497 lines
27 KiB
TeX
497 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-26-advance}{%
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\section{Chapter 26: Advance}\label{chapter-26-advance}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``You'd be surprised at the breadth of things that can be powered
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by the souls of the innocent. Fortresses, swords, my favourite
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chandelier.''}
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-- Dread Empress Malevolent II
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\end{quote}
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Calling how they moved a formation would have been inaccurate.
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A tide, maybe, or wisp of fog. The grey-brown cloaks fluttered behind
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them as the Watch charged towards the fortress, the fae only recovering
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from the sight of my right hand slaughtering their champion when the
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Deoraithe were mere feet away from the base of the rampart. A volley of
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flame-touched arrows bloomed, but it was like trying to catch smoke in
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your hand: the flames touched only the ground and the Watch began its
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ascent. Duchess Kegan had said that they wouldn't need ladders, and now
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I saw why. Every soldier took out a pair of steel stakes and I watched
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as the first to move forward leapt up before ramming his first stake
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into the stone. Using it as support, he threw himself up and bit into
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stone with his other stake. A flick of the wrist got the first stake out
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of the stone, and then he hoisted himself up again. Twenty feet up the
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wall, in the blink of an eye. \emph{Merciless Gods}, I thought. I might
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have been able to do that, but one of my soldiers? Suddenly Daoine's
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dream of taking the fight to the elves seemed more than an elaborate
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ritual suicide.
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The fae did not lose their composure, continuing to pour down arrows. At
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my side Duchess Kegan raised her hand again, a black scarf in hand. The
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three thousand remaining soldiers of the Watch, longbows already strung,
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released a volley of their own. The arc was perfect, almost pleasurable
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to watch, at though the projectiles were mere steel they scythed through
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the Summer fairies who'd been careless enough to leave the protection of
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the crenels. A burning log was tossed over the rampart but the Deoraithe
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did not miss a beat. Those allowed room by the angle pressed themselves
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against the stone and let it pass them by, and a woman whose chest would
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have been caved in instead leapt \emph{atop} the log, using it to leap
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again upwards and resume climbing with her stakes. \emph{And Grem
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One-Eye beat them}, I thought. \emph{When they were defending their own
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damned wall.} I'd always thought that in a few years after she was
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seasoned Juniper would be the best tactician on Calernia, bar none, but
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what I saw was forcing me to reconsider. It was one thing to beat
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devils, another to crush \emph{this.}
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Less than eighty heartbeats after they'd begun moving, just after
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another volley shot by the Watch who'd stayed behind forced the fae to
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take cover, the first Deoraithe landed on top of the wall. The fighting
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then was not so one-sided: Kegan's monsters were quicker and stronger
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than humans had any right to be, but so were the fae. Longsword met
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longsword as a dozen footholds formed on the rampart, but the Watch had
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not been deployed to take the wall. As soon as the last Deoraithe made
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it up, the clusters moved again and disappeared into the fortress.
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Headed for the gate, no doubt. \emph{My turn.} Nauk's men made way for
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me as I marched to the front of the two thousand legionaries of the
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Fifteenth, eyes on the still-closed gates. Adjutant joined me moments
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later, armour blackened by the sorcery of the baron he'd put down.
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``They're impressive,'' the orc gravelled. ``Maybe the finest soldiers
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on Calernia, pound for pound.''
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I hummed, not disagreeing. Now that the initial shock at their
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performance had waned, though, I felt that I was missing something. Only
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a quarter of Duchess Kegan's army was made up by the Watch. Why, if they
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were so effective? If she had twenty thousand of them the Wall would
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never have fallen during the Conquest. Were there requirements to being
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able to become part of the Watch? It couldn't be that they were all
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mages. Deoraithe weren't known to birth a lot of those, and no one had
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five thousand mages to field save for Praes -- who'd bred those numbers
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up over millennia -- and perhaps Procer, by sheer dint of its
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population's size.
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``Resource investment,'' I murmured.
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Hakram raised a brow.
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``Legion officers and mages take half a decade to train properly,'' I
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said. ``The Empire can bear that because it's rich and its population
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large. Daoine is a \emph{duchy}, not a kingdom. They might not have the
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means to support too many of those -- that kind of power can't come
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without a material cost.''
