700 lines
34 KiB
TeX
700 lines
34 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-red-the-flowers}{%
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\section{Interlude: Red The Flowers}\label{interlude-red-the-flowers}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Red the flowers, red the crown}
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\emph{Red this day of bleak renown}
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\emph{How soon they forgot Eleanor}
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\emph{Along every oath they swore}
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\emph{Red the flowers, red the wreath}
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\emph{Red the sword that left the sheath}
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\emph{Now a king lies dead on the grass}
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\emph{Taught the vows of princes pass}
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\emph{Red the flowers, red the grave}
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\emph{Red the biers of knights so brave}
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\emph{They who thrice rode and died}
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\emph{Under banners of olden pride}
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\emph{Red the flowers, red the right}
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\emph{Red the fires this day will light}
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\emph{For every slight there is a price}
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\emph{Ours will be long and paid twice.''}
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-`Red The Flowers', a Callowan rebel song written in the wake of the
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Proceran occupation of Callow
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\end{quote}
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It had been some time since Amadeus had last inhaled the scent of
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carnage. The dawn of the third day brought with it strong winds and
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burning sun: the corpses were rotting in the heat, the smell of them
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carried to the third line of fortifications in the southern valley. The
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Iron Prince had ordered a halt to the offensive with nightfall, the
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crusaders setting camp among the ruined walls and bastion they'd spent
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the day taking at such great cost. Papenheim was not fresh to the art of
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war: he knew better than to engage a Praesi army under cover of dark.
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Especially one that'd had most a year to raise siege engines goblins
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would field and aim perfectly when the crusaders stumbled along blindly
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with torches and holy flames. Grem stood by his side atop the tower
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known as the southern half of the Bloody Twins, the unusually slender
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orc towering two feet above him. Marshal Grem One-Eye spat over the
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wall, staring at the enemy stirring in the distance.
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``They're not wasting time,'' the orc said. ``Papenheim wants to
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bludgeon through as quick as possible, looks like. You were right about
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that much.''
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Amadeus remained silent, for the moment. Grem had been of the opinion
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that there'd be probing attacks to weather but no serious offensive
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until the armies of Levant arrived to reinforce the Iron Prince's sixty
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thousand Procerans. The initial span of the war had leant credence to
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the orc's prediction, but after the crusaders up north passed through
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the Stairway the old Lycaonese had begun his march in earnest. There
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were political considerations at work, the Black Knight suspected.
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Cordelia Hasenbach had called this crusade and assembled the alliance,
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but mistrust still reigned between Procer and its temporary allies. Even
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just the impression that she intended to bleed Levant instead of her own
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armies would raise the spectre of suspicion within the Grand Alliance.
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The old fear of Proceran expansionism haunted her regime still. Amadeus
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could sympathize. Past Dread Emperors had burned all the Empire's
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diplomatic bridges so thoroughly most ruins were still actively
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smouldering. It had taken Alaya more than two decades to craft a
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rapprochement with Ashur, and it'd still all gone up in flames after
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only a few months of diplomatic correspondence between Hasenbach and
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Magon Hadast.
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``I'm not so certain he's fully committed,'' Amadeus finally replied.
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``The First Prince needs blood on the floor to show her allies, but
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Papenheim has not been careless in his advance. He's willing to trade
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but not outright sacrifice.''
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``Thinning our numbers \emph{is} the best way for them to win this,''
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Grem conceded. ``They've certainly got the levies to throw away.''
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The legions garrisoning the Red Flower Vales numbered six. Twenty-four
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thousand men in full. The First under Grem was holding the southern
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passage along with Mok's Third and Sacker's Ninth. Marshal Ranker and
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her Fourth were leading the defence of the northern valleys, commanding
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the freshly-rebuilt Twelfth and Nekheb's Tenth. That last legion they'd
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had to employ sparingly. General Catastrophe, as they were fondly called
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by their living soldiers, fielded a legion of undead captained by
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necromancers. But even alone the dragon was a force to reckon with.
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Combined with foot soldiers they could torch along the enemy at no great
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loss? Nekheb could turn around a battle, if well deployed. They were
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also, unfortunately, \emph{very} vulnerable to heroes. Dragonslaying was
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an old heroic staple, and there was at least one hero on the opposite
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side with an archery-related Name. Wanton use would only result in the
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death of one of their primary assets.
