415 lines
21 KiB
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415 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{miraculous}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Miraculous}\label{miraculous}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{miraculous}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Miraculous}
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\epigraph{``Courage is what's left when the rest is gone.''}{Albrecht Papenheim, the Lone Sentinel}
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Captain Fredda squared her shoulders as she strode up the stairs leading
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to the summit of the Westenhaupt, her cloak tightly clasped at the neck
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over her grandfather's mail. She was glad for the way the cloth over her
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lower face hid her mouth, lest the soldiers she had been placed in
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command of see her biting at her lip. Though the responsibilities of
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command were fresh to her, and she young for them, they were not the
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source of her worries. She could handle leading a company, on the wall
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or off it. No, it was the ringing bells that were summoning her to the
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top of the ramparts that had her uneasy. Her soldiers should have been
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given six hours of rest in the depths of the Westenhaupt, where no dead
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could get to them and not even the constant pounding of the Enemy's
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mages could keep them wake, yet they'd only had four before being called
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back to the rampart. Father, who had been a well-known captain back home
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for all that he'd insisted he was a terrible innkeeper when she'd been a
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child, had always told her that you could tell a siege was going bad
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when they sent tired soldiers back into the fray. Her father who might
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be dead, for there were rumours going around about Hocheben
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Heights\ldots{} No, she could not let fear win. It might be, Fredda told
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herself, that was seeing ratlings instead of hares. But it also might be
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that her father had been right, instead, and that the Morgentor was on
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the eve of falling.
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Morgentor -- Morning's Gate, the last fortress barring the way out of
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Twilight's Pass. The last fortress the armies of the north still held in
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the face of the Enemy, for inch by inch they had lost the grounds. We'll
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hold, Fredda chided herself. \emph{The Morgentor hasn't fallen since the
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founding of Procer.} Had her mother not been a scribe, the fair-haired
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captain might not have known that the last time the fortress had fallen
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was the last time the Hidden Horror had invaded the north. As it was,
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the fond learning of her childhood was the dread of her later years.
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``Blades out,'' Fredda howled, glancing back at the soldiers following
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her. ``They don't ring the bells to make it lively.''
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``Where else are we supposed to earn a tune, captain?'' one of her
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soldiers yelled back.
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``Certainly not your singing, Hannah, or the Dead King would run back to
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Keter in fright,'' Fredda called out, and the lot of them hit the
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rampart to the sound of hard laughter.
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The dead had forced a foothold, damn them all and Keter twice. A wyrm's
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great fangs had sunk into the crenellation and the gargantuan dead
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serpent's open maw was now spewing out an endless stream of enemy
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soldiers. Westenhaupt, the westernmost of the Three Peaks, was held by
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the soldiers of Neustria with reinforcements from those hard Hannoven
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bastards when the going got rough. There was no lack of soldiers, but
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Princess Mathilda Greensteel was fighting the dead in Hainaut so the
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Neustrians had few of the old blood to rally around. It didn't help,
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that the finest soldiers and officers had gone south. But they'd earn
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the fucking keep, and if the Morgentor was to fall it would not be
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through their peak.
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``Shield wall,'' Captain Fredda screamed, raising her own.
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Her company fell around her and they advanced briskly into the melee,
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smashing into the side of the dead. The fair-haired captain hacked down
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with her axe, tearing through dead flesh and smashing old bones, and as
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she howled her soldiers howled with her. Inch by inch they forced back
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the dead, until the melee was so tightly packed there was no room for
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the enemy trying to climb out.
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``Where are the godsdamned burners?'' Captain Fredda screamed. ``Get
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that fucking wyrm off my wall.''
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\emph{Before everyone here dies}, she didn't say. Were they out of
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pitch, she wondered for a horrible moment? It couldn't be, how else were
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they to get ride of abominations like the wyrms? But then screams of
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\emph{Papenheim, Papenheim}, and \emph{yet we stand} sounded and flames
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spread across the dead serpent's flesh. If custom hold, it would retreat
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now -- the Enemy only had so many of those undead moving siege towers,
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and could not afford to lose them.
