813 lines
37 KiB
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813 lines
37 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-song}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Song}\label{interlude-song}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-song}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Song}
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\epigraph{``I wrote this work because it is our habit as a people to ignore
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the worst of our history and gild its mediocrities, and to speak against
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this practice will see you castigated as unpatriotic. This is more than
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wrong, it is dangerous. We must not snuff out the lights of our common
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soul by placating the darkness, else what manner of a world are we
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laying the foundation for?''}{Extract from the conclusion of `The Labyrinth Empire, or, A Short
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History of Procer', by Princess Eliza of Salamans}
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Her lips had gone dry, so Beatrice Volignac made herself drink from her
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cup so it would not show. The wine was watered, she was not foolish
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enough to partake while a battle was being waged, but the taste of the
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stout Cantal red was bracing anyway. The Princess of Hainaut, or more
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truthfully the capital and a thin stretch of the old southern
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borderlands, set down her golden cup after having wet her lips and
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leaned down to look over the maps she'd had her footpads being to the
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war room years ago. This was not a war council, for there was precious
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little planning left to be made, but given the prominence of the people
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seated in the salon where Beatrice's ancestors had once received
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visiting royalty any decision made here had the potential to make or
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break the defence of the city.
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Everyone had a man or a woman at the table, so to speak. The Army of
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Callow in the city was led by the seniormost of their generals, an aging
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orc who went by the name of Bagram, but while the general was here his
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authority was mitigated by another's presence: Lady Vivienne Dartwick,
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heiress-designate to the throne of Callow. That the former heroine only
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rarely used her authority in military matters only reinforced its weight
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when she \emph{did} use it, an elegant sort of artifice worthy of a
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woman with Lady Dartwick's excellent reputation with the Highest
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Assembly. There was some rejoicing among Beatrice's fellow royals at the
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notion that Lady Dartwick might be sitting the throne in a few years,
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though no doubt the prospect of no longer having to deal with someone
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who could drown an army when cross had played a role as well as
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Dartwick's personal qualities.
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For the Dominion it was Captain Nabila, the stout commander of the
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Alavan forces within the alliance, who was well-understood to be the
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least of the three great Levantine commanders. Both Aquiline Osena and
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Razin Tanja were Blood, it lent a lustre to their authority that the
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other woman could not hope to match. The Iron Prince himself was here
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too, having left the command at the southern wall to Princess Mathilda
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of Neustria, with his empty sleeve folded over the arm he'd lost
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defending this very city three years back. The sole representative for
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the Firstborn was a certain Mighty Sagasbord, dark-skinned and quiet
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with a bent for the sardonic when it did break its silence. Prince
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Arsene despised it, Beatrice had learned, not that the dark elf
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particularly seemed to care. Theirs was not a culture that quailed at
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the thought of making powerful enemies.
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It gave her the creeps.
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``- eastern wall drove back an assault by Revenants and beorns,''
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Captain Nadila shared. ``Lord Razin led the defence, with assistance
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from a band of five Bestowed under the Vagrant Spear.''
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Beatrice's eyes sharpened. From what she recalled, that was the band
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with the Barrow Sword. The same man the Black Queen plainly meant to
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make her lieutenant. Somehow the princess doubted he'd been put under
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the command of another. That had the smell of Dominion politics,
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something she figured she ought to have as little to do with as
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possible.
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``Only assaults on the walls,'' General Bagram growled. ``Like we called
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it right. They won't touch the front gate until they've drawn out as
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many as our soldiers as they can.''
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``They'll keep testing us with Revenants,'' the Iron Prince said. ``To
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suss out what Chosen we have at hand. Old Bones like to know the face of
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the opposition before he puts his back into the swing.''
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``The Revenants will be handled by Named,'' Lady Dartwick calmly said.
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``A defence plan was designed by Queen Catherine and the White Knight,
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before his departure. Our concern is to be the traditional forces.''
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Beatrice cleared her throat, claiming attention.
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``Have our Firstborn friends confirmed our suspicions?'' she asked.
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Mighty Sagasbord coolly smiled. Its Chantant when it spoke was eerily
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perfect, and Beatrice knew enough of drow to know such proficiency could
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only be gained by wholesale slaughter of her countrymen. As always, that
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serene mask over the madness made her skin crawl.
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``We dig for truth still,'' Mighty Sagasbord said. ``But the Tomb-Maker
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itself leads us, Hainaut Princess. There is no need for\ldots{}
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uneasiness.''
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That it could tell she feared it only made it more unpleasant to deal
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with.
