537 lines
27 KiB
TeX
537 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-41-turning-point}{%
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\chapter{Turning Point}\label{chapter-41-turning-point}}
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\epigraph{``Better behind a Tyrant than before them.''}{Praesi saying}
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The right to lead the vanguard, as always, belonged to Nauk.
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The orc legate was not as clever as Juniper or careful as Hune, but when
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the time came to hammer in a door there was a reason he was the man we
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sent for. More than any other orc I knew, Nauk had no \emph{give} in
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him. He was stubborn and aggressive and his men loved him -- even the
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humans, which was no given for a greenskin commander. In Arcadia he'd
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lost three fourths of his jesha to Summer regulars and the Immortals,
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and his men had stood their ground without flinching. How many hosts in
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all of Calernia would have done that, in the face of those kind of
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casualties? The Battle of Four Armies and One had effectively ended his
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command and we'd had to repurpose another jesha for him to lead, but
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he'd taken the reins swiftly. It helped that half the two thousand he
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now led had been under his nominal authority before I'd taken him north
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to Laure. Still, if it had been another officer I would have been wary
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of making them the tip of the spear when their forces were still
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unblooded and fresh to his command. Not with Nauk, though. What Summer
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did not kill today would become my vanguard in the wars to come.
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My sword hissed against the sheath as it was bared, Hakram hefting his
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axe at my side. It would be the two of us, in the beginning, without the
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Gallowborne. The kind of fights I'd be seeking were not ones you took
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mortals into, however well-trained. Behind us the legionaries of he
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Fifteenth advanced in tight ranks, shields hefted. Heavies in the front
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with sappers behind them, about to find out if the tactics Juniper had
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crafted to deal with fae were effective or not. Our engines had
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demolished us a clear path to the walls and split the Summer regulars in
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two, but it would have been madness to assault the ramparts without a
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solid beachhead. That meant getting in the thick of it, for good or
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ill.~The enemy was not slow in giving answer. Darkness had fallen, but
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for a heartbeat it felt as if day had come again: across the city flames
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bloomed and arrows rose into the sky. I was familiar with that trick by
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now, the fire-driven arrows that detonated upon impact. Watching them
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tear through the Gallowborne had made sure I would never forget.
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Masego's third and last ward activated with a sound like a massive
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siphon. The arrows flew unabated, but the flames were whisked out of
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existence. Fire suppression ward. It would cripple our mages as well,
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prevent them from using fireballs, but Summer lost far more to this than
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we did. That Hierophant had triggered this one meant the legions at our
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back had lost their best defence, and all I could do was pray they'd
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thinned the fae enough they'd be able to hold without it. The dice were
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thrown, now, and there was no use giving it any further thought. Juniper
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would handle the rest. Arrows clattered against shields behind us, the
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testudo formation drilled into the legionaries sparing them from the
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worst of it. I heard Nauk scream for his men to pick up the pace and
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left him to it. Hakram and I had other duties before us: we were, it
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could be said, going \emph{hunting}.
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``Where to?'' the orc gravelled.
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I'd closed my eyes, letting Winter flow through my veins, and opened
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them only when I found an answer.
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``West,'' I said. ``Close to the river. Baron or unusually strong
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lord.''
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``It'll be good to shake the rust off before we take on the real
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threats,'' he drily said.
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We left the road and took a corner around what smelled like an abandoned
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tannery. Wasn't surprised it was this far out. Most Callowan cities had
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laws forcing trades that produced fumes that dire to remain on the
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outskirts, no matter how useful. The streets out here were little more
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than dirt paths between wooden shacks, most not even broad enough for
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the two of us to pass through together. Though our entry had not gone
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opposed, Summer did not disappoint: by the time we reached the first
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broader street, we ran into our first ambush of the night. The only
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warning was arrows whistling, betraying the location of silhouettes
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standing over thatched roofs with bows in hand. I stepped to the side
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without missing a beat and Hakram had been moving before I'd even
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noticed. Archers on top, but there would be more. A dozen emerged from
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abandoned houses at our front and back, swords in hands, as the archers
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smoothly nocked their second volley.
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``See Adjutant, they do love us,'' I mused. ``There's a party and
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everything.''
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``Don't play with your food,'' the orc chided.
