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538 lines
26 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-triptych}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Triptych}\label{interlude-triptych}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-triptych}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Triptych}
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\epigraph{``Only one kind of war is ever just, that which is waged on the
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Enemy.''}{Extract from ` The Faith of Crowns', by Sister Salienta}
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Harbour duty was the worst, always had been.
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Ines had blown three months' pay on the warmest cloak that could be
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found at market and still she was shivering like a dying calf. The
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prince had spread talk through the city that with the Kingdom of the
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Dead stirring awake those soldiers who guarded the harbour would see
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better pay, but like most princely promises it had come to nothing.
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Rumour had it the coin had gone into buying the service of every
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fantassin company left in the north instead, and much as she hated
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freezing by the docks Ines had to admit it might have been better
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investment. The Princess of Hainaut was doing the same, it was said, and
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the mercenary leanings of the fantassins had turned the whole affair
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into some sordid bidding war. Still, better to be here at home than to
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have gone south as some of the prince's soldiers had. What word had come
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back from the crusade's foray into the Kingdom of Callow was the stuff
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of nightmares. Strange devils riding to slaughter in the night, an
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endless horde of orcs and heretics that at the corpses of the fallen.
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Some more fanciful tales as well, of the Black Queen bringing down the
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sky on the head of the crusaders and making a lake of their blood.
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Whatever the truth of it, none of those who'd gone south had returned.
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For once, she thought, being fresh to the prince's service had been of
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some use. It also meant Ines was inevitably handed down the shit duties
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by her careerist noble officers, but cold fingers were better than the
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grave. She put a spring to her step after clearing Gertrude's Tongue,
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hurrying towards the bonfire that awaited near the customs house. There
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she took off her leather gloves and pressed her palms close to the
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bronze bowl holding the flames, sighing at the warmth seeping into her
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bones. The pike she'd left to lean against her should had never seen use
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out of the training yard, and if the Heavens smiled on her it never
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would. Still, the silence of the night unsettled her. The winds that'd
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turned her earlier round into a ghastly affair had since died, leaving
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behind only eerie stillness. Cleves Harbour was lethargic on the best of
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days, the sporadic ship trade with Bremen and Lyonis the affair only of
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the prince and the very rich, but now even the fishermen had left. That
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lot had better read on what took place beneath the waters of the Tomb
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than anyone else, it was said. Those among them that did not learn to
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listen to the sound of danger were dragged into the depths by the foul
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creatures that were the only true rulers of the lake.
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Some nights, Ines wondered why the prince even bothered to assign guards
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to the harbour. Empty as it was, even if some dead mean took it that
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would be no great loss. The royals who'd founded Cleves had been a
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farsighted lot: the harbour was not connected to the capital proper. The
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thin stripe of docks and shore was walled with an eye at keeping the
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enemy \emph{inside}, not out, an unspoken admission that if the Dead
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King raided past the lake there would be no holding it against the
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Hidden Horror's armies. The slope descending to the shore meant Ines
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could not even catch a glimpse of Cleves itself from where she now
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stood, not behind those tall walls, but that part she hardly minded. It
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would be the hour-long walk back to the barrack of the capital she was
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not looking forward to, especially since some enterprising noble lad had
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decided that the length of that trip should no longer be counted as part
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of guard duty's duration. Ines' only comfort was that if the fucking
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dead actually showed up, that prick was bound to end up on the bad side
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of an unfortunate crossbow accident. The lad should have worried less
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about getting commendations from up high and more about the many people
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in charge of sharp objects he'd made enemies of.
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With an aggrieved sigh Ines put her gloves back on. She'd lingered
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around the fire as much as she could justify, if the next guard came up
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while she was still here she'd end up with another black mark on her
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record. Merciful Gods, though, it was a cold night. And not even winter
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solstice yet, it'd only get worse. She glanced to the side and upwards,
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at the slender tower overlooking the waters. She didn't know who Mikhail
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had paid off to get that particular cushy duty -- the guard tower had a
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bonfire up top, and a seat -- but the man could certainly afford it. The
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Lycaonese immigrant ran a little business on the side, providing hard
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drink warming the bones to the guards that could afford it. Ines had
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always disdained the practice, but the thought of the long walk back to
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the city after her duty had her reconsidering for tonight. Once wasn't
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going to hurt anyone, was it?
