581 lines
29 KiB
TeX
581 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-deadhand}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Deadhand}\label{interlude-deadhand}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-deadhand}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Deadhand}
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\epigraph{``One hundred and twenty-five: under no circumstances should you
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trust anyone who has the title of chancellor, vizier or duke. While they
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will always be powerful and competent, keep in mind they will also
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inevitably turn out to be in some way treacherous.''}{``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown}
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One was limping, two were nursing an arms and Adjutant had only
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withstood that blow from the Duke of Unrelenting Landslide's morningstar
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at the price of his plate being dented and the flesh beneath it torn
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right through.
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The Repentant Magister had done what she could, and she was a skilled
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healer, but magical healing was less immediately potent than the
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priestly kind when it came to deeper wounds. All of them were Named, and
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so the pain and increased fragility was only a minor matter, but Hakram
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had considered it an interesting piece of irony that he usually received
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a better quality of healing with the Woe, a band of villains, than he
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had from a pack of Above's designated footsoldiers. The air was rife
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with tension as the band of five he accompanied let the Vagrant Spear
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guide them through the bare stone corridors, though conversation had not
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died down even the wake of the defeat inflicted unto them by what could
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only be remnants of the Court of Autumn. The calm voice in the back of
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Hakram's mind noted that where the Woe would digging into their second
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plan of attack by now, everyone pitching even if it was Catherine who'd
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put it all together, these five were instead wasting their breath on
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largely inconsequential matters.
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Adjutant decided to take his own evaluation with a grain of salt,
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acknowledging he would always favour his own companions whether or not
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he was aware of it.
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They'd all been headed towards somewhere called the Spins for some time
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now, ominously enough without any fae harassment as they moved. Aside
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from Hakram's professional vexation at the way half of the Arsenal
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seemed to have some sort of nickname known only to the locals, on top of
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the already labyrinthine amount of sections within the facility, there
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should have been no reason for displeasure on anyone's part.
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Unfortunately, the lack of immediate peril meant the Mirror Knight's
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band of five had promptly lapsed back into open malfunction. It felt
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like dealing with children, Hakram thought. While that was not entirely
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a rare thing with heroes, who were often more preoccupied with pretty
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ideals than practicalities, this band of five was\ldots{} remarkably
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unstable. It would not be impossible to make them functional, in his
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opinion, but it would take sustained effort to keep them that way and
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some truly miraculous labour to mend the root causes.
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``Would you hurry, Magister?'' the Blade of Mercy complained. ``We'll
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lose them if you keep slowing us down.''
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As displayed, though in his opinion the younger of the Proceran heroes
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was, for all that he was vastly irritating, more a symptom of the
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troubles than a cause. The Repentant Magister, whose true name was
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Nephele Eliade, visibly bit down on the sharp retort she equally visibly
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wanted to let out at the boy who'd been needling her for hours now. The
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Stygian was slow because she'd taken bad fall in the last scrap with the
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Prince of Fallen Leaves and magical healing could only help so much with
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bones, not because she was somehow lazy as was being implied. Now, that
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should have been the moment when the band's unspoken leader stepped in
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before tempers further rose. The Mirror Knight had brought these people
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together after all, and that implied a level of deference to his
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leadership. Instead, Christophe of Pavanie leaned closer to the Vagrant
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Spear and addressed her in a low voice. The look the Magister shot at
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his back was distinctly less than adoring. It must have been rather
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irritating, Hakram mused, deferring to something that essentially did
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not exist.
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``How is your arm, Blade of Mercy?'' Adjutant gravelled.
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The redheaded boy started, constant in his surprise that Hakram could do
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anything but stand behind a human villain threateningly or eat village
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babies. Adjutant had known men and women who truly, genuinely hated his
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kind and so he'd not been all that ruffled by the Blade's casual
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bigotry. It was the way of thinking of a boy who'd been told orcs were
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not people and had never had occasion to question that before, not
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something running deeper. Hakram thought less of men who chided the
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likes of the Blade for speaking their opinion of his kind but privately
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shared in the belief, for at least the boy could be \emph{taught}.
