15 – 44

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Trissiny stared out across the edge of the plateau, through the space where he had vanished. Despite his and Schwartz’s conjecture over the summer about the damage that scythe could potentially do to reality, there remained no hint of the slash Gabriel had just carved in the air, just the quiet mountain breeze and the unpleasant but very faint buzzing in her ears caused by the charm he had used to conceal their brief conversation.

She held up the sheet of his enchanting paper, inscribed with a glyph-adorned circular diagram in faintly luminous purple ink; the basic structure of it was comprehensible to her thanks to Yornhaldt’s classes, but her knowledge of enchanting was very general and well below the level of this. And he’d just scrawled it in a few seconds. He was getting really good with these charms. Not for the first time, Trissiny resolved to focus more on her light wielding. It wouldn’t do to use it too much as a crutch, but it was a skill no Hand of Avei had developed to any great extent, and one which would thus take enemies by surprise, provided she was careful not to show it off excessively.

Pretty much the way Gabe used his arcane craft these days.

Raising her eyes to gaze again into the distance, Trissiny absently rubbed one thumb across a clear patch along the edge of the paper. It probably wouldn’t be necessary to destroy it; stable area of effect charms made from such basic materials burned themselves out very quickly, she knew that much about enchanting. The ink’s glow was already starting to fade. Once it went dark, it was just colored ink on paper, good for nothing except possibly as a little keepsake to tuck away…

And then, faster than she could react, it was ripped out of her hand.

Trissiny spun, instinctively reaching for her blade, and found herself almost nose-to-nose with Principia. Or would have been, had the elf’s nose not been turned the other way as she critically examined the charm.

“Sinneck’s silencing glyphward,” Principia mused. “A little sloppy, but he was probably in a hurry and it doesn’t really need to last long, does it? And as usual, you kids missed the broader strategic point under your fancy tricks: you can mask your conversation from the local elf, but the elf will still notice if she suddenly can’t hear your breathing, heartbeats, or anything at all from this little circular patch of ground.” Lifting her eyes to meet Trissiny’s, she deliberately ripped the charm in half, causing the faint buzz to vanish. “Where is he, Trissiny?”

She took her hand off the handle of her sword, deliberately straightening up. “It’s all right, Locke, he’ll be back…as soon as possible.”

“Not what I asked you.”

Trissiny narrowed her eyes at the flat tone. Principia was staring at her in a way she never had: like an authority figure demanding an explanation. Even when she’d faced the woman from the wrong side of cell bars, she had never had this attitude. Trissiny immediately decided she didn’t care for it.

“It’s nothing you need to know about, Locke.”

“You are too intelligent for me to need to list all the reasons that’s wrong, but I’ll indulge you. I am responsible for all of you, we are about to leave and this is going to delay our departure, possibly to the point that our guides will declare the window missed and we’ll lose another entire day to this, and this group has ample warning from no less than a god of self-inflicted trouble descending upon all our heads. And now, I find I can’t detect Gabriel Arquin anywhere within the range of my senses. So I’ll ask you once more, Trissiny: where did he go?”

She refrained from gritting her teeth in sheer annoyance at the fact that Principia was right.

“It is a paladin matter, Locke. Vidius needed him for something. Furthermore, he described it as…family business.”

“And you just let him go?” she demanded.

Trissiny frowned more deeply. “Did you not hear me? It’s not as if I had any prerogative to stop him.”

“You know, I can’t help but think back to a certain hellgate incident. Now, I wasn’t there, so stop me if I’m wrong about this, but the version of the story I was told involved two paladins being ordered to stay and fight, and their entire circle of friends refusing to let them do so alone. Ring any bells?”

To her vast displeasure, Trissiny felt color rise in her cheeks. “That was a completely different situation.”

“Yeah, unlike most of your friends you have an actual claim when it comes to butting in on paladin business and a much better chance of surviving it. I’m a better enchanter than Arquin and I can hear the beetles under the stone you’re standing on, Trissiny. So do you want me to chase the little brat down myself, or would you rather spare him the embarrassment and show me which way he went?”

“I doubt even your senses are sharp enough, Locke. When Vidius chooses to help him do it, Gabe can shadow-jump. With that scythe, he can apparently do so into places where it wouldn’t usually be possible.”

Principia clamped her lips into a thin, unhappy line. “I see. And you wouldn’t happen to know where…?”