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We split without needing to warn each other. Fighting with Hakram was
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like having a third arm, had been ever since he came into his Name. The
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archers were not amateurs: they aimed where we'd be, not where we were,
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and even adjusted for swiftness above that of mortals. Not well enough,
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though. I was quicker than I'd been before Masego had tinkered with my
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heart, and Adjutant had reflexes that were above even my own. He used
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his Name more efficiently than me, I'd come to suspect. Hakram barrelled
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into the fae swordsman, axe splitting open a skull before the arrows
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even struck ground. As for me, I glanced at a sidewall and made the
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wager it would survive my weight. A leap saw my foot land on the side of
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it, then another had me landing in the midst of the archers. They
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reacted smoothly, swords bared in the blink of an eye, but there were
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only six. My shield swung out to crush the skull of the one closest to
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me, and it might as well have been an eggshell. I turned a blade aside
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and carved open the fae's throat, spinning to turn the swing into
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another. They barely had time to raise their swords before three were
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dead.
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The ease of it scared me. They had been difficult to deal with, once.
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Now I broke one's wrist with my shield, pierce into the second one's eye
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with the tip of my blade and the third made to retreat. A flick of the
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wrist and a blade of ice and shadow took her in the back of the neck,
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snuffed out instantly. The last fae did not even have time to curse
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before my shield smacked into his face, breaking the chin and crushing
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the windpipe. Magic made flesh or not, there was no walking that off.
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Hakram was a whirlwind spinning amidst struggling fae, taking a life
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with every stroke, but I glimpsed arrowheads through a window at his
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back. They had, it seemed, kept back archers. I let out a long breath
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and pushed a sliver of power into my legs. The leap sent me sailing into
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the air, tearing through the wall and landing on my knees in a shower of
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shards. Three inside, I saw. One lost his wrist to the first flick and I
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spun. Second was thrown out the window with his skull crushed by a
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shield bash. Didn't even need to kill the third. I backed out of the
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house and let it collapse onto him. That'd been a load-bearing wall,
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apparently.
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``Retreat,'' a musical voice called out.
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I was watching the man it belonged to before he even spoke. The fae
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around Hakram scattered, though not before his axe harmstrung one's leg
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and his boot came down to crush her skull. The fae was the one I'd felt
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earlier, a tall pale man with grey hair that looked made of granite.
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``How many titled nobles do you have in the city?'' I asked.
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``Enough to break you,'' the fae smiled. ``Her Majesty will take your
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head personally.''
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Shame I didn't have the time to hack off that one's limbs and bring him
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back to Masego so the mage could dig out the information.
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``Well,'' I said. ``One less after this.''
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I didn't actually see the arrow coming, and that was telling. It was
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utterly silent, and all I managed was to have it strike my shoulder
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instead of my back. It punched straight through plate and I grimaced. He
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hadn't come alone, and no regular had done this. I broke off the shaft
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and ice spread over the wound, sealing it shut.
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``I think,'' Hakram said calmly, ``that there will be no need to seek
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them out.''
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On the outskirts of Dormer, five fae stood around us. One was on the
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rooftops, green-haired and from the looks of the longbow in his hand he
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was responsible for that friendly tap I'd just received. Two more in the
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streets, dark-skinned and wafting smoke. They looked liked twins, one a
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man and the other a woman, each armed with a short spear and a blade.
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The last one looked like a Yan Tei, honey-skinned and utterly hairless.
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She had a short sword in one hand, and a thin wheel of pale steel in the
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other.
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``All right, so,'' I hummed. ``Correct me if I'm wrong.''
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I pointed my blade at the twins.
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``Baron and baroness,'' I said, then moved to the longbow man.
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``Count.''
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I mulled over the rest a heartbeat.
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``Smug weaponless man's a jumped-up lord, and the one who brought a
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wheel to a swordfight's a countess, but one ahead of the curve,'' I
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finished.
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``I am not jumped-up,'' the grey-haired fae hissed.
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``That's exactly what you'd say if you were, though,'' I gently told
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him.
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The smoking twins grinned, and Gods was I glad Archer wasn't there to
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make something of that. The one who'd looked at what made wagons move
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and thought `I bet you could make a weapon out of that' offered a half
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bow.
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``I am the Countess of Wrathful Skies,'' she said. ``Second-in-command
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to this host. Should you surrender presently, I can guarantee you will
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not be tortured prior to execution.''
