557 lines
23 KiB
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557 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-25-intent}{%
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\section{Chapter 25: Intent}\label{chapter-25-intent}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Trust the Heavens but tie your horse.''}
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-- Callowan proverb
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\end{quote}
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It was past dawn when the last soldier crossed the gate.
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As soon as Robber stepped foot in Arcadia I had him prepare his cohort
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for scouting, but held off on sending him until Marshal Ranker's legion
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was through. A few quiet sentences with her and moments later a thousand
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goblins melted into the countryside, with warnings about fae patrols and
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the kind of tactics they'd deployed so far. I had a pavilion mounted for
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me half a mile away from the gate, surrounded by Nauk's two thousand,
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and settled on a folding chair while my few mages tended to the injuries
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of the surviving members of my retinue. I could have gone to sleep, but
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I still was too angry to rest and unwilling to miss anything. Instead I
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sat chewing on my mistake with a wineskin in hand as the reports began
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filtering in. There was not a soul within a mile of the gate, the scouts
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said. Neither was there any sign of the bodies I'd left behind, and even
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the places I'd skirmished at were now pristine: no sign of fire or
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fighting. Half a bell later one of Ranker's officers reported her line
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had found a road to the west that looked like it was leading to the
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towers in the distance.
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When the sun finally rose over the horizon, it found me still in the
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pavilion. There'd been one last development, not too long ago: Robber's
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cohort had caught a fae close to the road, when confirming it led to the
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towers. Said towers, the report also elaborated, were actually a
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fortress. One whose walls were now manned. They knew we were coming. I
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sent word to the Marshal and the Duchess to join me the moment the
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hamstrung fairy was brought into camp, Hakram hovering behind me. He
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felt guilty about not having been with me when I'd run into trouble, as
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if I hadn't been the one to order him to say in Creation to supervise.
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``Would have made no difference if you were there,'' I said.
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``You don't know that,'' he gravelled.
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``It\ldots{} this wasn't about power, Hakram,'' I said. ``I alone would
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have been able to cut down a third of them, if they'd fought the way I
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wanted them to. The Gallowborne would have wiped them out if it had been
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a melee. They've killed harder things than lesser fae. We fought them
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badly -- \emph{I} fought them badly, and I lost.''
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``You did as well as you could,'' he said.
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``They're not invincible,'' I told him, irritated at the attempt at
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comfort. ``They picked their ground, their time and the lay of the
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engagement. We just need to start thinking of them as a proper army
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instead of just a troupe of fairies, because they're sure as Hells
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\emph{fighting} like one.''
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``Well said,'' Duchess Kegan stated, her approval a tad condescending.
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The ruler of the Deoraithe was not growing on me, it had to be said. I
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wanted to like her, I really did, but she was like the human version of
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a stone in your boot. Ranker brushed past her rudely, to the highborn's
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irritation, and I was careful not to show amusement. I'd gotten this far
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by pretending to be above the bickering, taking sides would be
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surrendering what little advantage I had.
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``Your boy caught one of them, then,'' the Marshal said, gingerly
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climbing atop a folding chair and helping herself to my wine.
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She sniffed at the nozzle, hairless brow rising.
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``Vale summer wine? Fancy.''
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She drank anyway, not that it would do much for her. Goblins were better
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a processing liquor and poison than either orcs or humans.
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``Robber's good at finding things,'' I said, letting my voice carry
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enough that said Special Tribune would hear it from behind the pavilion
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flap where he was currently lurking.
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``Stabbing them too,'' my murderous minion contributed with a grin as
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two other legionaries from his cohort dragged a fae heavily bruised and
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missing an arm.
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Male, this one. More lightly armoured than the ones I'd run into, but
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his leather armour bore the same symbol I'd seen on the tabard of the
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patrol: a green oak. His remaining hand and feet were bound tightly,
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leaving him unable to do anything but kneel at an uncomfortable angle.
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``I won't need you for the interrogation,'' I told Robber.
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The goblin pouted, which on his face looked positively horrifying. Like
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a fish trying the same, but with needle-like teeth peeking through.
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``Can I watch at least?'' he wheedled.
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``Scram,'' I said, and he read the mood correctly.
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He swaggered away without pushing it, arms around the shoulders of his
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two cohorts, and I refrained from sighing at the sight. There were
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witnesses. The fae was gagged, so I rose to my feet to force down the
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cloth.
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``Whose lands are we in?'' I asked.
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The soldier spat on my boot.
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``Not the answer I was looking for,'' I said.