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``We've been light on losses so far,'' Amadeus noted. ``And we still
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hold three of the five defensive lines in both passes. It cost them at
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least seven thousand to get this far in.''
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``Less,'' Grem replied. ``If our effectiveness estimates on their
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priests is solid, anyway. We'll need to start deploying our
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contingencies today to blunt their momentum.''
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Amadeus looked at the glittering wall of steel forming in the distance,
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brow creasing.
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``You hold command,'' he said. ``I am here in an advisory role.''
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The orc barked out a laugh.
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``Meddling's in your blood, Amadeus,'' he said. ``You can't help it.''
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``And yet my role remains advisory,'' the Black Knight mildly replied.
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``I would caution you that sending Warlock onto the field before the
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enemy revealed their own Named casters will have consequences, but the
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the choice is ultimately yours.''
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Marshal Grem One-Eye half-squinted at the enemy, then cracked his neck.
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When they'd been young, the orc had done it purely for the satisfaction.
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Now his bones creaked and bent with age, the one enemy neither of them
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could defeat on the field.
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``We've got a few tricks to deploy before ol' Red Skies gets off his
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arse,'' Grem decided. ``Let's see how they like the taste of those.''
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Amadeus inhaled the scent of it again. Blood and rotting flesh, shit and
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steel and a hundred other small things drowned out by them. It was still
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thin, for now.
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It would grow stronger before the day was done.
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---
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Klaus had been raised to the old military dictum of never assaulting a
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fortress unless you had three times the enemy's number. Back in the
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Empire the first Terribilis had noted in his \emph{Ars Tactica} that
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twice the number was sufficient if you had spellcaster superiority, but
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that was a worthless piece of advice for anyone but the Praesi. You
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couldn't go up against the Dread Empire and expect your spellslingers to
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be up to snuff. Much, as he had discovered over the last two days, like
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you couldn't expect dwarven siege weapons to be a match for goblin
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engineering. The first day had been opened by an artillery duel and his
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host had not come out the better for it. The Empire's trebuchets and
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ballistas fired further and swifter than the catapults and trebuchets
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bought from the Kingdom Under, and the knock-off scorpions brought by
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the Arlesites had been about useful as tits on a sparrow. Not a single
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one of the them had survived long enough to come into firing range. If
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the old general had twice as many men he could have swept through one
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line of defence after another, taking the losses as he went. But as
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things stood? If he went it half-cocked, less than a third of his army
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would emerge from the meat grinder to set foot in Callow.
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The outer walls in both valleys were old Proceran fortifications taken
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by the Kingdom of Callow the last time the border principalities botched
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an invasion of the Vales, later repurposed to serve as defensive lines
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facing the other way. They were, essentially, piles of stone twenty feet
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high with steeply sloped hills behind them the Praesi had set their
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engines on. No bastions, no towers, nothing more elaborate than stones
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piled up high with mortar holding them together. One-Eye and the Carrion
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Lord had defended it with a bare few hundred, regulars and sappers, so
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he'd launched an escalade under cover of the artillery duel. Within the
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first half-hour of the offensive he'd lost over two thousand soldiers.
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Sappers lobbed their munitions onto the ladders, killing as many with
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the fall as the explosions, while crossbow volleys fired straight into
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tightly-packed ranks earned swaths of dead. They'd taken the damned
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walls, of course. Fortifications that bare couldn't be held against his
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numbers, and he'd half-expected the enemy would let him have them
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uncontested. Instead the Praesi had defended for less than an hour,
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taken maybe three dozen casualties and retreated with all their engines
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intact. That'd set the tone for the second day.
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Another four thousand gone to take the kind of defences you saw in your
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average Lycaonese border town. Low walls and towers, a single central
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bastion. He'd sent the heroes in with the first wave, with massed mage
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support, and run into a godsdamned wall. The fortifications were warded
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so thoroughly nothing he had could crack them in the slightest, and the
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grounds fifty feet from the foot of the walls were seeded what Praesi
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called lily fields. Hidden pits with spikes at the bottom. The assault's
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momentum shattered, Legion mages began torching everything in sight and
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the entire attack would have collapsed if not for a Chosen called the
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Fortunate Fool. Klaus had considered the man essentially useless,
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considering he had truck with more herbs than your average alchemist,
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but the hero had stumbled his way onto a safe path through the lily
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field by sheer happenstance. The other Chosen rallied the levies and led
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an assault on the walls in the southern valley. None of the Damned had
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come out to meet them, at least, something he'd been assured was a
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consequence of the White Knight and the Witch of the Woods refraining
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from entering the fray.
