371 lines
20 KiB
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371 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-liesse-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Liesse II}\label{interlude-liesse-ii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-liesse-ii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Liesse II}
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\epigraph{``There's not a lot of difference between court and a swamp.
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Colourful things are poisonous, lots of buried corpses, crocodiles are
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often involved.''}{Dread Empress Prudence the First, the `Frequently Vanquished'}
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Masego had forged his first dimensional pocket at the age of fourteen,
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the gruelling work of six months resulting in accessible space no larger
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than a cramped closet. Though the access and retrieval patterns had been
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flawless, the result was ultimately flawed: nearly half the power
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invested by ritual had gone to waste despite his best efforts. Father
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had refused him another attempt until he further improved his craft, as
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the costs of such an undertaking were\ldots{} prohibitive. It was only
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in the days after the Liesse Rebellion, when he had a mage's tower of
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his own, that he'd returned to the chalkboard and tried again. The power
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of his Name had granted him perception and control beyond that of any
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mortal mage, and though Masego had always disdained relying on those
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powers he'd hated the thought of an imperfect product even more. He'd
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come within razor's breadth of the Due, and with a weaving of High
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Arcana made a full room only he could access. He'd considered it a
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worthy effort, then, though still short of the perfection he aspired to.
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His horizons had expanded since.
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He had tread the grounds of Arcadia since, Winter and Summer and the
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hinterlands between. He'd laid naked eye on the silent line between
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Creation and other realms, shaped and breached it according to his
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whims. His path to understanding High Arcana did not lay in the study of
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boundaries, not like his father's, yet he had learned. One could not
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witness the seams of what the Gods had sown together without deriving
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insight from the act. The boy he'd been, who watched the world end,
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stepping into the silhouette of the man he now was and understanding
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that, in the end, it was all a lie. An agreement, a lending of form and
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function that was by definition temporary. In time, all this would end.
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That which was beheld was moulded by the shape of the beholder, and as
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runes whirled around him in patterns the Hierophant smiled. The sun had
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burned sight from him and so he had made the sun his sight, carving open
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the stuff of miracles for his due.
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No throne was so great it could not be toppled by madman's writ.
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Creation sang under his guiding hand, melody woven and folding unto
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itself. The fabric of the world wrapped itself around the demons before
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they could flee his reach, forcing them into a realm that was Creation
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and yet not. Foam on the wave, for a fleeting instant made a realm into
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itself. An instant was all that Hierophant was need, for so long as the
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unit existed the span was his to fashion. Masego stepped forward into
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the pocket he had wrested from nothing, his lie made truth by will
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imposed, and found the realm stretching as far as the eye could see. To
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bring strife to demons inside a closed realm, Father always said, was
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madness. Yet here he was, watching a shifting maze of smoke and mirrors,
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and in his bones he could feel the essences of his foes spreading. The
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Beast of Hierarchy wielded its own as a hammer, attempting to shatter
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the frame, but it was in a cage beyond its understanding. The realm
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broke, but all that did was set an ending. When that ending came was in
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the hands of the Hierophant, and he was not yet done done with his
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creation.
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Madness whispered song sweet and insidious, echoing across haze and
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empty spaces, but found no purchase. The strife it sought to sow
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reflected upon itself, parted smoke without ruination. It was Apathy
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that sunk its claws into the realm, the scars it left wherever it tread
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beyond even his mending. No furrows in matter, no, simply\ldots{}
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inertness. Matter made so still in all incarnations it might as well
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have been void. It had become the most dangerous of the three, yet this
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was not beyond Hierophant's prediction. Apathy was the oldest foe of
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wonder, and wonder was now the lens he perceived the world through. To
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destroy his enemy had always been where the trick of this would lay,
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Masego knew. It was the Heavens that granted their own the power to
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unmake even foreign essence through burning indignation, for in their
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stale eyes there was no place for such contamination in the orderly
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world that was to be built. The Gods Below granted no such boon, and had
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taught their own different lesson. \emph{Though we all lose in this
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summoning, what does it matter so long as the foe loses more?}
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To Evil, victory mattered more than the aftermath of that glorious
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moment.
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Akua Sahelian's cohorts had learned this well, bringing their arsenal of
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ruin into the world. The flickering bindings he could see shackling the
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beasts spoke not of control, but of direction. A plague unleased with
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the understanding that it would bring ruin to all it touched until fear
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pulled the leash and ripped them from Creation. It would have been
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child's play in this realm, for Hierophant to sharpen his will and rip
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through the runes. Yet in doing so he would sunder the means of recall.