She shrugged. “Family business, he said. And something Vidius cared about enough to both send him on, and help, which means it’s probably something to do with the valkyries, not his father. Could be anywhere.”

They stared at each other for five seconds before Principia finally spoke.

“Well, Trissiny, this is a real watershed moment in our relationship. First time you’ve disappointed me. I suddenly feel very maternal.”

“Now, you listen here—”

“You should have stopped him, idiot,” Principia shot back, jabbing one finger into Trissiny’s chest. “Failing that, you should have gone with him. At the very least, you should have warned the rest of us something was happening! All of that was well within your power, and glaringly obvious. And yet, here we are!”

“Enough!” she barked. “One more word, Lieutenant—”

“Have you ever even stood in a phalanx? I’m not talking about training, I mean shoulder to shoulder with your sisters while taking enemy fire and facing the real likelihood of losing comrades under your command. Because let me tell you, General, that is a whole different category of experience from the heroic solo warrior paladin shit you’ve been doing.”

“How dare you—”

“We both knew I’m a far better thief, but believe me, I’m as surprised as you to find that I’m a better soldier.”

Despite herself, Trissiny was struck silent. All she could manage to do was stare, her mouth open with her half-formed rebuke forgotten.

“Yes, we have our issues, and they’re nearly all my fault,” Principia went on relentlessly. “And yes, you outrank me. But if you have an iota of sense, Trissiny, you will listen to me when I criticize you. It’s not as if I do it often, and you can really use the benefit of my experience. Especially when it’s over the very real chance one of your friends might get killed from his and your combined goddamned stupidity!”

The elf dropped the two halves of Gabriel’s glyphward and turned on her heel, stalking back toward the half-ruined old building behind them. Trissiny was mortified to observe that the entire rest of her class was assembled in the doorway, watching in silence.

“Where are you going?” she demanded of Principia’s back.

“Where do you think? To fix this.”


“You’re disappointed in me?” Yngrid exclaimed, clutching Weaver tighter. “You, Gabriel, of all people? You know what it’s like, for all of us! Haven’t I done enough in eight thousand years to earn one spark of happiness for myself?”

“Whoah, whoah, whoah!” Gabriel said, holding up the hand not occupied with his scythe and stepping forward. “As far as that goes, I think you’re dead right, and I’ll back you up all the way with the big guy.”

She froze with her mouth open to continue arguing, blinking in confusion. “Oh. Then…?”

“Vidius sent me here and tasked me with bringing you to heel, and that means it’s gonna be done on my terms. And whatever I decide to do will damn well reflect the fact that all of you girls have been worked non-stop for an unfathomably long time, that he’s never had cause to complain about your performance, and that quite frankly Vidius has spent so long paying no attention to your own interests that if he failed to see something like this coming, well, that’s on him.”

Thunder rumbled along the distant horizon to the south. All of them turned to stare in that direction, save the projection of the Avatar, who just cocked one eyebrow in silence.

“And if he has a problem with that,” Gabriel added with a scowl, “he should definitely have thought more carefully before designating me the arbiter of this business. But he did, and I am, and so this isn’t as simple as you just going AWOL, Yngrid. I’ve gotta work out something to do about this, but I won’t stand for you being put upon any further over something so incredibly understandable on your part.”

A tremulous smile flickered over the valkyrie’s features, in sharp contrast to Weaver, who was still clutching her and glaring at Gabriel. A moment later, though, she frowned in confusion.

“I’m…glad to hear that, little brother, but… I’m not sure what you’re upset about, then.”

“Aren’t you?” he demanded. “Come on, Yngrid. You politely toed the line for thousands upon thousands of years, and now you finally decided to buck your duties because of…” He flung out his free hand at Weaver. “Really? Really? This guy? This family-sized tin of hickory-smoked buttholes?”

Billie burst out laughing so hard she immediately fell over, which did not even interrupt Gabriel’s tirade.

“Are you kidding me? Girl, as soon as all this is settled one way or another you and I are going to sit down and have us a long, awkward talk about your taste in men, and wow the fact that you’re hearing this from me of all damned people should shed some light on the depth of your bad judgment here.”

“Oh, I remember this one, now,” Weaver drawled. “Didn’t see him in the library much. Settle a bet for me, Arquin: can you actually read?”

“I’m not even gonna bother threatening you with the cliché, you walking ingrown crotch hair,” Gabriel retorted, causing Billie to begin rolling back and forth, clutching her ribs and absolutely shrieking. “You give her cause to regret this even once, and it ends with one of her sisters standing over you and deciding your eternal fate. I suggest you keep that firmly in mind at all times, you greasy wedge of pepperjack dickcheese.”