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``Call back the boy,'' Ranker shrugged. ``And send for knives.''
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``Torture will take time,'' the Duchess frowned.
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``Better to move delayed than move blind,'' the Marshal said.
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Hakram cleared his throat, drawing their attention. I glanced at him.
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``You forget you have a Named leading you,'' the orc said.
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Ah. Well, I'd never used it on fae before but considering how they were
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bound to stories it might actually work better than on mortals.
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``\textbf{Answer my questions},'' I Spoke.
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He twitched, fighting against the order, but eventually stilled.
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``Whose lands are we in?'' I repeated.
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``The Count of Olden Oak,'' the fae said.
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``How many soldiers do you have?'' Duchess Kegan asked.
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The fae smiled sardonically and said nothing. Ah, the wording. I asked
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him the question as Ranker sent the tan woman a mocking look.
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``Two thousand,'' he said through gritted teeth.
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``Any other nobles here?'' I asked.
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``The Baron of Dawning Day.''
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I frowned. That was two titled fae, which struck me as too many for the
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middle of nowhere. Weren't most of the nobles out with the army of
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Summer?
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``Ask him where in Arcadia we are,'' Ranker said, thoughts going along
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the same line.
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``The border marches,'' the fae replied when I did.
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The two older women exchanged looks.
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``If we march a sennight to the north, what will we find?'' I asked.
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That was, after all, about where I felt I'd be able to make a gate
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out\emph{. Let it not be the city of Summer, let it not be --}
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``The lands of the Princess of High Noon.''
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I needed to start being more careful about what I wished for, I decided.
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I glanced at the other commanders of the army, silently asking if they
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had any other questions. Neither did. I shot Hakram a look, and without
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any need for words he stepped forward and casually snapped the
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prisoner's neck.
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``Be a dear and drag that outside, would you?'' I said.
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He snorted in amusement, but obeyed.
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``So we need to march deeper into Summer,'' Ranker said, sharp eyes on
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me.
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``And quickly,'' I grunted. ``They'll consider this an invasion, there's
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a good chance they'll recall their armies from Creation to drive us
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out.''
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``Then the fortress had to be taken,'' Duchess Kegan said. ``We can't
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leave two thousand soldiers at our back, not with the amount of supplies
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we carry.''
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``Agreed,'' I said. ``Reports said it was a castle, curtain walls at
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least forty feet high. Legion standard?''
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The last two words were spoken looking at the Marshal, who nodded
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pensively.
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``Mages around the siege weapons, to ward from their magics,'' she
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added. ``Securing replacements out here would be difficult.''
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``We've no notion of how long it would take to break down fae walls with
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mortal trebuchets,'' Duchess Kegan said disapprovingly.
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``I understand time is an issue, Duchess,'' I said impatiently, ``but
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I'm the only one here who's tangled with them. We rush those walls and
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we'll lose thousands, likely to no gain.''
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``If you use legionaries, yes,'' she said. ``The Watch will take the
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walls and open the gates. Be ready to invest the fortress and deal with
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the nobles.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``You didn't bring any ladders,'' I pointed out. ``Or any siege fixtures
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at all, for that matter.''
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She smiled thinly.
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``There will be no need for them,'' she said.
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I glanced at Ranker, who chuckled.
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``At worst there's fewer Deoraithe in existence,'' she said, tone making
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it clear she believed this to be no great loss.
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I eventually nodded. If nothing else, I'd get to have a look at why so
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much fuss was always made about the Watch.
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``We march, then,'' I said.
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---
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Nauk's two thousand took point. There screens of goblins to the side in
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case any surprises had been laid out for us, but our advance went
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unchallenged until we came in sight of the fortress. It was an
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impressive piece of work, compared to a mortal castle, but compared to
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the likes of Skade it was rather mundane. Pale walls encircled four
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towers, whose only hint of sorcery was the way they were intertwined in
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a way that evoked roots. Glittering soldiers in the same silvery chain
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mail and tabard as the patrol stood atop the rampart, armed with bows
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and swords. There weren't two thousand up there, by my estimation --
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maybe half that -- which meant they'd kept reserves. The large oaken
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gate opened when Nauk's legionaries ceased marching well out of bow
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range, a single mounted man riding out even as I frowned. Behind me the
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allied army spread, the Deoraithe host right behind while the two
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legions took the wings. I didn't even need to focus to feel the power
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wafting from the rider, or notice it wasn't in the league of the Winter
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counts I'd encountered. The baron the prisoner had mentioned? Hakram at
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my side, we watched the fae caracole atop his white steed and raise his
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lance in a mocking salute.
