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939 lines
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\hypertarget{prologue}{%
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\chapter*{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{prologue}} \chaptermark{Prologue}
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\epigraph{``If my allies were half as reliable as my enemies, I would have a
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different moniker.''}{King Henry Fairfax, the Landless, upon being told of the Praesi
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invasion of Principate-occupied Callow}
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It went against Iason's instincts, but Amelia had been right. She had a
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knack for these things, it came with her Name. They must keep a low
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profile, at least for now. The sooner they moved out of Dormer and into
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the countryside -- rumour at the market was that large swaths of the
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south were still patrolled only irregularly by the Legions -- the
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better, but as long as they stayed in the city they had to be quiet.
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It'd been most a day now since the three of them had left the river
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barge they'd stowed away on, and they'd split for the afternoon. Lergo
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had gone to have a look at what the locals called Summer Hill, the mound
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of melted stone where they said the Black Queen had tricked the Queen of
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Summer into returning to Arcadia. The Ashuran had whined like a child
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about having to abandon his flamboyant crimson clothes for something
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less attention-grabbing, but he'd given in anyways. And made eyes at
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Amelia all the while, the pretentious twit. The Red Mage had proved he
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was a force to reckon with in a fight, but Iason had not grown to like
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him in the months since their band first assembled. The Gallant Bandit
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herself had gone to find them accommodations for the night, so he'd been
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charged with obtaining foodstuffs for the journey ahead.
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The marketplace in Dormer was thriving, for a city that'd been emptied
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and set aflame not even a year ago. It was Callowans running the shops
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and stalls, but there was a gaggle of foreign merchants as well. Iason
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found it difficult to tell apart the Taghreb and the men of the Free
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Cities, for they looked much alike in skin and faces, but the
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black-skinned Soninke stood out starkly. The hero bargained
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half-heartedly with a peddler for lentils and dried meat, rather certain
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he got robbed on the exchange. He was paying with silver \emph{fidi}
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from Mercantis, one of the few coins no merchant in Calernia refused,
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and he was not certain how it compared to Imperial coinage. The
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merchant's smiling admission he had no scale to compare the weights did
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little to inspire trust, though the man was unmoved when Iason
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threatened to seek another peddler. Odd behaviour, from a merchant who
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could not even afford a stall.
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``There,'' the peddler said, taking pity on him and giving back a few
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coppers.
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Not a mintage he recognized, Iason noted. It could be worthless for all
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he knew.
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``Don't look at me like that, son,'' the merchant snorted. ``That's from
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the Royal Mint in Marchford, not Harrow trash like everyone else is
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trying to offload. Call it my kindness of the day.''
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``Callow has a mint?'' Iason said in Lower Miezan, surprised. ``I
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thought it used the Tower's coin.''
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``The Bastard Lord had one built,'' the peddler told him approvingly.
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``That's Taghreb for you. Vicious fuckers one and all, but they've a
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nose for business. Mind you, everyone still takes Praesi mintage. Have
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to, with all the gold coming south these days.''
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``There are a lot of foreigners,'' the hero agreed, casting a wary look
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at a nearby Soninke.
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The peddler looked amused.
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``You don't sound like no Callowan, boy,'' he said. ``Delos?''
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``Atalante,'' he replied. ``My father was, anyway. I was raised west.''
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He'd grown to manhood in the principality of Creusens, but admitting as
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much in this city would have been the act of a fool.
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``We got a lot of Wastelanders around nowadays,'' the peddler agreed.
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``Trying to get their hands on grain, you know. Mercantis caught on so
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the Consortium is gouging them on prices and buying up the reserves in
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the other cities to drive up the prices. They're used to this country
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being the greener pasture.''
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``Few of them are smiling,'' Iason said, only now noticing.
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``That's `cause the Bastard Lord restricted commerce in foodstuffs,''
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the merchant grinned nastily. ``They want more than scraps, they have to
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get a permit in Laure. The really desperate ones are ruining themselves
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emptying tavern larders one at a time, but already the court is clamping
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down on that.''
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``That seems like a loss of profit for you all,'' Iason said.
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``Worth it, to have the crown's men around when some Wastelanders try to
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get nasty,'' the peddler said, spitting to the side. ``Not that there's
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been a lot of those. I'll say this for the Black Queen -- since she
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crucified all those pricks after Second Liesse, Praesi have been
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stepping \emph{real} light around here.''
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The hero was almost nauseated. They said the villain ruling Callow had
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nailed hundreds to crosses after slaying her rival, made them grisly
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ornaments along the road. The merchant should have been appalled, but if
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anything he sounded grudgingly approving. Iason had never been skilled
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at hiding his thoughts -- it went against his Name to be less than
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Stalwart in anything he did -- and the peddler picked up on it. The man
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spat to the side again, looking warier now.
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``You with the House of Light, son?'' he probed.
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``A lay brother,'' Iason said. ``Never took the full vows. I don't have
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the disposition for it.''
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Full-fledged brothers had to vow pacifism, and it was in his nature to
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meet injustice sword in hand.
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``Didn't know that was a thing,'' the peddler said, but he was
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mollified.
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It wasn't, not in Callow anyway. The House of Light in Procer tended to
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consider its equivalent in Callow to be a very\ldots{} provincial
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cousin. Prone to eccentricities. That the Order of the White Hand, true
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anointed paladins, had been allowed to hold lands of its own in the old
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days was spoken of as impious back home. It was just history, now that
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the Order had been exterminated, but Iason had a personal interest in
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the matter. His Name had but few previous incarnations, and most of them
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had come to be in Callow. The hero did not linger after that, already
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uncomfortable with how much attention he'd drawn. He hoisted the sack
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over his shoulder and made his way to the quarter by the docks, where
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Amelia had said she'd find them an inn. He was wondering how to find
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her, when she found him instead. The Gallant Brigand was almost as tall
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as he was, lithe and graceful in a way he could not help but stare at.
