426 lines
22 KiB
TeX
426 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-23-defeat}{%
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\chapter{Defeat}\label{chapter-23-defeat}}
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\epigraph{``Tyrants do not lose. We face temporary setbacks.''}{Dread Empress Maledicta II}
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Staying in the woods was a good way to head for premature retirement, so
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I spurred Zombie on to get us the Hells out of there.
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``This could have been a pleasant evening, you know,'' I complained out
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loud. ``Sure the blood-coloured moon is a bit of a mood killer, but
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when's the last time I just went for a ride?''
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``Little girl,'' another hooked thing spoke from the trees, ``why do
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you-``
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Without missing a beat, I raised my sword in its direction and allowed
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my Name to coalesce in a spear of shadows -- the projectile flew faster
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than the eye could follow, tearing a smoking hole through the devil's
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head. Its iron claws kept it on the branch, but it stopped moving.
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\emph{No blood but they can still die. That's a start.} My mount wove
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around the trunks and branches with preternatural ability, though not
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because of any great riding abilities on my part. Controlling Zombie
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became easier with every passing month, and by now was merely took an
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afterthought: most of my attention was on our surroundings. And a good
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thing it was, too. A I took a turn a long snake-like thing dropped from
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above and barred my path. \emph{Oh Gods. No, not a snake.} I'd seen
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centipedes before, but this one was large as a small horse and covered
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in small pincers all over its length. They were constantly moving and on
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its back I could see they formed patterns like human faces screaming and
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weeping. I could almost make out what they said, but -- I stopped myself
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right there.
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``Catherine, we \emph{don't} stare too long at the eldritch abomination
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that makes a mockery of all that is good and decent,'' I reminded
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myself, guiding Zombie to jump over it.
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The devil's front reared up, opening up into a jaw lined with four
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weeping thorns that snapped at my horse's tail. Yeah, I wasn't sticking
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around to see anymore of that. On another note, I had a feeling the
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spark of guilt I'd used to get when stepping on centipedes was gone
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permanently.
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``Little girl,'' one of the devils called out in a sing-song voice that
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sent a shiver up my spine.
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``I'm seventeen, you prick,'' I yelled back, because I had never quite
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managed to learn when to shut up.
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I ducked under a branch and finally emerged into the open, where my
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usual run of luck was continuing: my cohort was getting mauled by what
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must have been upwards of twenty devils. It was hard to tell in the
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dark, since the whole formation had fallen into chaos. I picked out a
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few gaping holes in the ground that likely meant the things had burrowed
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under my legionaries when setting up their ambush. \emph{Merciless Gods,
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I thought devils were supposed to be mindless. How long have those been
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around, to start thinking ahead this much?} Didn't matter, in the end. I
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was still going to have to clean up the mess before retreating. Speaking
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of messes, I cast a look west and winced. My wounded were getting torn
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apart, there were no two ways about it. They'd managed to get weapons
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out, at least, but they were in no shape to handle a pair of devils,
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never mind the thirty or so they seemed to be dealing with. A large
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silhouette the size of a supply wagon was rampaging around, goring men
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with a pair of curved horns sprouting off its head with unsettling
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agility. A heartbeat passed as I considered my options.
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Could I get my cohort in order quick enough to come to their rescue?
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Screams were filling the night, both my legionaries' and the creatures'.
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Every moment I spent hesitating, my soldiers were dying. I knew I should
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at least make the attempt, but In the back of my mind eerie green eyes
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looked back at me\emph{. The only clean victories are the ones in the
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stories, Catherine.} I could see no way to turn this into a victory, but
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the point still stood. I couldn't save everyone. I couldn't even save
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most.
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``Gods forgive me,'' I whispered as Zombie galloped for the cohort.
