413 lines
23 KiB
TeX
413 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-calamity-ii}{%
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\section{Villainous Interlude: Calamity
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II}\label{villainous-interlude-calamity-ii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Who should really be afraid, between the dragon and the peasant
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with a sword?''}
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-- Dread Emperor Reprobate the First
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\end{quote}
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The Hedge Wizard was attempting an offensive. Wekesa was more irritated
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than worried, but these things had a way of growing out of control if
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allowed to go unchecked. The girl had used an aspect relating to
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conversion to survive the trap laying behind his decoy, an expected
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outcome though the specifics of her counter had come as something of a
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surprise. It had been a mistake on his part to strengthen the detonation
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in hopes of an early crippling: she'd made the power her own and
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promptly shoved it through an exotic spell formula. Proceran-derived, by
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the looks of it. Interesting, that. Practitioners of the Principate had
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been heavily influenced by the Gigantes traditions that still lived
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strong in the Titanomachy, though they still subscribed to the
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much-maligned Pelagian theory of magic. When it came to broader sorcery
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they were far behind Praes, but there were few their match when it came
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to enchantments. The sleeping spell Wekesa had used to keep the Hunter
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under control last year, for example, had been a modified take on an old
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Proceran enchantment. Removing the requirement of true love's kiss had
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been a stark improvement, even if it weakened the overall strength.
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That the roots of the Wizard's formula were in enchanting had been
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obvious. The only way she could have successfully used an amount of
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power that large and unstable was by forcing a strict condition on it.
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Two thirds of it had gone to waste regardless, but the remainder had
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covered seven miles in search of the assigned criterion. She'd found
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five instances, because Wekesa wasn't a fool and he'd laid false trails.
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Running after the relays of false positives would keep her occupied for
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the moment, until a proper response could be mustered. This was, in the
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end, the limitation of the branch of sorcery the Soninke had chosen to
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master. It lacked the \emph{immediacy} of more direct magic. Wards and
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boundaries required outside factors to be accelerated in forming or a
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great deal of preparation. The raging dead on the walls had returned to
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the grave, by now, and it would be a quarter bell yet before the Red
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Skies were ready for actual use. Watching the scrying screens in front
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of him, Warlock tracked the silhouette galloping across the plains
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towards his second relay.
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She'd chose the shape of a horse, this time. Shapeshifting had always an
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interesting branch of magic, in his eyes, but ultimately a dead end. It
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was fixed to the limits allowed by creational laws and even High Arcana
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could at most allow slight deviation from this. No shapeshifter could
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take the shape of a dragon, for one, or even most creatures with
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sorcerous nature. The physical and metaphysical composition was too
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different, and something could not be made of nothing -- particularly if
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that something had markers fundamentally different from anything else in
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Creation. Warlock put the thought aside. He would return to those
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experiments soon enough, after this little dust-off was settled. His son
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had sent him promising results before Wekesa had to leave for the Free
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Cities showing that tapirs, unlike pigs, would gain wings but not the
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ability to breathe fire if infused with enough sorcery. That meant there
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was a qualitative difference between what lay at the heart of a dragon
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and -- ah, yes, distraction. Warlock tapped into one of his inert arrays
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with a thought, arranging the runes through the medium of High Arcana.
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He'd have to use his own will for this, which was unfortunate. Wekesa
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was aware that few aside from the oldest Soninke bloodlines and the
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purest of the Taghreb had as much power to call on, but it was still a
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limiting factor. No mage had endless power, and burning out when calling
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on the kind of sorcery he did would have\ldots{} dire consequences. A
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circle of runes formed in the air above the shapeshifted wizard and
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locked with a hum. A hundred times the gravity should be enough to turn
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her to a smears, he estimated. The array triggered without missing a
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beat, but the Hedge Wizard's form shimmered. Instead of being plastered
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all over the grass she reappeared three feet to the left of his spell,
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human again. Warlock raised an eyebrow. That had looked like
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teleportation, but it was mathematically impossible. Adjusting the
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nature of the scrying array, he dismissed the gravity circle and studied
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the sorcerous trail. Ah, displacement. She'd let the power push her
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through the half-existing space between dimensions. There must have
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bleed, or she would have reappeared directly outside his spell instead
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of drifting to the side.