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Dark hair kept in a ponytail was usually covered by a highwayman's hat,
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though she'd stashed it away for the sake of discretion, and the notched
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scar on her cheek somehow only added to her beauty.
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``There you are,'' Amelia smiled. ``Fruitful foray?''
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Iason cleared his throat uncomfortably. The cloistered life in Aviliers
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had not taught him how to deal with beautiful women, and he was always
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on the backfoot around her. At least Lergo wasn't there. The Red Mage
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always seemed to make it worse with his glib and cutting japes. As if
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the sorcerer himself didn't hang on her every word.
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``I have supplies,'' Iason stiffly replied. ``Have you secured
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accommodations?''
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Amelia snorted and clapped his shoulder.
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``Secured accommodations,'' she repeated teasingly. ``You need to loosen
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up, Iason. Though I suppose that would be against type.''
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\emph{I can be fun}, the Stalwart Paladin silently insisted. \emph{Just
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because I can't set things on fire with a word doesn't mean I'm a bore.}
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Instead of saying that he ended up chewing on his tongue like a fool, to
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the woman's visible amusement.
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``Come on,'' she said, withdrawing her hand. ``I found us a place. Be
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warned, though. It was cheap for a reason.''
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Iason frowned when he first saw the inn, as the warning seemed
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inaccurate. It was not luxurious palace, but it was spacious and swift
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perusal of the common room revealed it to be scrupulously clean. Perhaps
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she'd meant the food would be horrid? It hardly be worse than the
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cooking they'd inflicted on themselves journeying from the countryside
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to Atalante after forming their band in Nicae. The Gallant -- Iason did
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not like to think of the other part of her Name, no matter how much he
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liked her -- shot him a toothy grin after he set down the sack, and a
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moment later a loud screaming match began in the kitchen adjoining the
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common room. The hero grimaced. Lergo strolled in an hour later, still
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looking put-out at wearing wool instead of blindingly red silk, and
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claimed at seat at the table where Iason had been sharing a drink with
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Amelia and failing miserably at small talk. The Red Mage stole his
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tankard and drank from it, wrinkling his nose at the taste. The sorcerer
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had been born to one of the high tiers of citizenship in Ashur, he was
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likely used to much better fare. Everything about him smacked of
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arrogant privilege, which had not become any less grating with time.
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``Had a look at that hill,'' Lergo casually said in tradertalk. ``That
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was a serious scrap. If our cousin up north can tangle that hard, we're
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in for quite a vigorous dance.''
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The cousin up north, they'd taken to calling her to be discreet.
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Catherine Foundling, Queen of Callow. The Squire, some said, though
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others implied she had another Name yet to be revealed. The breadth of
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the swirl of rumours around the villain that ruled Callow was
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staggering, for one so young. \emph{Undefeated in battle. She murdered a
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god to steal his mantle and tricked two others into doom without ever
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unsheathing her blade. She has more lives than a cat, holds sway over
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dead and fae alike.} Her cohorts, the Woe, had been revealed to the
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wider world through the infamous massacre they called the Doom of Liesse
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back home. The Hierophant, a cold madman whose strange sorceries tamed
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demons and stilled miracles. The Thief, a fallen heroine said to have
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once stolen an entire fleet and even snatched the sun out of the sky.
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The Archer, the greatest pupil of the Lady of the Lake who had never
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lost in single combat. And the last, Hakram Deadhand. The Adjutant. They
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said he was unkillable, that he was large as an ogre and his hand of
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bones could wrest out your soul. The heirs to the Calamities had made a
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bloody debut, last year. Iason had paid close attention to the rumours,
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knowing even the slightest hint could make the difference between life
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and death.
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The three of them had come, after all, to kill the Black Queen.
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``That might have been the fae, not her,'' Amelia whispered in the same
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language, one of the few they all shared. ``Her talent is supposed to be
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ice, not fire.''
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``And what a talent fire can be,'' Lergo said, grinning suggestively at
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the Gallant. ``The element of passion, you know.''
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Iason's teeth clenched.
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``We're still on the outskirts,'' Amelia said. ``We'll hear more when we
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go deeper into the country. The south looks like very promising grounds
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to begin our work.''
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They would, to her. The Gallant Brigand had been vague about her
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activities before joining their band, but Iason had pieced together that
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she'd made her mark in the wake of the Tyrant of Helike's armies as they
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sowed chaos across the Free Cities. The southern parts of Callow were
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still feeling the aftermath of the last three wars, and so she would be
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moving on somewhat familiar territory. Robbing the powerful to help the
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powerless was a worthy cause, even if he disapproved of her methods.
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Banditry was a sin in the eyes of the Heavens, else why would so many
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bandit Names be sworn to the Hellgods? They had to delay the
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conversation after that, for the innkeepers came to offer their service.
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Callowans both, an old married couple. They offered stew on the house,
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though the ale was not, and to Iason's mild irritation lingered
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afterwards to chat with what seemed to be their only current patrons.
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Some matters were their own explanation.
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``Dormer born and raised, the both of us,'' the old man -- Albert, as he
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insisted on being called -- told them proudly. ``City's had a rough few
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years but we'll get back on our feet, you'll see.''
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``I heard Dormer was part of the Liesse Rebellion,'' Amelia said
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smilingly, ``but the damage was all from the fae, I am told?''
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``Good Anne dragged us into the mess, it's true,'' the old woman
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grudgingly admitted. ``She cut a deal with the Black Queen after,
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though, spared us the worse. And she's moved up in the world since, eh?
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Governess-General. A balm on everyone's soul that.''
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``Her whelp of a nephew's governor now,'' Albert said. ``He did fine
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getting people out before Summer came, but too many still died. His aunt
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he is not.''
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``That's not on the boy,'' the old woman sharply said. ``That's because
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a villain is queen. Ma always said that makes you cursed. Just look at
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the Wasteland.''