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Summoning made into true presence, no longer contingent on the consent
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of mortal men. To catch the light of the Heavens and shine it a lantern
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upon this place would have done well, but Hierophant had seen too
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little. Glimpses of Contrition, before he knew how to watch, and stood
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witness to the corpse of an angel of which only white dry bones were
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left. There was no miracle for him to vivisect and assemble to his will,
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not even the shadow of one. He could not dismiss or destroy, and so only
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one path remained Hierophant.
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``To borrow the fang of the beast, and strike the beast with it,''
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Masego sighed. ``How very crude.''
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Runes flared around his hand and the skin bubbled like water, until it
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parted bloodlessly and a drop of ichor flew from it. It had remained
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there since Marchford, so weak as to be cauterized and contained yet
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never entirely gone. Corruption. A perfect drop of it. The dark-skinned
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man turned to the maze of his own making, and felt the weight of his
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foes' attention bearing down on him.
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``Let us play a game, creatures,'' he said mildly. ``I call it `burning
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down the house with everyone in it'.''
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The drop of ichor sunk into the ground and Hierophant began.
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---
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Brandon Talbot, Grandmaster of the Order of the Broken Bell, leaned
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forward on his mount. Heliotrope's flanks were covered with sweat under
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the armour, but the Liessen charger was still far from exhausted. They
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were a hardy breed, raised for war. Once the favoured mounts of many
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chivalric orders, when their kind had still been the pride of Callow
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instead of the last remnant. But that remnant still stood, under its own
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banner if one suborned to the Tower through complicated ties of rule and
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authority. That was worthy of pride, if only a little, and today the
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last scion of House Talbot allowed himself to feel it. This, he thought,
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was the kind of battles he'd been born for. That they had all been born
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for. Not bitter struggles with fae or the petty butchering of traitors
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in his liege's own camp. Though the foot at the side of his knights was
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Legion instead of Royal Guard, against them both was arrayed the old
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enemy. Hellspawn garbed in stone, with the fangs and faces of rabid dogs
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baying for the death of all men. There was purity to this moment that
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he'd sorely missed from his days as a rebel vagrant in the south, a
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beautiful clarity. One one side rode knights, to protect the people of
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Callow. On the other stood devils and sorcerers, spawn of the vicious
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East. It was the manner of battles his ancestors had fought, and there
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was honour to be found in this.
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The painting was marred by the truth that his comrades were often
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greenskins and Wastelanders, but Brandon had been taught patience by the
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woe the Liesse Rebellion had brought to the cause. A lesson his aunt had
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once known, but discarded when she began to believe she would not live
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to see the kingdom of her youth forged anew -- save if she struck deal
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with the Procerans, a bargain with the devils to the west who preached
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fellowship yet warred as much as the Praesi. Brandon was not so old as
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to grow desperate, not yet, and so he had looked to the lay of the
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kingdom and made his choice. Better a tyrant born of Callow than the
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Empress' own leash at their throat. And he'd been right, he knew that
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now. Already so many of the Fifteenth were Callowans, and the further
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Queen Catherine broke with the Tower the more she would grow to rely on
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her own people. Not rebellion, no, not in the Grandmaster's day. But
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there \emph{would} be a day. Where Callow would be kingdom in truth even
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if the Wasteland denied it the name. Where a great and fierce army
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having learned from the victors of the Conquest would give the Tower
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pause should it seek to overstep again.
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He would play the long game, and win.
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But for that scheme to bear fruit, Brandon mused, he first had to
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survive this day. The Order had sallied out at the order of that
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scowling orc general, the one they called the Hellhound, and at first
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the Talbot had thought it foolishness. A young girl's blunder, for
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General Juniper was said to have seen barely twenty summers. The
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Grandmaster had once been heir to Marchford and Elizabeth Talbot, once
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held to be the greatest commander of the Kingdom of Callow when that
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name was more than a dream. He had fought in no wars before the Arcadian
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Campaign but he had been taught strategy and war-making, to lead men in
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battle as his forbears had for centuries. He'd thought it best to have
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his knights stay at the flank of the legionaries, ready to swoop on the
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enemy when they engaged the infantry. Yet the Hellhound had oddly
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staggered her foot and sent him out into the wilderness to await signal
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for a charge. It had seemed an ever-worsening blunder as he obeyed and
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impotently watched the devils spill out from the gate and spread along
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the length of this oblique formation of he general's. Oblique. That had
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been the word that led him to understand.