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Drumming his fingers thoughtfully, Wekesa tapped into another inert
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array. A different approach, then. Direct applications had proved
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ineffective but perhaps indirect would see better results. A bag of
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tricks as eclectic as hers would not come without drawbacks, which made
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it an obvious avenue of approach. Forging four runes of containment on
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cardinal points, Warlock crafted an inwards zone of disruption: within
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the boundaries, all power would be randomly amplified and diminished.
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His lips half-quirked when he saw the tiles she used to walk across the
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sky rip straight through her sleeves in their uncontrolled expansion,
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exploding in a shower of shards when they forcefully surpassed their
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capacity. The Hedge Wizard used the blood from the cuts in her hands to
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trace a line across her face, and to his displeasure this sealed all
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power on her. She ran out of the boundaries dictated by the zone,
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unharmed save for a few cuts. Warlock dismissed the spells, glancing at
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the seven inert arrays that remained around him. He could, of his own
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capacity, use perhaps another four workings of this calibre without
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being at risk of burning out.
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The girl was proving to be troublesome. The Wizard of the West had
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wielded ten times her raw power, but he'd been\ldots{} brittle.
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Breakable, when outplayed. This one was weaker but fluid, and Wekesa
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wondered if that was what she'd always been meant to be. The White
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Knight had been gifted an aspect that made him extremely versatile, a
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way to compensate for Amadeus' massive advantage in experience in skill.
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The Champion was apt to weather great violence and had previously been
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paired with a powerful healer that dabbled in offensive miracles. The
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fighting elements of this heroic band, by the look of it, had ben
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crafted specifically to kill the remaining Calamities. It wouldn't be
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the first time the Heavens attempted such a trick, but it \emph{was} the
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first instance in decades where the band managed to come together before
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core members were eliminated. A greater degree of caution on his part
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was advisable.
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Warlock began to insert his will into an array, but ceased when he felt
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his relays being tapped into. The girl had found one of them, and
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instead of following to the next in the line was\ldots{} mapping out the
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inner workings? He saw her lips move on his scrying screen, reading the
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word. \emph{Learn}. Wekesa's face creased in wariness. It was one thing
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for a transitional Name like Squire or Apprentice to have that aspect,
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quite another to see it in a full-fledged Name. Ranger was living proof
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of how dangerous it could be, given enough time to accumulate weight.
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The Hedge Wizard smiled in triumph, then created another relay to add to
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his own system. Using that, she immediately followed the current down to
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his current location. Her face appeared on the scrying screen ahead of
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him, looking back.
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``Found you,'' the heroine said, eyes hard.
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She'd used her second aspect, Warlock mused. He could return the
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courtesy.
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``\textbf{Link},'' he replied.
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Laws were nothing more than boundaries, and it had been his life's work
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to learn the manipulation of those -- even the law of sympathy. This was
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his most abstract aspect, but perhaps the most dangerous. It allowed him
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to create sympathetic links between entities that, by right, should have
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none. In this case, one of the remaining floating towers and the relays
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the Hedge Wizard had just taken over. Idly tapping a rune, Warlock used
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his access to trigger the collapse of the tower and the power raged
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through the connection. The impact was brutal. Her right shoulder, the
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entire arm and part of her rib cage simply\ldots{} evaporated. The
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heroine threw up blood and Warlock began crafting an array to finish her
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off, but she managed to whisper one word.
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``\textbf{Repurpose},'' she said.
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The same conversion aspect as before, he deduced. The leftover wisps of
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the the tower's power -- and ah, it had collapse on the city as well,
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though not exploded -- came together like blue smoke and reformed the
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mass she had just lost. The result was more magic than flesh, he noted,
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but it would allow her operate well enough. Not a single-use aspect,
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then. Neither was Imbricate, which made them an even match in this
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regard. Wekesa leaned forward, breaking the scrying connection and
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ignoring the battle. She had earned his full attention.