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``Your mother also said a bowl of cream and bread crumbs would keep the
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fairies happy, Mary,'' the old man mocked. ``How'd \emph{that} go
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again?''
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The three of them sat awkwardly as the old couple argued loudly, Iason
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deriving some satisfaction form the fact that Lergo looked as
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uncomfortable as he felt himself.
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``I couldn't help but notice the portraits by the kitchen door,'' Amelia
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intervened. ``You have children?''
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Gods they had they been lucky to run into her, Iason thought. And not
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only because looking at her when they trekked through the countryside
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made the journey a great deal more pleasant. Neither he nor the Red Mage
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had a way with people.
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``Only the one now,'' Mary soberly said. ``Our youngest died at First
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Liesse. Them devils summoned by the Diabolist did it.''
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``Aye, and the Black Queen killed her dead,'' Albert grunted. ``She's a
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hard one, make no mistake, but these are bad times. Hard is what we
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need. Even Jehan the Wise hung himself some princes. Seven and one, like
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in the song.''
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``It's ungodly is what it is,'' the old woman barked. ``A villain queen?
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No good will come of it.''
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``She was crowned by a Sister all proper, Mary,'' the old man insisted.
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``What more can you ask?''
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``Everyone knows the House up north went tame,'' she sniffed.
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``We've heard a lot about the queen, down south,'' Iason said. ``Some of
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it was less than pleasant.''
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``Never said she was a choir girl,'' Albert defended. ``But Hells, it's
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still better than Procer ain't it? Kingdom's back and Praes is playing
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nice. If the rest of the world would just leave us alone we'd muddle on
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just fine.''
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``He has to say that,'' Mary told them. ``Lily went and joined the army,
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the fool girl. Taking orders from an orc calling herself marshal of all
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things.''
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``If the orc pays her taxes and fights at the border, I say she's
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welcome here,'' the old man said stubbornly. ``A whole goblin tribe
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settled at Marchford and that turned out all right. You have to forgive
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Mary, she's a country girl. I'm a learned man, me. Went to Laure once
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when I was a boy.''
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``Not the Laure story again,'' the old woman sighed.
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Lergo spoke up, sparing them the Laure story, and Iason had never before
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been so close to feeling fondness for the man.
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``We intend on travelling north,'' the Red Mage said. ``Are the roads
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safe?''
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``Sure, if-'' Albert began, but he paused.
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In the distance, bells were ringing. Four times, Iason counted.
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``Again?'' the old man said.
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``Last one went straight to the Blessed Isle, made it far inland
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after,'' Mary said. ``Guess that was the last of the clever bunch.''
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``That's thrice now,'' Albert complained. ``Last time it took all day to
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clean up the docks after. No wonder we never get clients, with all them
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foreigners mucking up the city.''
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He paused, the glanced at the three heroes.
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``No offence,'' he assured them.
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``None taken,'' the Gallant Brigand lied. ``We're new to town, so I'm at
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a bit of a loss. What did the bells mean?''
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``Oh, you dears don't need to worry,'' the old woman said. ``Just stay
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indoors, it was the curfew bells. It'll be foggy out soon anyway.''
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``Curfew?'' Iason said. ``What for?''
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``Heroes,'' Albert said. ``Some must have come. Streets have to be
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cleared until that's done with.''
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The Stalwart Paladin's blood ran cold. Already? How could the Empire
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possibly have known? It hadn't even been a whole day. The three heroes
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shared a look and excused themselves to their rooms, telling their hosts
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of travel weariness, and made council in Iason's own.
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``We can't stay here,'' Amelia began. ``We can't risk putting those two
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in the middle of a fight between Named.''
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``They must have scried us, it's the only explanation,'' the Red Mage
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whispered. ``That shouldn't be possible, not with the Paladin bearing
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Heaven's touch. Unless you screwed up, Iason.''
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``I don't \emph{use} the touch, mage,'' the Paladin coldly replied. ``It
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is there. Always. There is no intent needed.''
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``I used to hunt for Helike supply caches, back in the day,'' the
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Gallant Brigand said quietly. ``Easy work, good loot. The way I'd find
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them was by watching the roads the Tyrant's men used most, then doubling
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back.''
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``I don't follow,'' Iason admitted.
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``That is because you're a sword-waving simpleton,'' the Red Mage
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drawled, and the Paladin resisted the urge to punch that twinkle out of
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his eye. ``The touch, it blocks actual scrying but the spell would still
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register failure. They moment it did they must have known we were
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coming, and they tracked us with the same. That's impressively clever,
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I'll admit.''
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``Then they might be able to track us to here,'' Amelia urgently said.
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``We need to move now.''
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Neither of them argued. Iason left silver by his bed to pay for both the
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night and the trouble, as his companions grabbed their personal affairs.
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The Mage took longer, and returned decked in red silks.
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``We are trying to be \emph{discreet},'' the Paladin hissed, his accent
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thickening.
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``Discreet is over,'' the man shrugged. ``Now is the time for panache.''
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``Well, I hope you can run in those,'' the Gallant amusedly said,
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adjusting her hat. ``Out the window, boys.''
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Heroic work, Iason thought, involved a lot more jumping down windowsills
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than he'd anticipated. He'd not needed to change, as he'd never taken
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off the chain mail under his coat and rarely wore a helmet. The Heavens
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provided armour when he required it. He landed as silently as a man
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wearing over twenty pounds of steel could, which was not very. The
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Gallant landed smoothly as a cat, and the Red Mage nearly broke his
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ankle landing. The Paladin smothered a smile, as it was unkind to take
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enjoyment from the misfortune of others. However richly deserved.
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``Well,'' Amelia said, lowering the brim of her hat. ``There's that fog
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Mary was talking about.''
