650 lines
30 KiB
TeX
650 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-75-desolation}{%
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\chapter{Desolation}\label{chapter-75-desolation}}
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\epigraph{``My dear Chancellor, I am most disappointed in you. If she
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escapes the crocodiles before the rope snaps, then of course she will go
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free. What does it matter, that she will oppose us again? Only the
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fearful insist on winning every game of shatranj they play.''}{Dread Emperor Malevolent I, the Unhallowed}
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I didn't know which part should rightfully be considered the miracle:
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that we'd managed to cram this many Named into one hall, or that a brawl
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had yet to ensue.
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``Some among us call them the Scourges,'' the White Knight said.
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The tone had been calm, unhurried, but the words alone were enough to
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kill every whisper in the ruined basilica where we'd gathered. There
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were nearly thirty Named were here -- twenty-seven, if you counted my
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own coalescing claim -- but Hanno had the undivided attention of every
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last one. Revenants were never pleasant surprises on the battlefield,
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but most people here had run into one of the Scourges at some point.
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Some had walked away with scars or dead friends, and even those who'd
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gotten lucky to be spared either now knew better than to believe the
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Dead King was without champions of his own.
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``That is not without meaning,'' Hanno of Arwad said. ``You all
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understand, as few ever do, that names have power. That they bind us to
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Creation and bind it in return.''
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The dead had not been kind to the Basilica of Perceval Martyred.
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Neshamah had made sure that no holy grounds remained in the capital
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after taking it, and it would take long before the priests were able to
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consecrate this place again. The defilement had been\ldots{} thorough.
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Dust, soot and ash now painted once-pale walls, and there was hardly a
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single pane of tainted glass that'd not been shattered. An entire hunk
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of wall had been ripped out to the side, reduced to rubble, and the
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front gates were unusable from the bell tower that'd been smashed down
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against them. Even the ceiling had not been spared, some kind of great
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horn piercing at it, and so sunlight came down in dusty rays on the tall
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terrace where the White Knight stood.
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Below the rest of our Named were gathered in small gaggles in gangs,
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keeping to circles of their owns even within the greater allegiance to
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Above or Below -- however loose it might be -- and seated on the same
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ornate stone benches where the mighty and wealthy of the city of Hainaut
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had once sat to be lectured by priests now long dead. I stood above on
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the terrace as well, leaning against a sloping arch with my staff of
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dead yew resting against my shoulder, but I liked the coolness of the
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shade better. I'd looked like a right idiot if I had to pull down my
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hood because the sun was getting in my eyes, and I could only be amazed
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by the way that the White Knight could stand in a sunbeam and apparently
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not mind in the slightest.
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Truly, his powers were beyond the reckoning of mere mortal such as
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myself. Hanno glanced at me, either smelling out the sarcasm or to
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indicate I should pick up where he'd left off. We'd not planned this out
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in great detail, but it was true in a way I had more experience with
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this part than he did. I pushed off from the arch, limping to the edge
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of the terrace.
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``Naming them gave them weight,'' I said. ``Part of that was in your
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minds, holding up as something to be dreaded or fought, but what truly
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matters is the weight it gave them on Creation. A Revenant belonging to
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their number is no longer simply one of the Dead King's stolen corpses,
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it is now a \emph{Scourge}.''
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I let the word ripple out, enjoying the way it reverberated in the hall
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even now that there was a gaping hole in the wall. Say what you would
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about Alamans, they knew how to build temples.
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``That story will be as wind in their sail,'' I said. ``They'll be
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harder to destroy because of it, a little luckier and a little sharper.
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More than that, they'll find it easier to kill \emph{you}.''
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No one argued with what I'd said but I found some faces growing blank
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or, for the less practiced, outright skeptical. Mostly on the heroic
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side, as my lot rarely needed much convincing that the world was out to
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get them, but the Berserker and the Headhunter stood out in their
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almost-derision. Irritated, I struck at the stone with my staff once and
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let the clap jolt half of them.
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``Don't be fools,'' I said, tone grown sharp. ``You think you survive
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falling off cliffs and make it through blood-curling curses because
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you're just \emph{that good}? As Named we are not only subject to the
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common rules of Creation, but those of our kind as well. Sometimes that
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is a shield, but if you act like a strutting boy it will bury you.''
