419 lines
22 KiB
TeX
419 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-apprentice}{%
|
|
\chapter*{Interlude -- Apprentice}\label{interlude-apprentice}}
|
|
|
|
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-apprentice}} \chaptermark{Interlude -- Apprentice}
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``The source of wonder and horror is the same, and the boundary
|
|
between them thinner than you would think.''}{Dread Empress Sanguinia I}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
``That is a Count, I believe,'' Masego announced.
|
|
|
|
Father's spectacles were of no use at this range, so he'd had to use his
|
|
Name. An aspect, more specifically -- \textbf{Glimpse}. Apprentice
|
|
disliked relying on the power conferred onto him by the Gods Below, as
|
|
he'd always considered it something of a crutch that would cripple his
|
|
ability to improve his casting without such means, but he could not deny
|
|
the abilities it lent him had their uses. Even from a mile away, behind
|
|
a set of obscuring wards, he'd been able to gauge the forces animating
|
|
the Summer fae. The intensity and breadth of those forces were inferior
|
|
to those of the Dukes and Duchesses he'd observed in Skade but superior
|
|
to those of a Baron. There were outliers, of course. The Lady of
|
|
Cracking Ice had been by an order of magnitude stronger than the other
|
|
nobles accompanying her in the initial meeting even though her title was
|
|
the lowest. He suspected the rough equivalent of Roles that was carved
|
|
into the consciousness of fae was the true factor behind the power those
|
|
entities could muster, but without proper investigation it was
|
|
impossible to turn this into a credible thesis.
|
|
|
|
Regardless, this particular fae seemed to have the power common for one
|
|
titled Count. The power of his Name keeping his eyes from blinking,
|
|
Masego studied the fluctuations in the forces. A shame the Count was not
|
|
in range of his spectacles. One of the enchantments on them helped him
|
|
quantify the energies at play in a way his aspect simply could not.
|
|
Still, the actual forces did not seem greater by a significant margin
|
|
than those of the same-titled Winter fae he had studied. The qualitative
|
|
difference that allegedly allowed Summer to win every time open war was
|
|
waged between those Courts must have come from a different source.
|
|
Nature of the energy, perhaps? The symbolic properties of fire and ice
|
|
as per the table of classic elements were cleansing and preservation --
|
|
typically, aggressive properties won over defensive ones when
|
|
diametrically opposed. Could it be that simple? The dark-skinned mage
|
|
itched for ink and parchment, but it would have to wait.
|
|
|
|
``I told you,'' Archer crowed. ``We just need to keep shooting stronger
|
|
ones in the head and eventually a big one will show up.''
|
|
|
|
``That is a vast oversimplification of still poorly understood social
|
|
dynamics,'' Masego replied peevishly.
|
|
|
|
``You know, really smart people don't actually need to use long words,''
|
|
the ochre-skinned woman grinned.
|
|
|
|
That was such a brutal insult that Apprentice remained too appalled to
|
|
reply for a solid thirty heartbeats. By that time, Archer had strung
|
|
that ridiculously large longbow of hers. Even with the power of his
|
|
aspect having faded away, Masego could see the sorcery worked into it.
|
|
The wood, already magical in nature and likely from the Waning Woods,
|
|
had been further strengthened and so had the string. It was, in his
|
|
estimation, physically impossible for anyone but a Named to successfully
|
|
draw that bow. Even then, what the woman was preparing to do seemed
|
|
rather dubious.
|
|
|
|
``He's a mile away,'' Apprentice said. ``There is a breeze. Longbow
|
|
range is, at best, four hundred yards. Useless against armoured targets
|
|
past two hundred. The distance you are aiming at is over four times
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
``That's very impressive,'' Archer grinned. ``Learned all those pretty
|
|
numbers from a book, did you?''
|
|
|
|
Masego had, in fact, learned those numbers from a book on military
|
|
tactics he'd borrowed from Hakram. He coughed to hide the blush that
|
|
touched his cheeks at being caught out.
