127 lines
5.7 KiB
TeX
127 lines
5.7 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{prologue}{%
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\chapter*{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{prologue}} \chaptermark{Prologue}
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\epigraph{In the beginning, there were only the Gods.
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Aeons untold passed as they drifted aimlessly through the Void, until
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they grew bored with this state of affairs. In their infinite wisdom
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they brought into existence Creation, but with Creation came discord.
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The Gods disagreed on the nature of things: some believed t*heir
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children should be guided to greater things, while others believed that
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tey must rule over the creatures they had made.
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So, we are told, were born Good and Evil.
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Ages passed in fruitless argument between them until finally a wager was
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agreed on: it would be the mortals that settled the matter, for strife
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between the gods would only result in the destruction of all. We know
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this wager as Fate, and thus Creation came to know war. Through the
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passing of the years grooves appeared in the workings of Fate, patterns
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repeated until they came into existence easier than not, and those
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grooves came to be called Roles. The Gods gifted these Roles with Names,
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and with those came power. We are all born free, but for every man and
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woman comes a time where a Choice must be made.
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It is, we are told, the only choice that ever really matters.''*}{First page of the Book of All Things}
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The sun was setting on a field of corpses.
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Black passed by a group of orcs building a pyre, nodding absently when
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they stopped piling up logs to salute -- green eyes swept over the
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bloodied plains, taking in the devastation the Legions of Terror had
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wrought. Camp fires were already burning in the distance, sprawled
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across the hills, and by the sound of it the officers had already
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distributed the night's ale rations. He would join them in time, but for
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a little longer he felt the need to stay here. To stand in the middle of
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what a decade of planning had brought forth. Callow's standing army had
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been annihilated today, over two thirds of their number slaughtered
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before they broke ranks. The Wizard of the West had fled, his power
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broken. Good King Edward's head had been popped off like a bottlecap by
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an ogre and the Shining Prince had been mobbed by a company of goblins
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until one drew a red smile across his throat. The Kingdom of Callow's
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strength had been crushed in the span of an afternoon, and Black would
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see to it that it never recovered.
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``It's getting dark out, Black,'' the voice came from behind. ``You
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should return to camp.''
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It never ceased to amuse him how a woman the size of Captain could be so
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eerily quiet. Even decked out in full plate, the olive-skinned woman had
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been noiseless in her approach. If not for the other senses that his
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Role afforded him, he would never have sensed her closing in. Turning to
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have a look at his right hand, Black raised an eyebrow when he was
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presented with the sight of Scribe standing next to the woman in
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question. Unusual of her to wander onto a battlefield, even one where
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the fighting was long over.
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``Soon,'' he agreed. ``Scribe, you have a report?''
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The plain-faced woman fished out a scroll from the bandolier hanging
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across her shoulder and handed it to him without a word. Breaking the
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seal absently, Black unfurled the parchment and scanned the lines. A
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moment passed until the barest hint of a smile quirked his lips.
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``That should keep the Procer occupied for the time being,'' he
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murmured. ``By the time the fighting dies down we'll have the border
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secure.''
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Handing back the scroll to Scribe, he returned his attention to the
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battlefield. The companies assigned to the thankless work of burning the
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bodies would have to work through the night, at this rate. He'd have to
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see about arranging a rotation when he returned to camp, if sufficiently
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sober soldiers could be produced. A tall silhouette striding forward
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purposefully caught his attention as the dark-skinned man it belonged to
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deftly sidestepped a pair of orcs carrying a log twice the size of a
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grown man.
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``You could have told me we were having an after-battle get together,''
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Warlock teased as soon as he was close enough to be heard. ``I'd have
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brought a few bottles, though admittedly the scenery's a little morbid
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for my tastes.''
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Black rolled his eyes, though he caught Captain discreetly suppressing a
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smile. Scribe eyed Warlock with the same mild bemusement as always, as
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if she couldn't believe the charmingly smiling man standing in front of
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them had been the one to call down a rain of hellfire on the enemy
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barely an hour earlier. Not an unusual reaction: sorcerers with that
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kind of power were rarely so jovial.
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``Happenstance,'' he replied. ``We'll be heading back to camp soon
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enough.''
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Warlock cast a look around, looking for the fifth member of their little
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band and coming up empty.
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``Ranger's already gone?'' he asked.
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``As soon as the battle was done,'' Captain informed him.
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The dark-skinned man grimaced.
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``I didn't think she would actually\ldots{}'' he said, trailing off
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after a sideways look at Black's face.
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``What's done is done,'' the Black Knight cut through, and that was the
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end of that.
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The four stood in silence for a long moment, watching the night slowly
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crawl over the fields of Streges.
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``Ten years,'' Black finally said.
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``Six, for the earliest ones,'' Scribe disagreed quietly.
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With a last look at the battlefield, the Black Knight turned away
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without a word and started for camp. Warlock slung a friendly arm over
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Captain's shoulder, murmuring something that drew a smile from the much
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larger woman as Scribe methodically adjusted her bandolier before
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following. The Dread Empire of Praes may have won the war, but the clock
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was already ticking. The Legions of Terrors had made a lot of angry
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orphans through the afternoon's bloody work, and in time that would mean
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one thing --
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Heroes.
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