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It'd taken most of the day to force the Praesi back in both valleys.
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He'd called a halt after that, well aware his men did not have the
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stomach to march into whatever nastiness the Carrion Lord had awaiting.
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Or the ability to match goblin nightsight: all torches and priestly
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glows would accomplish was mark targets for the enemy siege. Now the
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third dawn had come, and steel would be bared again. The defensive line
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ahead would be the beginning of the real fight, he knew. On both sides,
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though at different lengths from a bird's eye view, the valleys narrowed
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into passes flanked by cliffs. Those natural defences had been the seat
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of Callowan fortresses for centuries, the rock Proceran offensives broke
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on. The Bloody Twins, Alamans called them. Massive towers forty feet
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high sitting atop slopes at an angle of almost sixty degrees. There were
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dirt paths leading up, but they were not wide. Forcing the Twins was
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going to be ugly business, but it had to be done. They were the high
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point of both valleys, the terrain going down towards Callow after them.
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Claiming the high ground would allow Klaus' fucking engines to finally
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start being more than expensive targets, and with the fortresses still
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awaiting ahead he'd need every advantage he could get.
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Klaus swatted Ratbiter absent-mindedly to keep him from chewing away at
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the red marigolds that grew everywhere in the valleys, and were
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allegedly responsible for their name. They were said to have been gold,
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once upon a time, but had since grown red from all the blood spilled on
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these grounds over the centuries.
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``De Guison,'' he called out, and the mageling snapped to attention.
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``Contact the northern front. We're beginning our attacks.''
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The man made a three-act play out of obeying a simple order, but the old
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general's attention had already left him. He gestured for his personal
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hornblower to sound the offensive and eyed the grounds he needed to take
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before getting to the southern Twin. Almost four hundred yards of more
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or less flat grounds, before getting at the foot of the slope. Then
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another half hundred, marching up one of the continent's most viciously
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designed natural fortresses. He was going to lose thousands just on the
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approach, and that'd be if the Praesi had no surprised awaiting. He knew
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better than to expect that. There was a reason he'd ordered for the
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Fortunate Fool to run ahead of the first ranks, the silly-looking idiot
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in silks taking point so good soldiers need not die. His instincts had
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been correct, he discovered shortly.
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The Chosen walked over innocuous-looking grounds and was blown high into
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the sky by an explosion about a hundred yards from the bottom of the
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slope, landing on his back a dozen feet forward. Where he blew up again.
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Under Klaus' sceptical gaze, five explosions were chained in a row until
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the man arrived halfway through the evidently mined field. He got up,
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looking a little charred, and patted himself in panic to put out the
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flames on his chest. The Prince of Hannoven was familiar with the
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effects of Praesi demolition charges, and he silently reassessed how
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bloody difficult this Chosen would be to actually put down. A few
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streaks of lightning shot down from atop the Twin but the Fortunate Fool
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ducked them by a series of very coincidental trips and falls, before
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waddling back to the Proceran lines and loudly claiming victory. Klaus
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now had a basic notion of enemy mage range and the concentration of
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buried charges. The assault proper could begin.
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``Priests forward,'' he ordered his standard-bearer. ``Sweep for the
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munitions.''
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The robed brothers and sisters of the House of Light strode forward as
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ordered, and it was but a few moments before streaks of light began
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hammering at the ground in an advancing wave. The growing narrowness of
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the valley here ran to their advantage, for once. Less territory to
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cover. Munitions detonated in plumes of earth and smoke one after
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another, destroying the traps at the unfortunate cost of breaking up the
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terrain. Advance would be even more difficult. The enemy waited
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patiently for them to finish, silhouettes atop the tower unmoving. The
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murder holes and larger openings for scorpions were bristling with
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steel, a promise of death yet to come.
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``Mages and engines, forward,'' Klaus told his standard-bearer. ``Our
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vanguard is to prepare for advance on my signal.''