|
|
|
|
``For a mortal, those numbers matter a lot,'' the woman said, eyes
|
|
hooded with pleasure. ``For a Named, they matter a little. For
|
|
\emph{me}, though?''
|
|
|
|
Her grin turned sharp.
|
|
|
|
``If I can \textbf{See} it, I can kill it.''
|
|
|
|
Vision-driven aspect? Given her Name, it was only logical. Masego's
|
|
train of thought was interrupted by the sight of Archer on the move, and
|
|
for an instant that was all the filled his mind. He'd fought at this
|
|
woman's side before, but he had never witnessed her in action with a bow
|
|
-- only seen the arrows she shot. Archer moved so swiftly he saw only a
|
|
blur, string taut and then loose as the first arrow flew. Another two
|
|
followed before a heartbeat had passed. Merciless Gods. His eyes
|
|
followed the last arrow, studying the properties as it flew. They were
|
|
silent, and so clearly enchanted. No, he realized, not enchanted. Made
|
|
of material with natural sorcery. \emph{Inherent properties}, he
|
|
understood with a sharp intake of breath. Silence, and some kind of
|
|
amplification. Sharpness or penetration, he could not tell. It did not
|
|
matter. Most defensive wards relied on the assumption that any
|
|
projectiles targeting them would be either entirely mundane or have an
|
|
active sorcerous component to them, more commonly called an enchantment.
|
|
The arrows Archer had used would sail right through those, qualifying as
|
|
neither by the strictures of sorcery. Mage-killers. That was what those
|
|
projectiles were.
|
|
|
|
As a child he'd often lingered around Father and Uncle Amadeus whenever
|
|
they used Imperial business as an excuse to have drinks and bicker, and
|
|
one of his favourite games had been `could you beat'. He'd demanded a
|
|
plan for the two of them to vanquish everyone from the Dead King to a
|
|
company of legendary heroes, and always been given an answer. Until he'd
|
|
asked them for the plan to fight Ranger. The two of them had traded
|
|
looks, and then his uncle had smiled over his cup. \emph{Don't}, he'd
|
|
replied. Watching that woman's foremost apprentice at work, he was
|
|
beginning to grasp why. The Count didn't realize he was being targeted
|
|
until the first arrow took him in the chest. Fire flared as he fell, but
|
|
the second arrow nailed his shoulder to the ground anyway. The third
|
|
went through his left knee, immobilizing him for good.
|
|
|
|
``Do your stuff,'' Archer said, waving her hand like she'd not shot a
|
|
godling thrice in broad daylight.
|
|
|
|
Masego gathered enough concentration to activate the dispersed
|
|
components he'd left around the area where'd they killed the last two
|
|
patrols. The Count rose into the air, shackles of chirping light forming
|
|
around his limbs. That should keep him prisoner for the duration they
|
|
needed, and so the first step of their plan was complete. Apprentice
|
|
dispersed the obscuration ward around them, since neither of them were
|
|
using their Names anymore, and began the walk to their prisoner. It'd
|
|
been over a month since Catherine had sent them south to `bait the
|
|
Summer Court into attacking the Diabolist'. Masego had been assured that
|
|
the notion made strategic sense, not that he particularly cared. Only
|
|
now did he realized that Catherine had used his eagerness to secure some
|
|
high-quality fae specimens to rope him into doing actual work. Truly,
|
|
she was becoming more ruthless every month. That was how \emph{he}'d
|
|
been talked into going south, anyhow, but he'd wondered why Archer had
|
|
acquiesced and asked her as much. She'd been sent as a fae expert on
|
|
loan from Refuge, not a soldier to be used in the Squire's wars.
|
|
|
|
``Eh, just staying with the army would have been boring,'' she'd
|
|
replied. ``Hakram's not even around to spar with anymore.''