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``You still up here, you filthy Bremen throwback?'' she called out.
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No answer. He must have been indulging in his own wares, which was bold
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of him. There were only so many times he could bribe his way out of the
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trouble that'd come down on his head if he was caught. Taking her pike
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in hand, Ines decided against taking the lack of answer as a sign from
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Above. The thought of a warm belly had grown on her with the
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consideration. She strode to the bottom of the tower, finding the door
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ajar. Sloppy of him, she frowned, even if he was drunk. The twisting
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stairs leading up to the top were just a brisk walk, but when she came
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there a cold seized her that the fire could do nothing about. Sergeant
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Mikhail was there: throat opened, blood all over his mail. \emph{Oh
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Gods}, she thought. \emph{We're under attack}. She would have rung the
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bell the tower had been equipped with for this very reason, but the
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bloody thing was gone. Ripped off the metal hinges that had held it up.
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She leaned over the edge, casting her voice.
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``Attack,'' she screamed. ``We're under attack!''
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There was no answer. She wasn't loud enough, that was why they had the
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damned bells in the first place. For all she knew, she was the only
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soldier in the harbour left alive. That would make it her duty to run
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back to the city, wouldn't it? So that they were warned. It wasn't
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abandoning her fellows, it was doing her duty. Her hands trembled around
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the shaft of the pike.
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``Damn it,'' she whispered. ``Damn it.''
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She ran back down the stairs, heading for the nearest tower. There were
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ten in the harbour, they couldn't have castrated all of them unseen. Her
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old boots slipped against the frost and she fell, but she grit her teeth
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and picked up her pike before picking herself up with it. Dodderer's
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Height wasn't far, and as the largest of the towers it'd have fielded
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more than a single sentinel. Old, fat ones one the edge of retiring from
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service but there was strength in numbers. She made it past the jutting
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empty warehouse that was the Prince of Cleves' personal property and
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cleared the corner before she saw it. Five corpses, tossed down from the
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tower onto the pavement below. She glanced up, eyes squinting in the
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dark, but thank the Gods the bell was still there. Whoever'd done this
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had not yet ripped it out. Whoever had done this was likely still here,
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she then thought. Gloved fingers tightened around her pike, she grit her
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teeth and ran once more. Her attention had been on the tower, though.
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That was why she missed it.
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The undead climbed out of the lakewater, glistening wet under starlight.
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Rivulets dripped down the bare skull under the ancient helm and it
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advanced without a word. Ines yelled out in fear, but she'd trained.
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Feet wide but steady, she struck out with her pike. It pierced through
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the rusty mail, going straight into the body, and for a moment she
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tasted triumph. Then the dead thing began pushing towards her through,
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embracing the impalement. She dropped the pike in ear, immediately
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cursing herself for it. But it was slower than her, she realized, so she
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ran for the tower instead of fighting. All she needed was to ring the
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bell. The door was ajar, she saw, and she slowed to avoid slipping on a
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patch of ice. Just in time to watch a pair of armoured skeletons walk
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out of the tower, swords in hand. Blocking the entrance.
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``\emph{No},'' she hissed.
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What could she do? She didn't even have a -- the two undead were smashed
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to pieces by the same swing of a silvery sword. There was a man, tanned
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and wearing plate, who casually brought down a steel-clad boot to smash
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one of the skulls. The undead she'd fled from was tossed back into the
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lake by some giant shadow moving quick as lightning. For a moment Ines
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thought she glimpsed fur and fangs, but what wolf could possibly be so
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large?
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``Ring the bell, soldier,'' the man in plate said.
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His eyes were wreathed with light, she saw as she faced him. No, with
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\emph{Light}.
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``Chosen,'' she croaked out.
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``Go,'' he said. ``Your courage tonight did not go unnoticed.''
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``They're all over the place,'' Ines said. ``If they're here-''
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``Cleves,'' a woman's voice said, ``does not stand alone.''
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A face of painted stone over a cloak, long tresses swinging behind.
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Another favoured child of the Heavens, she would put her hand to fire
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over it.
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``It will be a long night,'' the first Chosen said. ``A long month after
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it, until Malanza arrives. But we \emph{will} hold.''