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\emph{Never get into a siege with Praesi}, he'd once told his niece. He
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still believed it, though he had no other choice. The Legions of Terror
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as forged by the Reforms were one of the finest war machines on the
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continent, and in this series of valleys he couldn't even use the major
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advantage his people had over the Empire. Cavalry. Instead he was forced
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to play to the enemy's strengths, to his distaste, and because of it
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this was not so much war as a slugging match of piled corpses. Dragged
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forward, the catapults were set down and panes of opaque yellow light
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formed to protect them.
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The third battle for the Vales began.
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---
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``We are witnessing,'' Grem gravely said, ``the birth of a Proceran
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combined arms doctrine.''
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Amadeus hummed in agreement.
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``It was only a matter of time,'' he said. ``We showed the effectiveness
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of it during the Conquest. The Principate was too preoccupied with the
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civil war to catch up, but they've had time to breathe since Hasenbach
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took power. She gave her uncle free hand to reform the Principate's war
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doctrine, and Papenheim is no fool. Catherine faced much the same
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tactics up north.''
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The old orc grunted unhappily.
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``If she'd listened to Istrid's daughter and gone ahead with Bonfire,
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she wouldn't have had to,'' he said. ``It was a solid plan. Would have
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taken Procer out of the war, and without the Principate the crusade
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collapses.''
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It was a natural consequence of his former apprentice having folded two
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legions into her Army of Callow that Amadeus had gained plethora eyes
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and ears among her officer corps. The Duni had mostly used these to keep
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abreast of her war strategy and arrange his own accordingly. Scribe's
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agents in her army, on the other hand, had been waging a war with
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Alaya's own spies in the ranks. He'd preferred passing information to
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her amusingly-named Jacks rather than carrying out the killings through
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his own proxies, though on occasion more direct intervention had been
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needed. He was quite pleased, in fact, with how quickly and solidly her
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network of spies and assassins had grown. The Thief was proving skilled
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at the art, though it would be years before the Jacks were in the same
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league as Alaya's agents or Eudokia's. Penetration in depth was
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difficult to achieve with such limited time and coin.
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``It would have painted a target on her neck for every single hero on
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the continent,'' Amadeus replied. ``The choice was correct.''
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``They're already out for her blood, Amadeus,'' Grem grunted. ``It's a
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crusade, not a petty border dispute.''
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``The difference is in being a target or \emph{the} target,'' the
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green-eyed man said. ``No villain can survive the amount of heroic focus
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Bonfire would have brought. The initial stages would have been a
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success, but within a few months a band of heroes specifically geared
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towards killing her would have been grown or assembled.''
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``A few months would have been enough to cleave Procer in half,'' Grem
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said.
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``Perhaps,'' Amadeus shrugged. ``But it would have signed her death
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warrant. She is cleverer than that.''
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The hint of pride in his voice at that, he did not suppress. His old
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friend caught it easily enough.
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``She stabbed you, Black,'' he growled. ``Don't wave that away as
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youthful enthusiasm, because \emph{we} certainly haven't.''
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Eudokia, to his occasional headache, had made that abundantly clear.
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He'd had to outright order her not to take revenge.
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``One who rears a tiger should not complain of stripes,'' Amadeus quoted
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in Mtethwa.
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``Your tiger put on a crown and raised an army after stealing three
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legions,'' Grem growled in Kharsum. ``We're past stripes.''
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``My tiger beat back an army twice the size of hers strengthened by the
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two most famous living heroes on Calernia,'' the dark-haired man
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laughed. ``Three legions, one of which was always hers, is a paltry
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price to pay for that.''
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``She's going to turn on the Empire, Black,'' the Marshal warned. ``We
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all know it.''
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Amadeus leaned against the crenelation as ballistas fired around them,
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hammering at the shields protecting the Proceran engines. The stones
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those were lobbing at the tower bounced off harmlessly or shattered.
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Wekesa had found it an amusing irony that the warding scheme he'd used
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here was a variation of a Callowan work. The very same that had once
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protected the walls of Liesse, dispersal of impact across the entire
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structure. The crusaders could fire at the Twin for months without
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making a dent, if they did not focus their fire.
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``Is the Empire as it currently standsso worthy of survival?'' the Black
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Knight murmured. ``I think not. If it cannot adapt, then let it perish.
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Out of the ashes we will raise something other than a snake devouring
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its own tail, shattering the world with its throes as it seeks to sate
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empty hunger.''
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``Dangerous words,'' Grem said.