|
|
|
|
Adjutant had informed him over one of their nightly games of shatranj
|
|
that those `spars' mostly consisted of Archer beating him black and blue
|
|
until she felt like having a drink, which thankfully was frequent. He
|
|
believed the orc. The foreign-looking woman had brought more drink than
|
|
rations in her haversack on their trek south, and insisted they stop at
|
|
villages to replenish her stock.
|
|
|
|
``That seems like a thin motivation,'' he'd said.
|
|
|
|
``The idea of screwing over Sahelian does give me the good kind of
|
|
shivers,'' the woman had admitted. ``And, well\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Ah}, he'd thought. He could understand the unspoken reason as
|
|
well. As a boy he'd sometimes wondered why his father did not lead the
|
|
Calamities. He was the most powerful among them, after all, capable of
|
|
wiping a city off the face of Creation in a single night. He'd always
|
|
liked Uncle Amadeus, but like did not usually enter the equation when it
|
|
came to villains. The strongest held command, that was the natural
|
|
order. Now, though? He'd learned better. Masego could probably kill
|
|
Catherine, if he truly put his mind to it. Two days of preparation
|
|
required at least, but it was doable even with the power she'd gained in
|
|
Arcadia. He didn't want to, though, and not just because taking up her
|
|
burdens would be atrociously inconvenient to his research.
|
|
|
|
She had a way about her, that\ldots{} It was hard to explain. Sometimes
|
|
he thought of it as akin to the way smaller celestial orbs circled
|
|
around larger ones, but that ignored some fundamental aspects of it. It
|
|
was warm and nice and almost addictive, being part of the family around
|
|
Catherine Foundling. That heady sense of \emph{belonging}, the way that
|
|
when she talked you believed there was nothing you couldn't do.
|
|
Apprentice did not enjoy `adventures', as a rule, but he believed his
|
|
life would be lesser if he'd not followed Squire on them. And so he did
|
|
not ask any further questions of Archer, because neither of them would
|
|
be comfortable with where that conversation would take them. Some things
|
|
were best left unsaid, and in the end he was not inclined to bare much
|
|
of himself to this stranger. For all that it was nigh impossible to get
|
|
the woman to shut up, Masego still knew next to nothing about her or
|
|
what she was capable of. This was not, he thought, a coincidence.
|
|
|
|
They hurried on the way to the Count. His scrying ritual, adapted to
|
|
notice the outskirts of the presence of fae instead of looking at them
|
|
directly and facing the full backlash, had told him there were no
|
|
patrols closer than half a day's march. Still, their actions today were
|
|
as good as lighting a beacon for anyone looking for them. They needed to
|
|
be gone before anyone came looking, if this was to work. Which he wasn't
|
|
sure it would. Neither of them, as it turned out, were particularly good
|
|
at planning. Apprentice usually let Catherine and Hakram handle this
|
|
sort of menial work, and Archer had admitted that her plans usually
|
|
didn't go much further than `fight the enemy until it died'. He'd agreed
|
|
to sharing a drink with the woman only once on their way south, when
|
|
they'd come up with their plan to push Summer to attack the Diabolist.
|
|
They'd tried to guess why Liesse had not been attacked yet, when the two
|
|
cities to its flanks had already been taken by Summer. Masego had
|
|
eventually mentioned the ancient but powerful wards protecting the city,
|
|
and the other Named had agreed that those would give fae pause. They
|
|
were, after all, exceptionally sensitive to boundaries.
|
|
|
|
They needed, therefore, to make it easier for Summer to attack the city.