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Praesi were wealthy beyond comprehension and cheated with blood
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sacrifices besides, otherwise raising even a single flying fortress
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would beggar the Tower for half a decade. Deoraithe didn't have that
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shortcut available, though. Them grabbing people to sacrifice, even if
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they kept it strictly in-house, would have been noticed eventually.
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``Every time one of them dies a small fortune goes up in smoke,'' Hakram
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grasped, brow creasing. ``They do have the population to field a larger
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army than twenty thousand. A choice was made.''
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``Quality over quantity,'' I said. ``They began treading that path long
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before the Reforms took Praes down the same road.''
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Duchess Kegan's hand, then, was not as strong as she had been
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pretending. How many years would it take to replace any casualty
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incurred by the Watch? She might be able to afford that in times of
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peace, but if she ever warred against the Empire her treasury would be
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bleeding out from a dozen different unavoidable expenses. If I could
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realize this at a glance, I had a hard time believing that Malicia and
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Black could not. Was that why they'd never acted like they considered
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Daoine a real threat? Something to keep in mind, when I next spoke with
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the duchess. It was not long after we finished speaking that the gates
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began moving, a dozen silhouettes on each side pushing the massive
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copper things open. In front of them the rest of the Watch had clustered
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together in a tight formation, and the moment the way was clear they
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began a smooth and almost leisurely retreat. I unsheathed my sword,
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raising the blade.
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``FIFTEENTH,'' I screamed. ``ADVANCE!''
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The nut had been cracked open. Now the butcher's work could begin. The
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ranks behind were four hundred broad, following behind just short of a
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run as Hakram and I took point. The retreating Deoraithe split around
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us, a few of them ceasing their retreat just long enough to shoot arrows
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at fae trying to close the gates before we arrived. \emph{Fifty feet}, I
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gauged. The soldiers of Summer behind the gate hurriedly sent a volley
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at the Fifteenth, the same kind of chest-height shots that had torn
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through the Gallowborne. This wasn't my retinue, though. It was a full
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\emph{jesha} of two thousand, half the forces making up a regular Legion
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of Terror. These men had been trained to deal with mages, and without
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missing a beat the mage lines within the Fifteenth returned fire. A wave
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of fireballs flew, tailored for size instead of strength or speed: the
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spells taught in the War College were not the most powerful or the most
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effective. They were the most \emph{flexible}, the formula easy to
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adjust for the situation. Every mage cast, and when the large balls of
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flame met the arrows a curtain of flame flickered across the grounds.
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Not a single projectile made it through. Heat licking at my face, I
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strode through the already-fading fire. \emph{Twenty feet.}
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``Been a while since we were in a scrap side-by-side,'' I said.
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``Liesse, I think,'' Hakram mused. ``Learned a few things since then.''
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``So have I,'' I said. ``Try to keep up.''
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There were maybe ten feet between me and the fae when I dashed forward,
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sinking into my Name. I'd always found clarity in doing that, in
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allowing the world to slow as my perception deepened and my blade
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followed, but it was different now. The air no longer felt just crisp,
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it was \emph{cold} -- like a windless winter night, everything tinged
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with frost. An arrow flew towards my throat but my sword came up without
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missing a beat, slapping it to the side as I pivoted on myself and fell
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on the first rank of the fae. At my side a roar sounded and blood
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sprayed high as Adjutant began to paint in red. We hit their line like a
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trebuchet stone, ploughing straight through. There was no room for
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elaborate tactics, here, no Lion Devours Gazelle. If they didn't hold
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the gate, they were done for: they had to stand and fight. It would be a
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red gutter before long, and the gutter was where I shone. One of the fae
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threw tongues of flame at me and I didn't even bother to dodge them:
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they hit my armour head on with only hissing steam to show for it, the
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ice-cold steel unmarred. My shield hit the opponent in the stomach,
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smashing him back, and I gutted him with a clean sword stroke.
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Adjutant stood at my side, sweeping the enemy aside with wild laughter
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as we drive deeper and deeper. There was a deafening sound behind us as
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Nauk's heavies impacted the fae line, orcs and humans in a
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tightly-locked shield wall beginning their push. This was not the kind
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of battle the Summer fae were meant for, I thought. Not these, anyway.
