590 lines
26 KiB
TeX
590 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-18-fable}{%
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\section{Chapter 18: Fable}\label{chapter-18-fable}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Some acts only have to be committed once to afterwards echo a
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threat in your every silence.''}
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-- Dread Empress Massacre the First
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\end{quote}
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The Tyrant's soldiers were killing my people.
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The cataphracts, when I'd caught sight of them from miles away, had been
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forming up for a night raid. This was war, I reminded myself. Besides,
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for all my talk of alliances and bargains with Kairos he remained as
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much a foe as a friend. No doubt some scheme was afoot, one that
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involved prodding the Fourth Army into moving some way or other for
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deeper purpose. Skirmishes against the Levantines, maybe, or to make
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certain the Fourth did not encounter one of the League's forces. The
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cataphracts were harassing my legionaries, as they had the Third's, not
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pulling knives and engaging in struggle to the death. This was no
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different than Malicia testing the eastern borders of Callow with
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refugees and warbands, like a villainous cat taking its claws to
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something to see how it reacted. It would be wisest to chide the
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Helikean cavalry, slap them on the wrist and send them off to trouble
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someone else. They'd cased their raid when I intervened, hadn't they?
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Just the sight of a lone rider had put the charge of sundry four
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thousand kataphractoi to an end, and as I my valiant Zombie the Fourth
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cantered forward their ranks bent inwards. They were following orders,
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obeying one of those fearsome madmen Helikeans had idolized for
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centuries. I told myself all this, as I bid my mount to stop, and it was
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enough to stay my hand. Then my mind whispered: \emph{the Tyrant's
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soldiers are killing your people.}
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My fingers clenched, leather gloves creaking. The Mantle of Woe trailing
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behind me, stirred by the night's breeze, I watched as a pack of
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officers under Helike's own banner rode to the fore of the host. Five of
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them, in weather-beaten armour, blades sheathed at their sides. Their
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conical, crested helms boasted red ceremonial feathers that jutted like
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a splash of blood, and beneath the rim of the steel cap two curved
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strips of steel demarcated their eyes. From those a shawl of mail
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descended to their chests, the lead officer among them unclasping hers
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to reveal a scarred mouth.
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``Black Queen,'' the Helikean said in accented Lower Miezan, ``I-''
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``Kneel,'' I softly interrupted.
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In the silence the followed the word rang like a thunderclap. There was
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a pause, the breeze raking its unseen fingers on the carpet of snow
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between us. The officers assembled behind her mouthpiece bridled at the
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order. Their leader raised a hand.
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``We serve the Tyrant of Helike,'' the woman replied. ``And bend before
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none other.''
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My staff rose, and with a thunderous snap I brought it down against the
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wintry ground. The order I had not spoken sounded across the Night like
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rippling decree, and under the crescent moon's smile the veil we had
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approached under was ripped away. The banner-sigils jutted out like the
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masts of a ship in the utterly still sea of Firstborn, fluttering in low
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murmurs. Red and black and blue, crisscrossed by strokes of silver and
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gold. Among them two stood higher than all the rest. Ochre inlaid with
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gold, a rainflower in bloom. \emph{Rumena}. Purple cut by silver, a tree
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bearing twin circles unfinished. \emph{Losara.} Twenty thousand drow
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stood like statues around Helike's riders, grey skin touched with the
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colours of their sigils. Fear ripped through the steel-clad killers
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sworn to the Tyrant, like a sudden and brutal shiver.
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``Kneel,'' I softly said, ``or Gods be my witness, I'll kill you all.''
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Shapes slid across my face, two crows far above gliding far above
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passing between the moon's cast and my silhouette. Casting razor-sharp
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shadows as the Sisters smiled against my neck, Andronike humming in
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approval. She had not forgot the nightmare made of Rochelant, and held
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no love for those what would serve its maniacal architect. I found their
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leader's pale eyes, circled by steel, and saw fear spread through them
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like ink in water. The words that followed were hurried out, and beneath
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my notice, even as the soldiers began to dismount.
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Under crescent moon four thousand \emph{kataphractoi} knelt in the snow.
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``You will stay knelt,'' I said. ``Until I tell you to rise.''
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Zombie heeded my will and turned around, leaving at an unhurried trot. I
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left them with their knees to the ground, and went to bring my Fourth
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Army back into the fold.