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``Ring the bell, soldier,'' the masked Chosen said. ``We will guard you.
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Tonight, the Dead King learns that dawn is not so easily snuffed out.''
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Ines straightened her back. She was no proud Lycaonese, to find glory in
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dying spitting in the Enemy's eye. Just some fool girl someone had
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shoved a pike in the hands of. But she'd been born in Cleves. The
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principality of her birth was a bloody mess, and she thought little of
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the man who ruled it, but that wasn't the point. It was her home. This
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was \emph{Procer}. They could lose to princes and princesses, they could
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lose to Arlesites and Lycaonese, but she'd be damned before a fucking
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undead abomination flew its banner over the city.
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She took up a sword from a corpse and climbed to ring the bell.
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---
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Balasi was allowed into the tent by the sentinels without so much as a
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second glance.
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It still surprised him, this. Had he tried the same with his lover's
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rooms in Nenli he would have been met at sword point and taken to the
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city square for a public flogging. Here, though, the campaign had made
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the king's laws grow lax. He might not be consort in name, but he was in
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deed and the soldiers acted accordingly. The seeker of deeds had since
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grown to suspect that this was one of the reason why Sargon had come
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forward to claim command over the Fourteenth Expansion. Back home their
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love would always be an illegal mismatch, but so far away from the
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Kingdom Under the rules had thinned. Sargon was not sleeping, as it
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happened. The Herald of the Deeps sat still as stone with his eyes
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closed as he sought council with the spirits bound to his staff. The
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Souls of Fire were known to hold wisdom, though a kind narrow in scope.
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Were they too clever the Kings Under the Mountains would have
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slaughtered them all, not bound them to the great forges. There would be
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need to dig deep again, after this land was claimed, to feed the fresh
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forges being raised. Many spirits would still lie asleep in their beds
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of molten rock, unknown to the \emph{kraksun}.
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``Delein,'' Balasi quietly said. ``There is need of you.''
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Sargon's eyes fluttered open.
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``Balasi,'' he murmured. ``I was far gone, this time. What ails you?''
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``Not me,'' he replied. ``All of us. And if that vein is true or hollow
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has yet to be known.''
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``Speak,'' the Herald of the Deeps frowned.
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``Our borrowed knife has returned,'' the dwarf said. ``And would now
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speak with you.''
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Sargon's beard twitched in surprise.
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``The Gloom still stands,'' he said. ``She cannot have been victorious.
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Are we certain it is the human, and not simply a Night-thing wearing
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her?''
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``I laid eyes on her myself,'' Balasi said. ``She was stripped of power,
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but it is her. Unmistakeably.''
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``And the cold spirit?'' Sargon asked, leaning forward.
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The seeker of deeds resisted the urge to roll his eyes. His lover had
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fancied the thing since their first meeting, considering adding it to
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his staff should the human queen be broken. Sargon had mastered the
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Greed in most aspects of his life, but not this: any interesting
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creature he encountered he desired for his staff of office.
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``Changed, yet still existing,'' he replied. ``You can look upon it
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yourself when speaking with the human.''
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``She is not that,'' the Herald of the Deeps said. ``You know this.''
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``Was not, perhaps,'' Balasi conceded. ``I am no longer certain of that
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old truth.''
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That piqued his lover's interest, as he'd intended, and Sargon merely
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put on a coat before they made their way out. Officer had been ordered
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to settle the human and her spirit until they were ready to be met, and
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the two dwarves found them awaiting patiently by a low table. Black kasi
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had been served, and the Queen of Callow was drinking from her cup with
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a broad grin. Hairless of the face like so many of her kind, some feeble
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thing grown even feebler since their last meeting. It had not escaped
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his notice that she sat in a way that took the weight off one of her
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legs, as if it were wounded. Or that she'd limped visibly when coming to
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the camp. The spirit stood behind her, dark and silent. Its face had
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changed, grown more human. Scarlet eyes had become golden, though no
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less watchful for it. Sargon's eyes lingered on it with interest, ever
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eager to get his hands on fresh curiosities.
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``Herald,'' the human said, inclining her head in shallow respect.
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``Seeker. Good to see you again.''