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``Ah, the Praesi gambit,'' I mused. ``Always a crowd-pleaser. I'm going
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to have to reply with the famous words of the Duke of Violent Squalls.''
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Silence reigned for a moment.
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``You have not said anything,'' the man with the bow said.
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You had to love that about the fae, if nothing else: you could always
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count on them to feed you the line.
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``Neither did he,'' I said. ``\emph{Because I killed his smug ass}.''
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Now that the usual diplomatic niceties were done with, I imagined
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negotiations were about to break down. Best get ahead of that.
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``Think you can handle the twins?'' I called out to Hakram.
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``Long enough you'll kill your way through the rest, at least,'' the orc
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agreed.
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And then they tried to shoot him, because they were just \emph{terrible}
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diplomats. I got a better look at the arrow, this time. Entirely wood,
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and wreathed in green light. Likely had to do with the Count's full
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title, whatever that was. In the heartbeat where Adjutant moved so the
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shot would skim his pauldron instead of tear through his shoulder, the
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rest of them moved. Grey hair called on something that had the ground
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around him denting and every stone in sight turning to dust. The
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Countess' wheel began spinning and lightning gathered along the sides of
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it, growing larger by the instant. The smoke wafting from the twins
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thickened into a cloud that enveloped them entirely. I cracked my neck.
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This, I thought, was going to be a memorable ride. Best get it over with
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quickly, or we'd be too battered to handle whatever Duke actually ran
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this show.
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I went for the archer first. If he was actually a Count it was dubious
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he'd be a pushover in close quarters, but neither Hakram not I could
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afford to be watching for arrows at all times while dealing with the
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rest. Moving faster than anyone should be able to within the bounds of
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Creation, the green-haired fae had another arrow flying before I'd even
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made it to another roof. For a moment I thought he'd missed, but he'd
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never aimed for me at all: the house I was going to use as a stepping
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stone fell apart in a cloud of dust and I cursed. All right, so they
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weren't idiots. Which was a real shame. Idiocy was a trait I prized in
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people trying to kill me. Wrathful Skies attacked before I could change
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my course, landing at my side wreathed in lightning. When she struck, it
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was with two blades. One made of steel, going for my throat. The other,
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lagging slightly behind, was made of lightning. I made he mistake of
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parrying the short sword and in that instant the lightning connected
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with our weapons, coursing down my blade and sending down horrid pain
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and convulsions across my body.
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First time I'd ever got hit by a lightning spell. I would not recommend
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the experience to anyone. I managed to duck the arrow the other fucker
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shot at my back, but when it struck ground instead green sorcery
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glimmered and it grew pins like a porcupine.
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``Shit,'' I eloquently grunted, and threw myself to the ground.
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A storm of arrows burst out and flew in every direction. A least five
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hit my plate, and if I hadn't gone down would have gone straight through
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the aketon into my flesh. I rolled to avoid the lightning wheel coming
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down on my head but that thing was trickier than it looked: when it
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touched the street a wave of lightning spread from the point of contact
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and had me convulsing again. This, I thought, was not going according to
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plan. Because all of this clearly just wasn't enough, stone powder
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coalesced above me and formed a massive obelisk that\ldots{} dropped.
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\emph{Lightning first}, I thought, gritting my teeth. I reached for
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Winter and frosted shadows formed an envelope around my body. They got
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burned through as swiftly as I willed them into being, but that bought
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me just long enough to scrabble out of the way of the obelisk. It turned
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to powder immediately, but I had other problems on my hands. I dropped
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my shield, since in the face of lightning it was just a liability, and
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grabbed the Countess of Wrathful Skies' wrist when she tried to swing
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down at me. Steadying my footing, I rotated and threw her right into the
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trajectory of the arrow that was meant for the back of my neck.
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A green shimmer and it was gone, because the bastards weren't going to
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make it that easy on me. Stone powder formed around me in the shape of a
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bubble. Containment, huh. At least they were taking me seriously. I
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released the shadow envelope and backed away, but the powder followed.
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Their first mistake of the night. He should have readjusted instead. The
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Countess had landed on her feet and her wheel rose up, gathering ever
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more lightning. Another arrow flew silently towards my chest, but I
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wasn't falling for that one twice. My wrist flicked with unearthly
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precision and I slapped it aside. When the smaller arrows burst out, it
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was too far for any of them to hit me. \emph{He did not retire that
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trick. Might be he can't when it's already been loosed}. The stone had
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caught up to me, by now, and Wrathful Skies had a streak of lightning
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floating above the wheel that looked like it was going to sting. My
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opening.