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---
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The cheers began sounding from the palisade when I came within ninety
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yards. Behind the wooden fortifications the Fourth Army's camp had lit
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up with fire and fervour both, like an anthill boiling over. Torches lit
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up, and the wall facing me was pulled open. Within seventy yards I could
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make out the twin rows of soldiers assembling to make an avenue of steel
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leading deeper into the Fourth's camp. When I reached sixty yards, a
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winged shape descended from the sky and landed before me in a geyser of
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snow. And\ldots{} wood? What was a post doing -- Zombie the Third,
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bright blue eyes shining with glee, whinnied loudly and trotted up to my
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side. My lips quirked and I ran my gloved hand down her mane.
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``Hello, girl,'' I murmured. ``Missed me, did you?''
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The winged horse I had\ldots{} acquired from the Summer Court through
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technically blasphemous means sauntered around my current mount, turning
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around the back and coming close to affectionately brush against my good
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leg.
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``You \emph{are} a good girl,'' I praised, patting her neck. ``Unless
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you've been eating corpses again, we had a talk about that.''
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Zombie the Third neighed, I thought, perhaps a little guiltily.
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Godsdamnit, I'd told Hakram just because it was occasionally appropriate
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behaviour for orcs didn't meant he could let my \emph{horse} do it. The
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look she cast at Zombie the Fourth -- who was a pure necromantic
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construct, and so about as sentient as his saddle -- was less than
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friendly, too. I cocked an eyebrow.
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``Come on,'' I said, patting her one last time for the road. ``We're
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headed to camp. Just let me take care of that.''
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There'd been a wooden post tied to her bridle, so I leaned forward to
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unmake the knot and let it drop. Flanked by my own mount, I resumed my
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advance. The Fourth Army wasn't one of my old commands, not at its
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source. It had few officers from the original Fifteenth Legion, and
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while it'd picked up a few spare tribunes from General Afolabi's
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now-disbanded Twelfth the general staff had actually been from General
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Istrid's Sixth, the Ironsides -- including the general himself, Bagram.
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But that was officers, I thought as I approached the open gates. The
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Fourth Army's bones, not the meat. In the rows and rows of faces most I
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saw were young and Callowan. Recruits joined before the Tenth Crusade
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began, or in the months I'd spent in the Everdark. Those who'd never
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known my armies as part of the Empire even in name. Maybe that was why,
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when I crossed the gates, swords were bared and raised in salute. A
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steel avenue, that old honour granted to the kings and queens of Callow.
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``HAIL!''
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The word sounded defiantly into the night as my soldiers welcomed me
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home. Once upon a time, I thought as the sound washed over me, it would
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have been only knights allowed to stand among those rows. \emph{But the
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times are changing.} Head high, cloak trialing behind me, I rode to the
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end of the alley under the eyes of thousands. At the end, two orcs
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awaited. One I knew from the few conversations we'd had during and after
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he brought the Sixth into the Army of Callow, General Bagram. The other
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had me smiling: Gods, it felt like a century since I'd last seen Hakram.
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He was still stupidly tall and large, like the Heavens had given an old
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oak leave to walk around. His hand of bone went without glove, in winter
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and summer both, but his other -- wait, what? I wasn't sure what baffled
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me more, that he'd somehow lost yet another hand or that he'd not
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bothered replacing it. I brought Zombie to a halt, his sister matching
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him, and met Adjutant's dark eyes with mine before cocking an eyebrow.
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``You know, one is understandable,'' I said. ``Happens to the best of
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us. But two? That's just careless, Hakram. It's not like you have any
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more spares.''
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``I suppose my clapping days are over,'' Adjutant thoughtfully replied.
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``And I never did take to the theatre.''
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There was a pause.
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``You made the same damned joke the last time you lost a hand, didn't
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you?'' I sighed.
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``It's funnier this time,'' he told me. ``You know, because I'm running
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out of hands to lose.''
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Something like a sob of hysterical laughter almost ripped out of my
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throat, but aware of the eyes on us I kept it locked inside. I still
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burned with the need to actually hug the bastard, who was showing just
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enough fang from one side of the mouth to be implying either a taunt or
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mockery. A moment later I cleared my throat and inclined my head at
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Bagram.
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``General,'' I greeted him.
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``Your Majesty,'' he gravelled back, offering a legionary's salute.