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``Yet here you stand,'' Amadeus said. ``Without ever having obeyed your
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summons back to Ater.''
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``It's illegal to order a Marshal back from an active war front without
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evidence of treason,'' the orc said.
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The Duni turned green eyes to his old friend, brow quirking. The orc
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looked away.
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``She won her games,'' Grem One-Eye finally said. ``But she still played
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them.''
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They left it at that, eyes returning to the unfolding battle. Papenheim
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had learned over the last two days the price of an infantry advance on
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Legion-held fortifications, even with dwarven engines providing cover,
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but he had little other choice than to repeat the previous performance.
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He could not starve out the defenders, nor did he have another path than
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the Vales to march through. The old bottleneck that had kept Procer at
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bay for centuries was bleeding it once more. Grem ordered for mage fire
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to be held as the crusader vanguard advanced, passing the engines and
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charging towards the slope. A handful of heroes were at the front, but
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Amadeus saw no need to intervene. They'd likely be able to shatter the
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tower gates if they made it there, but there was the rub. \emph{If.} The
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orc that was the highest-ranked officer in the Legions of Terror waited
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until the enemy was fully committed before ordering the mages to send
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the signal. Up on the mountaintops, faraway, there was an explosion.
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Months of work by sappers, all for this single moment. Amadeus counted
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seventy-nine heartbeats before the water began pouring down from the
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very discreet channel carved into the mountainside.
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There was a deep mountain lake, far out of sight. Digging a tunnel
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through hard rock and corking it with a dike had been a wonder of goblin
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engineering. He'd been quite amused, hearing that Catherine had dropped
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a fae lake atop her enemies up north. What the sappers had devised was
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not so different. The stream of water, quickened by the slopes, hit the
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outer edge of the Proceran lines. A few were killed by the sheer weight
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and momentum, but the real damage came from the spread of water sweeping
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away everything it touched. And continuing, at that same steady pace.
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Mages moved their shields to contain the situation, struggling to find
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the the location the water was pouring from -- it was hidden by an
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illusory ward. All they achieved, in the end, was to contain the flood
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until the pressure grew beyond the ability of their hodgepodge spell
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formulas to weather. Priests intervened as well, weaving fences of
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light, but they were not sufficiently organized to form a comprehensive
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wall. The water went around it. Surprise, Amadeus mused, was the most
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dangerous weapon in any army's arsenal. Still, it would not be long
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before heroes intervened now. There was a flare of Light from
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|
Papenheim's camp moments later, and the illusory ward broke. The fences
|
|
and shields immediately shifted to block off the opening.
|
|
|
|
``Send the second signal,'' Grem ordered their signal mage.
|
|
|
|
A streak of red light splashed across the sky, and twenty heartbeats
|
|
later another explosion sounded. A chunk of the mountainside broke open
|
|
and water began pouring again. A plan with a single point of failure,
|
|
after all, was no plan at all.
|
|
|
|
``The bouquets?'' Amadeus asked.
|
|
|
|
``As soon as they shift,'' Grem replied, eyeing the battlefield.
|
|
``Lukran, tell the sappers I don't want a single Proceran engine on the
|
|
field to survive this engagement. They're naked as babes in the woods.''
|
|
|
|
Left shieldess, the dwarven machinery was methodically broken down by
|
|
the goblin-manned ballistas as the Proceran mages and priests refocused
|
|
their efforts towards the more immediate threat of water. They split,
|
|
much as Grem had predicted when the general staff had planned this. The
|
|
mages shielded one entrance, the priests the other. Amadeus personally
|
|
would have focused on swiftness instead of optimal impact, with heroic
|
|
intervention being in the cards, but he trusted the orc's instincts.
|
|
|
|
``Bouquets,'' Grem ordered with a feral smile.
|
|
|
|
Sorcery flared as the mages lines wove tendrils of air, each hooked to a
|
|
heavy wooden barrel. Within moments a hundred of them snaked through the
|
|
sky, coming to rest above the mages and priests. The spells petered out
|
|
and the barrels fell. Hasty tongues of holy flame and sundry spells shot
|
|
up to intercept them, but there were too many targets to handle. Many of
|
|
them were duds filled with rocks, regardless. Others simple munitions.
|
|
Of the hundred barrels, sixty-three fell with impact by Amadeus' count.