|
|
Sadly, neither of them knew anything about military tactics. Apprentice
|
|
\emph{had}, however, made a comprehensive map of the wards in the walls
|
|
of Liesse before the battle of the same name. Leaking that information
|
|
should help, they'd agreed. So he'd written it down on a parchment,
|
|
they'd located a small fae patrol and handed it to them. Or tried to, at
|
|
least. The fae captain had ordered them to immediately kneel and swear
|
|
allegiance to the Queen of Summer or be destroyed, Archer had offered
|
|
them a drink instead and they'd rather taken offence to that. A quarter
|
|
hour later, they had five fae corpses she'd had to kill with a broken
|
|
bottle and they weren't anywhere closer to their objective. They'd tried
|
|
again, attracting another small patrol and just leaving the scroll with
|
|
the information on the ground while hiding. The fae had torched it and
|
|
ordered a search of the region. Five other corpses later, they'd agreed
|
|
that diplomacy did not seem to be working. Alternatives were needed.
|
|
|
|
Wondering what Father and Papa would do in a similar situation Masego
|
|
had arrived to the conclusion that capturing a fae and rewriting their
|
|
mind so the information was inside it before releasing them to the Court
|
|
was the most expedient solution. Archer's suggestion that they just
|
|
carve all the details on the corpses of the fae was clearly flawed,
|
|
since there was no guaranteed they wouldn't just torch the corpses on
|
|
sight like that had the scroll. They'd ambushed a third patrol, keeping
|
|
the captain alive and Apprentice had taken out his tools to tinker with
|
|
the forces that passed for the creature's soul. Frustratingly, there
|
|
hadn't been enough room. As entities who did not \emph{learn}, per se,
|
|
there was no space inside the mind of the fae for much aside what was
|
|
already there. Carving out some unnecessary things like the ability to
|
|
see or the knowledge of how to use sorcery had resulted in unmoving
|
|
bodies with blank eyes. Worse, apparently removing the ability to move
|
|
stopped them breathing as well -- that was just poor design, he'd
|
|
complained. Archer had suggested they abduct several captains and spread
|
|
the information across them, but that would both take long and risk more
|
|
inaccuracies the more operations he had to do.
|
|
|
|
``We need a bigger fish, then,'' Archer had suggested.
|
|
|
|
``We're in a landlocked region of Callow,'' Apprentice had reasonably
|
|
pointed out.
|
|
|
|
She'd called him a condescending pedant, he'd called her rampantly
|
|
ignorant and they'd eventually agreed that a more powerful fae was
|
|
needed. Simply flaring their Names wouldn't work, since for all they
|
|
knew it might draw an entire army. Archer had then introduced the notion
|
|
of ambushing a patrol and then remaining close by, then killing the fae
|
|
who came to investigate until one holding a sufficient high title showed
|
|
up. He hadn't liked the plan, but been unable to come up with a better
|
|
one. A sennight later, here they were looming over an imprisoned Count.
|
|
The fae glared at them, only barely conscious.
|
|
|
|
``How dare you-`` he started, but then his mouth closed.
|
|
|
|
Masego tied off the spell structure and left it active to keep the
|
|
creature silent. He was in no mood for a rant, not when he had to do
|
|
such a delicate operation. Reaching into the pocket dimension he'd
|
|
created after the rebellion, Apprentice took out the leather pack
|
|
holding his tools in place and casually created a pane of force to hold
|
|
it. Humming lightly, he took out what looked like a knife so thin it
|
|
could not possibly cut anything. He looked at the fae and patted the
|
|
man's shoulder reassuringly.
|
|
|
|
``Don't worry,'' he said. ``I'll cut out the part that dictates pain
|
|
very early. It shouldn't hurt at all after that.''
|
|
|
|
``It's much less creepy when they don't scream,'' Archer noted
|
|
approvingly.
|
|
|
|
Masego got work.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Well, it had worked. More or less. The two of them were hiding in a bush
|
|
under an obscuration ward, watching the host of Summer spread to
|
|
surround Liesse. The Diabolist had seen them coming, which had
|
|
interesting implications. Either Sahelian was using the same indirect
|
|
scrying he was but more accurately, or she'd found another way entirely.
|
|
Most likely the second. Wolof had many secrets in its vaults.
