928 lines
43 KiB
TeX
928 lines
43 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-woeful}{%
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\section{Interlude: Woeful}\label{interlude-woeful}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Hardship does not create valour any more than rivers create
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fish. It is simply a circumstance where the valorous reveal themselves,
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and it would be a mistake to believe that what misery or ruin unveil
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could not also be brought into the light by love or duty.''}
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-- King Albert Fairfax of Callow, the Thrice-Invaded
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\end{quote}
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Guillaume screamed in terror as he scraped desperately at the floor,
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trying to keep the winds from snatching him up in their like they had
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Leonie. His fingers were raw and bloody, the cut on his face was aching
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something fierce, he'd dropped his sword and Heavens it just wasn't
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going to be \emph{enough}. He could feel the wind pulling at his feet,
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as if trying to drag him into the sky. The gales were thick with ash and
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dust, hard to peer through, but Guillaume had seen his friends go up
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into the whirlwind and never seen any of them return. It would be death
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if he went up. So he kept crawling forward as the cacophony of wind
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blotted out the rest of the world, like a fish fighting the current, but
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he was feeling a tug on his legs as the strength of the storm grew and
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-- and, somehow, his hands had reached into a bubble of calm.
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He did not waste time questioning the miracle, only dragging himself
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forward along the floor with the last of his strength as he panted and
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grunted and half-wept in relief. A hand grabbed him by the collar and he
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started in surprise, but he did not resist after realizing he was being
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dragged further into the bubble. There was not a trace of the winds
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here, he realized, and even the screams of the storm were muted.
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Guillaume looked up, his face covered in cold sweat and his arms still
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trembling, following the sight of a bracer-clad arm over a black
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gambeson up to a steel cuirass and then something that was impossible to
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mistake: a great black cloak with a patchwork of many colours stitched
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on, banners and stranger things.
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The Mantle of Woe, he'd heard Callowans call it. And so it was the Black
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Queen's brown eyes considering him, set in a hard and angular face that
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seemed like it had been shaped to keep a frown. Guillaume shivered. They
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said the Queen of Callow was kind to the commons, but she was still one
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of the Damned and who would tell if she decided to take his soul now?
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``Your Majesty,'' he stammered, ``I-''
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Idly she flicked a finger at his forehead, the lights dimming around
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them, and Guillaume felt something cold slither through his veins and
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all the way up his face. Like a coiled snake, it waited under his cheek
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near his wound.
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``That'll stop the bleeding,'' the Black Queen said, in slightly
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accented Chantant. ``But you'll still need to get it healed or it'll
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infect.''
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Guillaume dragged himself up halfway to sitting, gingerly touching the
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edges of the deep cut on his cheek and finding that it no longer bled or
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stung. There was a cool, pleasant numbness instead when he prodded.
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Thanks stumbled out of his mouth and she offered half a nod before
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rising from her crouch, leaning heavily on a long staff of dead wood
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that gave off a sense of\ldots{} solidity that one did not often find in
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dead things. The queen suddenly cocked her head to the side, as if she'd
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heard something he had not. He pricked his ear even as he pushed himself
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further away from the edge of the bubble, but he heard nothing aside
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from the distant screaming of the winds.
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``Good, the Drake was overdue,'' the Black Queen said, speaking to thin
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air. ``And Ishaq said they got the Hawk as well?''
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There was a silence, then the queen grimaced.
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``I don't care what the Artificer says, Hakram,'' she said. ``Even if
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the Hashamallim themselves came down from the Heavens and personally
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pissed that Light, unless we see that body burn with our own eyes then
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the Hawk isn't dead. Pass the word to keep an eye out for her.''
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Merciful Heavens, Guillaume shivered. Were they all doomed, had the
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Black Queen had gone made and now spoke to the wind? Or had her powers
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grown so fearful that she could speak to others who were far away? He
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was not sure which thought scared him more.
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``Your Majesty,'' he tried. ``I do not-''
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Dark eyes turned to him.
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``Be silent for a bit,'' the Black Queen said. ``No, not you. There's
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this-''
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She cocked an eyebrow.
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``What's your name?''
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``Guillaume,'' he slowly said.
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She cast a glance at his equipment, the worried gambeson and dull
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cuirass that looked so shoddy compared to her own.
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``Brabantine?'' she guessed.
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``I am,'' he said.
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``A conscript named Guillaume stumbled into my stillness bubble,'' she
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told the air. ``But never mind that. Does Archer have eyes on them?''
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After a moment, she blinked in surprise.
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``The Archmage came up himself?'' she said. ``Shit. They're going for a
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major breach, then, he wouldn't come personally unless he expected to
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have room to cast in. Who's the other one?''