|
|
Twenty-one of those were a mixture of smokers and sharpers, and exploded
|
|
with billowing poisonous smoke. Twelve were filled with goblinfire, and
|
|
the battlefield turned into a hellish green landscape in the blink of an
|
|
eye. The mages and the priests broke, no longer able to hold back the
|
|
waters, and the streams began to pour out again. Prince Klaus Papenheim
|
|
had sent eight thousand levies and fantassins as his vanguard, with
|
|
fourteen mixed catapults and trebuchets to cover them. No engine
|
|
survived. Fewer than two thousand infantry did.
|
|
|
|
When night fell over the Vales, it was to the flickering of green flames
|
|
on still water.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Report,'' Klaus ordered, exhaustion bare in his voice as he sat
|
|
slumped in his seat.
|
|
|
|
Princess Mathilda of Neustria was pushing forty these days. It never
|
|
surprised him to see it. He remembered Mati as the rambunctious child
|
|
that had been close as kin with his sister, a mischievous devil in mail
|
|
skirts that never laughed as brightly as when she was shattering ratling
|
|
skulls with that monster of a mace she wielded. Neustrians as a rule
|
|
kept a closer eye on the happenings down south and had been known to
|
|
twine their lines with those of Brus and Lyonis on occasion -- unlike
|
|
most Lycaonese royalty, who'd sneer at such thinning of the blood -- but
|
|
Mati had never been one to have an interest in courtly games. It was an
|
|
old compact of the Four Houses that soldiers from the the southernmost
|
|
Lycaonese principalities would reinforce the walls and fortresses at the
|
|
border when the thaw came and warbands went on the march, but Mathilda
|
|
had never been one for half-measures. Every year since her crowning,
|
|
she'd taken all soldiers not garrisoning the border with Brus to fight
|
|
the Plague as soon as spring arrived. Klaus did not consider her an
|
|
exceptional tactician or strategist, but her the sight of her
|
|
distinctive green armour on the front had a way of lighting a fire in
|
|
men's bellies. Lycaonese had a well-worn love for royalty that led from
|
|
the front. The princess' face was streaked with dirt and her short red
|
|
locks pressed with sweat against her face.
|
|
|
|
``They dropped the mountain on us, Klaus,'' the Princess of Neustria
|
|
told him in Reitz. ``The \emph{fucking mountain}.''
|
|
|
|
Klaus leaned forward.
|
|
|
|
``The Warlock took the field?''
|
|
|
|
She shook her head.
|
|
|
|
``We think it was munitions,'' Mathilda said. ``Wasn't sorcery, the
|
|
mages say, and there were explosions. They must have mined the side
|
|
through tunnels. I sent in my vanguard and the entire cliffside toppled
|
|
down on it like some titan's flyswatter.''
|
|
|
|
``Gods Above,'' the Iron Prince croaked out.
|
|
|
|
``That bloody dragon made a pass right after, blew fire straight through
|
|
my priests,'' she said, passing a tired hand over her face. ``The Silver
|
|
Huntress put a magic arrow in one of its wings, but it's the only wound
|
|
it took. It'll be back tomorrow.''
|
|
|
|
``Casualties?'' Klaus asked.
|
|
|
|
``Maybe two thousand dead, twice as many wounded,'' the princess sighed.
|
|
``What's left of my priests is getting the wounded back on their feet.''
|
|
|
|
``They went straight after our priests and casters,'' the Prince of
|
|
Hannoven said. ``They're trying to cripple those before a decisive
|
|
engagement.''
|
|
|
|
``They're doing well at it, too,'' Mathilda said. ``And I don't need to
|
|
tell you morale went down the drain. There'll be no volunteers for the
|
|
vanguard tomorrow, I can tell you that much. Doesn't help that our two
|
|
alleged heavyweights have been sitting pretty this whole time.''
|
|
|
|
``Chosen logic,'' Klaus said. ``They say the Sovereign of Red Skies and
|
|
the the Carrion Lord will remain out of the battle so long as they do
|
|
the same.''
|
|
|
|
``The other Chosen are bloody useless,'' the Princess of Neustria
|
|
bluntly replied. ``Oh, they're a pretty sight leading the charge. That
|
|
Levantine girl, the Champion? She's been at the front of every
|
|
offensive. But we're swinging at mist, Klaus. They can be as good at
|
|
killing Praesi as they want, we're not fighting Praesi. We're fighting
|
|
falling mountains, and the Champion's no use there. We need the Witch
|
|
and the Heavens' hatchet man.''