|
|
Regardless, they knew the Diabolist had been aware of the fae headed her
|
|
way because the army she'd had on the field had retreated behind the
|
|
walls and was now manning them. As well as a truly impressive amount of
|
|
devils, Apprentice noted. She must have used a Lesser Breach to gather
|
|
so much on a short notice. Her skill with sorcery continued to
|
|
impressed. The two Named watched the host of Summer spread across the
|
|
plain, for it was a sight to see.
|
|
|
|
Ten thousand fae, he'd estimated. Entire regiments of ivory-armoured
|
|
fairies stood ramrod straight, spears held high and a river of banners
|
|
and pennons fluttering in the wind amongst them. Archers armed with
|
|
longbows of pure white wood stood behind them, feathers not of any
|
|
creature known to Creation fletching their arrows. Not a single one of
|
|
them could be called anything but young and beautiful, the ardour of war
|
|
wafting off them like a fume. Fae bearing trumpets of gold and rubies
|
|
stood in every regiment, ready to let out the clarion call of conquest
|
|
that lay in the heart of every Summer fae. A thousand knights in silvery
|
|
plate sat astride winged horses, long lances and shields of exquisite
|
|
make in their hands. They were forming in a loose triangle behind the
|
|
infantry, their mounts stirring eagerly. The nobles stood out starkly
|
|
from the rest, colourful figures made of fire, steel and silk that
|
|
warped the air with heat wherever they stood. No two sets of plate they
|
|
wore were the same, every one a masterpiece that would have made a
|
|
mortal craftsman weep to look at.
|
|
|
|
The defenders were no less dreamlike to witness. Praesi soldiers wearing
|
|
the distinctive colours of the family they were sworn to on their
|
|
tabards manned the few bastions on the wall, their chainmail blackened
|
|
dark as a crow's feathers as was the custom in the Wasteland. Their
|
|
armaments were sharp goblin steel, the finest blades of Calernia put in
|
|
the hands of men and woman trained from birth to use them in the service
|
|
of their lord. Between them stood rows upon rows of \emph{walin-falme}
|
|
devils. Tall and with the dark leathery skin of bats, they wore plate
|
|
marked with the brand of Wolof: red and black, a curving golden lion
|
|
inside the splash of colour. These bore spears and axes of cast iron,
|
|
the metal known to be the ugly death of fae. Spread amongst all of these
|
|
were small clusters of Taghreb and Soninke in tailored robes, panes of
|
|
lights inscribed with runes flickering around them. War-mages, the
|
|
finest the Wasteland had to offer. This was not an army that would go
|
|
gently, not even against the strength of Summer.
|
|
|
|
It was a host ripped straight from the old days of blood and darkness,
|
|
when all of Calernia had feared the sound of Praes at war. It was an
|
|
ancient dream, this one, but Masego's fathers had taught him better than
|
|
to love it.
|
|
|
|
``I forgot to ask before we left, but do we actually want Summer to
|
|
win?'' Archer asked, chewing on dried meat.
|
|
|
|
Masego blinked, shaken out of his thoughts. While he'd been spellbound,
|
|
his companion seemed less than impressed.
|
|
|
|
``You weren't paying attention during the briefing?'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Nah,'' she admitted easily. ``I figured you would.''
|
|
|
|
Apprentice cursed.
|
|
|
|
``I thought \emph{you} would,'' he admitted.
|
|
|
|
``It's their fault for making it boring, really,'' Archer said.
|
|
|
|
``They kept talking about logistics and supply trains,'' Masego agreed
|
|
bitterly. ``I don't \emph{want} to know anything about those, Hakram.''
|
|
|
|
``I mean, just guessing here,'' the dark-eyed woman said. ``Foundling
|
|
wouldn't want all the people inside butchered right?''
|
|
|
|
``I \emph{think} not,'' Apprentice said. ``She gets irritated about
|
|
people killing Callowans unless it's her doing it.''