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It'd been late afternoon and the winters in southern Callow were mild
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this late in the year -- spring would not come for months yet but there
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was no snow in sight -- which made the sudden appearance of thick fog
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rather jarring. There was nothing natural about this.
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``Might I suggest we leave the city before a full legion comes after
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us?'' Lergo suggested drily. ``Blood doesn't show on these robes but it
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\emph{does} smell.''
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``Keep an eye out,'' Iason said, for the first since he'd come ashore
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back in his element. ``As an opening move, this only makes sense if only
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our vision is restricted.''
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Otherwise the enemy was simply helping them escape. As the moved quietly
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through the streets, the Paladin wondered how many of the Woe would have
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come. The full five? That might be more than they could handle. Two or
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three, he was confident they could deal with. Four they could flee. Five
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with a sorcerer as reportedly powerful as the Hierophant among them
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would be too many. Best that they never encounter the enemy at all, and
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disappear into the countryside where they would be harder to track.
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Amelia suddenly stopped.
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``We're being watched,'' the Gallant Brigand said.
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He did not question her: she has an aspect relating to this, though he
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knew not the word. Iason could see no one so he sharpened his hearing.
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Scuttling above, on the rooftops.
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``Goblin,'' he said, and unsheathed his longsword. ``Roof to the left.''
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The Gallant followed suit with her sabre and the Red Mage fell behind
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them. Eyes watching above, Iason saw a leering green face pop out from
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thatching. Yellow eyes shone bright in the fog, above a grin of
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needle-like fangs.
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``Don't you think it was a little racist to assume I was a goblin?'' the
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creature mused. ``Plenty of people use rooftops, you know. They're like
|
|
streets that make it easier to murder.''
|
|
|
|
The Stalwart Paladin blinked, then opened his mouth. Had he -- but the
|
|
goblin had just said\ldots{} He closed his mouth.
|
|
|
|
``You're quite brave, to seek out three heroes on your own,'' the Red
|
|
Mage said.
|
|
|
|
``Well, we don't live old as a rule,'' the greenskin said. ``But hey,
|
|
that's why there's a \emph{lot} of us.''
|
|
|
|
Iason's hearing was still sharpened and that was why he heard them move.
|
|
Not one but dozens, and they'd all struck at once. He'd expected
|
|
crossbows but instead what came tumbling down was balls of clay with lit
|
|
fuses, and without missing a beat he called on the protection of the
|
|
Heavens. A halo of light wreathed him and his allies as well, but he'd
|
|
miscalculated. The munitions exploded into blinding brightness with a
|
|
deafening clap -- he had to blink it away and force the Light into his
|
|
eyes. The Red Mage cursed, and when Iason's vision returned there was no
|
|
sign of any goblins. All they had left behind was a red trail of burning
|
|
powder in the sky. \emph{They marked our position}, he thought. He
|
|
glanced at the others. Amelia had covered her eyes with the brim of her
|
|
hat, but by the looks of it the noise had still affected her.
|
|
|
|
``Run,'' he said, not sure how loud he was being.
|
|
|
|
The roar of the munitions was still sounding in his ears. The others
|
|
understood him well enough to obey, and they headed for the closets gate
|
|
without even the pretence of discretion. Dormer had turned into a ghost
|
|
town, every door and window closed. In the fog, he could barely make out
|
|
the shape of the houses unless he empowered his eyes with his Name. It
|
|
began clearing out close to the gate. Whoever had done this, he thought,
|
|
must have relied on the river to provide the water. Lucky them, they'd
|
|
chosen the gate opposite. Providence. The gate was unguarded, and that
|
|
was when he began doubting his last thought. No, he mused. Not
|
|
unguarded. There were two people by the guardhouse. One seated on a
|
|
bench, the other standing by it. Iason squinted. It was a woman, seated.
|
|
Tan skin and high cheekbones, long hair in a practical leather binding
|
|
behind her. Her legs were crossed and she was pulling at a pipe. The man
|
|
at her side was almost inhumanly slender, a whip of a body in a long
|
|
black tunic. At his hip was a sheathless sword, and one of his eyes was
|
|
covered by a dark silken blindfold with silvery lettering. It was the
|
|
hair that attracted his attention, though. It must have been a trick of
|
|
the light, but for an instant it had seemed made of crow's feathers.
|
|
|
|
``Iason,'' the Gallant Brigand urgently said. ``The woman's cloak.''
|
|
|
|
He looked. It must have once been entirely black, he thought, but it was
|
|
no longer. A patchwork of colourful strips had been woven over it, and
|
|
even some matter he did not recognized. It looked like rippling wind.
|
|
The collar, though, what laid woven into it felt like a sin. That made
|
|
this the Mantle of Woe, and the woman wearing it\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``Catherine Foundling,'' he said. ``The Black Queen.''
|
|
|
|
The woman spewed out a stream of smoke, still sitting. Iason met her
|
|
eyes. For one of her reputation, he was distinctly unimpressed. There
|
|
was no pressure there, only a young woman looking vaguely exhausted.
|
|
|
|
``Afternoon,'' the Black Queen said. ``Welcome to the Kingdom of Callow,
|
|
folks. Evidently you know who I am, so that saves us some tediousness.''
|
|
|
|
``Your trap will avail you nothing,'' Iason said harshly.
|
|
|
|
``This isn't a trap,'' the villain mused. ``Not unless you make it one.
|
|
If I wanted you dead, Robber wouldn't have tumbled you a warning shot.
|
|
It would have been goblinfire instead of brightsticks, and already it'd
|
|
all be over but the screaming.''
|
|
|
|
``How civilized of you,'' the Gallant Brigand said, her tone slightly
|
|
mocking. ``Since we're all being so friendly, might I venture as to ask
|
|
what you want from us?''
