403 lines
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403 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{winter-i}{%
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\section{Winter I}\label{winter-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Forty-one: should personalities among your band be clashing
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overmuch, consider leading the band into grave peril. Either friendship
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or a corpse will ensue, which remedies the issue either way.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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Merciful Gods, it truly was a terrible job but \emph{someone} had to do
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it. Today that person was Ernest, and though he'd gone as far as
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offering up his entire savings to anyone in his company willing to go in
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his place there'd been no takers. Either he'd not saved up enough to
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tempt someone into the risk, or they'd wisely decided that a corpse
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could spend no coin. Captain Noémie -- her rank meant she did not have
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to participate in the lottery, the damned lucky witch -- had ordered
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half a dozen of his fellows to come down to the shore with him, enough
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that even if the Dead struck there should be at least one runner left to
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bring back the news. Ernest's last attempt to sway one of them into
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taking his place was met with jeers and one promise to comfort his
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sister if he did not make it back to shore. Victor, the last one had
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been. He'd remember that. The rowboat was cramped and uncomfortable,
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though even in winter it'd been kept oiled and clean so it would remain
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in good shape. Ernest, by what he intended to claim was a coincidence,
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smacked Victor in the face with the oar when his companions pushed him
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out into the lake.
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The waters of Lake Pavin rarely froze even at winter's peak, but they
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were icy cold and prone to ripping currents that could easily tip over a
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small boat like this one. Still that was the last of Ernest's troubles
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this morn, for he'd been sent out to see if any of the Dead were lurking
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beneath the waters. Orders had come down from Prince Gaspard himself, it
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was said, that all forces by the shores of Lake Pavin and the Tomb were
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to survey the waters every day. Rumour had it that Langueroche, further
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up north, had fallen after heavy fighting because the undead had massed
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in great numbers under the surface of the lake before striking just
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before morning. The people had fled in time, but now the entire
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northwest was said to be buckling under the weight of the Dead's
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offensive. The young man glanced back to the distant shape of Sengrin,
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the fortress-town on the hilly slope where he'd been born, and prayed
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once more it was too small a town to be worth the Hidden Horror's
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attentions. They hardly had the men to resist an incursion if it came,
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for many had been called north to the capital where the Enemy had struck
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hardest.
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Yet the siege there had been broken, Ernest reminded himself. The war
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was not yet lost.
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A scream from the shore shook him out of his thoughts, reminding him
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simply rowing out would serve no purpose. Carefully, he went looking
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through the cloth bag hung at the front of the boat and took out a
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handful of small round stones. As he'd been instructed to, he leant over
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the side of the boat and dropped three in a line. Whatever it was the
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priests had done to the rocks, it worked as they'd said it would: light
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bloomed as they sunk deeper, casting a warm and broad glow. Now he only
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had to wait until it touched the bottom of the lake, repeat this twice
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more and he could -- oh, \emph{oh Gods no}. Standing in still and silent
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rows at the bottom of Lake Pavin, hundreds of figures in ancient armour
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spread out as far as the light was cast. Ernest desperately scrabbled
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for the oars again and began rowing, screaming out in alarm for his
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companions still on the shore, but with utter terror he saw from the
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corner of his eye one of the stones he'd dropped bounce off the side of
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a skeletal thing's bronze helmet. It looked up, an eyeless leering
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skull, and the young soldier nearly pissed himself.
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He hardly made it another twenty feet, screaming all the while, before a
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spear's tip punched through the bottom of the rowboat and it began
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taking water. He tried to keep rowing for a few heartbeats, even as more
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iron spikes went through the wood, but the weight was too much and his
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arms too weak. There were dark shapes moving under the water's surface,
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but what choice did he have? Cursing, he leapt off the boat towards the
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shore and began to swim in the icy waters. There were things trying to
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grasp at his feet but he was quicker than they, even though his limbs
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were growing numb, and he swallowed cold and scummy water but against
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all odds he made it near the shore. Enough he could find his footing on
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the ground below the water -- which was then spear took him in the back
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of the leg and he screamed as hooks sunk into his skin and something
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dragged him back into the deeper lake. Fingers closed around his throat
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to keep him still, and though he panicked he realized after a moment
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they were warm. And coming from the wrong way. A large woman in plate,
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with a helmet shaped like a snarling badger, grinned at him.
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``Stupid brave,'' the stranger praised. ``But this hurt.''
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And then he was screaming and flying through the air, blood spurting as
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the spear that'd been put in him accompanied him still stuck in his leg.
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He landed half-weeping, the pain and vicious bite of the wind on his wet
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body too much for him to take. The wet spear broke, though the head only
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dig deeper into his flesh. Someone wrapped a blanket around him and
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faces he could hardly make out for the tears hastily brought him up to
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the fire near the watchtower further up the hill.