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I swept the crowd with a look and this time found a more receptive
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audience. Good. I wasn't going to tolerate our losing Named just because
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the world had not yet gotten around to beating some measure of humility
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into their bones.
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``If we raise the Scourges above our other foes, as we have, then
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Creation will follow,'' I said. ``And the least of the ways they'll be
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raised is in the way that all those little fortunate turns, all those
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coincidences in your favours? They're gone. `The Scourges can kill
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Named'. That is the very bedrock of the story we made about them.''
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I flicked a glance at Hanno, who took back the torch, and retreated back
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to my more comfortable nook as he stepped into the light again.
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``Yet we can kill them as well,'' the White Knight calmly said. ``Names,
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Bestowals, Choosings -- however you would call what we are, it is a
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nature that thrives when overcoming adversity. All that the Scourges
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represent is an adversity to overcome.''
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I almost cursed, since that kind of `life is a trial we are destined to
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win' attitude being reinforced by the fucking Sword of Judgement was the
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last thing we needed before this scrap, but I was pleasantly surprised
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after a moment.
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``Make no mistake,'' Hanno continued, ``the Black Queen did not
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misspeak. Fail to heed her warnings not only at your own peril but at
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that of everyone here, and millions more across Calernia. Yet in raising
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our opposition higher, we have also given ourselves deeds to strive
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for.''
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He smiled, face serene.
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``Great foes are overcome,'' the White Knight told them. ``That is the
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shape of such stories.''
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Well, that or you died. I could see how that wouldn't be the greatest
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speech to give on the eve of battle, though, so I'd let it slide. I
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stayed back and let him keep at it a while longer. We'd already tended
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to the few complaints under the Terms there'd been, which for once
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hadn't mostly been backbiting between his folk and mine. My armies
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hadn't been the only one to enjoy a night of drinking and festivities,
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after the Fourth arrived, and in the drunken celebration that'd ensued a
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great deal of\ldots{} indecorous behaviour had ensued. It was worth
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hearing them out just for the petty pleasure I'd felt at Hanno making
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the Page admit that the `desecration of his affairs' he was talking
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about was some drunk Volignac trooper taking a piss on his saddlebags.
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The mood had been pretty lighthearted, even through the inevitable
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amount of sniping that ensued when Named were forced to sit in the same
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hall, but moving on to the meat of the reason we were here had doused
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that. Revenants were rarely a laughing matter, and the Scourges never.
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``- by joining the combat and eyesight reports, we have determined which
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of them are likely to be participate in the coming battle for Hainaut,''
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Hanno said, then paused. ``Our thanks to the Adjutant for this work, as
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it was him who saw to the work and found signs of the Tumult having
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operated on the outskirts of Prince Klaus' column.''
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There were some murmurs of appreciation, several grudging, and stone
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silence from others. I drummed my fingers against the side of my staff,
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committing those faces to memory. One of them had me sneering: like I'd
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needed \emph{more} of a reason to dislike the Valiant Champion.
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``So how many are we in for?'' Roland asked.
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``Eight,'' the White Knight calmly said.
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Yeah, that did little to raise spirits. Each of those Revenants were
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dangerous on their own, but several became significantly worse when they
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were paired with proper allies -- the Hawk and the Mantle in particular.
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The Berserker let out a low whistle and grinned.
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``Eight out of ten,'' she said. ``Keter \emph{really} wants us dead,
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looks like.''
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``Eight out of nine,'' I corrected, pushing off the arch. ``The
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Firstborn got the Stitcher up north.''
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That was well received. The Tumult was more of a danger, practically
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speaking, but the Stitcher's tendency to turn up in a dragon's worth of
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animated dead bodies was more of a horror to behold than the Tumult's
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own preference for tossing storms at soldiers.
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``The Seelie is missing,'' the White Knight said, ``but we believe her
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to out east, leading the assault against Princess Rozala Malanza. Every
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other known Scourge has been encountered by one of our columns as they
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advanced, and they should all be within marching of when we believe the
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battle in Hainaut will happen.''
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I smiled, beginning to methodically stuff my dragonbone pipe with a
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packet of wakeleaf.
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``So now we talk about the pleasant end of the business,'' I idly said.
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``Namely, how we're going to destroy them all.''