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Instead, the head of the soldier to Fredda's side disappeared into red
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mist. \emph{Fuck}, the flaxen-haired captain thought.
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``Chosen,'' she yelled. ``Torch the stretch.''
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It'd kill her and half her company, but if one of the enemy's undead
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heroes was allowed to linger up here they were all done for. She's seen
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one shred near two hundred Hannoven heavies three nights back before it
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was thrown down the wall. The Enemy's champion was a half-naked man, a
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mass of hard muscle wearing little but trousers and scarring, and even
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though she raised her shied her smashed through it effortlessly and
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grabbed her by the throat.
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``\emph{Audace},'' someone screamed in Chantant, and the lance caught
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the Chosen in the throat.
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Falling to the floor, Fredda wondered if she was dreaming. There wasn't
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a man or woman in the army who didn't know who Prince Frederic Goethal
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was -- the sole southerner prince to bring his army to fight for the
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Pass -- but the fluttering hundreds of horsemen in red and blue silk
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couldn't possibly be here, could they? They held the Ostenhaupt, the
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tower on the other side of the Three Peaks. The dead Chosen vaulted up,
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even with his neck torn through, and after punching right through the
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head of the horseman who'd ridden him down he was run through by another
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three lances in quick succession, pushing him further back. Until the
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last had him dangling over the edge of the ramparts, and a ridiculously
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ostentatious man with long curls held by ribbons laughed out loud.
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``Enjoy the drop, yes?'' Prince Frederic Goethal said, and with his
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sword hacked through the lance holding up the Damned.
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Captain Fredda had risen to her feet, by then and gotten her shield wall
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back in order. The wyrm's fangs left stone soon enough, and it slithered
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back down the four hundred feet it had extended to serve as a siege
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tower. With the Westenhaupt secured and no other captain coming forward
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to do so in her place, Fredda ambled forward to speak with the Prince of
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Brus herself. He was still atop his mount, though someone appeared to
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have handed him a fine glass of brandy since she'd last looked.
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``Your Grace,'' she greeted him, and the respect was not feigned.
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How could it be, when the Kingfisher Prince and his army had bled for
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every fortress from Volsaga to Morgentor? This would be remembered.
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There were Alamans, in the end, and there were \emph{Alamans}. The man
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might look a fool, in silk and ribbons, but he was a fool who'd ridden
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down a sheer cliff to slay an undead dragon. Even the bitterest of
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Hannoven exiles had to approve of that.
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``Captain Fredda, yes?'' the Prince of Brus smiled.
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The fair-haired captain was glad the cloth still hid her face, for if
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she'd been caught blushing by any of her soldiers she'd have heard about
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it until Last Dusk.
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``Aye,'' she gruffly said. ``I thank you for your help, it was a close
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thing.''
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``It was you Neustrians who sortied at Graueletter to pull us out of
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that mess with the beorns,'' the Prince of Brus replied. ``An even scale
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requires no thanks, captain. This was \emph{due}.''
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None of this is due, she almost said. \emph{You could be safe south, but
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instead you're here dying with the rest of us.} But she'd been raised
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better than to insult sacrifice when it was so gallantly given, and so
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she kept her mouth shut.
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``Then I look forward to returning the favour,'' she simply said.
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The prince smiled ruefully.
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``I expect you'll get the occasion before long,'' he said. ``The Enemy
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seems rather impatient of late.''
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Fredda almost didn't ask, for it was overstepping, but when else would
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she get such an occasion?
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``Your Grace,'' she hesitantly said. ``I have heard that the Hocheben
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Heights have fallen. Is it true?''
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The Alamans gazed at her steadily.
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``Why do you ask?'' he said.
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``My father held command at Emil's Displeasure,'' she admitted. ``And I
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know that letters are no longer carried, but it has been weeks since
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I've heard from him.''
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Something like grief passed through the Prince of Brus' eyes.
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``I'm sorry,'' he quietly said. ``They held until dawn and got word to
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Tauenberg in time.''