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Balasi stood as Sargon sat across the table, only then doing the same. A
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mere seeker of deeds could not be seated at the same time as the Herald
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of the Deeps, he thought, bitterness so old and worn it was hardly even
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that anymore.
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``You surprise me, Queen Catherine,'' Sargon said. ``I had not thought
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we would meet again until our bargain was fulfilled.''
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And such an advantageous one it had been, Balasi thought. A paltry
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quantity of gold and a temporary cessation of arms sales to a few human
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nations, in exchange for a sword pointed at the heart of the Night.
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Sargon had struck it most willingly, knowing that even if defeated the
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human would drag many \emph{kraksun} down with her.
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``That still holds,'' the human idly replied. ``I'm here to settle some
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details, as it happens. The Gloom could be gone by the end of this
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conversation, if it is fruitful.''
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The dwarf's brow twitched. A bold claim, this. Sve Noc still lived, this
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was known. Was the human claiming she had bound the old monster to her
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will?
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``Details,'' Sargon repeated. ``Such as?''
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``An offer might be more accurate,'' the human mused. ``Sve Noc is
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willing to cede her current territory to the Kingdom Under, but
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concessions will have to be made.''
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Balasi smoothly reached for the blade at his side. He'd let down his
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guard, when sensing the queen had been stripped of her power. Where
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before she had been an oppressive presence without even moving a finger,
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she now felt light as a feather. Nothing more than a mortal, he'd
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thought. \emph{So why do you feel more dangerous now than you did
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before, human?}
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``You were turned,'' he said. ``Made into their creature.''
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The queen made that strange human sound of derision, all nose and doubt.
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``I'm really more of an advisor,'' she said. ``We came to an
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arrangement, that's all. Trust was extended, and part of that is letting
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me speak for them when it comes to you fine folk.''
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``You no longer hold power,'' the Herald of the Deeps said.
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``I wield it instead,'' the human said. ``That's quite enough, as far as
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I'm concerned.''
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``You fed your purpose to them,'' Sargon said, openly appalled.
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``Purpose was shared,'' Queen Catherine corrected. ``As I would now
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share a proposition with you.''
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``There can be no truce with the Night,'' Balasi said.
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``The Night is dead,'' the human said. ``At least the way you knew it.
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And I am here to speak diplomacy, not theology.''
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``And what \emph{terms},'' Sargon scoffed, ``would Sve Noc speak?''
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She took out her pipe, taking her time to fill it with herbs. Snapping
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her wrist, she produced dark flames from the tip of her fingers to light
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it. It did not feel like sorcery to Balasi's senses, and this was
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worrying. She puffed at the dragonbone -- what a waste, he still
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thought, to make a \emph{pipe} of that -- and blew out a stream of
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smoke.
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``Would you like,'' Catherine Foundling cheerfully asked, ``to make your
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two biggest problems go at war with each other?''
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There was a moment of silence.
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``I am listening,'' the Herald of the Deeps said.
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---
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Friedrich Papenheim might have been a prince, in another life.
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Of those who had both the name and the blood, he was the closest
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relation to the Iron Prince. He'd served as a trusted lieutenant to
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Klaus Papenheim for decades as a steward and commander, and few others
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were as high in the man's council as he. But Old Klaus had made it known
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he intended to pass on Hannoven to his niece when he died, to make the
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principality as one with her own. Friedrich had resented this, on
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occasion, though always half-heartedly. It was hard to be truly bitter
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when one lost one's inheritance to the likes of Cordelia Hasenbach. The
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first Lycaonese to ever rise as First Prince of Procer, the iron-willed
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daughter of the ancient lines of Papenheim and Hasenbach who'd made the
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entire south submit to her rule. No, if he was to be royalty but not
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prince there was none other he'd rather lose the throne to. It would be
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in good hands, when the time came. Tonight, though? Tonight Hannoven was
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in his own hands, and it was \emph{burning}.