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Mere swords and bows were no match for the implacable advancing steel
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wall of the Legions of Terror. The path Hakram and I were carving
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through the enemy filled with soldiers, a wedge in the enemy formation
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that split them. Already they were wavering -- the Watch had killed
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hundreds on their way through, and what stood behind us now was not the
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full strength of the enemy. There still had to be some left on the
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walls.
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``\emph{Spargere},'' an officer's voice called out.
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Small clay balls with lit fuses sailed above the ranks, falling in the
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throng of fae. The sharpers exploded a moment later, shredding flesh and
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bone. With a resounding cry the shield wall pushed forward and the army
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of Summer folded under the pressure.
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``Fire,'' the same voice called out.
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Four dozen balls of flame flew above the fae ranks. They wouldn't hit
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anyone, but they weren't meant to. One by one they detonated, the
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pressure flattening the fairies under them even if they didn't kill
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anyone. The fae lines wavered and again the cry sounded, the shield wall
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pushing forward. I'd been killing my way through anything foolish enough
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to stand in my way, the tip of the spear, and finally I saw only one
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woman in front of me -- behind her was an empty courtyard, leading
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deeper into the fortress. There was fear in her too-large eyes. Her
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sword parried my blow, but her grips was weak. With a grunt I pushed
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down, flexing my muscles as she joined a second hand to her first and
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desperately tried to hold me back. Too weak. I broke through her guard,
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carving her from shoulder to rib across the body. After so many strikes
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against armour even the goblin steel of my sword was starting to dull,
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but with enough power behind the blow that mattered little. I stepped
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onto the courtyard lightly the sound of fangs tearing through flesh
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heralding Adjutant following me as he tossed a corpse with a ripped
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throat to the side. Heavies filled the corridor we'd open, splitting the
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fae in two, and it was the beginning of the end for them. They began to
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break.
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``We can leave them to Nauk,'' I said. ``We have a Count to settle
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matters with.''
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The orc nodded, licking reddened chops. The inside of the castle was
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still made of the same white stone, but in the shady corners I saw roots
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peeking through. Count of Olden Oak, huh. Might be more to the title
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than just heraldry. A set of stairs led to the upper keep and without
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wasting any more time I began the way up. We passed through an empty
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banquet hall without slowing, my gaze lingering at the larger and larger
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amount of roots I saw growing through the stone from every corner. Was
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this entire fortress a tree, the oak the fae noble was named for? I knew
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fuck all about what oaks actually looked like, having been raised in a
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city, so I could be looking at one for all I knew. There was another set
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of stairs in the back of the hall and we headed there, the both of us
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feeling the pressure coming from higher in that direction. We ended up
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in a corridor covered with living mosaics of leaves that shifted with
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every glance but didn't stick around to look at them: through an arc we
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could see a third and final set of stairs, leading to what I would have
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called a basilica if the the coloured glass of its windows didn't
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display the glory of Summer victorious.
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The way up was long and sharply sloped, the stairs broad and too large
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to be covered in one stride. The sun shone down, but it was not
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illuminating stone: we were surrounded by the brown bark of an immense
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oak, growing in the centre of the towers we'd glimpsed from the outside.
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The large structure ahead had coppers doors like the outer fortress,
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though these were wide open. The atmosphere was eerily green-tinged.
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``Twenty denarii he's waiting for us inside on some kind of oaken
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throne,'' I said.
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``I'm not taking that,'' Hakram snorted. ``Twenty denarii we get a
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monologue about the might of Summer before the fight.''
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We kept moving even as we talked but the moment we rose onto the first
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step the strange buzz of fae wings sounded in the utter silence. From
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the heights of the giant tree ten fae descended on translucent wings,
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landing halfway up the steps with unnatural grace. Each of them held a
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leaf-shaped shield and a long lance of wood. I raised an eyebrow.
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``So if he'd been called the Count of Plentiful Cows, would you be
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fighting with udders and hooves?'' I called out.
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The words echoed across the distance, my mockery repeating twice more
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before fading.
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``Though crowd,'' Adjutant deadpanned.
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The ten fae spread in a line without replying, wings flickering out of
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existence, and the spears rose. Since the grim-faced pricks weren't
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willing to save us the climb before we fought it out, we began the way
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up. I caught Hakram studying them carefully as we rose then punched his
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shoulder to draw his attention, eyebrow raised.