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Fredda's throat choked. Then Father was\ldots{}
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``Thank you,'' she croaked out.
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Her fists clenched. The Morgentor would hold, damn them all and Keter
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twice. Her father had died for it, and if that was what it took she
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fucking would too.
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---
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Otto Redcrown, Prince of Bremen by virtue of having been spared by death
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longer than the rest of his kin, stared down at ink on parchment and saw
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writ there the death of his people. It might take, he thought, a year.
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Two, perhaps, if the Enemy spent months thoroughly razing the lowlands
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of Bremen and Neustria rather than forcing the Rhenian Gates. Yet the
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moment the fortress around him fell, and Twilight's Pass with it, the
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last doom of the Lycaonese had come. They'd lost Hocheben Heights, last
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month, and the Dead King had since begun to march hordes through the
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plateau. The fortress at Tauenberg would slow them down a few weeks, he
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thought, for but after that the dead would have no wall or host
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hindering their advance into the heartlands of the principality his
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father and sisters had entrusted to his unworthy hands. Within the month
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they would be at the gates of the city of Bremen itself, which was in no
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state to withstand a siege: it was packed with children and the elderly,
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all those that could or would not fight. Already the roads south had
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been cleared and all were being sent further south into Neustria, but
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once the dead had their foothold in Bremen they would begin raiding the
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refugee caravans and the noose would begin to tighten. The Dead King had
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moved too swiftly for them, Otto Reitzenberg thought, his armies little
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quicker on the march than those of the living but ceaseless and tireless
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in that advance.
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Now only a single fortress of Twilight's Pass remained in the hands of
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his people: the ancient Morning's Gate, the last holdfast standing
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against the march of doom. And if it fell\ldots{} Oh, Otto understood
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the stratagem of the Hidden Horror well. It was writ plain in the lay of
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the map: the last armies of the Lycaonese would be driven from the
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Morgentor and find in their retreat that the Dead King's armies were
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already waiting to the south of them. Supplies would end, the
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wagon-chains of grain and steel, and even should force of arms fail to
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end his armies hunger and winter cold would slay his soldiers by the
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score until none were left. The war was lost, though he could not admit
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it to the captains looking to him for orders. He must now see to
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preserving as much of his people as he could, sending them further south
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into Alamans lands so that a generation from now the war could be taken
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back to the Dead King and their ancestral holdings reclaimed. Neustria
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too would fall, of that there could be no question, but further south
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where the borders of Brus and Lyonis ran close it might be that Lake
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Pavin and the marshlands of northern Brus could serve as a new line of
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defence. They were Alamans holdings, as well, and would have many kin to
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call to their aid when the dead arrived. It might be enough for a time,
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ff anything could ever be enough when facing the Hidden Horror.
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The sharp rap of a knuckle against wood was the sole warning Otto
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received before his sworn swords let in the man he'd asked for. Prince
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Frederic Goethal of Brus was still impeccable dressed and groomed even
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after two weeks of gruelling fighting on the walls and the plains, his
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ostentatious blond ringlets kept with ribbons made from cloth he'd taken
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from banners of the Dead King. The Kingfishers, as the prince's retinue
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of horsemen had been fondly named by their Lycaonese comrades, had taken
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to taking the Hidden Horror's banners at every opportunity so they might
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have a courtly game of the most insulting use one could make of it.
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``Reitzenberg,'' the other prince cheerfully greeted him. ``Back staring
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at the maps, I see. Good, I've been itching for us to try a sortie.''
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``That is what I would ask you to consider, in a manner of speaking,''
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Otto acknowledged.
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The blond man seemed pleased.
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``If you'd lend me some of the Hannoven riders, I do believe we could
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catch their camp near the mountain rivers unaware,'' Prince Frederic
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said. ``The waters are already poisoned, I daresay, but we'll have
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better luck there than trying the Abomination's frontlines. Last watch
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insists they brought in fresh Damned and another pair of wyrms.''