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Even coming from the -- former, thank you Cordelia -- Arch-heretic of
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the East, that won some cheers both sides of the gallery. Hanno picked
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up the thread as I passed my palm over the bowl, lighting the leaf with
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a small flicker of flame, and I breathed in the smoke with a small
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pleased sigh.
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``We have some knowledge of the abilities of all eight, and will speak
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of them in order,'' the White Knight said. ``Beginning with the
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Wolfhound.''
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There was a beat of silence, then I cleared my throat.
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``Hierophant,'' I prompted.
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Masego started, as if surprised. My eyes narrowed and I threaded small
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tendrils of shadows along the arches going up the ceiling. He'd not had
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an open book in hand, no, but looking at it from above\ldots{} that
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sneaky little shit. Three rows back there was an open book in Mthethwa,
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which I was pretty sure he'd been turning the pages of discreetly with
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wrested magic. He'd been using the clairvoyance of the glass eyes to
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look through the back his own head and the rest of the things in the
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way, reading without even giving a visible hint. I gave him a look
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making it clear we'd be having words about this later even as Indrani,
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seated at his side, snickered in amusement at his expense. She did deign
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to tell him whose likeness had been asked for, at least, and Zeze had an
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illusion of the Wolfhound up in the blink of an eye.
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It was pretty obvious why the Revenant had earned that sobriquet: a
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sculpted helmet of iron in the shape of that animals head had been its
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signature since its first appearance, though he also seemed to prefer
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using a sword a board when it had the choice. Armoured from head to toe,
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the Wolfhound's face had never been seen, though he'd spoken with Named
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on occasion.
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``Most of you will have encountered the Wolfhound at some point,'' Hanno
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said. ``He is, by our reckoning, the Scourge with the fewest deaths --
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Named or not -- to his name. That is because he is rarely out alone.''
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``He's a bodyguard,'' I bluntly said. ``And one of the better Revenants
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when it comes at taking a blow. He seems able to see through illusions
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and able to partly shrug off aspects. As I understand it, the Mirror
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Knight experience this firsthand.''
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Christophe the Pavanie, seated near the back of the heroic side and with
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only Tariq sharing his bench, looked surprised to have been called on.
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``I did,'' he replied. ``We've clashed\ldots{} six times, now? One of my
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aspects allows me to reflect the blows of my enemies, to turn them back,
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but it did not affect him the way it should have. The strength was
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weakened before it touched him.''
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``It has been the same with magic,'' the White Knight added. ``He is not
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immune to spells, but they do seem to weaken when turned on him.''
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``Weaknesses?'' Roland called out.
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``We haven't found any,'' I admitted. ``He doesn't seem to have any
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great offensive talents, but when it comes to the defensive he doesn't
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seem to have any great flaw. It's why we usually see him partnered with
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another Scourge, they're expected to be handling that aspect.''
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``The Twilight Ways would destroy him,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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I nodded.
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``They would,'' Hanno agreed. ``For those of you who are able to open
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gates, it is a valid tactic. Still, as with all Revenants I would warn
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you of mobility -- even the slow are quicker than they seem, and they
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appear to be able to feel the forming of a gate into Twilight.''
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Which did make an unfortunate amount of sense. Creation liked balance:
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the Ways were deadly to Revenants, so the Revenants could smell them
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out. I would have appreciated the Gods suspending that rule until the
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lives of everyone on Calernia were no longer on the line, but deities
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did tend to be inconsiderate shits. Except for my own splendid and
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flawless patronesses, of course. I felt Andronike's unamused touch brush
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against my mind, the divine equivalent of a half-hearted glare.
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``We do have some other talents we believe would go through his
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defences,'' I said. ``Among them, the Rapacious Bard is capable of
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affecting souls. That should ignore the protection.''
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``Overwhelming physical strength works as well,'' Hanno said, a tad
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drily.
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Between the Berserker, the Champion and the Mirror Knight we had that
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covered.
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``The partner is usually the trouble,'' the Barrow Sword pointed out.
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``Whoever runs into him needs to expect a hard knifing.''
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``Colourfully put,'' Hanno said, ``but essentially true. So far we have
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seen him paired with the Hawk-''
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I saw the Mirror Knight winced, as if still hurting, and Archer smile
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unpleasantly. She'd not liked that the Hawk had gotten to escape from
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their duel in the slightest.
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``- the Mantle and the Varlet,'' Hanno finished. ``We should not dismiss
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other possibilities, but Keter does tend to favour certain sets of
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tactics.''