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``The Fourth Army is yours.''
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I glanced back and saw the legionaries still standing with their swords
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raised. I supposed it was. Zombie moved under my will, turning to face
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them in full, and my staff rose almost of its own accord. Blades began
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beating against shield, a ruckus to wake even the dead, and cheers
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sounded with them. I glanced meaningfully at Hakram, and after
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dismounting I clapped General Bagram's shoulder and leaned close to tell
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him I needed to confer with Adjutant. I was led not far from there, to
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what I recognized to be Hakram's old campaign tent. I followed in the
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orc, limping at a pace. The inside was sparse, as usual, save for the
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inevitable piles of scrolls that followed Adjutant like a faithful pack
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of hounds. Still, it was warm and well-lit so it would do. I'd barely
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passed the folds when I was swept up in arms like tree trunks, hoisted
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up off my feet. I laughed and hugged the bastard back, though I slapped
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his shoulder for the indignity inherent to holding me up like I was some
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little lamb.
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``It's good to see you,'' I admitted, when finally the brute put me
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down.
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``You as well, Catherine,'' he rumbled out. ``It has been much, much too
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long.''
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``I hear that,'' I muttered.
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``Unexpected that you would find us, but decidedly not unwelcome,''
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Hakram said. ``The apparitions on the field outside, are they who I
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think they are?''
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``Drow,'' I confirmed. ``Though they call themselves the Firstborn --
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no, don't ask, it's a lot more complex than I feel like getting into.''
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The orc hacked out a pleased laugh.
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``You brought the drow to the surface,'' Hakram said, grinning. ``First
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time they came up in force in centuries. Gods be sated, you actually did
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it -- and so many. There must be at least fifteen thousand out there.''
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``Twenty,'' I corrected. ``The entire expedition in Iserre is fifty
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thousand strong, though they have their issues. They're headed your way,
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should be there before dawn. The Third Army got caught down in Sarcella
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by the Dominion, but they made it out after losing some skin. They're
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with the rest of the drow.''
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``The Priestess of Night is our ally, then?'' Adjutant asked.
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``They're called Sve Noc,'' I said. ``And they're, well, goddesses. More
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or less.''
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``You made an alliance with \emph{goddesses},'' Hakram said.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' I said. ``You're talking to the current
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high priestess of Night. Alliance was made, with some strings, but the
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fifty thousand are here to back us.''
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Hakram's brow rose.
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``The high priestess,'' he repeated. ``Of drow religion. A religion of
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drow. Presumably for drow. Which, unless I am mistaken, you are not.''
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``That's the one,'' I lightly replied.
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``What happened to the \emph{last} high priestess?'' he asked.
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``There wasn't one.''
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``And you talked goddesses into this how?''
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``I asked real nice,'' I smiled winningly. ``The trick was doing it
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twice.''
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``Cat, did you pull a knife on goddesses?'' Adjutant sighed.
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``Of course not,'' I replied, offended and technically even saying the
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truth.
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The orc stared at me, saying nothing.
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``We have an understanding,'' I said, a tad defensively. ``You wouldn't
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understand, you're not religious.''
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``I'm not going to touch that without a bottle on the table and half a
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day to waste,'' Hakram muttered.
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I snorted.
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``You're one to talk,'' I said. ``What happened to your hand? Tell me
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you weren't just struck with a sharp and urgent need for symmetry.''
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``Necessary sacrifice,'' Adjutant said. ``You'll understand when you
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meet with Vivienne.''
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My brow rose.
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``Most likely, yes,'' I said. ``But you're going to tell me anyway.''
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Flash of teeth, which I identified as implying sheepishness.
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``It'll be a long conversation,'' Hakram said.
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I studied him closely. I could press further, but it wasn't needed as
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far as I knew. And if it was, I trusted he would have told me.
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``It'll wait for that bottle with half a day, then,'' I said. ``Talk to
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me about Masego. I know everything Robber knows, but he said you'd have
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more.''
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``He knows more than someone of his rank should, though that is nothing
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new,'' Adjutant said. ``If you're looking for a location, we do not have
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it. He was seen in the fields west of the Blessed Isle, but we haven't
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caught sight of him said.''
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I frowned.
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``But?''
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``Before we took the gate into Arcadia,'' Hakram said. ``There was a
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report through the Observatory -- the last we ever got. Liesse is
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gone.''