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``Go to the Count,'' he gravelled. ``I'll handle them.''
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``You've used one aspect already,'' I frowned. ``And your other one's
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not much use in a fight.''
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The tall orc bared his fangs.
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``I feel\ldots{} close,'' he said. ``To the third.''
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Ah, and now I understood why he'd suggested it. Iron sharpens iron,
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Praesi were fond of saying. They meant it as a justification for their
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obsession with scheming against one another, but I'd found the saying
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had some truth in it. For both villains and heroes, conflict drove
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advancement. No, perhaps that wasn't exact. Weighty actions allowed you
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to sharpen your Name, and conflict had a way of birthing those. Whether
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it was arguing with an enemy or beating them down, a Named could temper
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themselves. It wasn't that Hakram thought he'd stomp over all these fae
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-- they were obviously meant to be an elite guard of some kind, no
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matter how ridiculous their equipment. But he believed that a dangerous
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enough fight might allow him to reach his third aspect.
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``I don't like risking you,'' I said, more honestly than I'd meant it
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to. ``Duel's one thing, this is just taking a risk to hurry something
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you'll get eventually.''
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He half-smiled, which given the size of his teeth still made him look
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more horrifying than sentimental.
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``You can't be the only one taking risks,'' he chided. ``And we'll need
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all we can bring to bear, soon. If not for this war then for the next.''
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I was still less than fond of this idea. It wasn't just that finding a
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replacement for Adjutant would be impossible, though there was no
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denying that was a fact. Even if Apprentice fused Ratface and Aisha into
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a single abomination of nature the combined talents wouldn't be able to
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handle a tenth of the work he did. Hakram was my friend. Gods, probably
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the person I was closest to in all of Creation. My first instinct was to
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kill anything that might threaten him and put the head on a spike to
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ward off anybody else who might want to try. I knew that look in his
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eyes, though. It was the same one he got before disappearing for a few
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bells and a problem mysteriously solved itself -- there would be no
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talking him out of this no matter how much I glared.
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``Wade in their blood, Hakram,'' I finally said, raising a gauntleted
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fist.
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``Luck in battle, Catherine,'' he replied, hitting his fist with mine.
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We were only two steps away from the fae, and they'd yet to move. I
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supposed they thought it made them look imposing.
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``The way is barred,'' a fae said.
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``So was the front gate,'' I replied.
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I dashed forward, sending a sliver of power into my legs. Bypassing a
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step entirely I landed in front of the rightmost fae, whose spear
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immediately whistled towards my throat. From the corner of my eye I saw
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movement -- ridiculous as they looked, they were quicker than the
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soldiers from earlier and better coordinated. If it had come to a scrap
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that would have mattered, but unfortunately for them fleeing was another
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game entirely. I formed a circular panel of shadow in the way of the one
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trying to flank me and ducked under the spear of the other, never
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breaking stride. Wouldn't have worked if I was any taller, but for once
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being so offensively short was an advantage. The shadow pane shattered a
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heartbeat later, but I was already on the step behind them. I glanced
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back and saw that none of them was deigning to pursue. Hakram ripped the
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shield out of the hands of one and smacked another fae's face with it,
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but he was surrounded within moments and the situation looked sharply to
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his disadvantage. My fingers tightened until the gauntlet creaked, but I
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forced myself to look away and continued my way up. He wouldn't have
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told me he could handle it if he couldn't.
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I forced myself to clear my mind the way I'd been taught even as I
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headed up to the structure that was the crowning glory of the fortress,
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the very heart of the Count's domain. From the sides of the stairway --
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there were no rails here either, though unlike with the Tower I was
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willing to cut Summer some slack since at least they could fly back up
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if they fell -- I could see roots leading up to the inside of the
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building. Well, that was promising. I'd seen my fair share of fucking
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horrors in Winter, I supposed I was due exposure to the other side of
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the coin. The copper gates were open, like I'd seen earlier, but as I
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made it to the top I finally got a glance inside. For the first time
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since breaching the fortress, what I saw gave me pause. It wasn't the
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tall silhouette of the Count that gave me pause, his back turned to me
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as he gazed out the green and red glass in front of him. It was the
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sight of the inside of the basilica, though the living wood that made
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hundreds of stacks filled with books and baubles was a stunning sight.