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Captain Ubaid was the first officer I found, screaming at the top of his
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lungs so his orders could be overheard over the ruckus. His company was
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trying to form a square but one of the monsters had burst out of the
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ground in the middle of their position. It looked almost like a man
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covered in filthy rags, but a jackal's head sprouted from the back of
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its head and from the looks of it its grip was strong enough to pull
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apart steel and crush bones. Zombie scattered a handful of my own men as
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he picked up speed and headed straight for the devil. I could have taken
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us a little to the side to swing my sword as we passed, but arming
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swords were not designed to be used from horseback -- instead my mount
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reared up and a pair of hooves slammed into the devil's back, battering
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it down. The thing apparently did not have bones, but there was a sound
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like a door hinge breaking. I reached for my Name before it could get
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up, a blade of darkness extending from the tip to sever the creature's
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neck. It flopped uselessly on the ground, perhaps not dead but no longer
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able to fight.
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``Hack that into smaller pieces,'' I ordered the closest legionaries,
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who were looking at me with something like awe.
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``Lady Squire,'' Ubaid called out, pushing through the ranks. ``We
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must-``
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``Get your men into tighter lines, captain,'' I interrupted, tone flat.
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``We're pushing forward to take the pressure off Tribune Galia.''
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``She's dead, ma'am,'' Ubaid replied. ``Some sort of giant snake
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creature burst out of the ground and swallowed her whole.''
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I cursed in Taghrebi. ``The other captain?''
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``Firefly landed on his eye, burst through the skull,'' a legionary with
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lieutenant's stripes contributed, bleeding from her cheek.
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My fingers clenched. We were going through officers faster than
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godsdamned rations, these days.
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``Ubaid, consider yourself a tribune for all intents and purposes,'' I
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said. ``We're still moving forward. I'm not leaving half the cohort
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behind when we retreat.''
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It was a sign of how badly we were getting hurt that not a single one of
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them suggested we try to extract the wounded. The man nodded, exhaustion
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showing for a moment before the Legion discipline kicked in and his face
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turned into a professional mask. I dismounted and rolled my shoulder,
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trying to get it to pop so it'd stop aching under the plate. I glanced
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at the lieutenant who'd talked earlier, frowning as I recognized the
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features under the blood and steel.
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``Kamilah,'' I said. ``Is that you?''
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``Ma'am,'' she replied with a wan smile. ``I'd say it's a pleasure to
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see you again, but under the circumstances\ldots{}''
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She'd been a sergeant in Rat Company. For a moment that almost made me
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reconsider what I was about to order, the sight of Nilin's corpse
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wreathed in green coming up to haunt me. Calmly, I grabbed that burst of
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sentimentality by its metaphorical neck and snapped it. \emph{Sentiment
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is no longer a luxury I can afford}.
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``How's your line, Lieutenant?'' I asked.
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``Down two men, Lady Callow,'' she replied. ``But we're still in
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fighting shape.''
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I almost smiled at the reminder of the name I'd assumed during my
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College days, tightening the strap holding my heater shield to my arm.
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``Then get your men ready, Lieutenant,'' I said. ``We're going
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hunting.''
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---
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For my cohort to be in a position to retreat, I needed two things.
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The first was for our formation to be free of enemies inside its
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confines. That much I knew I could achieve. The second thing was a
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little trickier: I needed to finish this part of the fight before the
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devils in the woods and the ones killing my wounded moved on us. That
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was the reason was why I was currently wrestling down one of the
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two-faced monsters as Kamilah's legionaries surrounded it. Good goblin
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steel slid in the thing's sides but it only struggled harder against my
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grip. Its fingers ripped into my plate, scoring long gouges on the
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surface. I cursed and rammed my helmet into the teeth of the jackal
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face. It reared back with a howl and the lieutenant herself hacked into
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the bared neck with her sword, putting it down for good. I forced myself
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up. The second company that had made up Tribune Galia's cohort was
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scattered in small pockets, fighting whatever devil had seen fit to prey
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on them. Numbers were starting to tell now that my legionaries had
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recovered from the surprise, but we weren't out of the proverbial woods
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yet. Ubaid was advancing his company as a three-man thick shield wall,
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enveloping individual devils in a circle of steel to overwhelm them --
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but there were outliers that were too strong for him to deal with.
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That was where I came in.