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He'd kept to the old ways. As soon as it was known that the Dead King
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was stirring he'd expelled every southerner from the city and hung those
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that refused the order. Every village and town in sight of the waters
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had been emptied, the spring armories had been opened and the war horns
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sounded. Every man and woman of fighting age in the principality had
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been called to serve, to uphold the old oaths. The whispers had passed
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from mouth to ear, spreading across all of Hannoven. \emph{The dead are
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coming.} \emph{Belt your swords, put on your armour, send your children
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south. The dead are coming.} He'd never been half as proud to be
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Lycaonese as when he'd watched the full muster of his people spread out
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like a sea of steel beneath the walls of the city. The watchtowers by
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the Grave had found the Dead King's host as it crossed, marching under
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the dark waters with the inevitability of an arrow in flight, but he was
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no fool to give the horde battle on open field. There could be no
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victory when every one of your dead turned to the service of the Enemy.
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He'd sent riders to the other principalities, Rhenia and Bremen and
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Neustria. He trusted no sorcery to carry the word when the Hidden Horror
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itself strode the field. The allies of Hannoven were of the old blood
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too, and they'd smelled the death on the wind: they would not be caught
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with their trousers around their ankles like some goat-fucking Alamans.
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Their armies would already be assembled, and the moment the message
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arrived they'd sound their war horns to send for full service. But it
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would be weeks, months before the first reinforcements arrived. The city
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of his birth was a fortress like few others, but it would not hold
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forever. And so he'd made the cold choice, as he had been taught from
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the cradle. Those unfit to fight had begun the march for Bremen with
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everything they could carry. With them had gone half the muster of
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Hannoven. He'd sent the young, the skilled, the promising. The future of
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his principality. With him Friedrich had kept old soldiers past their
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prime, the greybeards and whitehairs who did not know whether it was
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winter cold or ratling fang that would slay them. And with those he had
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fought for Hannoven.
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Fifteen thousand against the legions dark and darkly led. They taught
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the Dead King what kind of people got to grow \emph{old} in these lands.
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The first wall they lost on the first day, and retreated after setting
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the houses aflame. They held the second wall for a week, until the dead
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sent a flock of winged drakes aflight. Wall by wall they have ground,
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but never without making the Enemy pay for it. The longer they held the
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longer the rest of the Lycaonese had to gather their armies, the longer
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the people of Hannoven could flee without pursuit. They fought for a
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month and seven nights, dying in the snow as a sea of dead lapped at the
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walls. Hundreds of thousands, centuries of corpses marching to bring
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death to all the world. In the end it came down to the Old Fortress, the
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solitary mountain that had been turned into a castle jutting out from
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the plains. The dead never paused in the assault, never tired: day and
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night they came in silent assault, the banner of the Dead King flying
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tall behind them. It mattered not, for behind Friedrich the banner of
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Hannoven flew. A single soldier on the wall, grey on blue. Beneath was
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writ the words thrown in the Enemy's teeth since time immemorial:
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\emph{And Yet We Stand}.
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So they stood, and so they died.
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Ground away into nothing by numbers and sorcery their few mages could
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|
not match. Dead things that had once been Chosen climbed the walls, the
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sky grew dark with falling of arrows and behind them drakes stolen from
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the grave spewed out clouds of poison that burned lungs and skin. Less
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than a thousand of them left now, and most of them wounded. They'd
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retreated to the Crown, the very highest point of the fortress that
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could only be accessed by a few narrow paths filled with murderholes.
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The dead had been met with streams of burning coals and thrown oil,
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dwarven engines roaring destruction down passages where there could be
|
|
had no cover. The Chosen dead pushed through, after the horde withdrew,
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but they found the passages collapsing beneath them and spiked grids of
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steel awaiting them when they leapt. Now sorcerers that were little more
|
|
than grinning skulls pounded away at the defences with foul magics,
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|
forcing the defenders to stay behind cover until the next wave of dead
|
|
was ready for assault. Friedrich passed through the throng of wounded,
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clasping shoulders and trading grim boasts with what soldiers her had
|
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left.
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Old men, old women. The last gasps of their generation, dying sword in
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hand. His eyes grew cloudy with pride. Death came to all, but tonight
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they would meet it as Lycaonese should. Holding the wall in the face of
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the Enemy, for the sake of all the world. Friedrich beard was already
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|
flecked with blood, and he dipped out of sight when he felt the cough
|
|
came. It would not do for his soldiers to know he was dying. The wound
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|
he'd taken hammering a spike through the head of that last drake had
|
|
only gotten worse. Poison, he suspected, though it made no difference.
|
|
None of them would live to see dawn, poisoned or not. He wiped his lips
|
|
clean of blood and returned to the battlements after the cough had
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|
passed. The pounding had stopped, he immediately noticed. The assault
|
|
was coming. Captain Heiserech sought him out, her worn face seemingly
|
|
amused.