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen spewed out a stream of smoke, studying them calmly.
|
|
|
|
``That's my line,'' she said. ``Setting aside that you passed the border
|
|
illegally, having three heavily-armed Named wandering the countryside
|
|
without so much as a by-your-leave just isn't in the cards. What are you
|
|
here for?''
|
|
|
|
``Introductions first,'' the Gallant demurred. ``I am-``
|
|
|
|
``Amelia of Helike, daughter of Lasarn,'' the one-eyed man at her side
|
|
smiled, teeth like ivory. ``You are known to us.''
|
|
|
|
Amelia blanched. The way he'd spokeen that last sentence\ldots{} Iason
|
|
was not one to frighten easily, yet it had sent a shiver down his spine.
|
|
|
|
``That's Larat,'' the Black Queen cheerfully said. ``Or at least that's
|
|
what I call him. It pisses him off a lot, but why even \emph{have} a
|
|
treacherous lieutenant if you're not going to taunt them at every
|
|
opportunity?''
|
|
|
|
``We have come to study the aftermath of the fae incursion, Your
|
|
Majesty,'' Lergo said. ``Purely academic curiosity in my part, I assure
|
|
you.''
|
|
|
|
The lie sat ill with Iason, but he kept his mouth shut. Informing the
|
|
woman that they had come to slay her and release Callow from her grasp
|
|
would lead to a struggle he was not certain they could win. Not yet. The
|
|
Black Queen pulled at her pipe, then sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Red Mage, was it?'' she said. ``A warning for you. Of all the shit
|
|
decisions you've made today, trying to lie to me is close to the top of
|
|
the list. Don't do it again. I take it you're here to kill me, then.''
|
|
|
|
It was a little insulting, Iason thought, that she sounded more
|
|
irritated than threatened by that deduction. Arrogance was ever the
|
|
downfall of Evil, he reminded himself. She spewed out another mouthful
|
|
of smoke.
|
|
|
|
``Then what?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``Pardon,'' Lergo replied, sounding baffled.
|
|
|
|
``You kill me, glory to the Heavens and all that good stuff,'' she
|
|
waved. ``Then what?''
|
|
|
|
``The people of Callow are freed,'' Iason said. ``They rise against the
|
|
wicked Praesi and-``
|
|
|
|
``This,'' the Black Queen sighed as she interrupted, ``is why I have to
|
|
keep killing you people. Look, I understand better than anyone how easy
|
|
it is to start thinking you can just stab your way out of a mess, but
|
|
you haven't \emph{thought this through}. Putting my head on a pike just
|
|
makes a different sort of mess.''
|
|
|
|
``That's what tyrants always say,'' the Gallant quietly said. ``That
|
|
they may be a plague, but the world would be worse without them. You
|
|
have to lance a wound for it to be able heal.''
|
|
|
|
``You're not lancing anything, kid,'' the villain said. ``You're just
|
|
bleeding the body. And it's been a long time since anyone thought
|
|
\emph{that} helped. Look, I'm not barring Callow to heroes. You want to
|
|
wander the south healing and rebuilding? Fine by me. You get a Legion
|
|
escort, but they'll stay out of your way. You want to have a swing at
|
|
Black? Not my problem, but you'll have to get to the Vales through
|
|
Procer. You want to actually have a look at the fae marks, or even
|
|
Liesse? I'll need oaths as assurance, but we can deal. This doesn't
|
|
\emph{have} to be a fight.''
|
|
|
|
She paused.
|
|
|
|
``But,'' she murmured. ``Since I know what you're thinking. Larat.''
|
|
|
|
The one-eyed man's grin broadened, and power rippled across the street.
|
|
The air cooled, and Iason almost summoned his Heavenly Armaments in
|
|
answer. There was might in that creature's frame, and nothing human
|
|
about it.
|
|
|
|
``We've been tracking you since Mercantis,'' the Queen said. ``We've had
|
|
long enough we could have hit you still in the river. Do you know why
|
|
you were allowed to make shore?''
|
|
|
|
``I assume some form of sadism is involved,'' the Red Made drawled.
|
|
|
|
``In a manner of speaking,'' the villain smiled. ``See, I learned from a
|
|
man that would have had you corpses at the bottom of the Hwaerte before
|
|
you even noticed. But I'm trying, I guess, not to be him. Or worse.''
|
|
|
|
Slowly she rose to her feet, and emptied the pipe before stewing it away
|
|
in her cloak. The smile and the easy manners went away. Idly she rested
|
|
her hand on the pommel of her sword, and Iason felt fear. There was iron
|
|
in that woman's gaze that had not been there before.
|
|
|
|
``You've seen I'm prepared,'' Catherine Foundling said. ``You've seen I
|
|
have the muscle to put you down. But I didn't put on the fancy hat to
|
|
kill kids. So \emph{please}, I beg you -- don't make me.''
|
|
|
|
It sounded genuine enough that the Paladin hesitated. The sentiment that
|
|
they were kids to her was insulting, but what lay behind it\ldots{}
|
|
\emph{The wiles of devils are many and varied. Trust not the words of
|
|
those sworn to Below, for deception is their truest tongue.} He would
|
|
not balk at his duty.
|
|
|
|
``Go home,'' the Black Queen said tiredly. ``Or Hells, join up if you
|
|
want to. I'll find something for you to do, this country's still half a
|
|
wreck and it's not like I don't take in heroes. But if you force this,
|
|
it only ends one way. And once we start, I might not be able to stop.''
|
|
|
|
``You are a blight upon Creation,'' the Stalwart Paladin said, almost
|
|
regretfully. ``An instrument of the Hellgods, carrying within the seed
|
|
of damnation. May the Heavens grant you mercy in the afterlife, but for
|
|
the sake of Creation you must be removed from this earthly shell.''
|
|
|
|
``What he said,'' the Gallant Brigand agreed. ``Only, you know, less
|
|
priestly. Fuck you and your offer and your entire evil legions.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes yes, praise the Heavens and much defiance. That aside, out of
|
|
curiosity,'' the Red Mage smirked, ``has that speech ever actually
|
|
\emph{worked}?''