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``There's not much to do but wait,'' Prince Klaus Papenheim gruffly
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said. ``No dishonour in that, it's the way war is. Some of us should try
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to get some sleep: the dead will try to run us into the ground, it's one
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of Keter's favourite tricks.''
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As all here knew, but when such a renowned veteran spoke the words it
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gave others the opening to do so without shaming themselves. The Iron
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Prince was not without his kindnesses, for all that like most Lycaonese
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he cared little for social graces.
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``I may retire for a few hours, then,'' Princess Beatrice said. ``It
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would be better to be fully rested when I relieve Captain-General
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Catalina from her command on the western wall.''
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Captain Nadila snorted, eyeing her with open disdain.
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``Will you be returning to your palace for it, Princess Beatrice?'' the
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painted Levantine asked.
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The orc on the other side of the table chuckled. General Bagram received
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a cocked eyebrow from Lady Dartwick for it, but she took no further
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issue and he looked undaunted. It was the Iron Prince's unsurprised face
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that stung the most, though. Like he'd expected her to be the first to
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retire. Beatrice's fingers closed around her cup. Perhaps he had. It was
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not disdainful, but even now the Iron Prince thought of Alamans as
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\emph{soft} -- always it was they who balked, who slowed, who mutinied
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even as others bled to drive the dead out of their lands. And that
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belief, Beatrice Volignac found it reflected in the eyes of everyone
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here. She'd had it directed at her before, the look, when people though
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that because she was fat it meant she was weak or stupid. But it wasn't
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about her this time, was it? Not really.
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It was all Alamans that were being looked down on. And she could see the
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shape of it, almost. What great names had come of her people in this
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war? Cordelia Hasenbach was Lycaonese, Rozala Malanza was Arlesite and
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even the Kingfisher Prince, Frederic Goethal, preferred the company of
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northerners to his own kind while openly disdaining the games of the
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Highest Assembly. And it was unfair, Beatrice thought, for her people
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\emph{were} brave. They were gallant and stubborn and love freedom more
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fiercely than any other under the sun, but what did it matter to these
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few before her now? All they saw was an Alamans shackle around the Grand
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Alliance's foot. And this was larger than Beatrice, than House Volignac
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or perhaps even royalty, but here and now it was her that the looks
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stung.
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``I am not yet sure,'' Princess Beatrice evenly replied. ``Regardless, I
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will first go to our rampart and assess the situation there.''
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It was her home being fought for, she thought. Sleep could wait for a
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while still.
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---
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Catalina Ferreiro had become Captain-General of the \emph{Ligera
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Bandera} a mere two years before the war against Keter began, an
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appointment that had been like a noose around her neck ever since. She
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had been a compromise candidate, she knew, that her decent battlefield
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record and noble lineage had seen her elected by the officers because
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they have her more respectable standing in the eyes of the rank and
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file. The powerful banner-captains of the Ligera had meant to use her as
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a figurehead while they privately continued the same infighting that'd
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paralyzed the greatest fantassin company of the Principate so badly it
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had been unable to even take a contract for the Tenth Crusade. Catalina
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had thought herself clever, playing off Vargeras against Capistrant
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until they'd spent themselves against each other and she had enough
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support to muzzle Garrido on her own.
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The prize she had won, unfortunately, was uncontested command of the
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largest mercenary company on Calernia just as the first signs of the end
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times were glimpsed the north. As Old Teresa was fond of saying, the
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Gods never missed an opportunity to piss in the gruel of fantassins.
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``Pitch and torches,'' the Captain-General bellowed. ``Burn that thing
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or we'll lose the bastion.''
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Catalina preferred the spear, but it was a useless weapon against the
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dead so she'd taken to the halberd instead: with a grunt, she smashed
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the axehead into the flank of the skeleton coming for her and toppled it
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over the edge of the rampart. Her personal guard swept forward, smashing
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into the loose formation of undead trying to keep her from reinforcing
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the bastion where the \emph{Folies Rouges} were being hacked apart by
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ghouls and the beorn that'd carried them up the cliff. Captain Reinald
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had done well against the first wave, but the second had caught him by
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surprise and now the entire western wall was at risk. If they lost that
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bastion\ldots{} already the dead were trying to land ladders to solidify
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the beachhead. Flicking a glance back through the sweaty locks matting
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her helmet, she caught sight of the approaching torches. No more time to
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waste.
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``\emph{Ligera},'' Catalina shouted.
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``\emph{Faith kept through fire},'' her soldiers shouted back,
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They charged against into the dead, whose formation the undead officers
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had not been quick enough to salvage. The Captain-General paced herself,
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picking her foes carefully -- a thrust of her halberd pushed another
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corpse over the wall, a sweeping descent shattered another's helmet and
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broke the foul magics keeping it moving -- even as the front ranks of
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her mercenary company plowed through the enemy line. A clear path to the
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bastion, she thought.