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---
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Ride would have been a lethally dangerous aspect, in the hands of
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another hero. It leant a sharp increase in speed, armament that ignored
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enemy armour and and protection that nothing short of concentrated
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spellfire would be able to dent. It was wasted on the White Knight. The
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man had spent too long learning the skills of others and neglected his
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own abilities, turning an aspect that should have been a
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near-unavoidable killing stroke into a weak gambit unlikely to ever draw
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blood on another Named. Shadows hooked through the window and dug into
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the walls, dragging him through the space and tossing him straight
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through the door in the back of the house. Brushing off wooden shards,
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he landed one street across and through the opening watched the White
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Knight pulverize the entire wall in a blinding flash of light, the
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aspect dimming after it had struck a target. Hanno landed in a crouch as
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Black sent out his shadow tendrils, green eyes seeking structural weak
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points. Two sharpers detonated a heartbeat later and the roof collapsed
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on the hero's head as the villain made for the rooftops. Better to
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change his angle of attack before reengaging.
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He'd already baited out one aspect without using any of his own, though
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admittedly two of his three were less\ldots{} direct than those of his
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predecessors. Lead strengthened whoever he led on the field, but had no
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real use in a duel such as this, and while Conquer was currently
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sharpening his physical strength and reflexes it would do little else in
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this kind of situation. The aspect was better fit for war than
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skirmished between Named, a reflection of his departure from the
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traditional role of the Black Knights of old. As for Destroy, it was
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best employed as a tool for denial of enemy abilities. Anything it could
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accomplish on a purely physical level could be accomplished by more
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mundane means he had available, and should he ever attempt to use it in
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direct opposition to a hero's aspect the difference in power would see
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him promptly crushed. Or worse, corner his opponent badly enough they
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would have to learn new abilities on the spot that he had no solid
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measure against. It was a balancing act, this, where he must carefully
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lead the enemy in a position where they could be killed without ever
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overpowering them by too much.
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The most effective moment for the kill was usually when the hero had
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pulled out their trump card, or just after they had, and even then there
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were risks. Should he ever fail to manage a killing stroke then, the
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situation could be reversed in a heartbeat.
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Now, with Ride taken out of the equation the second stage of this fight
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should be approaching. The moment the White Knight was put in a dire
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situation he would tap into the aspect that leant him the different
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skillsets he'd used to recover from his incoming defeat in their last
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duel, but this was not a state of affairs that should be approached
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lightly. For one, Hanno would become exceedingly difficult to contain
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the moment he began using these other skills. The loss of his enchanted
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weapon should hinder him, the very reason Amadeus had arranged its
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destruction, but it would have been foolish to assume the man could not
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produce similar results using the Light. It was, after all, the very
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stuff of the Heavens shaped by will. Maintaining it had to be tiring,
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however, and this had been a side-benefit to be achieved by getting rid
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of the artefact. Amadeus knew better than to attempt to win through
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heroic exhaustion, but slowing down the enemy was very much possible.
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And if the White Knight attempted to compensate for that by using his
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Name, well, he would be effectively hollowing out his own power and
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heading directly for a collapse down the line. That would be another
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opportunity for a kill, in Black's experience, if he was quick enough.
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The dark-skinned hero emerged from the rubble without wounds, dark eyes
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searching for the opposition. Amadeus exerted his will and one of his
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two remaining corpses moved behind the shutters of an empty house,
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drawing enemy attention. He struck in just that moment, staggering four
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blades at calculated intervals. The first held by a tendril was parried
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when the White Knight immediately turned to face him, the second would
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have struck at the weak point of the greaves but was avoided by a shift
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of footing and the sword he swung himself was caught in hand.
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\emph{Mistake.} His shield struck the hero in the chest, taking
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advantage of the weakened stance to throw him off his feet, and the
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fourth blade plunged down from above and went straight through the
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plate. Goblin steel scraped against the collarbone instead of carving
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it. He'd been imprecise, and so lost an opportunity for a deeper wound.
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Unfortunate. Amadeus gave ground immediately and the shadow-held blades
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retreated with him, just in time to avoid the burst of Light the hero
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detonated in his wound to seal it.
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A costly way of healing, this. The touch of the Heavens on mortal flesh
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was never light, or without consequence. Amadeus could see the function
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it was meant for, though. If the White Knight was truly meant to face
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Catherine after she'd succeeded him, then he gave the man six in ten
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odds of winning a duel against her. His apprentice still had the nasty
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habit of overcommitting at close range once she'd drawn blood, and a
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semi-offensive form of healing like this would be damaging to her.