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``There's a priestess on her way,'' someone said. ``We'll take out the
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spear then. You did good, Ernest. Gods, you did good.''
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``Who was that, near the shore?'' he croaked out.
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``Don't know the name, but I know what the other one told us what they
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go by,'' Victor quietly said. ``The Valiant Champion. Levantine, I
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gather.''
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A Chosen, Ernest shivered. With the warmth of the fire and blanket his
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vision was beginning to stop swimming. He looked back to the lake and
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thought he must have gone mad, or been poisoned, but the others breathed
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in sharply and some even began to pray. All along the shore, for what
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must have been a mile, shapes began to emerge from the water. The dead
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walked, garbed in iron and bronze, flesh and bone dripping water. And
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further from the shore great shapes broke the surface, gargantuan snakes
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of bone and leather and crackling sorcery. And in front of them stood
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only two silhouettes, sharply glared at by the morning light. Women,
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both one in wet plate with a great axe resting on her shoulder and the
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other in a coarse green cloak-tunic that went all the way to her feet.
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She turned, revealing that behind the long locks framing her face she
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wore a mask, and flicked some droplets of blood against the rocky shore.
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The world \emph{shivered} and Ernest rose to his feet.
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``They'll die,'' he said. ``There's too many, and the snakes-''
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``Look,'' another man croaked. ``Gods, \emph{look}.''
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Lake Pavin screamed and tore back, the waters fleeing the shore as if
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terrified and snapping up most the undead with them. A few soldiers
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who'd already reached solid ground strode forward uncertainly as the
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lake continued to retreat, though any who dared to approach the pair
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were casually dispatched by the Valiant Champion: she smashed through
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them like they were glass, never needing more than a single blow and
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moving with blinding swiftness. The snakes -- there were three, Ernest
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now counted -- broke free of the waters pulling back and with
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sky-tearing screams tore forward. The Chosen in the snarling badger helm
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glanced at her cloaked companion, who nodded distractedly. Laughing
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wildly, the Valiant Champion began to run towards the gargantuan
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monsters.
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``There's a few still loose,'' Ernests said, glancing to the sides.
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``We can handle those, at least,'' Victor said, grunting.
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In the distance one of the great snakes struck at the Champion, who
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slapped the massive maw with the flat of her axe -- and after a rippling
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sound the snake was tossed back like a rag doll, hitting the lake and
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causing waves.
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``That's the Witch of the Woods, it is,'' another soldier said, grabbing
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his spear. ``Heard about her. Walloped the Sovereign of the Red Skies
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real good when they fought.''
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``She's not even the leader of that bunch, I hear,'' Victor said. ``It's
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some Ashuran knight.''
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Before their eyes, the waters that'd been drawn back by the Witch began
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to ice. Tendrils of frost went through, like ink in water, and thickened
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as they went. Gods, Ernest thought, what manner of a man could command
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women like these?
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---
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Hanno caught her wrist before the blade could claim more than a scratch
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on the Mirror Knight's chin. He would have liked to restrain the Painted
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Knife entirely, for the threats she was screaming in Lunara were not
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mild ones, but he could not. His other hand had seized the wrist of the
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Mirror Knight instead, catching it before he could finish drawing his
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sword.
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``You dare?'' the Mirror Knight thundered.
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Not at Hanno but at the Painted Knife, who snarled back in kind.
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``Enough,'' the White Knight said.
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``The Levantine tries to slay me in broad daylight and-''
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``If you do not release your grip, I will crush your wrist,'' White
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calmly said in Chantant, then changed to Lunara. ``Kallia, drop your
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blade.''
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``Did you not just hear him call the Scouring of Vaccei
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\emph{necessary}?'' she hissed. ``Thousands of my people killed,
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children choking to death on ashes and-''
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``I will not ask twice,'' Hanno calmly said.
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Snarling at him once more, she did. Christophe released the grip of his
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own blade as soon as he no longer felt threatened, though the
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dark-haired hero found he had little sympathy for the man. In some ways
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it was a relief that Procer gave birth to so few heroes, for Hanno had
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known none save for the Rogue Sorcerer who'd not at one point or another
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stirred black rage in heroes from another nation. The Mirror Knight was
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a good man, principled and well-meaning, yet his rustic attitudes and
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insistence that Procer's wars abroad had been for the good of Calernia
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were being received increasingly poorly by the heroes of the Dominion.
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If he stilled his tongue more often, it would be a negligible issue.
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Unfortunately, Christophe was both opiniated and frankly rather easy to
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bait. Which he inevitably was, by one of the several heroes who
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considered him pompous and in need of a good thrashing.