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``Torchmen,'' she screamed, ``with-''
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Her words were drowned out by a thunderous roar as the beorn that'd been
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tearing at the fantassins in the bastion abandoned its playthings there,
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instead leaping down onto the rampart and casually sweeping half a dozen
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men off the wall into the city below. Some might survive, Catalina
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though, though they might not wish they had.
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``Aim for the beorn,'' the Captain-General of the Ligera Bandera calmly
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said. ``On my signal.''
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Another seven men dead, the great abomination crushing them as easily as
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a boot would an ant.
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``Hold,'' Catalina Ferreiro said.
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Another handful dead, the beast enjoying its rampage. With only a thin
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stretch of wall to maneuver with and other soldiers behind them, her men
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could do little but stand and die.
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``Hold,'' she repeated through gritted teeth.
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And finally, crushing a young woman like a pulped grape, the beorn came
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close enough.
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``\emph{Now},'' the Captain-General hissed.
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Torches were put to the earthen jugs of pitch just before they were
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thrown, of the ten thrown nine splattering across the monster's large
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form. Flames burned clear and bright, spreading as they ate at dry dead
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flesh and the beorn howled.
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``Halberds to the front,'' Catalina ordered, breathing a sigh of relief.
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The halberdiers hurried forward, hacking at the creature even as it was
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destroyed by the flames and ensuring it would not smash into their
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formation. It toppled into the city below and the fantassins hurried to
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reinforce the bastion even as Catalina stayed behind long enough to
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arrange for the wounded to be sent back. Her bodyguards closed in around
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her as she followed into the bastion, finding the situation there had
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turned around. Captain Reinald had holed up his men in corners while the
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beorn rampaged but they'd come out swinging as soon as the beast was
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gone so the ghouls were already on the backfoot when her reinforcements
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arrived. She left the clearing out of the stragglers to her soldiers and
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took of her helmet, seeking out Captain Reinald.
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She found the fat man conversing with his wizards, an untended wound on
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his arm that'd been inflicted through now-ripped mail. The captain of
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the Folies Rouges dismissed his casters when he saw her approach,
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offering a grateful nod.
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``My thanks for drawing it away,'' Reinald said. ``All our pitch was
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spent on the first three and we hadn't gotten fresh jugs yet.''
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``I expect you'll have to return the favour before this is over,''
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Catalina replied. ``Have you heard anything from further north?''
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``The Bayeux footmen are holding strong,'' the older man replied.
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``Prince Arsene made it clear he'll tolerate no retreat.''
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Catalina breathed out a snort as Reinald smirked. Prince Arsene Odon did
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not have a particularly inspiring reputation as a military commander,
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though he wasn't as bad as some other royals. Still, he would never have
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made it above company-captain in the Ligera.
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``We'll need to start bringing in the smaller companies to freshen up
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bloodied positions,'' Catalina said. ``I don't want to dilute our ranks
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too much, but\ldots{}''
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``No, I quite agree,'' Captain Reinald said. ``If we bleed our finest
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soldiers dry too soon there'll be nothing but the dregs left fighting
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come sunlight.''
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She nodded in agreement. It might seem callous to dismiss some of her
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fellow fantassin companies with so contemptuous a term, but some of them
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were honestly no better than levies. Which brought to mind yet more
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trouble.
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``We'll need to keep a close eye on the Brabant conscripts,'' she
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sighed. ``They keep breaking.''
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``Prince Etienne croaking it did a number on them,'' Reinald
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sympathetically said. ``That man was his principality's backbone. Didn't
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help that the Iron Prince decided to pick them up by the throat
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afterwards.''
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``He did what he needed to,'' Catalina replied, but her tone was
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lukewarm.
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That Klaus Papenheim was one of the finest generals alive was not in
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dispute -- though the Arlesite in Catalina had her fancying that Rozala
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Malanza might give him a closer match than most -- but that he'd acted
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like a\ldots{} Lycaonese wasn't either. The northerners liked their
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tyrants, glorified them, but their southern cousins had never shared the
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fascination. Tyrants there got knives, not statues. Had this been
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another war, another man, many a company would have put coin together to
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hire assassins over a man who'd arrested so many officers on such
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spurious grounds. These were desperate times, of course, and the
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officers \emph{had} been out of line. It was still a bitter pill to
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swallow for all of them, Catalina thought, that the Iron Prince's
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heavy-handed actions had not earned so much as a raised eyebrow from any
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other great name.