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I pulled at my pipe, blowing smoke upwards. The White Knight was right.
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It was, I suspected, because Neshamah was undead. He couldn't really
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\emph{learn} anymore, even when infusing himself with the knowledge of
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his latest acquisitions. So instead he let his Revenants find approaches
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that work and then used his wits to make openings for that knife instead
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-- a skill he'd mastered while still alive.
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``We burned two aspects of the Varlet's at Maillac's Boot,'' I
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announced. ``So I won't count them out, but they're got a lot less of a
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bite now.''
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``It's the sneaking aspect that's left,'' Indrani said. ``So watch for
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daggers in the back, it's what it has left.''
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It was a spirited decision that ensued, moving through one Scourge after
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another. The Hawk, deadly at range and harbouring an aspect we believed
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have her the simple ability to `kill'. It was why her arrows, even
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though often made up of mundane material, could wound even someone like
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the Mirror Knight: there was nothing that she could not, in principle,
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kill. She was weak up close, though, and tended to leg it when Named
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closed range. The Drake, though very difficult to kill by most
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villainous means, fared poorly against Light and Tariq had teased out of
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him at Maillac's Boot what we believed to be his last survival trick.
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The Mantle shared the weakness against Light, at least great quantities
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of it, but was capable of hamstringing practitioners the same way she
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did me.
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The Tumult -- or Archmage, as heroes insisted -- was a spellcaster on
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par with both Masego and the Witch of the Woods, meaning if we didn't
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want casualties to start shooting up the moment it showed up we needed
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to field either against it immediately. Its fondness for using storms
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and weather meant most of our fighters struggled to close range. Indrani
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couldn't do shit to him even using \textbf{See} to aim. The Axeman, as
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they called the Pale Knight, hadn't been encountered frequently save by
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those who'd served in the Cleves front. While he was just as
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frustratingly hard to scratch for everyone as I'd found him, the
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Headhunter pointed out that the way he'd always avoided the Myrmidon and
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the Red Knight in fights meant he must have some weakness to his armour.
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The Mirror Knight noted he seemed to often serve as leader among not
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only Revenants but the lesser dead, a tactician as much as champion.
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There was little to say on the Varlet, save that not even our finest
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wards seemed entirely capable of stopping its sneaking about, which left
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us with only one left.
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The Prince of Bones.
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``Light can make a dent,'' Hanno said. ``Though only so much.''
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His stance had loosened over the length of the conversation, first going
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from calm to easy and then all the way to him sitting at the edge of the
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terrasse. I was, myself, leaning against a half-broken stone pulpit and
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pulling at my second packet of wakeleaf.
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``He can close Twilight Gate, if they are still forming,'' the Witch of
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the Woods flatly said.
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I cocked a brow. She'd not taken off her painted clay mask, but I
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gathered that under it she was frowning.
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``Mine as well,'' the Pilgrim agreed. ``Though not quickly, and it can
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be fought.''
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``Sorcery doesn't work either,'' the Harrowed Witch volunteered. ``Mine,
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anyways. I can dent if I put my full strength into the spell, but think
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we'd have to strip him layer by layer to get anywhere.''
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I didn't seen an obvious solution to the Prince of Bones either, to be
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honest. The illusion of him Masego was providing made it clear why: we
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were dealing with, essentially a corpse encased in what had to be a few
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hundred pounds of steel. It looked like armour, but it wasn't. Just
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layers upon layers of metal, moved by the necromancy buried safely deep
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within. Worse, that steel was layered with enchantments and whatever
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devilries the Dead King could muster. Running away wasn't usually an
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issue, the Prince was slow on the move, but when you \emph{couldn't}
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run? Even the Pilgrim hadn't been able to put him down, and the man had
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a Choir whispering tricks in his ear.
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``The Firstborn tell me it's essentially the same with Night,'' I
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offered up, having never fought him myself. ``And he usually sticks with
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the Grey Legion, so he won't be easy to pick off.''
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``We just need to crush him head on,'' the Berserker insisted.
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``Crush what, solid steel?'' the Barrow Sword mocked. ``No, what we need
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is the right blade.''
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A few looks were flicked the Mirror Knight's way. The Severance hadn't
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been a secret since the incident at the Arsenal.
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``We mean to use it for the Dead King alone,'' the White Knight said,
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``lest he find a way to overcome its edge.''