|
|
|
|
The Lycaonese balked at the notion of needing Chosen to win his battles
|
|
for him, but there was also truth in this so he held his tongue.
|
|
Outside, in the distance, water still burned green. Seven days and seven
|
|
nights, that was said to be the lifespan of goblinfire. Unless he was
|
|
willing to send his soldiers wading hip-deep in a lake topped by a hell
|
|
of alchemy, there would be no more offensives in the southern valley.
|
|
The Praesi would shift their forces accordingly, reinforcing the
|
|
northern Twin, and there would be no chance breaking through there
|
|
against the full muster of the Empire's finest.
|
|
|
|
``Then we will have them,'' Prince Klaus Papenheim. ``Even if I must
|
|
drag them to the front myself.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Hanno had died twenty-one times since morning.
|
|
|
|
He'd used his aspect in a similar manner before, but those had been
|
|
shallow readings. The seeking of similarity so he could draw on the
|
|
experience of his predecessors to make up for his own shortcomings.
|
|
Never before had he sought lives and memories purely to learn how to
|
|
kill a man. His enemy had made it difficult, nonetheless. Heroes rarely
|
|
survived their first encounter with the Black Knight, and those that did
|
|
were usually engaged by other Calamities on the second meeting. He'd
|
|
found a single instance, the Rebel Knight, who'd bared her sword at the
|
|
man twice. Three years after the Conquest, a hidden bastard child of a
|
|
branch line of House Fairfax who'd inherited the same Name as Eleanor
|
|
Fairfax herself. Flight after the first engagement had bought her an
|
|
hour before the Black Knight caught up and slew her in her wounded
|
|
exhaustion. Some other lives had taught him near nothing of use, like
|
|
the Merry Brawler -- the knife through the back of the neck that'd
|
|
killed him only served as a reminder that the Carrion Lord preferred to
|
|
kill without any struggle if he could. The Unconquered Champion had
|
|
yielded the greatest amount of information. The Levantine hero had
|
|
trapped his foe in his domain and teased out more tricks than any other
|
|
before or after him, in large part because five mortal wounds had been
|
|
needed before the man died.
|
|
|
|
Memory by memory, death by death, Hanno had woven together a whole.
|
|
Sitting with his eyes closed in a tent muted from all noise by Antigone,
|
|
his sword in his lap, he had studied the many murders of the Black
|
|
Knight. The man had limitations. Hanno had almost thought otherwise,
|
|
after their duel in Nicae, but he now saw his mistake. When recalling
|
|
the skills of his predecessors his plunge had been too shallow. Mere
|
|
versatility was not sufficient to kill the Carrion Lord, not when he
|
|
only brought to the fore part of the skills called on. That was, the
|
|
White Knight now understood, playing the villain's own preferred game.
|
|
The Black Knight was himself a jack-of-all-trades, facing him with a
|
|
similar approach would only lead to the victory of the older man's
|
|
greater experience. The method had been incorrect, and so he had
|
|
adjusted. Studied the swordsmanship the villain had learned from the
|
|
Lady of the Lake, the weaknesses of that tutelage. And, upon finding
|
|
them, Hanno had spent hours seeking the right combination of lives that
|
|
would allow him to capitalize on those weaknesses. Three would be
|
|
required: the Flawless Fencer, the Lance of Light and the Barehanded
|
|
Pugilist.
|
|
|
|
The sequence was adaptable to the villain's own approach, but the result
|
|
would ultimately be the same. He'd sought a handful of other lives to
|
|
draw on as contingencies, should tactics he'd seen employed through
|
|
other eyes be employed again, and another pair as escape and disengaging
|
|
sets. Night had fallen, when he emerged from the trance, and he remained
|
|
seated. Tired down to his bones and struggling to master the lingering
|
|
echoes of the lives he'd dug so deep into. He would need rest before he
|
|
was ready to fight. The tent's flap parted and a masked of painted stone
|
|
topped by long dark tresses stared at him. Antigone, still wearing the
|
|
face the Gigantes had bestowed upon her. Hanno suspected that of all the
|
|
host around him, only he understood the significance of that. The favour
|
|
of the Titans was not lightly earned, and no less terrible than their
|
|
wroth.