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``You have entered the lands of Summer Eternal, invaders,'' he called
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out. ``Only death awaits you here.''
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I heard someone striding towards me, Nauk's legionaries parting for
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them. I wouldn't be taking the Gallowborne with me today, not after the
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losses they'd incurred. Farrier had protested but his own shoulder was
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only held together by mage healing, and if it got broken again within a
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fortnight he'd be crippled for life.
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``A champion,'' Duchess Kegan said, occupying the side of me Adjutant
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didn't. ``How quaint.''
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I'd read enough about Deoraithe to know what they thought about this
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kind of posturing in matters of war. I didn't answer, waiting for the
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armies to reach their assigned positions as the fae continued yelling.
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``Are all of you cowards?'' the rider called out. ``Will not a single of
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you meet this Baron of Dawning Day on the field to redeem your honour?''
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``He's in crossbow range,'' Adjutant said. ``Shall we give him a
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princely answer?''
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I chewed over that.
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``I don't trust our shots to put him down,'' I finally said.
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``I have the finest bowmen in Calernia under my command,'' the Duchess
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said.
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``Better to kill him now, so he's not on the walls to make trouble for
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your people,'' I said. ``Hakram. Can you do it?''
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The orc looked at the baron for a long moment.
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``Shouldn't be too much trouble,'' he said.
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``Then shut the bastard up,'' I ordered.
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He laughed, clapping my shoulder before striding away. I felt the
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Duchess' gaze on me.
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``A princely answer,'' she repeated. ``Is is true, then. You had the
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Exiled Prince shot instead of duelling him.''
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``If I personally killed everyone in my way I'd never have time for
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anything else,'' I lightly replied.
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She let out a sound that could be construed as amused.
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``Perhaps there is some of the blood in you,'' she conceded.
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That would have been slightly more touching if she hadn't just spent the
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better part of a month being a pain in my arse. If she wanted to rope me
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in using my Deoraithe heritage she was barking up the wrong tree,
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regardless. I knew nothing about my parents and to be frank I wasn't
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particularly curious. Whoever they'd been, they had nothing to do with
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the person I was now. Still, the woman did have twenty thousand soldiers
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under her command and they wouldn't be going anywhere after the scuffle
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against Akua was over. Needlessly antagonizing her would be foolish.
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``All I've ever known of Daoine was through books,'' I said. ``Oh, and
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one of your relatives that put an arrow in me that one time.''
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``You spared her,'' the Duchess said. ``That did not go unnoticed.''
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Truth be told that had more to do with Black's orders than any notion of
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mine, but I saw no need to tell her that. That aside, wonder of wonders:
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for once my reputation for leaving a trail of corpses in my wake was
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coming in useful. People were starting to assume that whenever I didn't
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kill someone I did it on purpose.
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``She's a talented archer,'' I said. ``An inch to the side and it would
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have cleaved my spine. It'd be a shame to waste that kind of talent.''
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``High praise,'' Kegan said. ``Perhaps she will live up to it today.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``She's here?''
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``She finished her oaths last year,'' the Duchess said. ``The entire
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Watch was mobilized to put down the madwoman in the south. An unexpected
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turn of events, that Daoine would share an enemy with you, but not
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entirely unwelcome.''
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Well now, that was positively friendly. I'd have to be a special kind of
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idiot for that sudden thawing of tone not to worry me. Especially since
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it was happening the first time we were having a conversation out of
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Marshal Ranker's earshot, surrounded only by soldiers known to be loyal
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to me. The picture that was painting was very, very dangerous. I
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clenched my fingers and unclenched them. I could try to probe her
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intentions and beat around the bush, but that kind of game wasn't my
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specialty. I could cope with it in small doses, but I wasn't betting on
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getting the upper hand against a woman who'd ruled a duchy for several
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decades. Fuck it. It was sad to admit, but I had more burnt city
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incidents that diplomatic victories under my belt.
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``You're talking a lot more sweetly than usual today,'' I bluntly said.
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``There will be an after the war,'' Duchess Kegan said. ``It is not too
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early to begin considering it.''
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``In my experience, people who talk that vague are tiptoeing about
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treason,'' I noted.
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Her face showed no reaction. Why was everyone trying to negotiate with
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me so good at keeping their thoughts hidden?
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``Your actions of late might be considered that,'' the Duchess said.