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From where I stood, I could see two of the hook-bearing devils from the
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woods and one of the pale eyeless ones. Those I let go, leaving them to
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Ubaid. The firefly shapeshifters weren't too troublesome as long as they
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were in that humanlike shape, and after the second time the hooked ones
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had used the shields of my legionaries as a jumping point to tear out
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the throat of the man behind they'd adjusted their tactics accordingly.
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The real problems were the unique ones, like the large skinless ape
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who'd just caved in the head of a legionary a little to my left.
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``Skinless,'' I called out. ``Left.''
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Kamilah's line fell in behind me without a word, shields up and swords
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in the middle line. We moved forward at a brisk pace but the devil
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noticed us before before we could get too close. Leering in a way that
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displayed its oversized human teeth, it picked up the corpse of the
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legionary it had killed and tossed it at me like a rag doll. I barely
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had the time to wish it had killed a human instead of an orc before the
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body hit my shield like the load of a trebuchet. Gritting my teeth, I
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anchored my feet on the ground but the impact was so ludicrously strong
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it pushed me back a dozen paces, my armoured feet dragging lines into
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the ground. The legionary right behind me was thrown to the ground when
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we impacted, but I wasted no time looking back: snarling, I charged
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forward. Unsurprisingly, whatever ungodly place had given birth to devil
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had decided that just a pile of ape-shaped muscles and bones wasn't a
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horrifying enough appearance. Under the red flesh I could see wriggling
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maggots, some falling to the ground and crawling towards corpses as the
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devil ran in my direction. Its fist was the size of my head, but there
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was no subtlety to its attack: I saw the strike coming and ducked under
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the swing, closing the distance. My sword sliced up through its belly,
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tearing muscles and spilling maggots all over my shield. The monster
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barely even noticed, delivering a kick to my abdomen that knocked the
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wind out of me and sent me tumbling to the ground.
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``Gods Below and Everburning,'' I snarled, pushing myself back up.
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``Summoning you shits should be illegal.''
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``I hear that, ma'am,'' one of Kamilah's legionaries muttered.
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The rest of the line spread into a loose circle around the ape and I
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ignored the ache in my legs as I returned to the fray. I wouldn't kill
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this one by going for vital spots, that much had become abundantly
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clear. I'd have to cripple it enough that the legionaries could help me
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finish it off. The devil stepped forward lazily, the wound I'd inflicted
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it now filled with writhing worms. I loosened the straps on my shield
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and shook it off my arm, rolling my shoulder. Blocking would be
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pointless here, I'd have to dodge.
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``Come on, big guy,'' I grunted. ``Let's have another go.''
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``Squire,'' the ape replied in a scared child's voice. ``Please, Squire.
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It hurts, it hurts \emph{so much}.''
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``I've walked the Hall of Screams,'' I spoke calmly, keeping the horror
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I felt off my face. Was it -- was there actually a child in there, under
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all the maggots? ``You're going to need to do better than that, if you
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want me to flinch.''
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It struck without warning, but I'd not dropped my guard. A half-step put
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me just out out of the punch's path and my sword came down just under
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its shoulder with all the strength I could muster, cutting through flesh
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until it hit the bone. I felt the humerus break, but I couldn't go any
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further. Maggots started crawling up my blade and hastily whipped it
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out, barely dodging out of the way when the ape tried to cave in my
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torso with its foot.
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``Why won't it \emph{stop},'' the devil screamed, the child's voice
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going shrill. ``Mother, where are you? Why is it so dark?''
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The ape reached for the wrist of its damaged arm and ripped the entire
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thing out of its socket, the voice of the child screaming in pain as it
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swung the appendage at me like a mace. I took a deep breath and Creation
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slowed, all distractions fading away as my Name pulsed against my ears.
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I'd been wary of its power once, but compared to what stood in front of
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me? Gods, even the worst my Role could make was clear water compared to
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that filth. I steadied my footing and brought my blade down on the arm.
