not batting an eye. ``I
|
|
will have to discuss your terms with my advisors, Queen Catherine.
|
|
Perhaps negotiations can resume at a later date.''
|
|
|
|
I shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``If you want,'' I said. ``Until then, I'm under oath to offer you an
|
|
exchange for the prisoners taken in Jinon. As you have none of mine
|
|
imprisoned to trade, I've set ransoms instead. Akua?''
|
|
|
|
She offered the scroll, which without hesitation the High Lord of Wolof
|
|
took. He unfolded it, eyes scanning the lines. I'd set truly
|
|
extortionate rates, ten year's pay for every soldier and officer as well
|
|
as massive lump sums for every highborn. Even for someone as wealthy as
|
|
the High Lord of Wolof, it'd be a costly racket. My bet was on him
|
|
bringing home only the highborn, part of the reason I'd jacked up their
|
|
ransoms on principle. The rest was that I had a godsdamned war to pay
|
|
for, and it wasn't going to pay for itself.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' Sargon Sahelian briskly said. ``I'll send the sum to your camp
|
|
by cart before nightfall. I trust you will return them to the city at
|
|
the earliest convenience.''
|
|
|
|
I hid my surprise, but not quite quickly enough he didn't notice it.
|
|
|
|
``We're a greedy breed, Sahelians,'' the High Lord crookedly smiled.
|
|
``The coin I'll make again in time, Black Queen. People are not so
|
|
easily replaced.''
|
|
|
|
Huh. That was the closest to respect I'd felt for him all day, even
|
|
knowing he might be playing me. The talks ended without further
|
|
ceremony, and it was in a pensive mood that I rode back to camp. I felt
|
|
like I'd missed something, though I couldn't put my finger on what.
|
|
|
|
So far, we hadn't missed a beat.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I woke up in the middle of the night to the screams and smoke.
|