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Mind you, whoever it was that'd figured appealing to the \emph{Black
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Queen} over an issue of \emph{military discipline} was a good idea
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should be sent to Keter for raising in the hopes that the stupid was
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infectious. Catalina liked the woman more than she figured she would
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have, being a murderous heretic, and considered her a generally
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reasonable superior officer. She was also someone who hanged her own
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soldiers when they got sticky fingers and whose answer to a mutiny was a
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lot more likely to be crucifixion than sympathy. It had to be the
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\emph{Joyeux Chevaliers} that'd pushed for that, having some many noble
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brats within their ranks had them believing they were clever
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manipulators instead of expendable Highest Assembly catspaws.
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``Sure he did,'' Captain Reinald grunted. ``Let's hope he doesn't find
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it necessary to do it again.''
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``We wouldn't have so weak a position if we could agree on a
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representative,'' Catalina pressed. ``I know the Grizzled Fantassin
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turned us down-''
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She'd named an exorbitant price first, then noted that unless the Grand
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Alliance itself could be outbid there was no point in trying to buy her
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services. Old Teresa was said to be out in Mercantis these days, that
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floating pleasure house of a city. Hard terms to beat, admittedly.
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``- it can't be you,'' Captain Reinald frankly said. ``The Ligera has
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too many enemies, you'll never get the votes.''
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``It has to be \emph{someone}, Reinald,'' she exasperatedly said. ``If
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not me then another. And quickly. We are\ldots{}''
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Words failed her, for a moment, as the thought was hard to express. It
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was not a particular indignation that had been weighing on Catalina
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Ferreiro's mind but a hundred little signs, as if had some unknown
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prophecy on the tip of her tongue but could not bring herself to speak
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it.
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``We're dying, Reinald,'' she quietly said. ``Fantassins, our trade.
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You've seen the armies the rest of the world fields, now. Do you think
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we could handle the Second Army or a few sigils of drow? Gods, even the
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Levantines are making something of themselves.''
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\emph{We don't have mages and priests}, Catalina thought. \emph{We don't
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have sappers or Chosen. War is leaving us behind.} And the Principate
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had been hardened by the war too, she could feel it. See in faces and
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hear it in words. No one spoke of war as a part of the Ebb and Flow now,
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as the game of princes where glories and fortune were wagered. Even
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princes had grown harsher, and the wars they'd wage would grow harsher
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with them. Would veterans of the war against Keter really hesitate to
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torch a village? It had been against the unspoken laws of war in Procer,
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once, but what did those childish things matter to someone who'd spent
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three years fighting howling corpses as madness twisted the land around
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them? There would be no return to the old days, after this came to an
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end.
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For better or worse.
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``You're not wrong,'' Reinald muttered. ``Some of the things I've
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heard\ldots{} But this is a discussion to finish when the enemy is no
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longer at our gate, perhaps.''
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Catalina nodded, then smiled.
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``Tarry not,'' she hummed.
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The other mercenary snorted, recognizing the words from the old song
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everyone in their trade, from the greenest of boys to the most grizzled
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of warwives, had heard at least once.
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``Or we'll be dead,'' Captain Reinald finished.
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Over the edge of the rampart, a skeleton dragged itself halfway onto
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solid ground before a soldier smacked it down. The climbers were
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beginning to reach the top, she realized with dread.
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The skirmishing was over at last, and the battle had begun in truth.
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---
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Well, Roland thought, this was going to be a problem.
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``So \emph{that's} why they kept dropping vultures and Revenants through
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the wards,'' the Headhunter said.
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He -- Roland had asked, as he couldn't discern the differences in her
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facepaint that heralded either gender -- was looking at the same thing
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that he was: a gate into Arcadia opening in the middle of a city street.
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Which shouldn't be possible, the Rogue Sorcerer thought, considering
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this city was thick with wards. \emph{But the dead had years to meddle
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with the city after taking it}, he reminded himself. The Grand Alliance
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reclaiming Hainaut and then repairing the old foundations as well as
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slapping on fresh wards was not a comprehensive fix, despite the
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frenzied efforts of their mages. At least it did not seem to be without
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costs for the Dead King: the gate had only opened by subsuming a
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Revenant and was opening rather slowly. They could not be opened with a
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snap of one's finger, which was good news tacked on to the bad.
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``We need to close it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``And find out any
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other gate that might have been opened out of sight.''
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``The city's bleeding magic everywhere, wizardling,'' the Headhunter
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skeptically replied. ``We might as well look for a particular needle in
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a box full of them.''
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``Keter needs Revenants to make these,'' Roland replied, shaking his
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head. ``There won't be many, and we'll have seen them falling.''