|
|
|
|
``Hanno,'' the Witch of the Woods said, her words from no language known
|
|
to man and yet perfectly understood. ``The Champion wishes to speak with
|
|
you.''
|
|
|
|
The Gift of Tongues never ceased to invoke wonder in him when so
|
|
displayed. No man or creature that could understand the spoken word
|
|
would ever fail to understand his friend.
|
|
|
|
``I am done,'' the White Knight said, voice rough with disuse. ``Come
|
|
in, both of you.''
|
|
|
|
The inside of his tent was bare save for a bed of straw and his armour,
|
|
and so he had no earthly comforts to offer either women as they entered.
|
|
Neither seemed to mind. Antigone disdained any life but that of the
|
|
wilds, and Rafaella's cheer had already proved undaunted in the face of
|
|
greater discomforts. The Witch's long cloak-tunic pooled around her as
|
|
she sat gracefully, surrounding herself in coarse green cloth that
|
|
revealed only sandal-clad feet. Rafaella, on the other hand, slumped
|
|
down in a cacophony of shuddering armour. The Valiant's Champion
|
|
snarling badger helm was dropped into the dirt as she shook free the
|
|
long braid going halfway down her back, her tanned face split in a grin.
|
|
She was not wearing, for once, the wolf fur cloak she'd claimed from
|
|
someone that was no wolf at all.
|
|
|
|
``Have good day, yes?'' the Champion said.
|
|
|
|
Hanno inclined his head.
|
|
|
|
``I am ready,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' Rafaella hummed. ``My day, up and down. Easterners drop
|
|
mountain on me. Tried to fight it, went not so good.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno glanced at Antigone, her green eyes finding his own through the
|
|
mask.
|
|
|
|
``The Legions detonated a cliffside onto the Proceran advance,'' she
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
The White Knight's fingers clenched. His work had been necessary, but he
|
|
grieved that it had allowed the Carrion Lord to weave the deaths of so
|
|
many through his inaction.
|
|
|
|
``Then dragon came,'' the Champion continued, sounding noticeably more
|
|
pleased. ``Went on dwarf machine, told soldier: `Bald Procer man, I
|
|
stand on machine. Throw me at dragon.'\,''
|
|
|
|
Hanno's brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``I take it he did not,'' he half-asked.
|
|
|
|
Rafaella sighed.
|
|
|
|
``He said `no, stupid savage, if I do this it kill you'. I say `maybe if
|
|
I feeble Procer soldier like you, but am glorious champion of Levant'.''
|
|
|
|
The tanned woman scratched her chin thoughtfully.
|
|
|
|
``Bald Procer man not happy about that,'' she mused. ``Left and did not
|
|
reply. Think he complain to tall red princess about it.''
|
|
|
|
The Ashuran snorted. Proceran royalty had avoided him like the plague
|
|
after the first time he'd been called upon to render judgement in a
|
|
dispute and a cousin of the the Prince of Orense had been judged as
|
|
unfit for continued existence by the Seraphim. Oddly enough it had
|
|
warmed some of the Lycaonese to his presence, though the true gain of
|
|
the affair had been the end of the insistent invitations to share cups
|
|
of wine by the rest. He doubted any of what Rafaella had mentioned would
|
|
be brought to him as a dispute to arbitrate.
|
|
|
|
``The Warlock still waits,'' Antigone said. ``The Carrion Lord with him.
|
|
None of our companions ever reached them.''
|
|
|
|
``They were not all meant for this war,'' Hanno quietly replied. ``For
|
|
many it is beyond the scope of their Fate, bound as they are elsewhere
|
|
to other works. They must be careful, lest sudden death find them. The
|
|
Grey Pilgrim is not with us to forgive such mistakes.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella discreetly traced a sign on her leg at the mention of the
|
|
Peregrine, expression sobering. To see her act \emph{bashful} when
|
|
they'd first met the man had been an almost frightening experience.
|
|
|
|
``You ready now, yes?'' the Champion asked. ``Time for fight.''
|
|
|
|
``At dawn,'' Hanno replied calmly. ``The fourth day is the beginning.''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Finally},'' the Witch of the Woods murmured.
|
|
|
|
Hanno of Arwad breathed out slowly. The sentence had already been given.
|
|
|
|
It must now be carried out, at last.
|