“…please…stop…” Billie wheezed desperately. “…can’t…air…”

“Gabe,” Yngrid said, her quiet and earnest tone a stark contrast to everything else going on. “I understand why you think that, but please trust me. You don’t know Damian like I do.”

“Scuze me for insertin’ myself into what sounds like family business,” McGraw said, diffidently tipping his hat, “but I think it’s worth pointin’ out that this fella is a Vesker bard. He lives his life playin’ a role, and the moment you take that for the real man underneath, you’ve fallen for the grift.”

“Yeah, I’m not buying that for a second,” Gabriel said flatly, “and I say that after spending a week of this summer being dragged around by Vesk himself. You wear the mask, you become the mask. If someone acts like an insufferable asshole, that fact alone means they are one, irrespective of their tragic backstory or whatever else.”

Joe cleared his throat. “Hi, Gabe.”

Gabriel glanced at him. “Hey, Joe. Surprised to see you here.”

“Yep, that’s kinda what I wanted to bring up. I know our orbits have only crossed here and there, but the fact is I do think of you as a friend.”

Gabriel raised one eyebrow. “Well, likewise, I guess.”

“I mention it because I can say the same of Weaver, here. Not to argue with your assessment, exactly, but the fact is the man has a whole group of friends who’re willin’ to not only trek to this godforsaken patch of dangerous nowhere—uh, no offense, Avatar.”

“It would be fruitless to take offense at accuracy,” the Avatar acknowledged, nodding wryly to him.

“But,” Joe continued, “also care enough about the big jerk to risk antaognizin’ Vidius himself so he and Yngrid could be together. I get the impression you’re concerned for her well-being, here, so…hopefully that counts for something. Man has the capacity to make solid friendships, and I hope my own judgment means at least a little bit.”

Gabriel heaved a deep sigh, shifting his stance as if he were actually leaning his weight on his scythe. “Well…whatever. Regardless of that, we still have the matter of a rogue valkyrie loose on the mortal plane and my obligation to do something about it.”

“Why?” Yngrid asked bitterly, tightening her grip on Weaver’s arm. “Can’t you just leave us alone?”

“Yngrid,” he said wearily, “you have to know that even if I you were one hundred percent in the right, you are just too dangerous a category of being for it to be that simple. And you’re not completely in the right, are you? Did you ever even ask Vidius for any kind of reprieve?”

“He’d never have agreed to that, and you know it!”

“No, I don’t know it. My experience with him has been largely a process of him trying to be more flexible and less bound by old ideas that don’t work anymore. That’s the only reason I’m here. And whether or not that’s true, the question remains: did you ask?

She looked away, scowling.

“Because if you’d come to me, I would absolutely have spoken up for you,” Gabriel continued. “Hell, your sisters would have, as well. Most of them, anyway. Did you seek anyone else’s help before having Grumpypants McPonytail pull this scheme?”

“It doesn’t matter now, anyway,” she muttered. “What are you going to do about it, then?”

“Lemme just be serious for a sec,” Billie said, still grinning but sitting upright now. “Is lookin’ the other way entirely outta the question, here?”

“Fraid so,” McGraw answered before Gabriel could. “There’s already an actual god watchin’ these shenanigans directly. However this gets resolved, it ain’t gonna just go away if everybody involved agrees to pretend nothing’s up.”

Gabriel lifted the butt of his scythe off the stone floor, beginning to pace back and forth. “As usual, it’s less about the thing itself than the things connected to it. This is going to have wide ranging repercussions. A valkyrie back on the mortal plane is a big deal,Yngrid! The entire rest of the Pantheon is going to be alarmed about this, and they’re just the first. We both know what happened when the last fallen valkyrie ran into the Empire’s forces. Also, apparently you girls are inherently terrifying to dryads, and there are at least two of those interacting regularly with mortal society now! Wait, no, five, that I know of. What happens the first time a dryad accidentally flies into a panic and people are in the way? And for that matter, Yngrid… What about the rest of the girls? You know all of your sisters would want the same chance, if one was available. Did you give any thought to how they would feel after you ditched them?”

Yngrid had pressed herself hard into Weaver’s side, now, wrapping one black wing around him so that they resembled a single dark shape with two heads. Her eyes remained on the ground, refusing to meet Gabriel’s stare.