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The Chosen dead and raised in the service of the Enemy had been leading
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the waves trying the walls for days now, though smashing through the
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ladders before they finished climbing was enough to keep most of them at
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bay. The wyrms were darker news, for the great serpents the Hidden
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Horror had crafted from corpses were worse than simple monsters: they
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were as undead siege towers, their insides made ladders so that the dead
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could climb up through them after the wyrms sunk their fangs into stone
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deep enough nothing could move them. Pitch fires were enough to set them
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to retreat, sometimes, but supplies were running low and more wyrms
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meant further thinning of them. They might have even less time than he'd
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hoped before the walls fell.
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``I would have you ride in another direction,'' the Prince of Bremen
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said. ``Now, before it is too late. Take forty thousand with you, and
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all our horse. Delay the enemy near Tauenberg, if you can, but you must
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take everyone you can south.''
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``Otto,'' the other prince said.
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``It is ill-done of me to ask after the sacrifices you have made,'' the
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Prince of Bremen admitted, ``but if you could let them into Brus, all
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who can will fight in its defence. If oaths must be made to you in place
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of the old crowns, then they will be. I have seen to it.''
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``\emph{Otto},'' Prince Frederic sharply said.
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``I'll hold as long as I can,'' he promised. ``And send word to the
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Rhenians to march everything they can through the Gates to slow the
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Enemy's march south. A month, at least, I can promise. Beyond that-''
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``If you speak another word of this foolishness, Gods forgive me but we
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may have to duel,'' Frederic Goethal flatly said.
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``We're going to die, Frederic,'' Otto Redcrown quietly said. ``There's
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too many of them and even the Morgentor cannot hold forever. Thrice in
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two days did we come within a hair's breadth of losing one of the Three
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Peaks, and the moment we do our annihilation has begin. Go while you
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still can and take the seed of my people with you, so that one day the
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Lycaonese may return north.''
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``Of course we're going to die, Otto,'' the other man replied, tone
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gentle. ``This is no surprise to me. My cousin Henriette has already
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been confirmed as my successor and I've tasked her with preparing our
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lands. What remains of the Goethal army will advance north into the
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marshlands to raise forts and escort your people to safety.''
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``It won't be enough,'' the Prince of Bremen said. ``You are held in
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respect, Frederic, in a manner that will not extend to your cousin. A
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prince needs to lead the last of us.''
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``Then go,'' Prince Frederic languidly shrugged. ``You, too, have been
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crowned.''
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``I am the last of the House of Reitzenberg,'' Otto Redcrown said, in a
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tone that brooked no argument. ``So long as one of us breathes, dawn
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will hold.''
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Of that matter there was nothing more to say, for Twilight's Pass would
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be his grave as it had been that of greater men.
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``I do not begrudge you that pride, my friend,'' Frederic Goethal said.
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``Do not begrudge me the same.''
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It was not the same, Otto thought. It was not the same, but he did not
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know the right words to speak and he would fail in this has he had been
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failing since the moment Elsa had pressed her bloody crown into his hand
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and breathed her last. Yet before he could say anything more, the door
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was roughly banged against.
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``Your Graces! The enemy stirs!''
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The two princes traded a glance, and wordless agreed to set aside the
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matter for now. If there was to be another assault on the walls there
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were more pressing concerns to attend to. Neither of them left their
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arms or armour save when they slept, these days, though attendants
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brought helmets to them as well as reports as they both made for the
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ramparts. The Morgentor had first been raised in the days of the Iron
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Kings, after the third time Hannoven fell and a ratling warband swelled
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into horde swarmed down Twilight's Pass looking for yet more to devour.
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The Rhenian Gates had held, as they always did, so with the way north
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into Rhenia barred the ratlings had ended up heading south towards
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Bremen like a tide of vermin. The battle for the lower mouth of
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Twilight's Pass was great victory, but a costly one. When one of the
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Krauff -- who had ruled over Bremen, in those days, predecessors to the
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Reitzenberg -- was elected Iron King in the years that followed, he
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ordered the raising of the Morgentor to ensure when the Chain of Hunger
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next broke through there would be walls awaiting them. In the centuries
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that'd followed, every great against the Dead and the Plague had seen it
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built into a greater holdfast. There was no greater fortress in the
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north, it was said, save for the cities of Hannoven and Rhenia
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themselves. That was no idle boast, Otto know, for otherwise he would
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not have been able to hold at bay the more five hundred thousand dead
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the Hidden Horror sent against the walls day and night.