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``\textbf{Take},'' I said.
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The Countess' eyes went wide as I claimed the sorcery above her head,
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for just one moment wresting it from her control and tossing it straight
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at the fae lord trying to contain me. Struck him right in the chest with
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dark satisfaction. I was moving before my most dangerous opponent could
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react, and the lack of arrow to duck had me surprised until I heard
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Hakram's hoarse grunt. \emph{Shit}. I didn't have time to spare a look
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as I avoided stepping stones entirely and leapt straight at the archer.
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I got a boot in the helmet for it but caught it with my hand even as I
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began to fall, drawing on Name strength so even from that awkward
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position I managed to snatch him off his foot and swing him down behind
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me. Right into the face of the the Countess of Wrathful Skies, as she
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prepared to run me through. The two of them were smashed to the ground
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in a pile of sprawling limbs. I thinned my lips, well aware I couldn't
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afford to use Fall on these two even if it would be a near-guaranteed
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kill. I needed it for the Duke. Shot a spear of ice at them out of spite
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and immediately moved towards the lord.
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He was back on his feet, in a narrow alley between two houses. The
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powder formed a wall in front of me but I sped up and went through
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before it solidified. Hastily he dragged it back to him and shot spears
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of stone at me, the first at feet height and then rising. Panting, I
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threw myself into a slide and narrowly went under the bottom stone. I
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landed in a crouch in front of him and even as his skin turned to stone
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my sword came up. Straight though the belly. He gasped and I rose as I
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withdrew the blade, cutting straight through his neck in the next swing.
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The head rolled on the floor, and there went the first of my opponents.
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The walls to my side groaned, and I cursed when I saw the arrows
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groaning from them. Fuck, could he pull that on \emph{all} wood? Furious
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at the waste, I dug into Winter and froze both walls before he could get
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the arrows flying. Another twist of will had the walls collapsing, and
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even as the houses followed I turned to face the other two remaining.
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The Countess kept her lightning wheel close, and not powerful enough to
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be worth stealing. She'd learned. Not that I'd Take it lightly, anyway.
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I could get another two uses out of that aspect tonight at most, and
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every one I used on these was one less I could pull against the Duke.
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``Yew,'' the Countess said. ``Travel. She'll target you otherwise.''
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``I would never,'' I lied.
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The possible count hesitated, but then lay hand on a wooden wall and
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disappeared. Well, fuck. That was going to be a pain to deal with. There
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was smoke in the distance where Hakram was fighting the others, and I
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could hear rhythmic singing in a dialect of Kharsum I was unfamiliar
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with. If he was well enough to sing, I decided, I could afford to be
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careful dealing with these two.
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``You are Duchess of Moonless Nights in truth,'' the Countess said.
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``Reports of your power were greatly understated.''
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``I'm just putting my whole heart into it, this time,'' I sharply
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grinned. ``So, have you distracted me long enough for him to line up his
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shot yet?''
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``Why,'' the fae drily replied. ``I would never.''
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What I'd meant to do was duck the arrow then kick it into the Countess'
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face to make me an opening. It started going wrong on the first part:
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while I avoided the arrow by a hair's breadth, it was already growing
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pins. I had to roll through a window into a house to avoid the storm,
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and Gods Below was that a mistake. Everything began growing spikes a
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heartbeat later.
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``I have made better tactical decisions in the past,'' I conceded out
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loud.
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I managed to tear through the door in time to avoid the worst of it, but
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worst was a relative term when even the bloody door was shooting arrows
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at me. About six of them stung their way straight into my back, through
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plate and aketon both. A lot more worryingly, Wrathful Skies was waiting
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for me in the street with the wheel raised. There wasn't so much sorcery
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there it would be worth stealing, and that moment of reluctance cost me.
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A dozen tendrils of lightning struck out and the better part of them
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managed to hit me. The \emph{really} dangerous part, I managed to
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realize even as my body screamed, was that the spell was continuous. The
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other fae slid out of a wall to my side and nocked an arrow but let it
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gather green light. Ominous.
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``\textbf{Take},'' I gasped.