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen breathed out, and in a moment she went from tired girl
|
|
only a few years older than them to razor-sharp killer. It was in the
|
|
eyes, in the way she held herself. She had the poise of someone used to
|
|
taking lives.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' she said. ``But I'll try with the next batch anyway. Sixth
|
|
time's the charm, right?''
|
|
|
|
The one-eyed creature laughed.
|
|
|
|
``They never listen,'' he said, sounding pleased. ``I do believe
|
|
offering mercy might actually make it worse. Fascinating.''
|
|
|
|
Six. Iason felt a trickle of fear go down his spine. How many heroes had
|
|
she killed? No, it didn't matter. She only needed to fail once. The hero
|
|
folded into himself, and let his aspect reverberate within his soul.
|
|
\textbf{Arm}. Plate of pure Light formed around him, a full suit topped
|
|
by a winged helmet. His sword shone radiantly and as Lergo began to
|
|
incant he advanced. The villain did not move, eyes still on him, but the
|
|
Paladin felt the shifting currents of power. To their side a gate opened
|
|
out of thin air, and as he glanced there Iason saw two things. The first
|
|
was two score goblins, bright-eyed and eager in their furs as they
|
|
occupied a frozen wasteland. The second was six scorpion-like
|
|
contraptions of wood and metal, and as that sunk in they began to fire.
|
|
The bolt hit him in the chest, then two others, yet it might as well
|
|
have been children throwing mud at a stone wall. The steel bent, the
|
|
wood shattered and he barely even felt the impact. He had no moment to
|
|
spare enjoying the small victory, however. The Red Mage was most
|
|
endangered by this sort of assault. Though gifted with a particularly
|
|
strong talent for destruction, Lergo had confessed he was incapable of
|
|
even the most basic of shieldings. The sorcerer managed to save his own
|
|
hide by turning to ash the handful of projectiles aimed at him, but he
|
|
would not be able to keep this up forever.
|
|
|
|
The Stalwart Paladin moved between his companion and the volleys of
|
|
steel-tipped bolts, letting them strike impotently at the armaments
|
|
bestowed upon him by the Heavens. The Gallant had been the most
|
|
unruffled among them, dancing out of the way and somehow even parrying a
|
|
projectile with a casual flick of the wrist.
|
|
|
|
``I'll break the machines,'' Iason said, and his voice thundered. ``Keep
|
|
the villains busy.''
|
|
|
|
Though the Black Queen had caught them by surprise, she'd been arrogant.
|
|
With only one creature and mundane soldiers at her disposal, it might be
|
|
feasible to slay her here and now. To free Callow of tyranny within a
|
|
day of coming to its shore would be a grand deed, worthy of hymns and
|
|
remembrance. Yet if the tide turned against them, the Paladin would
|
|
rather see them defeated before the fled. It would be the beginning of a
|
|
Pattern of Three, he suspected, and that would greatly enhance the
|
|
swiftness of their growth. Indeed, the might even encounter another hero
|
|
after they fled. Providence had a way of rewarding the righteous. To
|
|
Iason's mild irritation, the goblins manning the siege engines proved
|
|
passingly clever. Seeing that their bolts had no effect on his armour as
|
|
he advanced, they turned their fire to his companions. Some sorcery must
|
|
be behind the machines, he thought, for there could be no other
|
|
explanation for how swiftly they kept firing. No matter. He was quick
|
|
enough on his feet that only the odd bolt made it through. Clever as the
|
|
goblins were, they'd not been quite clever enough to flee his approach.
|
|
|
|
Iason crossed the gate into the frozen landscape and raised his sword
|
|
the moment he felt the bite of urgency near his shoulder. It was not
|
|
quite enough, the angle too awkward. A blade shattered his pauldron of
|
|
Light and ripped into the chain mail below, though not deep enough to
|
|
wound, and the Paladin breathed in sharply. A tall orc decked in burnt
|
|
plate discarded a broken axe and spun out another, face grim. The hand
|
|
of bare bones gave away the name of the greenskin that had struck him.
|
|
The orc spat to the side.
|
|
|
|
``Masego will be pissed,'' he said. ``Half a day's work and it kept for
|
|
a single blow. At least you're not reforming.''
|
|
|
|
Iason grit his teeth. The Heavenly Armaments did have that weakness --
|
|
they could only be used once day, and could not be forged anew while in
|
|
use.
|
|
|
|
``You will not land another,'' the Paladin promised.
|
|
|
|
The orc's eyes were on his mail, not his blade, and they narrowed. The
|
|
heraldry, Iason realized. It'd been made visible by the rip.
|
|
|
|
``Half-House, le Miroir Verdant,'' the greenskin said in lightly
|
|
accented Chantant. ``Proceran, then. Good, I've been meaning to try one
|
|
of you out before the big Names come.''
|
|
|
|
``I am the Stalwart Paladin,'' Iason thundered. ``And you will lose more
|
|
than a hand today, orc.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm the Adjutant,'' Hakram Deadhand replied, baring his teeth. ``I had
|
|
a light meal this morning.''
|
|
|
|
They both moved with the swiftness of Named, tangling halfway there.
|
|
Iason managed to hammer down on the orc's wrist, loosening the
|
|
greenskin's grip on the axe, but the dead hand closed around his throat.
|
|
The bones blackened as the Light furiously bit into them, but they did
|
|
not give and Iason struggled in vain before the Adjutant tossed him back
|
|
out the portal. He landed in a crouch, shifting his weight as his
|
|
fighting-master had taught him. The orc rolled his shoulders and
|
|
strolled out of the gate unhurriedly.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Iason},'' the Gallant screamed.