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``The ruins?'' I said. ``They were destroyed?''
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``Gone,'' the orc said. ``As in moved. And we don't know how, or
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where.''
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My reflex was to reply that was impossible, especially given the
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ridiculously vicious wards I'd had put around the still very much
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dangerous ruins, but then I remembered \emph{who} had put those up
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specifically.
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``You think he took the city somehow,'' I said.
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``I think he's not in his right mind, since Thalassina,'' Hakram
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grimaced. ``And that he got his hands on the broken shards of the single
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most dangerous magical weapon this continent has seen since Triumphant's
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day. For what purpose, I can only guess.''
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Well, \emph{fuck}. This was still salvageable, I had Akua around and
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she'd know how that monstrosity worked better than anyone -- she was,
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after all, its architect. But until we got a read on how Masego was
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moving around, this was a sword hanging above someone's head. Whose
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there was no real way to know, if the disaster at Thalassina had
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affected Hierophant's mind somehow.
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``We need to find him,'' I said. ``\emph{Quickly}. Do you have any idea
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what happened to the Observatory?''
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``Nothing concrete, same as the gates going wild. We've got a dozen
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running theories, but the mages keep poking holes in each other's,''
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Adjutant admitted. ``About a third of them insist it's to do with the
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way scrying is blocked in Iserre, the rest are in agreement they are
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entirely different problems with no relation.''
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It was, I thought, grim irony that the person most likely to give us an
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answer about what was going on was the one we needed the Observatory to
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look for.
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``I'll see what Akua can figure out, but she'll only have so much time
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to spare,'' I said. ``I have her working on something else.''
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He nodded.
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``Archer's safe?''
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``Working through some things,'' I said. ``It got\ldots{} bad down
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there, Hakram. She had a close call.''
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I could see his chops move as he ran his tongue against his fangs, the
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cogs in his head turning as he weighed whether or not now was the right
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time to ask.
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``Bottle and half a day,'' Adjutant finally echoed.
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I conceded with a nod.
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``We need to talk with General Bagram,'' I said. ``Lay down some ground
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rules about the drow, prepare for the Third's arrival. I'll want to know
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about the state of the Fourth, too.''
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``He'll be waiting,'' Hakram said.
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``Then let's go,'' I sighed. ``We're wasting moonlight.''
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``You have four thousand surrendered cataphracts outside, Catherine,''
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he reminded me. ``The situation needs seeing to.''
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``Not surrendered,'' I said. ``I neither offered nor asked. They're
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considering their sins, that's all.''
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Adjutant's dark eyes scrutinized my face.
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``You're thinking of killing them,'' the orc said.
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I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
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``Some,'' I admitted. ``If I let them go today, they're a blade back in
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the Tyrant's armory tomorrow.''
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``Are we to break entirely with the League, then?'' he asked.
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I grimaced.
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``No,'' I admitted. ``There are some interests in alignment.''
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``Then you cannot commit slaughter,'' Hakram said.
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``Unless you have a lot more supplies than the Third, we can't keep them
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prisoner either,'' I flatly said. ``Four thousand men and four thousand
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horses. I suppose we could butcher the horses for meat, but the
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soldiers? Given what's out there, we don't have the manpower for the
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guards or the food to spare. Not without shaving it much too close for
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comfort.''
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``I fought those riders, Catherine,'' Adjutant said. ``So did the
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Fourth. And I can assure you, there is no love between us. Not even the
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fondness of respected foes. But we cannot butcher prisoners of war.''
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``Butchery? Slight and price, Hakram. One for one,'' I said. ``You have
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lists of dead, lost to their attacks. So did the Third. I will not let
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this go \emph{unanswered}.''
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``I wouldn't ask you to,'' Hakram said.
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The orc let out a long breath.
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``I could tell you that this would set a dangerous precedent,'' Adjutant
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said. ``That we must be taken as law-abiding actors, if the Liesse
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Accords are to be signed and held. I could even say that a massacre
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tonight will be matched by the Tyrant when opportunity comes for him,
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and we both know it will.''
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``But,'' I said.
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My closest friend in the world looked me in the eye.
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``Weren't we better than this, when we started?'' Hakram softly asked.
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I did not answer him on the way to General Bagram's tent. I still had
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not, after those talks were done, when I headed back into the snows.