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``It stings,'' the blue-eyed boy admitted. ``But it is only pain.''
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``I am sure Lady Eliade could heal it further, if the sting is a
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distraction,'' Adjutant suggested.
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The Blade of Mercy cast a look at the Stygian sorceress and bit his
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tongue, looking somewhat abashed at the implicit reminder that the only
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reason his arm wasn't bleeding meat was the Magister's healing touch.
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``I would not ask her to waste her valuable magic on my discomfort,''
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the Blade of Mercy stiffly said, inclining his head at the sorceress.
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It was exactly the kind of answer someone with a disdain of magic trying
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to politely excuse themselves from healing would have used, but Adjutant
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suspected that when it came to the redheaded boy the words were genuine.
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Or close enough. Hakram had met two very different Blades of Mercy,
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after all. The first was a boy with Light gleaming in his eyes, spouting
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lines sounding suspiciously similar to those of the heroes of Proceran
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bodice-ripper novels and very much trying to act like one of those
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heroes. The other was an awkward redheaded boy, out of his depth and
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painfully aware of it. He found it easier to pity the latter than the
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former, for all that they were one and the same.
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The Maddened Keeper, further behind, let out a harsh bark of laughter at
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the about-face but did not speak. That she did not contribute much of
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anything was, to Hakram's eyes, a contributing part of this mess: there
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was an element missing to their band, the Callowan Named's aloofness
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withholding an influence that would have stabilized matters even if it
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was negative -- a designated enemy, after all, would have given the
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Blade someone to focus his grandstanding against. The Magister offered
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Adjutant a discreet incline of the head in thanks when no one else was
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looking, which the orc did not hesitate in returning. It was a rare
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thing for him to have high opinion of a heroine before meeting her, but
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the Repentant Magister had been an exception. How could he not hold a
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woman who'd spurned the slavery she was raised to in high esteem? If
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Catherine intended to take this one as a consort he could only approve.
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``Adjutant,'' the Mirror Knight called out from the front, ``if we might
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have a word?''
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Hakram put some spring to his step, catching up to the two in front as
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the Vagrant Spear moved to the side so he might stand between them.
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Those two were significantly easier to read than the rest, but in a way
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twice as hard to understand. Adjutant, in theory, knew much of the
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Vagrant Spear from Indrani's reports -- which, while usually written in
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sloppy drunk handwriting with some of the filthiest limericks he'd ever
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seen slipped in here and there, always seemed to cover enough the
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important parts thoroughly enough he couldn't actually complain about it
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to Catherine -- and her equally informative tendency to shamelessly
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gossip after she had a few drinks in her.
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He knew that Sidonia was from the city of Alava, from one of the lesser
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lines of the Blood related to spears and considered as related to the
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Champion's Blood even though in practice their skills had much more in
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common with the Slayer's Blood. A political issue, he'd been made to
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understand. Hakram knew that Sidonia was strictly interested in men,
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could kill skillfully with both hands and seemed to have some
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Name-driven taboo against wearing shoes of any sort. None of this,
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though, helped him understand the mercurial brew of affection and
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dislike she related to the Mirror Knight with, or why it seemed to spin
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the man's head around so much. Half the time the man seemed to crave her
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good opinion, the other half he seemed to court actively spiting it. It
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was probably about sex, which humans keeping to the House of Light
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tended to make a lot more complicated than it needed to be.
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``I have heard that the Woe fought mighty battles against the Seasons of
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the Splendid,'' the Vagrant Spear said. ``Do you have insights to share
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about the nature of our foe?''
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Adjutant considered that, for a moment.
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``The Prince of Fallen Leaves is weak, for one of his title,'' Hakram
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replied. ``And the court he belongs to should be Autumn.''
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The orc cast a curious look at the Mirror Knight, who he'd expected
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would have known much of this. The `Elfin Dames' living in a lake the
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man was supposedly sworn to defend sounded very much like fae, or
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something close enough it hardly mattered.