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His aunt had once spoken it to him when he'd been a boy, in her solar at
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Talbot Manor as she sat him in a chair and placed iron figurines on a
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drawn map. The Fields of Streges, she'd been showing him. It would have
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been a lie to call them the first ones, for that stretch of field had
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seen a hundred battles between Callow and Praes, but the battle she
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showed him had been the one before the Carrion's Lord massacre on that
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plain. When Dread Emperor Nefarious, fresh to his throne and cocksure of
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his might, had attempted an invasion. Good King Robert had met the old
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legions and their hordes of greenskin auxiliaries on flat grounds, and
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staggered his advance much like this. Even as the Wizard of the West
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fought the Emperor, the Black Knight of those days had ordered
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greenskins to pour down the staggered side and sweep it aside. It'd been
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a bloodbath, though not the one the Wastelanders wished for. And now
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Brandon stood in the place of the old knightly orders, under banner of
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bronze and black, ready to unleash death at the end of a thousand
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lances.
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The stage General Juniper had crafted them went like this: at the back
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lay the Hellgate. From it flood of devil still poured, but that flow was
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slowed for lack of space. In the face of the approaching Fifteenth the
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dog-devils had formed ranks, at least in part. The Fifteenth was
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staggered in three sections. The rightmost was most ahead, followed
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after beat by the centre and a beat after by the left. The hellspawn
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stood steady before the right tip of that oblique line, but they were
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pouring unheeding down the left. Without line or formation, without even
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the semblance of orders. From where his horse stood, Brandon could see
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the shape of it as a long diagonal line. At the bottom of which was the
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Order of the Broken Bell. Before the the Hellhound ever sounded the
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horns, the aristocrat prepared his knights in three wedges. Three blades
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ready to plunge in the enemy's flank. The Grandmaster raised his lance,
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and within ten heartbeats all the knights had gone silent at the sight
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as he cantered ahead of his riders.
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``Knights of Callow,'' he said, voice pitched and clear across the
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field.
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\emph{Truth's not the point of a battle-address, Brandon}, Aunt
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Elizabeth had taught him. \emph{Put fire in the bellies for the fight
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ahead.}
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``You all know it was Her Grace, who named us,'' he said.
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Silence, to heighten what was to come.
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``The Order of the Broken Bell,'' the Grandmaster said slowly,
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enunciating precisely. ``Long have I pondered the sense of this, for our
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queen is a woman of few words and deep meanings.''
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He raised his lance high, steel tip shining bright even under this
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shadowed sun.
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``It was no slight, my knights,'' he said. ``It was a reminder, that in
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years past we \emph{failed}. The fracture across our banner is warning,
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remembrance of that dark day where our weakness broke Callow.''
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There was murmur across the lines, but no denial. They had all been
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raised to the truth of this, that for all the might of the old kingdom
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the might of the Praesi had been greater still.
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``But there is still a bell on our standard,'' he shouted. ``We have a
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people still, if no kingdom. And now before you stride forth the hordes
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of Hell, to destroy even that.''
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He raised his voice.
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``Knights of Callow,'' he said. ``Will you fail them today? Or will you
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redeem the truth of your standard?''
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Lances struck shields, a thunder crafted by the souls and hands of men.
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\emph{No}, the shouts came. \emph{Redemption in steel}, the calls went.
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Once, twice, thrice the horns sounded. \emph{All knights charge}, the
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call old as the soul of this ancient land. Lances lowered, shields rose
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and horses swept across the field as the last knights of Callow went
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forth to meet their ancient enemy. Brandon Talbot laughed the laugh of a
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man who had finally found his place in the world.
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---
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Istrid smashed the head of a boy who'd been one of her own until moments
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ago. One of the fucking wights ran him through, and within a heartbeat
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of hitting the ground dead he'd risen as one of the enemy. The rebels
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had pulled a new trick. Raising legion dead was no great innovation:
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they'd done the same half a dozen times, during the civil war. But back
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then it'd been a ritual, one sweep and done. Enough for the protocols to
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be amended with sappers watching corpse-piles, but no great worry. The
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orc had thought this to be the same old trick, and one wasted -- her
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goblins had munitions breaking her dead within moments of them rising.
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But the ritual had not ceased. The wights had turned savage, and now
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every legionary they killed rose. It was grinding at her frontlines
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brutally, every death twice as costly. The Sixth had gotten its shit
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together after Black went to murder his way to an ending, consolidated
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the grounds and brought the sappers to bear, but now the tide was
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against them. If this were a raid, Istrid would have called for a
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retreat. But it'd been a long time since she'd gone out to kill her kind
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for cattle and glory, and this was a battlefield. Retreat here would
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mean casualties in the thousands as they tried to disengage from the
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undead horde.
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So her men stood, fought and died.
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It was worse for the others. Afolabi's legion had taken rough beatings
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in the Arcadian Campaign and even worse making a go at the central
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bastion, and the sudden turn had found them bloodied and overextended.