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``If it comes to that, we've been able to bury him before,'' I said.
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``The Witch of the Woods has done it. It's not a killing stroke, but we
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can keep him out of our hair long enough for enough Named to gather
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\emph{something} will stick.''
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It wasn't the most confidence-instilling of suggestions, but at the
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moment it might genuinely be the best we got. And, to be honest, if we
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could deal with the Grey Legion for good the Prince would be much less
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of a threat. I pointed out as much, which Tariq backed to the hilt.
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``Alone he is a slow, lumbering monster,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Much
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of his power comes from his legion -- the Hashmallim believe some of his
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Bestowal is invested in his soldiers, and that they in turn empower
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him.''
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``If it comes to that,'' I finally said, ``I'll authorize the last of
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our goblinfire to be used.''
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That cheered some but other less. Not only because the green flames were
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notoriously prone to spreading out of control but also, I realized in a
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startling moment, because some of the people here believed the Prince
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would actually survive the fires. Most of them had never encountered the
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substance, I reminded myself, but I still found myself shaken by the
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skepticism. The conversation stretched out for another hour, mostly when
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Named were willing to share particular talents that made them
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well-fitted to fighting one of the Scourges, but eventually we called
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the council at an end. I kept Ishaq back, as the Barrow Sword had
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essentially been confirmed as my lieutenant among villains when I kept
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bringing him to war councils, while Hanno was instead accompanied by the
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Pilgrim.
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``Some bands seem like natural fits,'' the White Knight said.
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``Agreed,'' I grunted. ``Troubadour, Summoner and Guardian?''
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The Silent Guardian had signed that she believed she'd be able to handle
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the Wolfhound, due to an aspect of hers, so the Summoner for mobility
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and the Troubadour for the killing stroke were the obvious additions.
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``Either Huntress or Sidonia with them,'' Hanno replied, nodding in
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assent.
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``Huntress,'' I said. ``I know for a fact she's not only competent at
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range but trained herself in tactics against archers.''
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By which I really meant Archer, but it'd work against the Hawk as well
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and she could imbue her arrows with Light so that'd be trouble for
|
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Mantle too.
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``The Young Slayer with them,'' Tariq suggested.
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I cocked a brow, but Ishaq was stroking his beard in agreement.
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``As a spotter and a skirmisher both, the boy has talent,'' the Barrow
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Sword said. ``If you desire the Huntress to be one of the strikers, then
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you need a replacement.''
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I glanced at Hanno, who after a moment nodded.
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``Sold,'' I said. ``Mirror Knight for the Prince of Bones?''
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``There's no one else who would be able to take a hit from him,'' the
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White Knight replied. ``Who to pair him with is the issue. I would argue
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against a full band here.''
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The Barrow Sword, I saw, was watching us both like a starving hound
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being shown into a larder. \emph{Why?} After a moment I realized that
|
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even as I thought the question, Ishaq had asked it out loud.
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``Because Hanno doesn't think we can kill the Prince of Bones,'' I said,
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``which means investing a full band there would be a waste. A partner,
|
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though, is pretty much a precaution to keep the Mirror Knight alive.''
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``I do not understand what makes him different from the Wolfhound,'' the
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Barrow Sword slowly said, ``save perhaps greater strength.''
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``The Prince of Bones is a hammer,'' Tariq calmly said. ``We can dull
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the blow, but it will fall. The Wolfhound, and whoever will accompany
|
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him, are blades we can break.''
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``It's going to go the usual,'' I explained. ``You know, the beats -- we
|
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win, we lose, we win again. Only with Wolfhound and partner, like Tariq
|
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said we have a good change of rolling those two Scourges up outright.
|
|
Kill them clean. We don't have that with the Prince. Instead we use
|
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those beats to pull out the Mirror Knight when this goes south on him,
|
|
and we just need a partner for that. Not a full band.''
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The Barrow Sword looked at us, smiling in glee and yet somehow almost
|
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frightened.
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|
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|
``Is it always like this?'' Ishaq asked. ``Battles between Bestowed.
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Like\ldots{} shatranj for the mad, with half the rules unknown and the
|
|
rest shifting?''
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I cocked my head to the side. In my experience?
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|
``Yeah, pretty much,'' I shrugged.
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I turned when the heroes chuckled, met with almost fond looks.