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``Dissolving the Ruling Council. Naming a former rebel Governess-General
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of Callow. Replacing every Praesi governor with a Callowan, save for
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one.''
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Denier, that. The man under Ranker's thumb had never given me an excuse
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so I'd had to settle for waiting out his term. I could see what she was
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hinting at, and I needed to shut down that avenue right now if I didn't
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want a third godsdamned civil war in a row to erupt the moment
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Diabolist's head ended up on a pike.
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``Callow will stay under the Tower,'' I frankly replied. ``That isn't up
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for debate. The nature of that relationship, however, will be
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renegotiated. I have backing in this.''
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The older woman's eyes narrowed to slits.
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``Does the Carrion Lord mean to depose the Empress?'' she asked, finally
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discarding the pretences.
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``No,'' I replied, about as sure of this as I could be with someone like
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my teacher.
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``Interesting days ahead,'' the Duchess finally said.
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``Procer is coming,'' I said. ``Not this year, I don't think, but within
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the decade.''
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``Offers were made, during the rebellion,'' Kegan acknowledged.
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I'd always suspected, to be honest, but it was still an upset to have
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that suspicion confirmed. While I'd been fighting a war with swords
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against the Lone Swordsman, there'd been another war entirely going on
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behind the scenes. I was only now beginning the grasp the form of it,
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and what I learned was chilling.
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``Let me guess,'' I said. ``Independence and an alliance?''
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``As well as a princess for my grandson, when they come of age,'' she
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replied.
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``But you didn't bite,'' I said.
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``Grudges incurred after the Third Crusade have yet to be settled,'' the
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Duchess said, tone harsh.
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I frowned. The Deoraithe held on to slights like a drowning man to
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driftwood, but that still felt like too weak a reason. It wasn't like
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Praes hadn't taken regular runs at the Wall for over a thousand years.
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Hells, Dread Empress Triumphant had infamously crucified a King of
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Daoine for not bowing low enough.
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``And?'' I probed.
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She hesitated, then continued.
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``The Watch has guarded the Wall for a long time, Duchess Foundling, but
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that is not what it is \emph{meant} for,'' she replied. ``The border
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being quiet allows us to tend to an older duty.''
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There was fervour in her voice, by the time she finished speaking.
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\emph{The Deoraithe hate the} \emph{elves}. That was no great mystery.
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Perhaps not common knowledge, but any book about Daoine's history made a
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point of mentioning it -- the Deoraithe had once lived in what was now
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the Golden Bloom before being driven out of it. Warlock had once
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theorized in front of me that the Watch was meant to imitate the strange
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abilities elves gained as they grew old, gaining through sorcery what
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the others were born to. Was that what she meant? That without the orcs
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raiding west Daoine could turn its attention to the elves?
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``A conversation to finish at another time,'' Kegan said. ``The duel you
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ordered is coming.''
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The entire conversation hadn't taken long, but in that span Hakram had
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made his way through Nauk's legionaries. My Adjutant had always been
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tall even for an orc, and I was almost certain he'd grown taller since
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coming into his Name. Not as broad-shouldered as Nauk or stout as
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Juniper, but he carried himself with a \emph{presence} nowadays that had
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an almost physical weight to it. He'd grown into his power and it
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showed. Hakram no longer used the sword and and shield that had been his
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lot as a legionary: first he'd traded the sword for an axe, then the
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shield for another axe in the wake of our fights with the fae. He'd told
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me that if we were going to keep fighting creatures that could cut
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through steel like parchment he'd rather carry a second blade than dead
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weight. The weapon the orc took in hand as he strode onto the field was
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more a long and large hatchet than a battle axe in a conventional sense,
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goblin steel forged into a haft and head he still twirled like it
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weighed nothing. The Baron of Dawning Day ceased his strutting atop a
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horse when a challenger appeared, reining in his horse and guiding it to
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face Adjutant.
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The legionaries in the first ranks began stomping their feet and it
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spread like fire among the Fifteenth, goblins and orcs and men of every
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stripe. The ground shook under two thousand steel-shod boots, and to
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that harsh meter voices rose to match.
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``Dead the hand and dead the man,
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Sharp the blade and sharp the fang
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For no matter how tall they stand
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When iron rests we see them hang.''
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Hakram's stride went unbroken as he called out to the fae, his words
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drowned out by the voices and beat as to the sides of the host the other
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Legions of Terror joined their boots to the song. Ten thousand souls
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stomping as my legionaries sang their eerie anthem. The Baron of Dawning
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Day's lance descended and without any further taunts he charged.