|
|
|
|
``So we don't want Summer to win,'' Archer pointed out triumphantly.
|
|
``They do tend to burn stuff a lot. And people. I don't think they
|
|
understand the difference very well.''
|
|
|
|
``Everybody burns people, it's a common execution method across
|
|
Calernia,'' Masego replied absent-mindedly, trying to remember anything
|
|
about the briefing aside from Adjutant's voice droning and Catherine
|
|
drinking too much. ``I think we may want them both to lose.''
|
|
|
|
``Is that something that happens?'' she asked, sounding puzzled.
|
|
|
|
He glanced at her.
|
|
|
|
``Have you won every fight you were in?'' he asked sceptically.
|
|
|
|
``Well, no,'' Archer said. ``I spar against the Lady Ranger. Never
|
|
landed a blow on her unless she allowed me.''
|
|
|
|
Apprentice drew on his extensive military experience, which consisted of
|
|
three battles where he'd largely spent his time setting people on fire
|
|
or exploding them when Catherine asked.
|
|
|
|
``I think it's like shatranj,'' he mused. ``You know, towards the end of
|
|
the game when most pieces have been taken. We want them both to lose
|
|
pieces.''
|
|
|
|
Archer glanced at the city and grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``I think we may have given Summer a bit too much of an advantage,'' she
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
Masego followed her eyes and paled. One of the fae, on a winged horse,
|
|
had ridden up to the city walls. The volley of arrows shot at her burst
|
|
into flame and scattered into ashes long before they got close, and it
|
|
only got worse from there: a torrent of heat formed in front of her and
|
|
impacted the walls, beginning to melt the stone. Well, that was one way
|
|
to beat the wards. They could not be held back by the boundary if there
|
|
was no boundary.
|
|
|
|
``This is bad,'' Archer decided.
|
|
|
|
The Diabolist, though, did not flinch. A heartbeat later Apprentice's
|
|
ward shivered as a large-scale ritual triggered. The waves of sorcery
|
|
coming from Liesse were almost enough to scatter it, though when he had
|
|
a \textbf{Glimpse} at the city he saw this was but a sliver of what had
|
|
been at play. Slowly, Liesse and the ground under it began to rip their
|
|
ways out of the soil\emph{. And only this much wasted power?} he
|
|
thought. At least a mile around the city should have been turned into a
|
|
wasteland, for something this large. The Diabolist seemed to have
|
|
managed to keep it all within a hair's breadth of Keter's Due, which
|
|
meant this workingl might have had the single most efficient ritual
|
|
array in Praesi history. He was itching to have a look at it even as
|
|
Liesse rose into the air and kept rising, tons of soil falling out from
|
|
under it. He could almost see the array itself, what had gone into
|
|
activating it. This was no mere blood sacrifice, she'd used fae to fuel
|
|
it and, just for a moment, the Apprentice touched something greater than
|
|
himself. A larger truth still beyond his understanding, a mystery in the
|
|
almost religious sense of the term, and though he could not grasp it
|
|
just witnessing part was almost enough to\ldots{} And then the moment
|
|
was gone. He was shivering and more excited than he had been in years.
|
|
He'd nearly transitioned into another Name, just by looking at this. He
|
|
was \emph{close}. In the distance, the host of Summer lit up a thousand
|
|
bright colours as their wings formed. The soldiers and devils on the
|
|
walls prepared to meet the assault.
|
|
|
|
``We have, technically, accomplished the task we were sent south for,''
|
|
Masego said.
|
|
|
|
Archer looked at the army of Summer taking flight.
|
|
|
|
``Retreat?'' she finally asked.
|
|
|
|
Streaks of sorcery filled the sky with sounds like thunder. As devils
|
|
spread their wings and the battle began in earnest.
|
|
|
|
``For now,'' Apprentice said. ``We'll be back.''
|