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The Three Peaks had begun as the two great towers leaning against the
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sides of the pass, the third one originally raised as a simple bastion
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before centuries of additions turned it into a massive mountain of
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granite masonry. The walls between the three towers rose higher and
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thicker with the passing years, until it seemed like peaks made by the
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hands of mortals had filled the mouth of Twilight's Pass. The great
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gates that allowed armies and merchants to pass through were layers upon
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layers of enchanted steel, raised in times of peace but now fully closed
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since all to the north had been lost. Tunnels dug into the mountainside
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allowed for sorties from hidden places, though each had been built to it
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could be collapsed on the enemy if they found it. Otto himself had been
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commanding from the central peak, which was held mostly by Bremen
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soldiery. Prince Frederic's army held the eastern peak, while the
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Neustrians held the western one and the Hannoven exiles served as
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reserve and reinforcements for all. It was at the heart of the middle
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peak that Otto had set his quarters, and it would be swifter for the
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Prince of Brus to rise to the top of the tower and head east from there
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than to descend all the way down before doing the same -- as such, it
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was together that they reached the summit of the Herzhaupt and came to
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gaze down at the Dead King's sea of dead.
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``That is not an assault, unless I am gravely mistaken,'' Prince
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Frederic said, frowning.
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Otto did not disagree. The armies of the dead had made their camp
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further north, among the ruins of Graueletter, where their sorcerers
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were less vulnerable to sorties. Not without reason. The Lycaonese had
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proved more than willing to trade dozens of lives, if not entire
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companies, for the destruction of corpse-mages since the beginning of
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this war. It was known from ancient lore that the Dead King could not
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easily replace these, and that many of his foulest rituals required
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their presence. The Prince of Bremen had been forced to halt the
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practice of late, as he could no longer afford such losses no matter the
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prize, but the dead had remained cautious anyway. Close to the Morgentor
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they had only raised forts and filled them with tireless watchers: the
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river poured forth only when the ramparts were tried, be that day or
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night. What had at first been constant bruising assaults -- some of them
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having lasted more than a day and night in length -- had since slowed in
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frequency, though none wise would believe that to be good omen. Yet for
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all that the armies of the dead had come out of the ruins to the north,
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none of them had advanced further than the outer forts. Among the
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seemingly endless ranks of corpses garbed in ancient armour, there lay
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greater abominations.
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The wyrms, foul serpents that were monster and siege tower both. The
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beorns, bear-like monsters that served as the first wave of assault by
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climbing the ramparts and spewing out a company's worth of dead to aid
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their own rampage while ladders and wyrms advanced. Flocks of long-dead
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drakes circled above, waiting to spew their clouds of poison and acid.
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And among the lesser soldiers, ready to lead the dead hordes that would
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attempt to land their iron ladders on the ramparts, Chosen slain and
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raised into damnation stood still as statues. More than a dozen times
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now had Otto driven back that host when it tried to take the Morgentor,
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yet gazing upon it still sent a shiver up his spine every time. It was
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an army, he'd thought, raised to be the end of Calernia. And ahead of
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those dark ranks, a company of riders had approached under ancient
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banner: a circle of silver stars around a pale crown, the Hidden
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Horror's own heraldry. The riders bared their blades and raised them
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blades in salute, high and shining in the morning sun.
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And then they left, and the army went with them. Not a word had been
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spoken, from beginning to end.
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``What is this?'' Prince Fredric softly asked.
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``A miracle, my friend,'' Prince Otto replied in a hushed whisper.
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``Gods save us all, it is a miracle.''
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The dead withdrew all the way back to Graueletter and for three months
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took not a single step forward.
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