He stopped pacing and rested the butt of his scythe on the floor again. “Well. Obviously, I don’t have the power to send you back.”

Everyone had the presence of mind not to look at the Avatar, who himself obligingly remained silent.

“Honestly,” Gabriel muttered, “even with all the rest of it… I dunno that I could stomach doing that even if I was able. But Yngrid, we have to do something. Do you have any ideas? Because believe me, I am open to suggestions.”

“Take credit,” Mary said quietly.

He turned a pensive frown on her. “…go on?”

“It is a very old trick of politics, when one is unexpectedly outmaneuvered,” she said in the same soft tone, her expression intently focused. “Claim that whatever transpired was your own idea, and step in to guide its consequences. That will not solve all the issues that may result from this, but it addresses the immediate implications of Vidius having been thwarted by one of his own servants. He—and you—save face and regain the initiative, and you will have gained a powerful agent for your god’s ends who is less constrained than the rest of her sisters.”

“Huh,” Gabriel mused, his expression growing distant. “You know, I think you might be onto—”

“Young man,” Mary interrupted softly, her eyes fixed on his waist, “where did you get that sword?”


The group parted like waves as Principia strode through them into the building. Merry was still inside, standing with a backpack slung over her shoulder and watching warily, but apparently not having been quite curious enough to push into the crowd of students to stare.

“What exactly do you plan to do?” Trissiny demanded, striding in right on Principia’s heels. “It’s not like you can follow him!”

“No, indeed,” the elf concurred, slowing as she stepped past Merry, almost to the entrance on the other side, which led to the broad plaza in the center of the plateau. “I have neither the know-how nor the magical muscle to track a shadow-jump, much less one going into someplace that required god-driven murderscythe power to penetrate. But someone, somewhere, somewhen, has both those things.”

With her back to them, she held up one hand. In it was the silver-trimmed wooden face of the Mask of the Adventurer.

“Whoah,” Merry exclaimed in alarm.

Her alarm was nothing compared to that of Fross. “WHAT THE HELL? That was in my dimensional storage! My personal—it was basically part of my— How in the name of—”

“I’m a thief,” Principia said flatly, turning to stare at them. “More specifically, I am a damn good thief, and now you know why my tag is Keys and not Dazzling Personality.”

“You do know we are extremely capable of just taking that away from you, right?” Ruda asked in a deceptively mild tone.

“I should damn well hope so,” Principia replied grimly. “Avelea, Punaji, Awarrion.” She pointed at each of them in turn as she continued. “Mad at me, raised to make ruthless decisions, and both. I have no idea what kind of rabbit hole I’m about to crawl down, and I’m going to count on you to put me down at the first firm sign that it’s necessary. I said firm sign, but also the first one. If you see the need, do not wait for me to get positioned to fend you off.”

“Locke, think about what you’re doing,” Toby said, stepping forward. “You were more wary of that thing than any of us, at least at first, and rightly so.”

“And that is the point,” she said patiently. “You kids may think of me as kind of a joke, and that’s fine, but the fact remains I am responsible for you. And remember, our one and only conversation with Arachne on the subject established that I am entirely expendable in this arrangement. This thing should not ever be used in any real-world situation beyond your little trial runs, but sometimes we just don’t get the luxury of doing things as they should be done. If somebody’s gotta get bent over the barrel for this, it’s going to be me and not any of you.”

“Does someone have to be?” Juniper asked. “That can’t be your only idea.”

“Tracking a shadow-jump by itself is among the most complex and advanced magic in existence,” Principia replied, her patient tone beginning to be strained. “And that’s not even touching on the matter of whatever required him to use that scythe to claw open a doorway. This is my only idea, or you could bet your green ass I wouldn’t be doing it.”

“But do you need to follow him?” the dryad persisted. “Gabe can take care of himself, and he knows what he’s doing. He does!” she added a little defensively when everyone else turned to look at her. “He’s not the same guy we started school with two years ago. None of us are.”

“Vesk was here!” Principia shouted. “Fucking Vesk! The patron god of plot contrivances, who regards people’s gruesome deaths as great character development for their grieving loved ones! The last time I took orders from that asshole I came very damn close to losing good women under my command. Other people died under our weapons who absolutely did not need to, and wouldn’t have if he’d just stayed out of it! But it did solve our immediate problem, in the end, and in a much more dramatic fashion than the patient and thorough campaign we’d been gearing up toward. And that is what it comes down to with him, kids. As soon as you find yourself in one of his goddamn stories, you are in it and you’re not going to wiggle out from under his thumb until he’s had a satisfying climax and denouement.”