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No, it was the hundred corpses of the Gallowborne that hung from the
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branches covering the ceiling.
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I let out a long, quiet breath. Fury was not unknown to me. I'd felt
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both boiling anger and frozen, bitter hatred since I'd become the
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Squire. But the sight of men and women who'd died for me trussed up like
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trophies in someone's sanctum killed the emotions in me. I'd seen the
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Carrion Lord once. The monster the tales spoke of, instead of the
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sardonic teacher I'd come to love. Seen the humanity in him smothered
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like a candle, leaving behind only a thing capable of anything if it
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furthered its objectives. If someone was looking at my face right now, I
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thought, they might just see the same thing. He'd told me, once that
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were the same in some ways. Maybe he was right, because right now I felt
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capable of being monstrous. My footsteps broke the silence in the room
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as I walked forward, the heartbeats of the Beast echoing in turn. It was
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there, I knew as well as I knew my own breath. Still as the grave, but
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looking at the Count with my eyes. It did not delight in the violence to
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come, for once. It \emph{bowed} to it.
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``I'd never considered any of this personal,'' I heard myself say, my
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tone without a speck of feeling. ``I am, after all, invading your home.
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You've not participated in the invasion of Callow, and my only reasons
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for sieging this keep were of a strategic nature.''
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The Count of Olden Oak turned to face me, tall wooden spear in hand.
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``But this?'' I murmured, looking at the corpses of people I'd known,
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trained with, laughed with. ``This was a choice. Those have
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consequences.''
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``Duchess of Moonless Night,'' the fae greeted me calmly. ``You seem
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displeased.''
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``We passed civil the moment you hung up those corpses,'' I said. ``I
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could torture you for this, I suppose, but that's a cheap sort of
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satisfaction. Meaningless, really. There's no evening this particular
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scale.''
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``Winter pretending to be righteous,'' the man mocked. ``A farce of
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farces.''
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``I revoke your right to exist,'' I said, tone measured. ``I will take
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what I want from you, and then you will end.''
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He opened his mouth to speak again but I shot forward. The man wore no
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armour, only green robes, but with fae that meant nothing. My sword came
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down but the shaft of the spear caught it -- whatever sorcery was in the
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wood made it harder than steel, my blade bouncing off. I was past
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caring. I smashed my shield into his shoulder, but his hand came up to
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block it: green light shone on his palm and the momentum of the strike
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vanished. I gave ground, stepping back and slowly circling around him.
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Swift as a hawk he struck, spear aiming for my eyes, but I hit the tip
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of his spear with the top of my shield to knock it off course. The spear
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rose past my head but instantly a branch grew from it, whistling towards
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my throat. I blinked in surprise as it pierced straight through, only
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backing away in time to prevent it from severing my spine. My vocal
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chords were done for, but I no longer needed to speak an aspect to call
|
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on it. \textbf{Rise}, I thought. The wound slowly began to close even as
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the branch that had grown from the spear withdrew back into it. So this
|
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was a Count of Summer, I thought. I had no makeshift prophecy protecting
|
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me from this one, no shield of lies to blunt his power.
|
|
|
|
He would lose regardless.
|
|
|
|
I moved forward again and the spear whipped out, tearing a hole through
|
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my shield -- a last moment adjustment prevented it from piercing through
|
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the hand that held it. He made to withdraw the spear but I focused my
|
|
will and the ice welled from the steel and froze it stuck inside. I
|
|
managed to swing at his face before he forced it out anyway, twisting
|
|
away from by blow -- I cut clean just underneath his eye. Green light
|
|
came out instead of blood, bark growing to fill the wound. I was not the
|
|
only one with a healing ability, it seemed. The hole in my shield froze
|
|
shut with dark ice and I went back on the offensive: his growing trick
|
|
was too dangerous to allow him the initiative. The tip of my blade
|
|
probed his guard as I angled my feet for a thrust, his eyes flickering
|
|
down to notice it. The Beast howled. When he slapped aside the thrust
|
|
with his spear I was already moving, twisting the momentum into a pivot
|
|
that smashed into his spear when he managed to block it again. I tore
|
|
through no flesh, but the strength behind the strike threw him back a
|
|
few feet. I was stronger than him, then. My title of Duchess was not
|
|
entirely meaningless.