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``The Fair Folk are a weakness of mine,'' Christophe of Pavanie boldly
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volunteered. ``My shield will not reflect their works, and their
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illusory wiles are effective against even my protections.''
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``Your oath protects your mind from glamours and manipulations,'' the
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Vagrant Spear dismissed.
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``It does not,'' the Mirror Knight curtly said.
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Sidonia of Alava looked surprised, by Adjutant's reckoning, but not by
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the curtness.
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``You once told me-''
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``I know what I said,'' the Mirror Knight grunted, looking away, ``yet I
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repeat: my oath will not protect me.''
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The Levantine looked confused, for a moment, then a wicked grin split
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her lips.
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``Are you telling me you finally lost your-''
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``I would recommend that the Repentant Magister provide protective
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enchantments against glamour, if she can,'' Hakram interrupted. ``The
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stronger fae do not usually bother with deception, but once cornered
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they'll break habit if they lack the strength to win otherwise.''
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Something like gratitude gleamed in the Mirror Knight's eyes at the
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distraction that'd been provided.
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``Have you fought Autumn before then, Adjutant?'' he asked.
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``No,'' the orc gravelled. ``But it is the spawn of Summer broken, and I
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have fought Summer enough.''
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The dream that the King of Winter had seeded in Catherine after titling
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her in his court had been a difficult thing to sparse even though her
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recollection of it was vivid, because it was not truly a single dream:
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it was the recollection of a cycle's shape, one so old and primordial
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that mortals mind found it difficulty to truly grasp. There had been
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lessons to learn from it, though, and Hakram Deadhand had committed them
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to memory.
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``The Lady tells marvelous tales of the battles against Summer,'' the
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Vagrant Spear agreed.
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It took Hakram a moment to grasp that she was talking about Indrani,
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simply using the same term Indrani herself slipped into whenever talking
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about the Ranger. Interesting, he mused. Archer might not be interested
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in making a legacy for herself, but that did not mean she wouldn't end
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up making one regardless.
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``I'll ask Nephele if she can weave such enchantments,'' the Mirror
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Knight said. ``Thank you for your advice, Adjutant.''
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``It was my pleasure,'' the orc replied.
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The Mirror Knight retreated further back with eagerness, leaving
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Adjutant alone with a still-grinning Vagrant Spear. That grin was
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directed at him, now, like she expected him to pat her on the back for
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having put the Proceran hero to flight.
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``Now is not the time to make sport of him,'' Adjutant bluntly said.
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``We're headed into a hard fight.''
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``You said the prince was weak,'' Sidonia replied. ``Have you not
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defeated stronger royalty of the Splendid?''
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``As part of a band containing the Black Queen and the Hierophant,''
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Hakram flatly replied. ``And even then, it was a close thing.''
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And that was the thing that had his hand itching, wasn't it?
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Metaphorically speaking. After so many years among the Woe, where
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Catherine steered and inspired and mediated, having his Name attached to
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this walking mess was making him restless. His very nature was urging
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him to \emph{fix} this band so that at least they'd cease bleeding each
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other with their sharp edges. It wouldn't even be difficult, he knew, to
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untie the most pressing of the knots. If the Mirror Knight ceased
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focusing on the Vagrant Spear he'd start taking the Blade of Mercy
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closer in hand, which would free the Repentant Magister to be a
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moderating influence on the band. All it would take was establish some
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sort of accord between Christophe and Sidonia, terms of interaction they
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could keep to instead of constantly pushing each other.
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``You underestimate us,'' the Vagrant Spear said.
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``You overestimate yourself,'' Adjutant frankly replied. ``The only
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reason there hasn't been a casualty on our side so far is that the fae
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aren't here to fight us.''
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That struck her in the pride, as it'd been meant to. Indrani had coddled
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her four too much, they'd started to get ahead of themselves. The
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Vagrant Spear, the blooming pattern of blue on grey on her face
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tightening as she scowled, turned to him with a straightened back and
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tight grip on her spear. Trying to make it so he was not looming so tall
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above her.