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I sliced clean through it, spilling worms as the lower half of the
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appendage flew in the distance and the rest passed me. Feeling my focus
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already beginning to wane, I ran forward. The ape had dropped its
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makeshift weapon and tried to grab me but I spun around the fingers,
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angling my body downwards and my sword to the side as I slid between its
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feet. The blade cut through the flesh of its lower leg, stopping only
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when it hit the bone: I ground my teeth in effort and hacked again, this
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time going all the way through. The devil toppled forward with crazed
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laughter, grasping at my legionaries who'd cautiously edged away from
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it. The moment after, as I crawled away from the remains of the leg that
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was were already spewing maggots like a fountain, Kamilah's line fell on
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the downed devil like a pack of wolves.
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Methodically they chopped away the limbs, the lieutenant herself dodging
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an attempt from the beast to bite through her arm before ramming her
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sword in its empty eye socket. By the time I'd gotten back on my feet,
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all that was left was a pile of wriggling flesh incapable of moving.
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``You're getting rather good at this,'' I told Kamilah, trying to keep
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my mind away from the very real possibility that there was still an
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innocent child's soul kept prisoner in the devil's remains.
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``Practice makes perfect,'' the woman replied, serenely bringing her
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boot down to squash a worm that had gotten too close.
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I couldn't help a smile. That little sentence was the essence of the
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Legions, wasn't it? The ironclad belief that as long as they remembered
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their training and kept the shield wall steady there wasn't a force in
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Creation -- or beyond -- they could not beat. What did it matter, if
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they were facing angels or devils? A crossbow shot every twenty
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heartbeats and good goblin steel would see them through it. There was, I
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reflected, something very Callowan about that. The again perhaps that
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shouldn't have surprised me. How had my teacher put it, if Warlock was
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to be believed? \emph{When trying to understand someone, look at their
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enemies.} The Legions had been shaped by Callow as much as Callow had
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been shaped by the Legions. Shaking away the musing, I focused on the
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there and then. Now was not the time to get lost in thought. As far as I
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could see, the handful of remaining devils were fleeing the field. Yet
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another thing they should not be clever enough to do. Ubaid's company
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had swelled with almost all the survivors from the other one: this was,
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I recognized, as many as I'd be able to salvage from this fiasco. I
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forced myself to look west. My heart clenched at the sight of the last
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of my wounded being swarmed over by devils, but I knew how forcing that
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engagement would go.
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``We're done here,'' I told Lieutenant Kamilah. ``We're marching back to
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Marchford, as fast as we can manage. Send word to Cap- Tribune Ubaid,''
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I corrected myself.
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``Thanks the Gods,'' my old follower from Rat Company breathed out in
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relief. ``I'll go myself, ma'am. We can't leave soon enough for my
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taste.''
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She clapped her sergeant on the shoulder and made it three feet before
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the ground burst out under her and enormous jaws snapped shut around her
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body. The snake's head was the size of a barn, but while its features
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might have been reptilian there was not a scale in sight. \emph{Flesh},
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I realized. It was made of flesh. A hundred thousand faces sown together
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in a patchwork of features that still moved. The devil turned its eerie
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cat eyes at me, then noisily crushed Kamilah inside its mouth. I felt a
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red haze descend on me. I did not recall bringing up my arm, but I
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snarled and shadows formed into something that was more a ballista bolt
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than a spear, flickering into movement faster than even my Name-sight
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could grasp. It hit the snake just under the jaw, and the shadows
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splashed harmlessly against the skin. The devil swallowed, then opened
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its gaping maw.
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``Was she precious to you?'' it asked, but the voice did not come from
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the mouth. The faces all over its skin were speaking in unison, a
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hundred men and women. ``She was; I can see it from your anger. That's
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fine. You might still save her if you're fast enough. It takes a while
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before they become part of me.''
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I found, to my surprise, that the rage taking hold of my bones was so
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deep it was stilling my tongue. I stepped forward, sword in hand, but
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the devil laughed.
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``Come and play, Named,'' it invited me, slithering back into the hole
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it had torn through the ground.
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I took hold of my rage. I would not make decisions angry. Anger made you
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sloppy, clouded your judgement. This once, though, my burning desire to
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brutally murder that creature coincided with what needed to be done. I
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had no idea how quick it could move underground, but there was no way I
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could afford to let it harass us on the way back to Marchford.