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Combined with her lack of experience with different kinds of Named, the
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White Knight's aspects would gain him a decisive advantage in a clash.
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As usual, the Heavens stacked the fight before the fight ever happened.
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Best he never let it come to that, for everyone's sake. Catherine was
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too important to die at the hands of some hunting dog of the Seraphim.
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``Thousands will die tonight, because you keep me from checking the
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Tyrant,'' the White Knight said, circling around him.
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Heroes did have a fascination with talking, didn't they? Black reached
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for the bundle of power he'd left in the second corpse that remained,
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watching through its eyes. Sixty to eight heartbeats before it arrived,
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depending on the struggling. Running out the hourglass by talking was
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acceptable.
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``I have no personal enmity with anyone here,'' Amadeus said calmly.
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``And this war is not of my making.''
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``Yet you participate in it,'' the White Knight pressed. ``You have
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responsibility for this. Guilt.''
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``I've been afflicted by many things, in my old age,'' Black said.
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``Guilt is not one of them.''
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``And you believe this makes you better?'' Hanno said.
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``Oh, I am very much a monster,'' Amadeus conceded, reluctantly amused.
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``But then so are the things you serve and yourself as well. A mere
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different shade of barbarity hardly puts you in a position to lecture,
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White.''
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The hero would have replied, but Black's undead cleared the corner and
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the man went still. The corpse held a struggling woman in its arms,
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knife at her throat.
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``Surrender or she dies,'' Amadeus said.
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The man went directly for him, without hesitation. The Choir of
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Judgement did not suffer lack of decisiveness in its servants. A twist
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of will saw the woman released and she fled straight to hero and now
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\emph{that} had him hesitate. A different matter, a hostage and an
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innocent in need of protection. The White Knight was not the first hero
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sworn to Judgement he had fought. Their kind was taught to think of
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people in particular categories, and during that heartbeat the hero had
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to readjust his assessment of her. In that very moment Black struck,
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blades in motion. One tendril was sent directly towards the woman's
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back, slowly enough Hanno could parry it if he moved there.
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``\textbf{Recall},'' the hero said.
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He blurred in motion, shaft of light lashing straight through the shadow
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holding the sword as he protected the civilian. \emph{Spear-wielding
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skillset, possibly a lancer}. \emph{High mobility, expect piercing
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strikes.} No wound, but Amadeus' base objective had been achieved
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regardless. Now the more difficult work could begin. In silence, the
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green-eye man advanced.
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---
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It was getting warm out, and not just because Sabah was swinging half a
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hundred pounds of solid steel at the kid. Warlock's ritual with the sky
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was getting stronger, getting closer to what he'd pulled at the Fields
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of Streges. It was only a matter of time until the rain of fire began,
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and anybody's guess if he would limit it to just that. Captain wasn't
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eager to start dancing around tower-sized burning rocks falling from
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above, but she was no stranger to it either. The Valiant Champion was
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way ahead the curve even for a hero her age and she'd learned from their
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fight at Delos, but she wasn't used to fighting an opponent like Sabah
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and it was costing her. That shift in her footing, right there? It was
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meant to deal with something Captain's size, yes, but something on four
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legs. A monster, not a person. The hammer ploughed into her shield and
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tossed her into the wall, though the thing didn't break. She'd learned
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the trick for putting Name power into weapons since they'd last fought,
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though she used it to strengthen the steel instead of add sharpness to a
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blade the way most Named did.
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Given another few years, this one would have been a right terror. She
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hit like godsdamned trebuchet and her defence got stronger with every
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scrap. Sabah had fought quite a few heroes meant to stand and deliver,
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over the years, but this one was head and shoulder above the rest of the
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crowd. She could take punishment like a Holy Shield and still swing like
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a Blood Sword. At least she didn't go berserk like the latter. Even with
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the Beast out Sabah had found him hard to put down when he started
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spasming and his body unhinged. Those people from around Hedges were
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weird fucks, even for Callowans. Still, tonight was tonight and not in a
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few years. The kid was still out of her league for now, and down an
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aspect as well. Sabah hadn't had to use one of hers yet, though since
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this was their second scrap she'd probably have to at some point. The
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more you fought heroes the more of a pain they became, as a rule.