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``There could have been more than one Revenant by bird,'' the Headhunter
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shrugged. ``And they can run anywhere after the fall. We've only caught
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one so far.''
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Fair points, but only so long as providence refused to put a finger on
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the scales. Roland would have to hope otherwise.
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``There's another band out there roaming,'' he reminded the other. ``We
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can only hope they will catch what we don't.''
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He rose from his crouch before the Headhunter could answer, expecting
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that otherwise he would be served a sermon on the subject of why the
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three young souls with transitory Named also assigned to keeping the
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streets clear were weak and so naturally doomed to failure. The other
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man's opinions were more strident than thoughtful, in Roland's opinion,
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but he saw nothing to be gained by arguing. The Headhunter's ways had
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paid off for him, and people with full pockets didn't usually tend to
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abandon the ways that'd filled them. A long casting rod of sculpted
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ivory in hand, the Rogue Sorcerers leapt off the edge of the roof and
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|
landed on the cobblestone street. The gate into Arcadia, a broad
|
|
rectangle at least twelve feet high and twice that in length, was
|
|
pulsing. \emph{Still stabilizing}, Roland thought. He brushed a hand
|
|
close to the surface, mustering his will.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Confiscate},'' he murmured.
|
|
|
|
It took, he found with some relief, but not as much as he would have
|
|
wanted it to. He was drawing from the active spell, but not the
|
|
foundations. The light of the portal began flickering wildly. All he was
|
|
achieving was further destabilizing the gate, not breaking it. Movement
|
|
from the corner of his eye had him drawing back, but not quite close
|
|
enough. A javelin, he saw just a heartbeat before it bit into his first
|
|
defensive enchantment and shattered it. A shell of light became visible
|
|
for a moment before shattering. A second flew out, but by then the
|
|
Headhunter was there and he swatted them down with insolent ease.
|
|
|
|
``Gate's not closed, wizardling,'' the Headhunter grunted. ``Get the
|
|
Hells on with it.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{I'm not sure I can}, Roland thought. If he could not confiscate
|
|
the sorcery, then he had to either overpower or shatter the gate --
|
|
which would require strength he did not have or for his knowledge to be
|
|
superior to that of the \emph{Dead King}. He was going to have to
|
|
improvise. If he couldn't break the gate itself, what were his options?
|
|
He cast a glance at the Headhunter.
|
|
|
|
``You have the head of a Damned who could empower magic, correct?''
|
|
|
|
``Amplify,'' the Headhunter corrected. ``And the heads only give weaker
|
|
imitations. What are you scheming?''
|
|
|
|
``I want,'' the Rogue Sorcerer boyishly grinned, ``to make this a much
|
|
\emph{larger} gate.''
|
|
|
|
He felt like tapping his foot, like humming an old song. He was only a
|
|
few mistakes away from dying, but wasn't that where he did all his best
|
|
work?
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Princess Beatrice Volignac of Hainaut went utterly still, her horse
|
|
following suit.
|
|
|
|
Frost spread across the cobblestones like the breath of some wintry
|
|
beast, steam curling above it like fading stripes of lace as ghostly
|
|
lights set the shadows to dancing. It was as if a hole had been cut out
|
|
in the world, revealing some fantastic winter vista hidden behind the
|
|
curtains of Creation, and yet what had come out of it was not some
|
|
strange monster or fair lord. It was an intimately familiar sight. The
|
|
banner was what Beatrice recognize first, stirring as it was in the
|
|
wind. A golden griffin on blue, crowned by three daffodils, but it was
|
|
not the heraldry that made it distinct. It was the long haft of forever
|
|
unrotting whitewood it hung from, ending in a grown of pure gold set
|
|
with sapphires. Even streaked with ash and dust, Beatrice would have
|
|
recognized the royal banner of the House of Volignac anywhere.
|
|
|
|
Riders streamed out of the pale plains of snow on the other side, ranks
|
|
upon ranks of silent souls in beautiful enameled armour that rode steeds
|
|
of the finest coats. Their lances were raised tall, a forest of sharp
|
|
steel held up by unwavering hands, and at their head rode a beautiful
|
|
woman. Skin pale as milk could be seen through the open visor of her
|
|
helm, golden hair in a long braid going down her back. The armour she
|
|
wore was a gift from Beatrice's father, a family heirloom of
|
|
blue-painted steel etched with enchantments, and at her side the ornate
|
|
wooden sheath of the ancient blade of House Volignac, Mordante, rested
|
|
against her hip. And on her brow, atop her helm, a crown of gold had
|
|
been inlaid into the steel for her name was Julienne Volignac and she
|
|
had once rule Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
There was a gaping, bloody wound where her heart should be.