“Fuckin’ ew,” Ruda muttered.

“The only thing to do,” Principia continued more quietly but just as insistently, brandishing the mask at them, “is lean into it and try to guide the damage in the least awful direction you can. Whatever Gabriel’s involved in now, the timing alone tells me he’s bitten off more than he can chew. I have a feeling this was only ever going to end with somebody using this horrible abomination of yours, and then probably learning an ironic lesson about power and taking the quick and easy path. And as I said, it’s going to be me, is that clear? You just remember what I told you. Be ready to help Gabriel with whatever bullshit we are about to find, and be ready to deal with me if it comes to that.”

She took at deep breath and stared at the mask in her hands with undisguised contempt. “And damn that little shit for making me do this. Somebody please wring his neck for me.”

Then, before anyone could argue further, Principia pressed the Mask of the Adventurer to her face.

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57 thoughts on “15 – 44

      1. Knowing what is actually happening we think that. But Principia does not know th situation. And Vesk is definitely the kind of asshole she described. I really hope someone will put him down.

        Liked by 2 people

    1. Yeah, there’s no real point to try to genre-savy your way through the powerful story-god., especially not by framing it as such before all involved. Then again, if someone were to steal Vesk’s satisfaction, it’d probably be keys.

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  1. I wonder what Mary’s going to think when she sees a legendary warlock appear out of nowhere when she’s probably in a pretty fragile state.

    Liked by 4 people

      1. I want to see that now. This is already shaping up to be an embarrassing disaster, let’s keep adding to the pile of ways this goes badly. Like, say, the avatar speaking up and announcing the imminent arrival of a kitsune delegation who’ve detected the event.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. This is absolutely what is going to happen, the Irony of Principia turning into Kuriwa with the mask is just too good not to happen, the the mask is basically only restricted by the challenge it face and what would be the best story result of its intervention, it was created under the divine influence of Vesk after all.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Gabriel arrives in an alarmingly, magically weird place, to find a diplomatic and institutional nightmare which may also cause more direct, obvious and lethal kinds of disaster involved in it at some point. In conversation with one of the foremost practitioners of fay magic commonly known, they start concocting a scheme to lie about what happened and spin a bullshit story claiming this isn’t a disaster.

    ….Then, he gets a surprise posse of adventurers to the face, and everything is ruined.

    Liked by 4 people

    1. Could this be considered as people of power abusing that power in order too craft the world in way that most benefits them and their interests? Because if that is the case then the Hand of the god of Defiance is going to have some serious objections to that.

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  3. It’s getting very obvious by now Principia is the Hand of Eserion.

    I wonder if Zaruda is going to be turned into an Accountant due to being made Hand of Verniselle.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. I am of the firm opinion that anyone under the effect of the Punaji Royal curse is essentially a hand of Naphthene, and who better to be the cognitive anchors for the bitch Goddess of the see than the rulers of a pirate nation that represents personal freedom and individual agency?

      Liked by 5 people

  4. Mary has recognized Ariel, her sister’s sword. That Gabriel know to be Tellwyrm sword. It is nearly a confirmation that Arachne is the long-lost sister of Kuriwa.

    I would pay dearly to see her face when she find out that Arachne is her sister😂

    Liked by 4 people

      1. At yes, your right. Technically, in this reality she never had a sister. Maybe it is the fact that it is a high elves sword?

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Could be that, or seeing it triggered something. I wonder if Ariel remembers where she came from before the Crawl.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Still though – Connecting Arachne to the high elves, particularly if she goes and asks where she found the sword, is one step closer to a family reunion

        Liked by 3 people

      4. Sure, I just said it’s unlikely she sees a connection to a sister she doesn’t know she even had once.

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      1. AFAIK it isn’t Arachne’s sword. She did send them into the Crawl to recover her sword, which they did in the tavern. Ariel is a different blade.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I think just knowing what *kind* of sword that is and how it’s made is enough to explain Mary’s reaction.

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  5. I don’t think Mary knows that Ariel once belonged to her sister – I think she’s just recognised it as a High Elf blade, which Gabriel is very much not supposed to have.