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``The Black Queen has sharpened herself against exceptional opponents,''
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the Pilgrim said. ``I have known few Bestowed, either by Above or Below,
|
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whose knack for stratagems was stronger.''
|
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The Barrow Sword had the gall to look kind of relieved, the shit.
|
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|
|
``If this practice is to be considered an art,'' the White Knight said,
|
|
``in all humility you might be considered to stand before some of its
|
|
finest living practitioners.''
|
|
|
|
Compared to the Intercessor we were all rather lacking, but then I
|
|
supposed that was rather his point. I cleared my throat.
|
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|
``I was thinking Stalwart Apostle,'' I said. ``I'm told she's worked
|
|
with him before, and though she's hardly a veteran-''
|
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|
``I must disagree,'' Hanno said.
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|
``Indeed,'' the Pilgrim said. ``Christophe is a remarkably enduring
|
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young man, but the foe is not one to underestimate. The Forsworn Healer
|
|
would be a more appropriate partner.''
|
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|
``That leaves \emph{you} as our primary healer, Tariq,'' I said. ``Which
|
|
is a fucking waste, considering your striking power.''
|
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|
``More lives will be saved by your hand red than pale, Peregrine,'' the
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|
Barrow Sword said.
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|
|
|
There was a challenge in the tone, but Tariq seemed disinclined to
|
|
address it.
|
|
|
|
``We can revisit,'' the White Knight said, correctly ascertaining I
|
|
wasn't convinced. ``For the Axeman -- the Pale Knight, if you insist,
|
|
though we seem to have a profusion of knighthoods these days -- the
|
|
Headhunter and Vagrant Spear seem like our finest foot forward.''
|
|
|
|
I mulled that. The Headhunter knew their way around fighting the Pale
|
|
Knight, and Sidonia had a knack for killing things she shouldn't be able
|
|
to. Neither were good at taking hits though.
|
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|
|
``Needs muscle,'' I said. ``Berserker?''
|
|
|
|
``I had thought to leave them a pair,'' Hanno admitted. ``If we use
|
|
bands to go aggressively after the weaker elements at first\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``That's a recipe for bodies on the floor,'' I grunted. ``Two pair
|
|
against two of the Dead King's heavies? We're losing at least one of
|
|
those for sure.''
|
|
|
|
``The Hierophant against the Archmage seems a match all can agree on, at
|
|
least,'' Tariq stepped in.
|
|
|
|
I inclined my head to the side.
|
|
|
|
``I was considering going after them with the full Woe, actually,'' I
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``Not Lady Dartwick, surely?'' the Pilgrim asked.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I said, ``we'd need muscle instead. I have candidates.''
|
|
|
|
One was by my side, but the downside to taking Ishaq was that he was a
|
|
natural captain: he'd be a lot more useful as the head of a band of
|
|
five. That left two other options, each hard to swallow for different
|
|
reasons. The Valiant Champion was honestly probably the finest shield
|
|
left, with both the Guardian and the Mirror Knight already assigned. I
|
|
just happened to despise her. And the other was, well, the Squire.
|
|
Between Arthur and Indrani we'd be able to hold a line up close if we
|
|
had to, while Zeze and I could slug it out with the likes of the
|
|
Archmage without missing a step. The issue, though, was that Arthur
|
|
Foundling himself might be a threat to our lives. His story was not one
|
|
that seemed all that friendly to the continued survival of the Woe.
|
|
|
|
``I would agree in principle,'' Hanno slowly said. ``The Archmage is the
|
|
Scourge I would like dealt with soonest.''