|
|
|
|
It felt like being kicked by a horse. The entire left side of his
|
|
armaments shattered under the blow and as he flew he felt the Black
|
|
Queen following with impossible swiftness. She arrived at the end of the
|
|
arc before he did, snatching his foot and smashing him into the
|
|
pavement. He saw her change her grip as she stood above him, ready to
|
|
plunge down the point into his throat even as he tried to rise, but
|
|
salvation came in time: a streak of red lightning had the villain
|
|
ducking away in a hurry. The sorcerer had come through, thank the Gods.
|
|
The Paladin got to his feet and took a swift look around as the Black
|
|
Queen circled him slowly. Deadhand was now tangling with Amelia, and
|
|
though he'd yet to land one of his brutal blows she was on the backfoot.
|
|
Looking for an opening, he decided. It was not a bad match. The other
|
|
conflict was. Lergo was weaving spells into one another admirably, flame
|
|
and lightning and hexes flowing into the next seamlessly, but the
|
|
one-eyed fae was toying with him. There were three cuts on the Red
|
|
Mage's cheek, perfectly parallel and scabbed black. Iason suspected they
|
|
might have been killing blows, if the fae wished it so. He needed to
|
|
lose Foundling soon and come to the sorcerer's aid, or he was going to
|
|
get run through when the creature bored of the game. This was no time to
|
|
hold back.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Smite},'' the Stalwart Paladin said.
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen attempted to avoid the aspect, but she was too slow.
|
|
Light came down from above a perfect a perfect heptagon of seven feet on
|
|
every stroke. For a moment the shape seemed almost solid, the wrath of
|
|
the Heavens shattering the paving stones and even the ground beneath. A
|
|
heartbeat later it was gone, leaving the half-kneeling form of a smoking
|
|
villain. Her face was a tapestry of burned flesh, her hair gone up in
|
|
smoke and her bare hands crushed. Her eyes were unseeing, struck blind
|
|
by righteous retribution. The villain spat out a gob of black blood that
|
|
steamed and ate away at the earth.
|
|
|
|
``You have William beat when it comes to impact,'' the woman noted, her
|
|
voice a croak yet somehow cold.
|
|
|
|
She rose, and as she did the air cooled and her flesh knitted back. She
|
|
shed the burnt skin like a snake, and her pupils broke as fresh ones
|
|
forced themselves forward.
|
|
|
|
``As a general rule, striking aspects tend to go one of two ways,'' the
|
|
Black Queen said, voice empty of emotion. ``Broad but shallow, small but
|
|
deep. I would not have walked off Swing so easily. A nice trick, but
|
|
ultimately-``
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Smite},'' he interrupted.
|
|
|
|
She was standing again, which meant resuming the fight was not longer
|
|
unchivalrous. There was a heartbeat between the Light striking and the
|
|
word being spoken, and it was enough for her to evade.
|
|
|
|
``Ultimately still a trick,'' she finished, as the smiting struck the
|
|
empty pavement.
|
|
|
|
Only once more could he call on the aspect. He would have to get in
|
|
close, prevent her form evading and\ldots{} \emph{No}, he thought. He
|
|
was being baited. She was keeping him busy while her minions killed the
|
|
others. Though it grated, Iason turned and without a word ran for the
|
|
Red Mage.
|
|
|
|
``Hakram,'' the Black Queen said, voice echoing strangely. ``Switch.''
|
|
|
|
The orc moved away from Amelia without missing a beat, barrelling
|
|
towards the Paladin immediately. Form the corner of his eye he saw the
|
|
human villain pass them both in a streak, blade sounding against the
|
|
Gallant Brigand's own. Lergo cried out in pain, his incantation
|
|
interrupted, and Iason's fingers clenched around his sword. It was not
|
|
all lost, he thought. The Adjutant was much slower than his mistress.
|
|
The axehead came whistling down but Iason's blade shifted angle, the
|
|
combination of years of training and what he'd learned since coming into
|
|
his Name. The Heavens-touched steel cut straight through the haft of
|
|
wood and into the steel pauldron behind it. The orc began to retreat,
|
|
and then the Paladin spoke.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Smite}.''
|
|
|
|
Light filled his vision, but it was no harm to him. He felt the orc's
|
|
body flinch but somehow it remained standing. Though the greenskin's
|
|
footing was shot, so was his, and aside from smoking skin and amour the
|
|
orc seemed unharmed when the aspect ebbed. And aspect of his own had
|
|
been used, the Paladin suspected. There was the taste of power in the
|
|
air. It was not enough. Iason ripped his blade free and smashed the
|
|
guard in the orc's face, knocking him clear of his feet. His
|
|
Light-girded boot came down and broke the villain's knee. That should
|
|
cripple him for the rest of the fight. The greenskin struck out with a
|
|
knife but Iason fluidly stepped back. Leaf Stirred By Hand, his master
|
|
had called it, and when the knife withdrew he stepped forward following
|
|
it. The blade whistled down, the orc bared his fangs and another blade
|
|
knocked the killing blow away.
|
|
|
|
``You will not have him,'' the Black Queen said, something sharp and
|
|
heavy in her tone.
|
|
|
|
She frowned, and shook her head. Something in her eyes thawed measurably
|
|
as she grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``Ever grasping is the tyrant's lot,'' Iason replied in Chantant.
|
|
|
|
``What's he saying?'' the woman asked. ``My Chantant's shit, and his
|
|
accent is horrible.''
|
|
|
|
``He called you a tyrant,'' the orc said.
|
|
|
|
``Wouldn't be the first,'' the Black Queen grimly said, parrying his
|
|
blow and landing a riposte that failed to break through the Armaments.
|
|
|
|
He was pushed back, to his fury. Years he had trained for this,
|
|
gruelling hours spent in the cloister's courtyard being worked to
|
|
exhaustion by his fighting-master. He'd learned the Five Ways and the
|
|
Verdant Stances, been taught how to dismantle the foremost styles of
|
|
every nation under the Calernian sun. But the Queen wasn't fighting like
|
|
a swordswoman. Whatever she had learned, it was no proper swordsmanship.