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``The Lady bats you around when you spar, I hear,'' she challenged,
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baring pale teeth.
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Hakram Deadhand did not bare his own teeth, posture or swagger. He
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simply looked at Sidonia of Alava, calmly, and considered how long it'd
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take him to kill her if he was serious about it.
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``You are the not the Archer, child,'' the Adjutant simply said. ``And
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if you challenge me again, I will rip your fucking throat out.''
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The younger woman stared at him for a long moment, then shivered.
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``Apologies, Lord,'' the Vagrant Spear said, briskly dipping down her
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head. ``I should not swat at him while we head into battle, it does us
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all disservice.''
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``I don't know what stands between you two,'' Hakram said, and raised a
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hand to stop her when it looked like she might tell him, ``and I do not
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particularly \emph{want} to. There will be time to pursue it after the
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fae are scattered, Sidonia. Until then, the Mirror Knight holds
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command.''
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The Vagrant Spear threw him a sardonic look.
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``As you say, Lord Adjutant,'' Sidonia said, tone a tad dry.
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The orc decided not to address that. There was only so much blood you
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could squeeze from a stone.
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``Are we close?'' he asked instead.
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``Soon,'' the Vagrant Spear said. ``We should get there ahead of the
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Splendid, if they took the main halls.''
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``Good,'' Adjutant said, baring his fangs in approval.
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He slowed his stride, leaving Sidonia alone in the front and sliding
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into the conversation that had been forming behind him. As expected,
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with the Mirror Knight there to impress the Blade of Mercy was
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significantly more personable. Without the needling to interrupt, Lady
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Eliade skillfully steered the conversation away from what she'd been
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asked, an enchantment that would perfectly resist glamour, to make it
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seem like the Mirror Knight had instead requested something she could
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achieve, an enchantment that would allow someone to tell if they were
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under the throes of glamour. When properly angled, the four Named could
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associate without wounding each other. But there were still only four,
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Hakram noted, as the last member of the band of five had stayed aloof
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and behind all this time.
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The Maddened Keeper's long and unkempt hair did much to hide her face,
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but Adjutant would have been able to peg her stare as cool and distant
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even if he'd not spent the last few years learning the nuances of human
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expressions. That one watched and missed nothing, but she kept her
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peace. She was Callowan, but from the times before the Empire had ruled
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it and so little like the Callowans that Hakram knew. There was a sense
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of\ldots{} threat to her, one that had the orc's instincts apprehensive.
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To his senses, to his Name, she felt like a predator waiting to strike.
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She was no fighter, the earlier scraps with the fae had proved that, but
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the Maddened Keeper had also swallowed whole a cloud of decay that'd
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powdered rock and would likely have killed the Blade of Mercy if it'd
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been allowed to spread. In a senses she reminded him of Vivienne, in the
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sense that she was clearly familiar with violence but just as clearly
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not trained in it -- but there ended the similarities, as no prince of
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the fae had ever \emph{very carefully} avoided being touched by Thief
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even at the height of her Name.
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Adjutant slowed his steps even further, slipping at the back of band and
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matching his stride to the Maddened Keeper. She peered at him through
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oily bangs, unsmiling.
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``We were never properly introduced,'' Hakram gravelled.
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``So that's what you're used for,'' the Maddened Keeper said, voice
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apathetic. ``The plate and the axe, the height -- it all paints the
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wrong picture. They don't see it coming, that your brain's the most
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dangerous part of you.''
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She was not such a tall woman, the Keeper. Skinny thing, no real muscle
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to her, and though she had vigor it was the feverish kind: burning but
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not healthy. Whether it was with his hand of bone or the spectral one,
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it would have been child's play to snap that sparrow-like neck. So why
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was Adjutant's Name screaming at him that if he laid a finger on the
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Keeper he'd be snuffed out in the blink of an eye?
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``If we are to be at odds, so be it,'' Adjutant said. ``There are old
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wounds, between your people and mine. But there are more pressing needs,
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Maddened Keeper.''