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|
|
|
``Commander,'' she saluted. ``The skulls want to talk. They sent some
|
|
kind of giant dead. Think it might be `Ol Bones himself come to pay us a
|
|
visit.''
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|
|
|
``Has he now?'' Friedrich grinned. ``Well, let us see what the Dead King
|
|
has to say.''
|
|
|
|
Maybe he'd ask for surrender. His people could certainly use the laugh.
|
|
He wasn't sure who started. It could have been anyone, or half a dozen
|
|
at the same time. Only a few voices, at first, but more joined until the
|
|
stone shook with sound.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``The moon rose, midnight eye}
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|
|
\emph{Serenaded by the owl's cry}
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|
|
|
\emph{In Hannoven the arrows fly.''}
|
|
|
|
The refrain came as a roar of defiance.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Hold the wall, lest dawn fail.''}
|
|
|
|
Friedrich Papenheim strode to the very edge of the battlements, where
|
|
the passages had been broken, and found a horror awaiting on the other
|
|
side of the drop. It was large as three men, wearing plate of bronze and
|
|
steel that had been nailed to its frame. Its face could not be glimpsed
|
|
behind the great helm, but the eyes could. Sunken yellow things,
|
|
glinting with power. That might be the old bastard himself in the flesh,
|
|
Friedrich thought. The song echoes from behind him, slipping into the
|
|
wind.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{No southern song for your ear}
|
|
|
|
\emph{No pretty lass or merry cheer}
|
|
|
|
\emph{For you only night and spear.''}
|
|
|
|
``A Papenheim,'' the Dead King mildly said. ``I should have known. Your
|
|
entire line is like a nail that refuses to be hammered.''
|
|
|
|
Friedrich could not deny the sliver of pride he felt at that. He was
|
|
dying, but he would stand straight in the face of the Enemy. Even if his
|
|
lungs throbbed with pain.
|
|
|
|
``In the name of Her Most Serene Highness Cordelia Hasenbach, First
|
|
Prince of Procer and Warden of the West, I bid you to crawl back into
|
|
the hole that spawned you,'' Friedrich said. ``And to take your horde of
|
|
damned with you, old thing.''
|
|
|
|
``I rather missed this city,'' the Dead King said. ``You make it harder
|
|
to take every time, it keeps things interesting.''
|
|
|
|
``And when we chase you back into the dark, claiming it back, we'll
|
|
raise an eight wall,'' the Lycaonese replied with bared teeth. ``On it
|
|
will be written: here lie those who broke the back of the Enemy and
|
|
stand those who will again.''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Come rats and king of dead}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Legions dark, and darkly led}
|
|
|
|
\emph{What is a grave if not a bed?''}
|
|
|
|
``You fought well,'' the Hidden Horror said. ``And so were owed the
|
|
courtesy of this conversation. Should your soldiers wish to take their
|
|
own lives instead of having them taken, I will allow them the right.''
|
|
|
|
``So that we may rise whole in your service?'' he laughed. ``I think
|
|
not. We'll burn, and you with us.''
|
|
|
|
``Once wolves,'' the Dead King said, almost fondly, ``always wolves.
|
|
What soldiers you would have made, under my banner. Die proud, then,
|
|
Papenheim. You were an irritation.''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Quell the tremor in your hand}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Keep to no fear of the damned}
|
|
|
|
\emph{They came ere, and yet we stand.''}
|
|
|
|
The aging soldier smiled.
|
|
|
|
``We'll be waiting for you at the passes, Dead King,'' he promised.
|
|
``With a proper Lycaonese welcome.''
|
|
|
|
``I would expect no less,'' the Hidden Horror said.
|
|
|
|
He turned his back on the Enemy and returned to stand with the last of
|
|
his soldiers, the words in the wind guiding him home.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{So we'll hold the wall,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Lest dawn fail.''}
|
|
|
|
When the light of day found Hannoven, not a single living soul remained.
|