|
|
|
|
``Sister,'' Beatrice softly breathed out. ``Gods, what did they do to
|
|
you?''
|
|
|
|
She had taken a mere hundred riders with her as an escort when heading
|
|
for the western rampart, a pittance compared to the thousands Julienne
|
|
had taken with her on that last doomed charge to delay the dead long
|
|
enough for their people to escape. \emph{But only a few have crossed},
|
|
Beatrice thought. \emph{We can hold them at the gate.} She looked around
|
|
and found only fear on the faces of her soldiers. As much at the sight
|
|
of who it was they were fighting as the numbers, the princess thought.
|
|
|
|
``Bastien,'' she said, raising her voice as she addressed the captain of
|
|
her bodyguard. ``Go for reinforcements. Hurry.''
|
|
|
|
``Your Grace,'' the man replied, hesitating, ``what is it you intend?''
|
|
|
|
Beatrice Volignac breathed out, watching her sister's golden hair across
|
|
the street.
|
|
|
|
``I have you an order,'' she harshly said. ``Go.''
|
|
|
|
She heard him slink away, chastened. In the distance, Julienne Volignac
|
|
met her sister's eyes and smiled sadly. She brought down her visor,
|
|
lowered her lance.
|
|
|
|
``Look ahead,'' Princess Beatrice said, voice ringing out. ``That is
|
|
what Keter means to make of you.''
|
|
|
|
The Princess of Hainaut lowered her lance, and after a terrifying
|
|
heartbeat saw that her retinue followed suit.
|
|
|
|
``They gave their lives for everyone here,'' Beatrice said, throat
|
|
clogged up. ``So we could live, crawling through ash and dust to return
|
|
home another day.''
|
|
|
|
She pressed her knees against her mount, the destrier breaking into a
|
|
trot. Her retinue followed. The enemy, on the other side, lowered their
|
|
lances and began to advance.
|
|
|
|
``We're home now,'' Beatrice Volignac shouted. ``We're home, and tonight
|
|
\emph{we lay our ghost to rest}.''
|
|
|
|
Her soldiers roared, the thunder of hooves crashing against cobblestones
|
|
drowning out battlecries even as the two lines of horsemen rammed into
|
|
each other.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Catalina was not sure who it was that began to sing.
|
|
|
|
The world had turned black and white, chopped into moments of violence
|
|
and moments of relief, but through both songs had begun to wind their
|
|
way. There was nothing, the Captain-General thought with an exhausted
|
|
smiled, that Procerans loved more than a song. Even the ever-cold
|
|
Lycaonese thawed, when the time came to sing. There were more singers
|
|
than birds in Procer, it had once been said, and for every season and
|
|
hour there was a song. Or a poem, or a dance or another gesture of
|
|
beauty returned to the Creation that had given birth to all of them. And
|
|
wasn't that, in the end, the most beautiful thing about her home? Even
|
|
in the dark, they sang.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps in the dark most of all.
|
|
|
|
The dead came over the rampart, silent and relentless. Catalina battered
|
|
them over the edge, hacked and split and felt cold iron sink into her
|
|
arm when tiredness slowed her, but the tide would not end so neither
|
|
would she. And all around her, the Captain-General saw only bastards.
|
|
Mud nobles and cutthroats, peasants and shopkeepers, the leftovers of a
|
|
great realm with blades in hand. And still they held, her thousands of
|
|
brothers and sisters who too bore the name of \emph{fantassin}, her
|
|
fellow fools who traded life and limb for coin and a few boasts. And so
|
|
when the song poured out of her throat, she did not fight. What else was
|
|
there to do, when the world was so ugly, but to bring a sliver of beauty
|
|
in it?
|
|
|
|
\emph{``My father wept for a prince}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And died with a spear in hand.''}
|
|
|
|
The man by her side, covered in sweat and filth, shot her an incredulous
|
|
look and began laughing before cracking a skeleton's skull. He joined
|
|
his voice to hers.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``My mother hasn't wept since}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Or left a god un-damned.''}
|
|
|
|
It spread like a fire, snaking along the rampart and the bastion until a
|
|
thousand throats sang it, that old bastard song, the \emph{Sun In the
|
|
West}.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Beatrice Volignac was in the heart of the whirlwind, dancing with many
|
|
smiling deaths.
|
|
|
|
They fought desperately against the honoured dead, trading lances with
|
|
corpses until all were spent and furious melee with sword and shield
|
|
swept across the cobblestone. There was something burning in all their
|
|
bellies tonight that had devoured whole the fear, replaced it with
|
|
clenched teeth and hard eyes. Before them was the mockery Keter had made
|
|
of the finest gesture any of them had known, and what could they do but
|
|
quell it? Nothing less could be tolerated. So Beatrice traded blows with
|
|
a corpse in armour, ramming her blade into the throat and throwing it
|
|
down its undead mount before pushing forward. A blow glanced off her
|
|
shield and she answered with a hard cut, but it found no purchase in the
|
|
enemy's armour.