    Liked by 4 people

    1. Although if Ariel was connected to Arachne when she was nabbed by Scyllith – would the high elves have a record of her/it in this timeline?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thats a good question did Scyllith just erase all memorys of Arachne or did that include all records even obscure ones that don’t mention her directly.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. In the chapter “Accursed 5”, we see that Kuriwa´s father had only one daughter. In this timeline, Kuriwa has no sister. So I think said sister’s sword is absent from the records.

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  6. What Gabe needs here is to borrow Falconer Industries Lawyers from Teal to write up an offical modernised Employment Contract for the Valkiries and proper Vacation entitlements.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The only problem is that no matter how official it looks, it has to account for the fact that immortal Avatars of Death will be walking the mortal Plain, sure they are generally even keeled and are people, but they also have had access to some of the world’s most guarded secrets over millenia, the implications are just to broad to be settled with paper.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That’s not the problem, the problem would be fanboys/girls, the Vidian versions of November.

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  7. Mary’s idea is a good one. Solid, not too complicated, can be adapted as needed… so of course, Principia is going to make an absolute mess of it by accident.

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    1. And this time, without even trying 😏 But it was a direct mission from Vidius, not Vesk. For me, there was no reason to be particularly upset or worried, and Trissiny had the right reaction.

      I wonder how the adventurers will react. Will they find out about the Mask?

      Liked by 2 people

  8. It feels kind of odd that the reason Principia is so weirdly frantic and upset is an event which happened off-screen before the chapter began.

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  9. Principia clearly believes that there is some kind of epic disaster occurring thanks to Vesk, and that if it ends with Gabriel maimed or dead (or a sufficient other nonspecific disaster) that Arachne is going to kill her.

    Both of which, given Arachne’s speech at the beginning of this trip and Vesk’s prior behavior, seems at least reasonably believable.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. omg, she recognizes Ariel. this will be interesting. also, i think, in this timeline, the sword IS her sister. who better to make a sword with than a person who was born damaged in such a way as not to live? timelines being changed, but finding ways to heal themselves.

    also, TAKE HER SCYTHE. limit her powers.

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  11. Principia, I’m not sure you’re in a place to throw stones regarding “heroic solo paladin shit”, considering that’s been your whole career up until recently. I’m not saying that she’s wrong in this instance (Gabriel going off by himself after a visit by the God of Ominous Foreshadowing is cause for concern), but her “I will always know better than you, it’s up to you to listen” schtick isn’t nearly as airtight as she thinks it is. My knee-jerk reaction to the “I’m a better soldier” speech is a that of hearing a lecture from a new convert who’d been living a self-indulgent lifestyle for CENTURIES (I’m still not quite over the circumstances of Trissany’s birth).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Until Prin joined the legion, she was not a soldier.
      But then she did join, and became a soldier, even an officer, and she has thrown herself to that role with the same skill and dedication she did on being the best damn conman, thief and a general layabout for decades, even centuries, to a point where the god damn high priest and bishop of Eserion wondered if they should give her their jobs.
      Yeah, while Prin may be over reacting here, she does so with a good reason, and she absolutely is better soldier than Triss, probably not as good a tactician or strategist in the traditional sense, but definitely better soldier.

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Anybody else slightly scared by the fact that Keys is a good enough thief to steal something out of Fross’s personal dimensional storage? I.e. Fross consists mostly out of magic, and Principia can unravel her control over what is essentially her body, grab parts of it, and she didin’t even notice. I think this is like stealing somebodies pacemaker or gold teeth – not really body parts, but close enough for all intents and purposes? This means that she can steal basically _anything_ , and if i was somebody who was running on subjective reality/magic i would be really worried.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Could also turn her into Arachne, we’ve already seen that, which would be hilarious
      Or that mysterious warlock from earlier

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    2. My guess is that it’ll turn Prin into Prin. It’ll double the Prin and she’ll steal the concept of distance between her and Gabe.

      Liked by 1 person

    3. Or a Valkyrie. They own a scythe and can follow shadow-jumping. The arrival of another Valkyrie will be problematic.

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  13. I’m currently thinking about whether Prin can steal godhood.

    Or indeed if one becomes Paladin of Esarion by stealing the mental imprint from the previous Hand.

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  14. oh, also, Tris was rubbing the paper and thinking of keeping it as a keepsake… yup. she’s falling HARD.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Here’s a thought:

    Can the Mask turn Prin into Kuriwa from *before* her memories were lost?

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  16. I am getting so annoyed that Gabriel keeps calling millenia old demi goddesses “girls.” Couldn’t he return the respect offered and call them sister, or big sister, or something?

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