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``Blood was spilled,'' the Mirror Knight flatly said. ``There must be
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answer to that.''
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``Are you requesting,'' the White Knight peacefully asked, ``the
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judgement of the Seraphim?''
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The other man's face shuttered and he curtly shook his head in denial.
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The Painted Knife, whose Chantant had improved with the months she'd
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been in Cleves, understood enough to chortle at Christophe's expense.
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Hanno's gaze moved to her, quelling, and she stalked away like a proud
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cat. A spar with the Vagrant Spear would settle her, he hoped.
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``You've lost less than thimble of blood, Christophe,'' a cultured voice
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drawled. ``Shall you require less than a thimble's worth of justice to
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go along with it?''
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The Repentant Magister had yet to finish the cup of wine in her hand,
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for she'd been more interested in spectating the aftermath of the
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careful barbs she'd sent the Mirror Knight's way than in finishing her
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drink. Lounging in her seat in heavy velour robes, the patrician beauty
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wore a sardonic smile that could widen or dwindle but never quite
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entirely left her face. Nephele might have renounced the sordid
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practices and sorceries of the Magisterium, but she'd yet to shed their
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taste for making a game of others. Even after it had nearly come to
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blows between two heroes she seemed entirely unrepentant -- which might
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have amused Hanno, given her Name, were he shallower sort of man. As it
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was, instead he considered to be as much if not more at fault for the
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incident as the two who'd reached for steel.
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``Nephele,'' he warned.
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``Stygians,'' the Myrmidon shrugged from the side, speaking Aenian.
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``What else can be expected, even from one claiming \emph{repentance}?''
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Bereft of her armour for once, the slender woman was sitting on his cot
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and polishing the large bronze shield whose holy blessings were as a
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song to Hanno's Name. The Repentant Magister's smile had sharpened the
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moment she began speaking: neither had hidden the strong and instant
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dislike they took to each other the very moment they met.
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``When the Exarch ran you of Penthes like a whipped dog,'' Nephele
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conversationally asked in the same obscure tongue, ``is it true that you
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were jeered at by the mob on your way out?''
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Heroes were not meant to gather in great numbers, Hanno thought, not for
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so long. Not without a common enemy they could all strive against -- and
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though the Dead King was that, he was simply too distant to fill the
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need. He could not be found on the field, which left instead a crowd of
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heroes each itching to fight the war on Keter in their own way without
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the slightest desire to heed anyone's commands or any notion of how to
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remain civil with others just as stubborn. Keeping the peace between
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them was like trying to teach humility to a cat.
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``The Magister does not speak untruth,'' the Mirror Knight said, having
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ignored the exchange he could not understand. ``Can the Dominion's band
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of \emph{heroic} killers now cut their allies without consequences?''
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``Nephele speaks to stir up amusement,'' Hanno flatly said. ``And you
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gave offence with your words that was no less than the scratch of a
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blade.''
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Christophe's face set mulishly.
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``I do not deny that the sanctions visited upon Vaccei were harsh, yet
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they were hardly-''
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``Ah, I'd forgotten,'' the Myrmidon mused, still in Aenian. ``When
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Procerans have a massacre, we have to call it \emph{sanctions}
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instead.''
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``What was that?'' the Mirror Knight sharply replied, having caught the
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tone if not understood the words.
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``Is fuck him,'' the Myrmidon replied, her Tolesian heavily accented.
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``You,'' Nephele helpfully clarified. ``She means fuck \emph{you},
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Christophe.''
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The Mirror Knight reddened. He was a young man, and proud. Too many
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slights had been offered to him tonight for him, he'd chew on them for
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weeks. It was the persistence of the Repentant Magister in stirring the
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pot that bothered the Ashuran, as much for the stirring itself as her
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persistence in doing so when she'd been confronted about it. She did not
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usually continue past the first verbal raking of her claws on someone's
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back when caught out. The White Knight's gaze moved to her hands, which
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he found steady, but then to the cup she was holding. Which was, as he'd
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noted earlier, still full. So was the open bottle at her side on the
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table.
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``Are you drunk, Magister?'' Hanno suddenly asked.
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The smile vanished.
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``Of course not,'' Nephele replied, tone serene.
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A lie, Hanno thought. He glanced at the other two heroes: Christophe had
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followed, but as the Myrmidon spoke nothing aside from Aenian, barely
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passable tradertalk and a smidge of Tolesian she was utterly in the
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dark.
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``I would ask you for use of the room, Mirror Knight,'' he formally
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asked the Proceran.