|
|
|
|
They were losing, the Princess of Hainaut knew. The charge had not been
|
|
enough. They had slowed the enemy's outpouring through the gate but not
|
|
cut it, and now they were being drowned. Yet she found, queerly, that
|
|
the thought did not mover her to fear. It would be a worthy death,
|
|
Beatrice decided, and such a thing was not to be feared. She was a
|
|
princess of the blood, a Volignac: what did she have to fear in this
|
|
world or any other, save for dishonour? So when the song came on the
|
|
wind, drifting like curl of smoke, the Princess of Hainaut laughed. She,
|
|
too, had once dreamed of being the one who would once again bring the
|
|
sun to west. A good song, she decided, to die singing.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Maybe I'll go east, they say}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Swords there can win a crown.''}
|
|
|
|
Voices joined hers, as the dead hemmed them in and the last of them
|
|
gathered around the banner. The enemy were coming for them, for the
|
|
killing stroke. Through her visor, Beatrice met her sister's eyes as
|
|
Julienne approached with the ancient sword of their shared blood.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Rule king a year and a day}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Be buried with great renown.''}
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Roland hummed under his breath, one hand on a desiccated human head and
|
|
the other on a portal through which a great many people were trying to
|
|
kill him.
|
|
|
|
It was just going to be one of those nights, he figured.
|
|
|
|
``Is it working?'' the Headhunter asked with a grunt.
|
|
|
|
He carved through another skeleton's neck, kicking it into another's
|
|
path as it tried to cross. The villain had, impressively enough, been
|
|
holding the gate single-handedly all this time.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' the Rogue Sorcerer mused, ``if it is, then-''
|
|
|
|
There was a deafening keening noise and the gate double in height before
|
|
beginning to shake.
|
|
|
|
``Wonderful,'' Roland grinned.
|
|
|
|
The Headhunter turned around, throwing an axe at him that cut through
|
|
the javelin someone had very unkindly thrown at Roland's chest.
|
|
Keterans, a people truly without manners.
|
|
|
|
``It's gotten bigger,'' the Headhunter noted, unimpressed. ``Is that it?
|
|
I thought it was-''
|
|
|
|
What looked like the maw of a beorn began to pass through the gate,
|
|
roaring angrily and cutting off the conversation. Rudeness upon
|
|
rudeness, truly. The other Named pulsed with a stolen aspect coming from
|
|
a head and tried to force the construct back, but Roland kept pushing
|
|
sorcery into the gate and amplifying the flow with the human head. Soon,
|
|
soon it would be ready. Mind you, he'd best not tarry long. How did the
|
|
song go again?
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Long ago, the tale goes,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{The sun rose in the west}
|
|
|
|
\emph{It might be it will again:}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Tarry not, or we'll be dead.''}
|
|
|
|
The Headhunter was thrown back into the street, hitting the wall of a
|
|
house and breaking through it, but Roland only smiled even as the beorn
|
|
turned towards him.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Beatrice's horse had died on the third pass, but she'd knocked her
|
|
sister down from hers so it had evened out the affair.
|
|
|
|
They had sparred on occasion, while they both lived, though in those
|
|
days Beatrice had not taken the blade all that seriously -- it had been
|
|
the horse and lance she preferred, finding bladework to be an ungainly
|
|
and sweaty affair. The spars had been measured, almost fond, more shared
|
|
time than any genuine test of each other. \emph{This} was nothing like
|
|
it. Beatrice desperately brought up her shield as the family sword,
|
|
Mordante, bit at the painted steel and let out a flash of light and
|
|
frost. She swung at Julienne's head, but her sister's shield was already
|
|
in place and they collided with each other as each tried to make the
|
|
other trip on the blood-strewn ground
|
|
|
|
``I will free you,'' Beatrice gasped through her helm. ``Gods, Julienne,
|
|
I swear. \emph{I will not leave you like this.}''
|
|
|
|
The enchanted sword kissed the top of her helm, freezing the visor shut,
|
|
but the Princess of Hainaut began hammering at her sister with her
|
|
shield. Julienne had the strength of undeath to her, the tirelessness,
|
|
but Beatrice was \emph{fat}. She was heavy, and muscled, and when she
|
|
struck her sister shook form the impact. Once, twice, thrice until
|
|
Julienne slipped on blood and bone and Beatrice followed her down. A
|
|
lance passed above her head, forced away by one of her last men at the
|
|
last moment, but the Princess of Hainaut's eyes were only for her
|
|
sister. Mordante bit into her side, frostburn creeping through her mail,
|
|
but Beatrice ripped off her sister's helm and met those blue eyes with
|
|
her own as she drew back.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``The fire turns to ember,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{I wake from a sorry dream}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Morning rides in pale splendour}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Chasing down a fading gleam.''}
|
|
|
|
``We will meet again,'' Beatrice whispered, ``in a better place.''