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Putting some length to her stride, Captain moved to strike while the
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iron was hot.
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The first hit the Champion ducked under and it put a hole in the wall,
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but the second nailed her to the floor through the shoulder. Didn't
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break bone, though. Fucking Name strengthening. Sabah kicked her in the
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stomach but she brought up her shield in time and it just blew her back
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a few feet.
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``Good fight,'' the Champion praised, grinning through her badger helm.
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``Getting blood flow.''
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``You've got the most potential to grow out of your band,'' Captain
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replied honestly. ``I'm glad we're fighting now and not after you went
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adventuring a few years.''
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``Life is adventure,'' the girl philosophized in broken tradertalk.
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``Kill many things back home. Much slaughter of other claimants.''
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Well, they did say the Named of the Dominion were closest to the old
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breed of heroes. The ones who'd gone traipsing like well-armed vagrants
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around Calernia, killing dragons and looting every tomb in sight. Before
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the House of Light had gone and civilized them, like that entire
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religion wasn't about licking the feet of the angels telling you what to
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do. Sabah had never understood why anyone would pay a tithe to be given
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sermons, but people out of the Wasteland did tend to get strange ideas
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in their heads. Captain usually left the statecraft to Malicia and
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Amadeus, but she did know that when it came to commerce middlemen always
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screwed the buyers. Why most of Calernia wouldn't think to apply
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something that simple to the Gods they kept to, she had no notion.
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``I don't suppose you could just go back to Levant?'' Sabah asked.
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``Leave the Empire alone. I'm fairly sure Black would not pursue if you
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just stuck to your borders.''
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``Eh,'' the Champion refused. ``Much boring. No good fight there. Procer
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all peace-talking, now. You legend, Biggest Girl! Many songs for slaying
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of you, and drinks without pay.''
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Not talk about the power of friendship or justice to be served, which
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she had to admit was rather refreshing. There were only so many times
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you could get those speeches before they kind of\ldots{} melded
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together. About half of them quoted the Book of All Things, too, and
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Sabah hadn't read that so she never got the references. She sighed.
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``I apologize, then,'' she said. ``Because I don't think this ends well
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for you.''
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``You much kicking of my arse,'' the heroine ruefully admitted. ``But I
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Valiant Champion, not no-balls Arlesite. I stand, and \textbf{Exalt}.''
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Second aspect of the night. They were doing brisk business. Sabah
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watched the ripple go through Creation and frowned. Domain, huh.
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Champion types did tend to have those. Amadeus had been caught in the
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Unconquered Champion's pocket dimension a few years back and Sabah
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had\ldots{} not taken it well. Wekesa hadn't been able to locate him at
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first, so they'd had to face the possibility he was dead. She'd lost
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control of the Beast when she'd been told the news, and woken up to a
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butcher's yard of half-eaten corpses. She still had dreams about that,
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sometimes. She'd not been that out of control since she'd been a young
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girl. If Warlock hadn't started carving into the soul of the hero's
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childhood friend to find a hint about what the nature of the dimension
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was, the others might have thought him dead too and that would have
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gotten\ldots{} bad. If Ranger had come down from Refuge to avenge him,
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she didn't think Vale would have survived it -- or anyone trying to get
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her to stop, for that matter.
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The girl's domain was just an arena, Sabah saw. Old sunny stone with
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empty stands stretched in a long oval, but maybe not so empty as they
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seemed at first. If she sharpened her ears she could almost hear
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cheering and applause. The two of them were standing in sand, and the
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Valiant Champion raised her axe. Her movements were more fluid than
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before. She was probably stronger inside here, a sharp increase of
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everything as long as the domain held. Fit with the word, anyway.
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\emph{That poor kid.} She'd picked her grounds, yes, but she'd also
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taken Captain somewhere she didn't have to worry about the consequences
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of going all out. It was one thing to lean into the Beast when there was
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a risk she'd end up eating a portion of Nicae. Another when it was just
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the two of them. Sabah rolled her shoulder, and dropped the hammer.
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``\textbf{Unleash},'' she said, and the world went red.
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