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---
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They'd stayed kneeling.
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A few had tried to run, deciding to die gloriously with a blade in hand,
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and their pulped flesh had been splattered across the snow by the Mighty
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among my host. The rest had remained knelt in the cold and the dark,
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waiting for the judgement that was to fall upon their heads. They
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shivered and trembled, for the wind had not grown gentler in my absence,
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but even as their legs had begun to ache and their fingers had grown
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rigid for the chill the cataphracts of Helike had endured. Some portion
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admired them for it, but it was not so large that it was not drowned out
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by the anger still fuming in my bones. And even that admiration was
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tainted, for valour in the service of the likes of Kairos Theodosian
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could only be abused. The Firstborn parted for me without a word as I
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tread across the snows, come to meet the five officers who had meant to
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bargain with me. They had withstood their wait, I found, and softly five
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feathery streaks of red still rose and fell with the breath of the
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soldiers. My staff touched the ground with measured beat as I limped to
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them, and when I halted I felt their gazes turn to me. It was the leader
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among them I turned my own eye to, the woman who'd spoken.
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``Your name?'' I asked.
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``Pallas,'' she said. ``I am a general of Helike.''
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Letting the agony skitter across my leg, I leaned against my staff and
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knelt to match her height. I glimpsed vivid pale eyes that lingered
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between grey and blue, set on a tanned face that was younger than I had
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thought. Not so young she had not lived, I thought, and not so young
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that she should not have known better.
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``Nine hundred and thirty two,'' I said. ``That is how many of my men
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yours have killed, between the tallies of the Third and the Fourth.''
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``They fought well,'' Pallas simply said. ``And bravely.''
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``They died bravely too,'' I said, tone sharpening.
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I saw in her face, then, the expectance of the blow. Of sudden and
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merciless death.
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``I had thought to kill that many of you,'' I pensively said. ``And then
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another as well, for the remembrance.''
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``You would take us all instead, then?'' Pallas calmly asked. ``If that
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is so, we will not die kneeling. Vainglorious be our pride, Black Queen,
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we are \emph{kataphractoi} of Helike. We do not meet slaughter meekly.''
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Cataphracts of Helike, I thought. Legionaries of Praes, knights of
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Callow, fantassins of Procer. The names changed, and the lands matched
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to them, but in the end it wasn't it the same defiant promise? \emph{We
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are people}, it said. \emph{You can kill us, but you cannot make us less
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than that.} Funny, wasn't it? How you could offer soldiers praise and a
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title and they'd make of it something to make the world quake. Not the
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kind of funny that made you smile, but funny nonetheless.
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``No,'' I said. ``The man that serves as my better nature waits in camp,
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and though his kind knows little of mercy he asked it of me all the
|
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same.''
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``Mercy,'' General Pallas told me, ``will not change our oaths.''
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In that moment I was no longer looking at a woman kneeling in the snow:
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it was Helike's own grim visage looking back at me, that ancient
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city-state that had fought Praes and Procer at their peaks and walked
|
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away unbowed. And it had done so on the back of men and women just like
|
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the one facing me. Iron-wrought souls gathered to a Tyrant's banner, the
|
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victors of a hundred fields.
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``We serve a Theodosian, Queen of Callow,'' Pallas of Helike said, ``We
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do not flinch from doom nor grave, under that banner -- \emph{or
|
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anything else}.''
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\emph{I could take that certainty from you}, I thought, \emph{easy as
|
|
breathing. Of all my teachers the one who knew least of fear cowed all
|
|
of Callow with it, and I have since witnessed sights that would have him
|
|
pale.} And part of me wanted to, because nine hundred and thirty two
|
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legionaries were dead at their hands. And perhaps these cataphracts were
|
|
brave and skilled and loyal, but they were treating death as a game
|
|
while dancing to the Tyrant's tune -- and even now remained proud of
|
|
that truth. I wouldn't even need to speak a word in Crepuscular, to see
|
|
it all done: under the moon's gaze, when it came to weaving power not
|
|
even the Tomb-Maker was my match in raw strength. A mere four thousand,
|
|
kneeling? It would be, as I had thought, easy as breathing. And that
|
|
gave me pause, because my leg \emph{stung} and I still remembered the
|
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sky opening at the Battle of the Camps and sending down death at
|
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impotent Procerans. Some nights I wondered if part of the reason my
|
|
father had refrained from embracing the paths to power that were a
|
|
villain's due was because he was afraid of what he might \emph{do} with
|
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it. The kind of person it made you, to look at four thousand soldiers
|
|
and know that your own hand could slay them in the span of a breath. The
|
|
kind of person it made you, to go through with it. Hadn't it always been
|
|
the tragedy of Creation that might ever went to the people least
|
|
deserving of it? That I could not change, not truly. But I could, at
|
|
least, act like I was not the Dead King incipient. Like I still
|
|
remembered what it was like, to laugh and breathe and hurt -- what it
|
|
meant, to snuff out those same things.