|
|
She ignored his feint and pivoted around his back, her elbow hitting his
|
|
flank and breaking his footing. He pivoted to face her but she'd moved
|
|
with him and he had to give ground to avoid an oblique blow that would
|
|
have carved through his throat. Iason gave further ground. Staying
|
|
close, he would only get caught in her pace. It was then he realized
|
|
that he could no longer hear the Red Mage fighting. He looked back and
|
|
saw no sign of Lergo, or of his opponent. The air where they'd been
|
|
fighting reeked of power and darkness. Gods, this was turning out too
|
|
much for them. They had not been heroes long enough, none of them even
|
|
had their full aspects.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Cut},'' the Gallant Brigand coldly announced.
|
|
|
|
She emerged out of thin air behind the Black Queen, aspect howling as
|
|
her blade carved clean through the villain's abdomen. She'd\ldots{} done
|
|
it? Then the woman's silhouette dispersed, and Iason realized they'd
|
|
been had. \emph{Glamour}, he realized with a shiver of fear. \emph{That
|
|
was glamour}. He rushed forward but it was too late. Amelia almost
|
|
managed to avoid the blow out of sheer instinct, but goblin steel ripped
|
|
through her coat and muscles. Her left arm fell down limply, and even as
|
|
she caught her sabre with the other one the Black Queen caught her by
|
|
the back of the neck and squeezed. There was a sickening crack, and just
|
|
like that Amelia was dead. There was not so much as a flicker of emotion
|
|
on the villain's face, he saw. Not a speck of humanity to be found. Just
|
|
ice and hatred wearing a body. Her silhouette blurred for what must not
|
|
even have been a heartbeat, and Iason pushed through the grief. Glamour
|
|
again, and he could not see through it. He stepped back warily, and the
|
|
impotence of it burned. Sharpening his ears found nothing, she was
|
|
stepping lightly and her illusion advancing towards him. He needed to
|
|
see, he needed to find her, he needed to\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Discern}.
|
|
|
|
Power rippled through the Paladin's frame washing him clear of tiredness
|
|
and pain and the weakness of the flesh. This was more than mere sight,
|
|
he knew instinctively. It would tell truth from lies, read the movements
|
|
of the flesh before they came to fruition. He could see her now,
|
|
wreathed in mirror-like mist. She was stalking his side, eyes patient.
|
|
|
|
``Enough,'' he snarled. ``You will not get away with this,
|
|
\emph{butcher}.''
|
|
|
|
He caught her by surprise, striking without warning. He glimpsed the
|
|
parry before it ever rose, flicked his blade to the side and cut into
|
|
her shoulder. She wove back, her footing swift, but his Light-gauntleted
|
|
hand struck her across the mouth. He headbutted his winged helmet but
|
|
came off the loser for it, forehead bleeding as he returned in kind and
|
|
she rocked back in pain. His fist caught her in the stomach and she
|
|
gasped. His blade shone radiantly as it scored a deep cut across her
|
|
upper leg, but somehow the cutting of her muscles was not enough to make
|
|
her fall. Fingers coated in frost and shadow slugged into his cheek,
|
|
shattering the Light, and the two of them fell to the ground struggling.
|
|
Using his weight to come atop her, he caught her wrist and dug his
|
|
finger into her eye. She bit him, down to the bloody bone, and he
|
|
snatched his hand back before he could lose the finger. She struggled
|
|
under him but he was much heavier, and his fist broke her chin before
|
|
she could wrestle away his arm. He'd felt teeth loosen. Forcing her arm
|
|
aside his fingers closed around her throat, and suddenly she smiled.
|
|
|
|
The knife went ripped through the mail as Adjutant struck into his
|
|
flank. Iason was thrown off the Black Queen by hundreds of pounds of
|
|
angry orc, as as he hit the ground the world slowed. Light wreathed him,
|
|
but still soft fingers touched his forehead. The Stalwart Paladin closed
|
|
his eyes, an opened them in an endless spread of pale blankness.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{You will bleed,} a chorus of voices whispered into his ear.
|
|
\textbf{You will suffer. You will weep, yet find no relief. Though your
|
|
soul is young and your weight feeble, you will take on the burden of
|
|
many. Iason, son of Idrim, We offer you the misery of Endurance. We
|
|
would embrace you one of our own, to blood and tears and bitter end.}
|
|
\textbf{Iason Brightsword, Son of Tears, will you withstand horror so
|
|
that others do not?}
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' Iason whispered into the void.
|
|
|
|
The blankness rippled, and he was no longer alone. Two silhouettes with
|
|
burning eyes and unspeakable shapes stood before him. And another,
|
|
between him and them.
|
|
|
|
``There will be none of that,'' Catherine Foundling sharply said.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{You do not belong here}.
|
|
|
|
The weight of their wrath was crushing, almost enough that Iason fell to
|
|
his knees and it was not him they gaze upon in anger. Yet the Black
|
|
Queen stood undaunted, cloaked in ice and shadows. And more. There was a
|
|
silhouette riding her back, arms laced around her shoulders. A beautiful
|
|
and dark-skinned woman.
|
|
|
|
``I already told the Hashmallim to walk it off,'' she said. ``Am I
|
|
really going to have to revisit this with every fucking Choir?''
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Arrogance. Your doom comes.}
|
|
|
|
``Might be,'' she said. ``But not today, and not through this weak an
|
|
instrument. Fuck off, you bottom feeders. This one's been claimed fair
|
|
and square.''
|
|
|
|
``You can't fight angels,'' Iason hissed.
|
|
|
|
``Who said anything about fighting \emph{them}?'' Catherine Foundling
|
|
said, and then she rammed a knife in his belly.
|
|
|
|
The blankness fled, Iason's eyes opened and the last thing he ever felt
|
|
was a spike of frost going through his forehead.
|