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The Countess immediately cut the lightning, but it wasn't her I was
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going for. For an instant I felt the green light and knew whom it
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belonged to: the Count of Green Yew. His title spoke to growth and wood,
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to- pain spiked my thoughts, scattering them. There was no fire in this,
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but it was still born of Summer. Anathema to what I had become. It had
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been enough anyway. The power I'd taken disappeared from the bow and I
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shoved it into the same door that had wounded me. Tendrils of wood rose
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and caught the lightning, freeing me. A heartbeat later the arrow struck
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where I would have still been, but I was already moving. The Countess'
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sword rose to parry my own, but it was only steel at this very moment
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and in a contest of strength, I trumped her outright. Her blade driven
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back she began to step back but I caught her throat with my bare hand.
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Lightning flickered as she called it back from her wheel into her body
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but it was much, much too late. My fingers clenched and a sickening
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crack resounded as I snapped her spine and pulped her throat. Before her
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body had dropped to the floor I was turning to the Count of Green Yew,
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but he was already gone.
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Retreat? It would be hellish to go through this city with the fae
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popping out of every house to take a shot at us. No, can't be.
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\emph{Summer doesn't retreat, not like that.} He could, however, have
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decided to kill Adjutant so the twins would be freed to act against me.
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Shit. Aside from the fact that if Hakram died I was going to murder
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every last one of them, from the first fucking regular to the Queen
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herself, fighting blind like the smoke-using fae must impose was one of
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the ways I most hated fighting. I'd grown too use to relying on my
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Name-sharpened senses. There was no time to dawdle. The smoke cloud was
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easy enough to find, and I legged it towards there. I kept a eye on my
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surroundings as I did, wary of an ambush, but I had forgotten one fact
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about fae: they \emph{flew}. Three arrows landed in a triangle around
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me, and the pins grew a heartbeat later. Heart sinking, I froze them.
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I'd already used more than I'd wanted to, and I still had one other
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major draw to deal with before I got to the Duke. At this rate I'd be
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dead on my feet by the time I got there. On the other hand, at this rate
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by the end of this all that would be left of the Summer Court was going
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to be three guys and a graveyard.
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Small comfort. The Count of Green Yew was flying half a mile above me
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and already nocking an arrow. Making my way up there was going to be
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tricky, against an opponent that specialized in range combat. The first
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house I chose to use as a stepping stone was collapsed before I even
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touched it and I had to resist the urge to flip him the finger.
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Discarding the fanciness, I created a circle of shadow in the air and
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leapt atop it. I was going to stab the bastard even if I had to claw my
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godsdamned way up. The second circle I made, even as I dismissed the
|
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first, was torn through by an arrow. I fell back to street level and
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took a deep breath. That \emph{fucker}. I was going to have to make
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multiple platforms every time, wasn't I? Drawing the power, I blinked at
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what I saw above. He \emph{has} to see that, I thought. But the Count
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shot another arrow at me instead, and even even as I danced away I was
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laughing.
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The lower edge of the trebuchet stone caught him at rib height.
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I got a glimpse of red splatter and white bones before it got out of
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sight, and faintly made note to find out what goblin had made that shot
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so I could order them promoted. Hells, if I could accomplish that as
|
|
vicequeen without burning too many bridges I was going to have them made
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\emph{count}. They'd sure as Hells earned it. It was harder to find
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Hakram than I'd thought, after, because the smoke had dissipated. I
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found Adjutant panting and bloodied in a marketplace, his armour black
|
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as coal and his face bearing nasty wounds that were going to scar. His
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dead hand gleamed strangely, at least the parts of it I could see. Most
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of it had been shoved through the baroness' eye cavity. \emph{Gods}. My
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second didn't fuck around, when he got serious. He ripped it out in a
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shower of gore and crouched, almost too exhausted for words.
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``Had to use Rampage,'' he croaked. ``Kept Stand. Think they were weak
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for barons.''
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I offered him my arm to grasp and helped him to his feet.
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``Dipped a little too deep as well,'' I said. ``Hopefully the others
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|
were more conservative, otherwise even if we take out the Duke we'll be
|
|
wiped when the Queen comes through.''
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``Plan's not to fight her,'' he said.
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``And those always go so well,'' I drily replied. ``You up for a run? We
|
|
need to catch up to Nauk.''
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``I'll live,'' he said. ``No inner bleeding. Is it possible to bruise
|
|
your kidney?''