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``Necessity's son,'' the woman said, tone gone velvet soft. ``Whispering
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her sweet nothings. Stack, stack, stack -- move around the stones and
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maybe one day the game will make sense. But the tower always crumbles,
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doesn't it? You'll not find me so easy to steal or pile, death's hand.''
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She cast him an unfriendly look through the ratty curtain of hair.
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``Walk away, orc,'' the Maddened Keeper told him. ``Lest I develop an
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interest in pulling at your seams.''
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Adjutant was not above recognizing that creeping sensation going up his
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spine as fear or heeding its warning. There were some that were beyond
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his ability to corral, and so to continue an attempt was to invite
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sanction. Villains that did not know their limits died young, and Hakram
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had too many labours unfinished to be able to afford delusions about his
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own ability. He walked away, not with undue haste but without lingering
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either, moving towards the centre of the band again. Hakram caught only
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snippets of what was being discussed, which turned out to be heroic
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gossip about the lingering rumours of the White Knight and the Witch of
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the Woods being romantically involved. He filed it away regardless, but
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before the subject could change the Vagrant Spear called them to a halt
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with a peremptory gesture. They had reached the end of a long hallway,
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which Adjutant found was leading down to a broad downwards slope,
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spiralling inwards oddly.
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``We are here,'' the Vagrant Spear said. ``The top of the Spins.''
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Quietly walking to the edge of the hallway, Hakram leaned down and
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studied the battlefield the band had picked with a frown. The Repository
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was largely used as a great warehouse for all the incoming supplies for
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the Arsenal and outgoing artefacts feeding the war machine of the Grand
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Alliance, which in most situations would mean a large room spreading
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outwards. The Arsenal, however, had been carved form the inside of a
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mountain: there was no difficulty in layering several of these
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warehouses atop each other, so long as they could all be accessed by
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wagon. The Spins were likely the part meant for that very purpose, a
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soft-sloped spiral leading into eight different broad hallways of
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different heights. Most of those would lead to warehouses, though the
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`central' hall was likely to be the one heading deeper into the
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Repository. Towards the restricted sections, where war assets were being
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kept and the Maddened Keeper informed them all the fae were headed --
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though she couldn't tell them exactly \emph{what} the fae were after.
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Speaking of the devil, she'd come to the fore at long last.
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``The fae haven't come through here,'' the Maddened Keeper said. ``But
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we don't have long.''
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``I'll take the front,'' the Mirror Knight immediately said. ``Lady
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Eliade, your sorcery will serve well from the heights and Antoine can
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serve as your escort. Sidonia-''
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He was making mistakes, Hakram thought, planning like his magical
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back-up was the Witch of the Woods instead of the Repentant Magister --
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whose sorceries lacked bite, and the artefacts she used to make up for
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it tended to require shorter distance.
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``I can go on the frontline with you,'' the Blade of Mercy interrupted,
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``the Vagrant Spear can see to the Magister's protection.''
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``I strike, I do not defend,'' Sidonia of Alava flatly said. ``That is
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the nature of my Bestowal. This plan is foolish.''
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``Perhaps the Adjutant could see to my defence as I weave sorceries from
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closer,'' the Repentant Magister suggested. ``You are well-versed in
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such duties, Lord Hakram, if I recall correctly?''
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Catherine had begun needing a flanker once more since her return from
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the Everdark, so Nephele Eliade was not wrong. That said, Hakram was by
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far the most durable of the Named here after the Mirror Knight so
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frankly speaking he should be at the man's side when the fae began
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taking the gloves off instead of out back with the Repentant Magister.
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``I am,'' Adjutant said. ``But we have the advantage of surprise. It
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would be wasteful not to at least attempt an ambush.''
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The Mirror Knight blinked in surprise, while the Blade of Mercy stared
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at him in undisguised distaste.
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``That would be dishonourable,'' the redheaded boy told him, as if
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addressing one slow of wit.
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``The Adjutant has it right,'' the Vagrant Spear grunted. ``You don't
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meet a raiding party on open ground, you turn the raid on them.''