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Now they were being torn apart company by company, every break hastening
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the next. Sacker and her Ninth were giving pitched battle over the
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fields of stakes north of this mess, but no amount of sharpers would
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allow her boys to break through in time. The Ninth was too light on the
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offense, they weren't built for a hard brawl. It took off the pressure
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some, wights moving there to ward them off, but not enough to pull them
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out of this mess. The Fifth Legion, she could see even from where she
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stood, had it even worse than the Twelfth. Orim was retreating back to
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the palisades he'd taken as Marshal Ranker hurried to his aid, but she
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was too far and the wights were in close pursuit. How much of the Fifth
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would be left, by the time they had the palisades protecting them? Half,
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maybe less. Unlike the Twelfth, they had no other legion to hold one of
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their flanks.
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Istrid spat phlegm on blood-sodden ground and left the frontlines,
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legionaries filling the gap she'd left. She needed better vantage before
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making a decision, or better yet Bagram's take. Her legate would have
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been watching the whole time. Making her way through closely-pressed
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ranks took too long for her tastes, though it was no fault of her men's.
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The more the wights pressed around them, the tighter the shield wall
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became to compensate. She felt the current of it as she moved, the way
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ground was being lost inch by inch. The Sixth was no longer fighting
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forward, it was trying to hold its grounds -- and \emph{failing}.
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``General,'' Bagram saluted when she found him, arriving blood-streaked
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and tired.
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``Legate,'' she rasped. ``The Twelfth. How long do they have?''
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``Every legionary will be dead within an hour,'' he said, not mincing
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words. ``General Afolabi's own standard went down not long ago. He may
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very well be dead.''
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Fuck, Istrid thought. She had no love for the arrogant Soninke, but
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commanders of his calibre didn't grown on fucking trees. There were few
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better generals to hold a fortress than him, and they were going to
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\emph{need} men like that when Procer came knocking. She turned to watch
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the battlefield, and her lips tightened when she watched another of the
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Twelfth's companies shatter then rise howling at their comrades. The
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only good news, as far as she could tell, was that the godsdamned demons
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were gone. They'd just popped out of existence after the warlock's get
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let them out. The Deoraithe were marching forward to fill the void, or
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at least some of them. Their army was a fucking mess, the left half of
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the foot and and bowmen being pulled down to the Hellgate. Where her own
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daughter was trying to face down an entire Hell with less than ten
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thousand men and no help from Ranker. Gods, this had all turned into a
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fuckup faster than you could blink. The entire army was falling to
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pieces, and no one was in a position to do anything about it than her.
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``I'm taking our reserves,'' she told her legate. ``We're backing the
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Twelfth, then withdrawing behind the palisades.''
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Bagram grimaced.
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``We'll be thinly spread, general,'' he said. ``If the wights punch
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through our lines the enire formation will collapse -- we'll have no men
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to plug the gap.''
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``We'll be surrounded on three sides if Afolabi's boys break,'' she
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growled. ``Better bloody than buried.''
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And so she went, near a thousand with her. Heavies and regulars,
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sweeping through the dead at her command. Advance was slow, slower than
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she would have liked or the Twelfth could truly afford, but what choice
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did she have? If she hurried she was handing her men to the enemy as
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fresh fodder to spend against her own. They hammered into the wights
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pressing down on the other legion, buying enough time for them to
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retreat with a semblance of order. \emph{Holdfast}, a cognomen earned.
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Even with half the Twelfth gone terror did not rule its ranks. The
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sorcerers guiding the undead struck back at the reverse, the horde
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turning on them like a pack of hounds. Her Sixth was made of sterner
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stuff, but the centre of the Twelfth crumpled like wet parchment when
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wights threw themselves over the shields and Istrid had to lead
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berserkers to prevent the whole formation coming down on her head. Howls
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filled the air as Red Rage held back the tide where Legion discipline
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had failed, and she screamed until the Twelfth fell back in line and the
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retreat was shored up. Elbowing men aside, Istrid of the Red Shields
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moved like flame through the ranks and hardened resistance. She was
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tiring, she knew, but far from done. Neither was this battle, if she had
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anything to say about it.
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Tumbling through a knot of legionaries too slow to withdraw she slapped
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a man upside the head and swatted down a wight too eager for the kill
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with a backhand, barking order for them to pick up the pace. She'd taken
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wounds, she felt as the red haze ebbed low, but nothing that would kill
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her. More scars with stories for the telling. Yet one stung. She passed
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a steel-clad hand over the throb and her gauntlet came back with yellow
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as well as red. Istrid blinked, and twisted to look at the cut on her
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flank. Shallow little thing, she thought as her heartbeat slowed. Just
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deep enough to get the poison in. Istrid Knightsbane fell to her knees,
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but her last thoughts were not of her husband or daughter. Goblin steel,
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she rasped as the world went dark.
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Goblin steel had made that cut.
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