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``Lord or priest or knight in pale
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On burning hill or dawning vale
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The scale settles it all the same:
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Red and broken lies the name.''
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Adjutant did not move, calmly awaiting the charge. My heartbeat
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quickened at the sight, but I trusted in him. Given his size and
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strength, the natural comparison among the Calamities for my right hand
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was Captain. I'd fought them both, though, and knew that was a mistake.
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Sabah was strength and swiftness unrelenting, more hurricane than woman
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when moved to violence. Hakram\ldots{} Hakram fought like Black. Even
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more than I did. Patient and measured and ruthlessly brutal in motion.
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The lance shone brightly under the sun, but still the orc did not move.
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Only when the mass of muscle and steel was teen strides away from him
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did his hand whip out: the axe spun, blade sinking through steel plate
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between the eyes of the Baron's charger.
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``Dead the hand and dead the man,
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Sharp the blade and sharp the fang
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For no matter how tall they stand
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When iron rests we see them hang.''
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The white horse died and momentum carried it in a messy slide across the
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grass as the Baron deftly leapt off it and landed like a cat on the
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ground. Adjutant moved three steps to the side, taking his second axe in
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hand as the dead horse tumbled just past him. Casting his lance aside,
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the Baron of Dawning Day unsheathed a sword bright as the morning he was
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titled after. The orc awaited him patiently, unmoved by the sight. In
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the blink of an eye the fae was on him, sword leaving trails of light
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behind every swing as he furiously tried to take his opponent's life.
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Calmly giving ground, Hakram avoided a cleave turned into a thrust a
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little too shallowly: the green skin of his cheek parted under fae
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steel, leaving a blackened mark like it had been burnt. The Baron
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avoided the haft of the axe with mocking ease, but it was a distraction:
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Adjutant's fist caught him in the chin. Bone broke, for an orc's strike
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was no small thing and this orc had strength beyond mortal bounds.
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Spitting teeth, the fae snarled furiously and harsh light bloomed in
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front of him. I sucked in a breath: even from where I stood I could feel
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the heat of it, and so close it would have been impossible for Hakram to
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dodge it.
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``Queen or king or Heaven's get
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Never unpaid goes their debt
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Learn bitter with the last breath
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The left hand gives only death.''
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When the light died out, Adjutant's smoking frame towered three feet
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back from where'd he'd been. He was steaming like cooked meat but
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unharmed. I could still feel the wisps of his Name on him, the remnants
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of the aspect he'd called on: Stand. He'd withstood the strike of a
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demon using it, once. Fae sorcery was lesser in comparison. I saw his
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axe had been turned to blackened scraps by the Baron's power, though,
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and felt a sharp surge of fear. The sound of his laughter dispersed it.
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He'd been driven back to the horse's side by the impact, and deftly he
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claimed back the axe he'd left in the mount's head. He didn't close the
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distance again, though, which I found strange. Though visibly shaken by
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the way his sorcery had failed to quell his opponent, the Baron
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immediately returned on the offensive. Light flared around the blade,
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and only then did I understand Adjutant's intent. The orc's legs
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lowered, the muscles of his arm flexed and his skeletal hand dug into
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the horse's flesh: with a loud grunt, he seized the entire corpse like a
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mace and smashed it into the charging fae. The Baron hastily tried to
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cut through the flesh, but only succeeded in parting the belly: the mass
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still ploughed him downwards like a fragile doll. The carcass bubbled
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and burst in a shower of gore as the fae emerged, panting, but there was
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no recovering from his misstep. The crescent blade of the axe caught him
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him in the neck, cleaving to the spine. The orc booted his stomach to
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wrench the steel out, leaving him twitching in the gore, then calmly
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cleaved straight into his skull.
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``Dead the hand and dead the man,
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Sharp the blade and sharp the fang
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For no matter how tall they stand
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When iron rests we see them hang.''
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Dead. And now, just now, when the sight of it was still fresh in the
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eyes of the fae above? That was the moment to strike. Even as thousands
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of feet thundered in approval and Hakram's blood-red axe rose to the
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sky, I drew Duchess Kegan's attention.
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``Now,'' I said. ``Send them in now.''
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The older woman nodded slowly, still troubled by what she'd just seen,
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and drew a red scarf from a pouch on her side before holding it up.
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Without a sound, two thousand men and women of the Watch broke into a
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perfect run. Like the song had said, there were scales to settle.
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And like the song had said, Summer would lie red and broken for it.
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