|
|
|
|
It was all haggling after that, were I began to discern different
|
|
strategies. Ishaq was fresh to this sort of planning so he tended to
|
|
fall back to the Levantine conception of a band of five, the same that'd
|
|
founded the Dominion itself: Champion, Slayer, Binder, Brigand and
|
|
Pilgrim. Which wasn't a bad instinct, in most circumstances, but he
|
|
needed to wean himself off it. When facing the unknown balance was
|
|
useful, but when planning the destruction of a known quantity it was
|
|
better to tailor the band to the foe. Tariq, on the other hand, was
|
|
coming at it from another angle entirely: he was setting things up to
|
|
keep Named alive. Not because the old man was a soft touch, although
|
|
when he could afford to be he was, but because in the Pilgrim's
|
|
experience if heroes fought an enemy for long enough they \emph{won}.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't going to argue with that too much, but there were risks to that
|
|
kind of thinking. Both sides of the fence were playing here, and I'd
|
|
proved at the Battle of the Camps that some calibre of foe time wasn't
|
|
enough to overcome. Yet theirs, were in away, the old conventions of
|
|
Named warfare. Hanno and I had been raised by our teachers to approach
|
|
those fights differently. The difference between us, I began to notice,
|
|
was that he seemed much more inclined to take risks. I chalked it up to
|
|
the habit of having providence on his side, at first, but eventually I
|
|
was forced to concede otherwise. I was just used to planning from the
|
|
starting position that I was going to lose \emph{something} before it
|
|
was all over, while the White Knight \emph{had} known the kind of
|
|
full-throated victories that'd been so rare in my career. He'd known
|
|
them pretty regularly, too, with the defeats at Black's hands being
|
|
pretty severe departures from the norm. We settled what we could for
|
|
today, agreed to speak again tomorrow and broke off.
|
|
|
|
Except he didn't leave and neither did I, because I'd noticed something
|
|
and he'd not tried very hard to hide it.
|
|
|
|
``Witch of the Woods,'' I said. ``Valiant Champion. Stalwart Apostle,
|
|
and last of all the Merry Balladeer.''
|
|
|
|
Names he'd been careful never to let drawn into an assignment, along
|
|
with his own. A pretty neat band of five, though the Apostle was young
|
|
and Hells if I knew what he wanted out of the Balladeer. No Named was
|
|
every truly without strength, but as far as I knew she was a bardic
|
|
Named without any standout talents.
|
|
|
|
``I did not mean to hide it,'' Hanno said. ``It was simply not a
|
|
discussion I wanted to have with company.''
|
|
|
|
My brow raised, as did my wariness. I'd already sworn oath to Tariq that
|
|
I'd not meddle with how the White Knight overcame his doubts, and that
|
|
meant not letting myself be drawn into too pivotal a conversation.
|
|
|
|
``It's a band of five,'' I acknowledged. ``I'm simply not sure what you
|
|
mean to do with it.''
|
|
|
|
North, to end the threat of the bridge that was still looming tall in
|
|
the distance? Or to lead them here in the city, a blade against the
|
|
Scourges. Hanno chuckled, though the days where the sound would have
|
|
carried that undertone of serene amusement seemed pass. Whatever
|
|
certainties it'd been that'd lain at the heart of the calm, they had
|
|
been shaken. \emph{Shit}, I thought, \emph{Tariq's right}. I'd still
|
|
half-believed, deep down, that the old man had been exaggerating. Not so
|
|
much, looking at the unease on the White Knight's face now.
|
|
|
|
``I was not so certain myself, when I woke up this morning,'' Hanno
|
|
said. ``But it is going north, Catherine. It must be the north.''
|
|
|
|
I slowly nodded. It was what I'd wanted, only now getting it was making
|
|
my fingers twitchy. Unsure if a mistake had been made or not.
|
|
|
|
``The bridge at Thibault's Wager must be broken,'' I finally said,
|
|
choosing my words.
|
|
|
|
``How carefully you speak around me, these days,'' the White Knight
|
|
wanly smiled.
|
|
|
|
I did not answer. I knew a dead end when I saw one.
|
|
|
|
``I do not know,'' Hanno finally said, ``how much good I can truly do
|
|
here in Hainaut. You are a capable leader and tactician, seasoned in
|
|
leading Named.''
|
|
|
|
``Your departure would be a loss,'' I honestly said. ``And not just
|
|
because of your skills in combat. But I still believe it to be a
|
|
necessary one.''
|
|
|
|
``I imagine you do,'' the White Knight said, ``though that is not what
|
|
moves me to go.''
|
|
|
|
He looked up at the ceiling, where the afternoon had turned the lay of
|
|
the sun. Shadows gone bright, light swallowed up by the shade.
|
|
|
|
``There are goods I do not know if I should strive for,'' Hanno of Arwad
|
|
said. ``If I can achieve, even if I did.''
|
|
|
|
He breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``So I will start, perhaps, with the good of which I am certain,'' the
|
|
White Knight said, meeting my eyes. ``It will be north, Catherine
|
|
Foundling, and the light that still lies within my grasp.''
|