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The man was still furious, but now he was also confused and aside from
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it all his natural manners won out -- when politely asked a minor favour
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by someone he considered a social superior, Christophe would feel the
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need to grant it with aplomb. He acceded to the request. The Myrmidon
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would require better reason, so instead Hanno asked her to see if the
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Painted Knife had calmed -- and if not, if she could be talked into a
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spar with the Vagrant Spear. The Penthesian was quite taking with the
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latter, if not in a romantic sense: their very public matches had become
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one of the favourite entertainments of the army in Cleves.
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``Am I to be punished now?'' the Repentant Magister smiled. ``I
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\emph{have} been a bad girl, and since we have the use of the
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room\ldots{}''
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``Would that help you?'' Hanno frankly asked.
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She blinked in surprise. He thought it a little sad, that she had grown
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so jaded of her own life she no longer genuinely sought companionship in
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others.
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``If all it takes is asking, it is cruel no one has told Antigone,''
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Nephele chuckled.
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That brought out no reaction from him. Hanno understood the Witch of the
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Wilds perhaps better than anyone not of the Gigantes could, for the
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silent tongue they shared had a hundred thousand nuances but not a
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single \emph{lie}. They knew where they stood, and what could and could
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not change from it. Insinuations thrown against that were like an egg
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tossed at a rampart.
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``No, then,'' Hanno frowned. ``Drink is not a remedy, Nephele.''
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``A remedy for what?'' the Repentant Magister asked.
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``Your hands shake without it, I think,'' the White Knight said. ``How
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many bottles have you drunk?''
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The heroine's face tightened, and so he knew he'd been correct.
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``I am not \emph{weak},'' the sorceress said.
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Hanno sat at her side. How many times did it make now he'd been in this
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position? The strain was getting to all of them, one way or another.
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They were far from home, drowning in death, and forced to stand shoulder
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to shoulder with people they might otherwise draw blades on. The
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exhaustion they felt was making them all quarrel more than they would
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have otherwise, for though their bodies were often kept rested by their
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Names the same could not be said of their minds.
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``When you left Stygia, you renounced the sorceries you were taught,''
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Hanno gently said.
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``Not all,'' Nephele said. ``Enchantment and clairvoyance, healing and
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strengthening. I am still mistress of these, for all I have cast
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aside.''
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But the curses and destructive sorceries the Magisterium was fond of
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unleashing on its enemies -- or had been, before Hanno and the Ashen
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Priestess personally slew its finest sorcerers -- she had renounced. The
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magics she used were useful, for all that some of their companions had
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expressed regret she was the one to come north with them instead of the
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Rogue Sorcerer, but in the face of relentless tides of death they would
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not save her life. Fear, Hanno thought, was at the heart of this. That
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could not easily be mended, but in sharing its hold could be lessened.
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So they spoke of many things, the two of them, for once pressed the
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heroine seemed almost eager to speak. They always were, when they
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searched his face and found no castigation there. Why they could expect
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it he did not know, for while Hanno often diverged in belief form his
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companions he had never once thought them his \emph{lessers}. He, too,
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knew fear. Still remembered a corpse and a trick, words wielded like
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knives. \emph{Certainty and blindness}, the monster had said. \emph{I
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have ever wondered at the difference.} The sorry song of doubt, for a
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monster's curse in defeat might be dismissed but not so a gloat in
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victory.
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``We must seem so petty to you, White Knight,'' Nephele bitterly said.
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``With our doubts and our failures.''
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``You have come a very long way to fight for the sake of people you
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never knew, against an enemy some claim cannot be defeated,'' Hanno
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gently said. ``Even at the worst of the casual cruelty you have offered,
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never once did I think of you as petty.''
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\emph{Why do you all hold me in such esteem}? He could not help but
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wonder, for even those among the heroes in Cleves that had never once
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obeyed his commands still seemed to consider him as a figure of
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authority -- though not one to which they were beholden. It was as if
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they all knew something he did not, something that set him apart from
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the rest, and he knew not what it was. So instead he stilled his tongue
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and held Nephele when the bottle was empty and she wept for the home she
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loved as much a she hated, for the golden life she had left behind
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because she could not stand to see men in chains. He held her as she
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broke and helped her rise when she put herself together again. She'd not
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needed him, not truly. The woman she'd been the moment she spurned
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everything she was raised to embrace was the true face of her, not the
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malice that came out when fear and exhaustion won. They never seemed to
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understand it, Hanno had learned, that every single one of them had a
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light in them that was not so easily put out. He put the Repentant
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Magister to bed, after, and took his leave. It was not yet too late to
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call on Prince Gaspard and Princess Rozala, to discuss where the Dead
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were striking.
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There would be no rest for the wicked if he could have it otherwise.
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