|
|
|
|
The spear snaked forward as he moved towards me, casually slapped aside.
|
|
Even as it passed my flank I saw the branch grow and head for my
|
|
kidneys, but I was ready for it this time. I dropped my sword and caught
|
|
the bursting wood with my hand, forcefully moving it aside. Ice
|
|
glistened on the lower edge of my shield, sharpening it like a blade,
|
|
and I rammed that edge into his shoulder. I cut through the robe and he
|
|
hissed in pain, then wrenched out the shield while throwing myself to
|
|
the side before the two branches growing from the first one he'd made
|
|
could punch through between my ribs. I landed in a roll, without a
|
|
weapon, and the Count smirked. Green light shone the gaping wound going
|
|
from his shoulder to his pectorals, bark filling it instantly. I flicked
|
|
my wrist and Pickler's contraption triggered, a knife slapping down onto
|
|
my palm. My Senior Sapper had made sure that there would always be steel
|
|
in my hand when I needed it, her sharp little mind ever-refining the
|
|
tool I'd once used when fighting the Lone Swordsman.
|
|
|
|
``You seem to be at a disadvantage, Duchess,'' the fae mocked.
|
|
|
|
I had no interest in trading barbs with meat. I charged again but found
|
|
the distance between us had been too lengthy: the Count flicked his
|
|
fingers at me, a dozen strands of green light shooting towards my chest
|
|
as I advanced. I stepped aside, adjusted my angle and continued moving
|
|
forward but he still had control of the sorcery: the strands struck down
|
|
at my boot, roots growing from them and nailing me to the floor. My
|
|
momentum cut short, I had to force myself back in order to avoid
|
|
tripping. Immediately the fae struck, moving to the side my shield
|
|
didn't cover with the grace of a cat. My knife wouldn't be able to do
|
|
much against the spear, at this distance. \emph{You have made a
|
|
mistake}, I thought with vindictive satisfaction. I adjusted my grip on
|
|
the knife to be the same I'd use for a sword, and then with a flicker of
|
|
will from the short blade a full sword length of dark ice grew. I cut
|
|
through the spear, and thought it immediately began to grow back his
|
|
eyes widened.
|
|
|
|
I tore through my boot out of the roots effortlessly. I'd already proved
|
|
I beat him in raw strength -- arrogant of him to think he could bridge
|
|
the gap with sorcery. My shield hit his stomach, knocking the breath out
|
|
of him without his little healing being of any use. My blade carved
|
|
straight through the wrist that held the spear, and though it grew back
|
|
in bark that didn't bring back the weapon to his hand. Sorcery attempted
|
|
to do so, but when it began rising from the ground I exerted my will
|
|
again and froze it stuck. I cut his throat, without missing a beat.
|
|
Green light filled the wound, but I was already striking again. I sliced
|
|
through his eyes and he screamed, but a heavy groan sounded out behind
|
|
me. I risked a glance and saw that a hundred spears of wood were
|
|
descending from the branches covering the ceiling. In that heartbeat,
|
|
the world slowed. I could move out of the way, give ground again and
|
|
avoid the danger. But I didn't want to. I wanted to crush him under my
|
|
boot, and the bone-deep hatred I'd felt when first entering Summer well
|
|
up in response.
|
|
|
|
I didn't set it aside, this time. I took it, owned it, carved it into a
|
|
weapon. It was mine, and it would answer to my will like any other
|
|
aspect.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Fall},'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The world went dark. A boundless night sky spread above us, without a
|
|
single speck of light to break the black. There was a cold here that was
|
|
old and merciless, and the branches that would have pierced me slowed
|
|
and turned grey. The sap inside them froze and they \emph{died}. The
|
|
Count of Olden Oak's bark-crafted eyes stared blindly into the dark as
|
|
he panicked. I could feel a flame inside him, feel it dimming with every
|
|
passing heartbeat. Frost spread across his body slowly, and I could feel
|
|
him on the brink of death. I smiled and the night went away, wrenching
|
|
me back into the sunlit basilica. He was barely conscious now, so little
|
|
of him left a child could have beaten him to death. His power would grow
|
|
back, though, given enough time.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, you don't get to die yet,'' I said. ``I still have a use for
|
|
you.''
|
|
|
|
What little was left of his mind smelled of fear, and it was not
|
|
unwarranted.
|