|
|
|
|
And down her sword went.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Roland of Beaumarais, nothing but a -- borrowed -- human head in hand,
|
|
smiled at the monster forcing its way out of the gate into Arcadia.
|
|
|
|
``This should do the trick,'' he announced, removing his hand from the
|
|
portal at last.
|
|
|
|
The magic he'd been drawing on stuttered, the bundle nearly empty, and
|
|
the Rogue Sorcerer offered the beorn as deep a bow as he could without
|
|
making the head dangle. The construct swatted at him, but he stepped
|
|
away even as the Headhunter rose from rubble and the clawed limb came
|
|
well short. The beorn seemed confused, as well it might be.
|
|
|
|
``The gate's frozen,'' the Rogue Sorcerer told it. ``Brilliant man,
|
|
Masego. His work his \emph{comprehensive}.''
|
|
|
|
Roland hadn't even noticed when that derivation had been added to the
|
|
ward schematics, but then that didn't matter. What did matter was that
|
|
the Dead King was not the only brilliant Trismegistan sorcerer in these
|
|
parts, which meant that what had been used here to make the gates was a
|
|
technicality and not a flaw. The last of the magic he'd fed the portal
|
|
was absorbed at last, and with a loud keen the portal's length began to
|
|
extend. It managed to grown another five feet, before the blind spot in
|
|
the wards laid down by the Hierophant was entirely outgrown and they
|
|
triggered with a vengeance.
|
|
|
|
``To borrow from a friend,'' Roland smiled, then raised his hand and
|
|
snapped his fingers.
|
|
|
|
The portal exploded in a pillar of power and light, the city wards
|
|
crushing it into nonexistence without mercy, and Roland de Beaumarais
|
|
was once more left to wonder at just how much he \emph{loved} magic.
|
|
There was always something new, wasn't there? The Headhunter caught up,
|
|
looking at him warily.
|
|
|
|
``Come on,'' the Rogue Sorcerer idly said. ``There will be other
|
|
portals.''
|
|
|
|
And, hands in pockets, he began to make his way down the street as he
|
|
sang the song that'd been on his mind all evening.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``The road is long and winding,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Though I did it love it once}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And tread it still, searching}
|
|
|
|
\emph{The bottom of many cups.''}
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, even charlatans got to have a good turn.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Gods, but they were holding.
|
|
|
|
The Captain-General watched as ladders were brought to the walls and
|
|
undead scaled the cliffs. Stones and logs were thrown at them, burning
|
|
oil poured on ladders and Light filled the air as priests began turning
|
|
the wrath of Above on the dead. It was a narrow, wavering thing but they
|
|
were holding. And now the reinforcements were pouring in, lesser
|
|
companies freshening the ranks of the greater and bringing with them
|
|
well-rested hands. Mages were beginning to rotate in, cadres trained in
|
|
the Arsenal, and though their magics were simple when turned on a single
|
|
great monster in concert they were also often successful. Catalina
|
|
withdrew from the rampart, exhausted enough her vision swam, but after a
|
|
tonic and rest she would return.
|
|
|
|
She sat by a fire, her bodyguards close around her, and drank deeply
|
|
from a waterskin. She smiled as she hear the chorus of the song rise
|
|
again, perhaps the tenth time it had been sung tonight. The Sun In the
|
|
West was often sung as wistful or angry -- there was a reason it was
|
|
familiar to taverns but rare in courts -- but tonight it was, instead,
|
|
almost defiant.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Long ago, the tale goes,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{The sun rose in the west}
|
|
|
|
\emph{It might be it will again:}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Tarry not, or we'll be dead.''}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Our sun has faded}, Catalina thought, \emph{but it has not yet
|
|
set.} There was still blood in the veins of the lumbering beast known as
|
|
the Principate, and perhaps after the war\ldots{} Lightning struck at
|
|
the bastion and a howling gale swept over it, hundreds dying in the
|
|
blink of an eye as Catalina was thrown against a wall and bit her lip as
|
|
she felt her collarbone break. The storm screamed, and two silhouettes
|
|
landed on the stone.
|
|
|
|
The Scourges had arrived.
|