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|
``I think mine is permanently blue,'' I said amusedly.
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|
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|
We made our way back to the main path, and only had to stop twice for
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|
him to retch. There wasn't a lot of blood in it and Hakram was an orc,
|
|
so I wasn't overly worried. His people were built resilient, and Named
|
|
took that to an extreme. That part of the city had already been secured,
|
|
though the vanguard was long gone. It was the Deoraithe that held it now
|
|
and they made way for the both of us. Emptying his stomach had put
|
|
Hakram back on his feet, more or less, so he was spared the indignity of
|
|
my holding him up all the way to the front. Nauk found us before we fond
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|
him. The fae, I saw, had razed a ring of houses around the city wall.
|
|
There must have been a moat as well, once, because I saw a pit around
|
|
even the gates that had been burned clean. It was empty now. The
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|
Fifteenth had dug in their positions around the edge of the wall,
|
|
trading sporadic crossbow fire with the fae above. No sign of the
|
|
Immortals on the walls, which was relief and worry both.
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|
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|
``Cat,'' Nauk grinned. ``Good hunting?''
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|
|
|
``We cleaned house in the west,'' I said. ``Can't answer for the rest.''
|
|
|
|
``Whatever you did there, it collapsed their flank,'' the legate said.
|
|
``We hold most of that side now. To the east we've got ten thousand
|
|
holding a neighbourhood near the walls. Deoraithe failed to break
|
|
through, but they're contained.''
|
|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow.
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|
|
|
``And the rest?''
|
|
|
|
That left ten thousand missing.
|
|
|
|
``They tried another run at the trebuchets,'' Nauk said. ``We lost
|
|
another two and half our ballistas, but they were beaten back. Saw them
|
|
fly behind the walls.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. That was a lot more fae in the inner city than I'd wanted to
|
|
deal with.
|
|
|
|
``The Immortals?'' I prompted.
|
|
|
|
``We think they hold the castle,'' the orc said. ``To make sure the
|
|
Queen has foothold when she crosses.''
|
|
|
|
I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
|
|
|
|
``Doesn't matter,'' I finally said. ``We break through now. What time is
|
|
it?''
|
|
|
|
``Midnight Bell was an hour ago,'' Nauk replied.
|
|
|
|
Then we needed to hurry. Behind the walls would be an even uglier fight.
|
|
|
|
``Scry Masego,'' I ordered. ``He's to dismiss his last ward and join us
|
|
for the push.''
|
|
|
|
The legate bared his fangs.
|
|
|
|
``Wade in their blood, Catherine Foundling,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Gods, I hope not,'' I replied. ``Hakram spends long enough cleaning my
|
|
armour as is.''
|
|
|
|
The grin I got was worth the words, considering the casualties his
|
|
advance must have caught. When I found Adjutant again the Gallowborne
|
|
were already with him. Tribune Farrier saluted, and promptly handed me a
|
|
shield. It had, I noted, my very fresh heraldry painted on it.
|
|
|
|
``Figured you might break your first one,'' the dark-haired man said.
|
|
|
|
I thanked him decided not to tell him it was actually fine and that it
|
|
had just entirely slipped my mind to double back to pick it up. I rolled
|
|
my shoulder and took a look at the walls. Those might take hours to
|
|
breach, if we let the trebuchets do the heavy lifting. Even more now
|
|
that we'd lost over half of them.
|
|
|
|
``Cluster tight around me,'' I ordered Farrier. ``Shields up. They'll be
|
|
aiming at us all the way.''
|
|
|
|
``They always do,'' the Callowan smiled. ``And yet, here we are.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled back, though the affection was short-lived. There were a lot of
|
|
new faces among the men, and I knew exactly why. I took the lead, Hakram
|
|
at my side and the Gallowborne at my back. The fae on the walls only
|
|
fired a few arrows at us, though that'd change if they saw we didn't
|
|
retreat. I closed my eyes and let Winter loose. I took a step, and ice
|
|
rose. One step after another, a stairway of ice rose in front and then
|
|
above the gates of Dormer. It was, I knew, wide enough for three hundred
|
|
men to go up. It was burning through my reserves, cooling my blood. It
|
|
was also how my armies were going to take the city.
|
|
|
|
I advanced, and the Fifteenth advanced with me.
|