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``They have the advantage in numbers,'' Lady Eliade noted. ``It would be
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wise to try to remedy that as quickly as possible.
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``The Levantine and the mage, arguing in favour of ambush,'' the Blade
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of Mercy sneered. ``How surprising.''
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Christophe of Pavanie straightened.
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``No chivalry was offered in the attack, none be offered in the
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defence,'' the Mirror Knight said. ``It would be best of the prince
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could be slain swiftly, the rest might buckle.''
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``\emph{Christophe},'' the Blade of Mercy protested.
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``Honour offered to the dishonourable is gold tossed into the river,''
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the Mirror Knight replied. ``Both the Adjutant and I can afford a long
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drop without any trouble, we might as well leap. Sidonia and Antoine
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flanking the hall, Lady Eliade on the slope overlooking?''
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``Agreed,'' the Vagrant Spear nodded.
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Hakram rumbled in approval himself. Keeping himself and the other heavy
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back might seem counterintuitive, but that way they'd be able to more
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easily pick out a fae high noble to tie up. There were mutters of
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approval from the rest.
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``I will go with the Repentant Magister,'' the Maddened Keeper said, and
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none gainsaid her.
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With the bare bones of the plan agreed on, all that was left was
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preparations.
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``Gather close,'' Nephele Eliade ordered. ``And don't move, it will make
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laying the enchantments much harder.''
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|
Adjutant had heard much of providence, the golden luck of heroes, but
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|
rarely had he wished for its arrival. He did today, though, because if
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they were to make through this without corpses on the ground a dollop of
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|
providence would very much be required.
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|
---
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|
The first fae to arrive reminded Hakram of a dragonfly.
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|
All shiny carapace in shades of blue and long wings, with a long halberd
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|
in her hands, she cast a look around but after a long moment it appeared
|
|
she could not see through the illusions that the Repentant Magister had
|
|
woven around the flankers. \emph{The Lady of Cooling Nights}, Adjutant
|
|
recognized. Coming after the outrider, the vanguard should be next. The
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|
first fae whistled softly, the melody of it haunting, and two more fae
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|
slunk in. Though the orc was familiar with the sight of them, their
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|
titles remained unknown. Their unnaturally tall bodies and long limbs,
|
|
though, could not be mistaken -- neither could their skin, pale as bone,
|
|
or the sharp spears of ivory they held. Pale wings bloomed and they
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|
scattered upwards, Hakram's fists tightening against the handle of his
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|
axe as he hoped none of the heroes would be spooked into striking too
|
|
soon. A beat passed and none of them moved, to his relief.
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|
The Prince of Fallen Leaves' court strolled in afterwards, riding at a
|
|
leisurely on great white horses. Three lancers of what Adjutant
|
|
suspected was Autumn's equivalent to the Immortals of Summer and the
|
|
Sword of Waning Day for Winter, their scale armour fashioned to look
|
|
like a thousand fallen leaves but their lances wickedly sharp and their
|
|
horsemanship unnaturally skillful. Then the Countess of Still Amber,
|
|
half a statue and dressed in her namesake from head to toe, and the
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|
Duchess of Red Sunset -- blinding to look at, which had made the Mirror
|
|
Knight the only one who could withstand her up closer. The company
|
|
slowed, only to be joined a few moments later by two more fae. The Duke
|
|
of Unrelenting Landslide, looking like his armour had been carved out of
|
|
granite by an artist and his massive morningstar hefted over his
|
|
shoulder, was simply too heavy for a horse to be able to bear him. He
|
|
towered tall enough he could keep up with the last fae's mount, however.