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``Sergeant, begin the retreat,'' I ordered, voice deceptively even.
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The orc saluted, then hesitated.
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``Will\ldots{} will you be coming with us, Lady Squire?'' he asked.
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I spun my blade in a loose circle, loosening my wrist.
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``I'll be following shortly,'' I replied, and jumped into the hole.
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Immediately I regretted that decision when the serpent's head burst out
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of the hole and rose into the air, faces cackling. I only barely managed
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to catch the open mouth one of of them with my free hand as we kept
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getting higher. It tried to chomp down, but teeth were pointless against
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good plate.
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``\emph{Got you},'' the nearest face crowed as the snake continued
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rising in the air.
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Sixty feet at least before it stopped, and there must have been at least
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that much underground to support it.
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``Can you fly, little Named?'' the face asked mockingly.
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Grunting in effort, I rammed my sword into the open mouth and used the
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pommel as a handhold. I had enough of a grip I could hug my body closer
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and slip my feet into another mouth and an eye socket -- I had to kick
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until the eye fell off, but eventually I made enough space.
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``And down we go,'' a woman's face announced above me.
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To my horror, the devil tipped back and let itself fall. The wind howled
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around me and the ground got closer with every heartbeat as I
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desperately tried to scale the side so I wouldn't be stuck between the
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massive weight and the floor. I was only half successful: earth sprayed
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and corpses flew, masking the sound of my left arm and leg breaking. I
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bit my lip until it bled to force down the primal scream of pain that
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almost escaped me. The snake shook itself, then slowly rose again.
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``That must have hurt,'' the woman's face mused.
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``One arm and one leg left,'' an old man snickered. ``How long can you
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hold on?''
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Under me I could see my cohort beginning to panic, though the officers
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were doing their best to keep them moving. The devil begun to waddle
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back and forth like a grotesque pendulum, my body shaking with it. Shit.
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My arm and leg were -- I blinked, then rasped out a laugh. \emph{As good
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as dead}. Gods, I really needed to add some tricks to my arsenal did not
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rely on me being halfway into the grave. My Name howled in approval,
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spinning threads around the useless limbs. With the crack of multiple
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fractures worsening, I forced my broken arm to reach up and force its
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way into another face's mouth.
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``Pointless,'' a puppet from around my knee mocked me.
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I hoisted myself up, kicking through its teeth to use its mouth as a
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foothold. Inch by inch, I started making my way up to the head. It tried
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to shake me off, shouting insults all the while, but the threads held.
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Tightened, but did not snap. The devil screamed and let itself fall
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forward, counting on the momentum to flip me off its head. I rammed my
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sword through the nostril of another face at an angle to give me a
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counterpoint, feeling the muscles in both my arms tear as I pushed
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myself in the opposite direction. Immediately it tried to push the other
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way to use it against me, but something that size could not move fast
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enough -- I'd already found other handholds by then. The higher I got
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the more it panicked, shaking and screaming imprecations at me.
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``You can't kill me,'' it screamed when I finally hoisted myself over
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the ridge of the head. ``I am hunger incarnate, I-``
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``Talk too much,'' I finished coldly, shoving my free hand in the mouth.
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The shadows formed into a spear and kept growing as I tapped into the
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furthest depths of my Name and kept feeding into it, growing and growing
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until I could no longer hold the power. With bared teeth I released it,
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and felt it burrow inside deep inside the devil's head. The mouth closed
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over my forearm like a bear trap, teeth shattering against steel, and
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every single face went silent. Slowly it dipped forward and fell,
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crashing against the ground with a thunderous roar. I slipped off the
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side of it and landed on my bad leg with a hoarse cry, guiding Zombie to
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me with a thought. I leaned on my mount from my good side and hoisted
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myself up with only two suppressed yells of horrible pain, which was a
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victory of sorts. I only then noticed I'd landed less than a dozen feet
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away from my cohort, every single legionary of which was looking at me
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in utter silence.
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``I don't remember telling you to stop retreating,'' I croaked out,
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sheathing my sword.
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