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|
``There was once a man, to the far east,'' I quietly told Pallas. ``He
|
|
was a killer among killers, and among that red number there were none
|
|
more loathsome. So when he claimed the Tower, \emph{Foul} was the title
|
|
he took. Third of his name, and last.''
|
|
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|
I smiled.
|
|
|
|
``In the Wasteland they remember him a vainglorious failure, for when he
|
|
led his armies west the Kingdom of Daoine crushed them all and sent his
|
|
limbless body back to Ater, along with the head of ever highborn in his
|
|
host,'' I said. ``Of his duel with the Commander of the Watch and the
|
|
valour that saw the Deoraithe prevail I could tell you much, but what
|
|
would it mean to you?''
|
|
|
|
I tapped my fingers against my staff, hearing the steady beat of
|
|
\emph{do not forget} along with the pulsing pain of my leg.
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|
|
|
``It is the years after I'll tell you a story about,'' I said. ``You
|
|
see, Foul did not long survive his return. His successor cared nothing
|
|
for the man, but there were rules to observe. Two bounties were offered.
|
|
The first for the head of any Commander, only once claimed in the
|
|
history of Praes. The second, though? It was for two fingers.''
|
|
|
|
I leaned closer, voice almost a whisper.
|
|
|
|
``The one that came after was titled \emph{Vile}, and of that epiteth
|
|
proved well-deserving, but for all that he was not without cleverness,''
|
|
I said. ``It was longbows on a wall, that broke his predecessor and so
|
|
he put coin to unmaking the first of these two. For four centuries
|
|
following, anyone bringing back the severed index and middle fingers of
|
|
a Deoraithe was rewarded in gold.''
|
|
|
|
Pallas of Helike went very, very still.
|
|
|
|
``Yeah, I figured you'd understand,'' I said. ``You're an archer
|
|
yourself. But a snip of the knife and all that skill, all those
|
|
years\ldots{} up in smoke. Can't pull back the string without those, can
|
|
you?''
|
|
|
|
``And this,'' General Pallas replied, ``is the span of your
|
|
\emph{mercy}?''
|
|
|
|
``I never claimed my kind of tyranny to be deserving of capital
|
|
letter,'' I said. ``So you'll keep the fingers, Pallas. But they will be
|
|
broken, by your own hands, and with them I take every fucking thing that
|
|
allows you to call yourself \emph{kataphraktoi}.''
|
|
|
|
The woman's eyes widened in surprise and anger.
|
|
|
|
``You cannot-'' she began.
|
|
|
|
``Be silent,'' I hissed. ``You ride around slaying my soldiers and
|
|
abetting a madman's madness when the King of Death is sinking his teeth
|
|
in the world. You do not get to be indignant, Pallas of Helike. You're a
|
|
worm in the flesh, and if neither you nor your master can be trusted not
|
|
to act as the ushers of the end times then you will have to be
|
|
\emph{disciplined}.''
|
|
|
|
I rose to my feet, leaning on ebony, and glared down.
|
|
|
|
``You came here as cataphracts,'' I said. ``And here will stay your
|
|
horses and arms and armour. Not a single one of you will leave this
|
|
place with as much as a butter knife.''
|
|
|
|
Breathing out, I met pale eyes and let the slightest part of the fury I
|
|
still felt slip into my gaze.
|
|
|
|
``Walk back to your Theodosian, General Pallas,'' I said. ``And give him
|
|
warning from the Black Queen -- if he ever pulls anything like this on
|
|
my people again, there's room for another soul on my cloak.''
|
|
|
|
In the sky far above crows cawed, the sound of it eerily like laughter.
|