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Fallen Leaves himself was of a dark grey-brown tone,
|
|
wearing loose court clothes in tones of burnt orange that subtly evoked
|
|
the membrane of a leaf by the cut and cloth, and on his brow rested a
|
|
heavy crown of burnished copper. Bearing a slender longsword of what
|
|
looked like rotting wood, he offered a permanent faint smile under pale
|
|
orange eyes. Yet for all that the fae looked more like a dandy out on
|
|
ride than a prince of the fae, Adjutant knew him to be wickedly fast on
|
|
his feet and seemingly impossible to wound: any cut made on him would
|
|
begin spilling fallen leaves, as if he were a sack filled with them,
|
|
until it closed and left no scar behind. The Lady of Cooling Nights
|
|
landed at the prince's feet, kneeling.
|
|
|
|
``My prince, all the halls seem to lead here,'' she reported. ``Shall we
|
|
assemble the court and sally forth?''
|
|
|
|
They'd split their forces, the orc realized. Given the sometimes
|
|
maze-like lay of the Arsenal, it made sense that pathfinders would have
|
|
been needed. Especially if they were after more than the sword made out
|
|
of the Saint's corpse, as Hakram suspected they were. The Bard would
|
|
have needed something to put them in her debt before they came here, or
|
|
more likely \emph{someone}. Now was the time to strike, Adjutant
|
|
thought. Before some fae happened to see through their illusions, and
|
|
before more of them gathered here. The Mirror Knight might cotton on to
|
|
that, he considered, but there was one of their company a great deal
|
|
more used to raids and that was\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
The Vagrant Spear blinked into existence, grinning with all her teeth
|
|
and spear screaming with the Light as it tore right through the Lady of
|
|
Cooling Nights' throat.
|
|
|
|
``Honour to the Blood,'' Sidonia of Alava gleefully shouted.
|
|
|
|
Chaos broke out in the moment that followed, the fae all aflutter at the
|
|
sudden attack. Adjutant kept a calm eye on the situation, looking for
|
|
his opening. The Blade of Mercy revealed himself with a hoarse shout,
|
|
greatsword glinting with Light as it carved through both a lancer and
|
|
its mount in a single stroke, and a heartbeat later the Repentant
|
|
Magister fired her sorcery into the mess. The power gathered to strike
|
|
at their ambushers by the fae, a panoply of titles and abilities, was
|
|
sucked into a small spinning orb of gold that then blew up in a pulse of
|
|
pure sorcery at the height of the chest of all those mounted. Only one
|
|
of the lancers was caught and blown of its mount, the others all
|
|
dismounting in time, but with that trick Lady Eliade had bought the rest
|
|
of the band another heartbeat of advantage.
|
|
|
|
``I will engage the prince,'' the Mirror Knight's voice murmured, though
|
|
coming from empty air.
|
|
|
|
Adjutant simply grunted in reply, wary of being overheard himself, but
|
|
picked his own target before leaping. The whistle of the wind against
|
|
his face was pleasant, as to his side a thrown spear of ivory struck at
|
|
what should have been emptiness -- but bounced a mirror shield,
|
|
revealing a steady-eyed Mirror Knight falling with his silver sword
|
|
already in hand. Below them the tall, pale fae who'd not thrown its
|
|
spear instead leap up on pale wings and flew towards the Magister. The
|
|
two remaining lancers were stuck against the side of the hall, moved
|
|
there impatiently by the greater fae around them as they made room to
|
|
fight, but already the Duchess of Red Sunset was beginning to emit
|
|
searing light. Adjutant looked away, guiding his fall with his shield
|
|
and landing a heartbeat later on the head of the Countess of Still
|
|
Amber, knocking off her horse in surprise and rolling away before her
|
|
petrifying curse could begin eating at his boots.
|
|
|
|
Shield rising as he rose, Adjutant brought up his axe just in time to
|
|
strike the side of a massive morningstar as it was swung down at him,
|
|
pushing the blow to the side enough that it shattered the ground instead
|
|
of his skull and shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``You again,'' the Duke of Unrelenting Landslide said, voice sounding
|
|
like a thousand stones grinding against each other. ``It seems you did
|
|
learn to fear your betters last time, orc.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram Deadhand rolled his shoulder, limbering the muscle he'd almost
|
|
just pulled, and bared his fangs at his foe.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the Adjutant growled, ``let us talk, fae, of \emph{betters}.''
|