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Guillaume had, without even noticing it, lowered his guard. He must
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have, or else why would he feel his entire body clenching at the sight
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before him? The easy expression on the Black Queen's face went up in
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smoke, revealing a face that was all hard iron. Starlight dimmed around
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them, as if shying away in fear.
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``Meant for Ishaq's band to get him, but we'll do,'' the Queen of Callow
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evenly said. ``'Drani knows?''
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A heartbeat, then she nodded.
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``Good,'' the Black Queen said. ``She can take the vanguard.''
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---
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``\emph{Sahelian confirmed it},'' Hakram's voice spoke into her ear.
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``\emph{It's the Pale Knight with the Archmage. Catherine leaves the
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vanguard to you.''}
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Indrani hadn't needed Flighty Fantom's say-so to be sure of what it was
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she was looking it at, but Cat letting her start off the waltz was good
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news. So long as that damned storm was swirling about, she couldn't do
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much with her bow anyway. After the first and only time she'd been able
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to put an arrow in the Archmage by Seeing a weak point in the winds, the
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Revenant had rebuilt his usual storm defence from the ground up so there
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would be no repeat. The most irritating part seemed that the Archmage
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was now seemingly able to bring other Revenants into its storm to
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protect them, which he hadn't been able to a few months back. The
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defences had improved again.
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She was going to have to carve an opening with her swordarm.
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``Got it,'' Indrani quietly replied, letting the paired stone carry her
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words.
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She unstrung her bow, as it'd make for too easy a target otherwise, and
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slid it against her back in the leather sheath she'd made. Crouched atop
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the bastion to the north of the one that'd fallen to the assault of the
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Scourges, Archer studied the grounds she was going to have to assault
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once last time. The ramparts of Hainaut had fewer bastions than most
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walls, though she wasn't Cat or Hakram so she had no real idea why, but
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the way they were made was pretty straightforward. Two levels: the lower
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one accessible from the rampart themselves through gates on each side
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and the upper one accessible through stairs leading up from inside. Easy
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grounds to defend.
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Trouble was that the dead had come from above, directly on the flat
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grounds of the upper level, so it was them that were defending. Might
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still be some soldiers huddled up below, since the Revenants seemed more
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interested in allowing iron ladders to land on the wall than pushing
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their advantage, but they wouldn't last long one the dead got to
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clearing them out. Indrani wasn't worried about the skeletons coming up
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the ladders, but she didn't like the look of that storm: not only was it
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spreading out from the bastion on which it was centered, the winds
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seemed to be getting stronger. If she tried to walk her way to the lower
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bastion, she risked getting caught up in that.
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She narrowed her eyes, trying out a \textbf{Stride} along the path. The
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feeling wasn't as clear as when she used the aspect when journeying, but
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it still tended to give a hint -- and this time, the sensation was that
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of a broken path. Yeah, like she'd thought those winds were going to be
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a headache. Fortunately, just because she had to go on foot didn't mean
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she had to take \emph{this} particular. Between \textbf{See} and
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\textbf{Stride}, finding the thin places between Creation and the Ways
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had always been staggeringly easy to her and tonight was no exception: a
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little below her perch, two feet forward and five feet off the ground,
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there was a weakness. Someone must have used powerful magic there
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earlier, it had that kind of a taste.
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Would it get her where she needed to go? Indrani listened to the pulse
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of her aspects carefully, then nodded in satisfaction. Close enough.
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``Going,'' Archer told Hakram through the stones. ``I'm using the Ways,
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and tell them to be careful with those winds. I think the storm is
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growing.''
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She did not wait for an answer before leaping down, tumbling through the
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thin veil on the Pattern even as she reached for her longknives. The
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Pale Knight was at hand, finally.
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Time to teach the Scourge that killing Lysander had been a very fatal
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mistake.
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---
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The connection severed itself before he could sever it, which Adjutant
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took to mean Archer had entered the Twilight Ways.
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It wouldn't be long before she popped out in the middle of the enemy
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then, as had been her wont since she'd learned she had a knack for
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`sidling'. Unlike using gates it wouldn't forewarn the Revenants,
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another reason that Indrani was best suited among them to taking the
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vanguard. Even if he'd still had both his legs, he wouldn't have been
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able to\ldots{} Hakram forced himself to concentrate on the here and
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now. Too often these days did his thoughts take him down fruitless
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paths. Fingers pressing on another stone, the orc linked to Catherine.
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``Indrani is moving, using the Ways,'' he told her. ``You need to
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prepare.''
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``\emph{I hear you},'' she replied. \emph{``Is Masego ready as well?''}
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That was the essence of their striking plan, after all. Indrani was to
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interrupt the Archmage's casting of the storm, freeing Catherine and
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Masego to hammer both Scourges immediately with strong workings. From
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there the plan grew\ldots{} fluid, as things grew harder to anticipate,
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but there were ideas that'd been discussed.
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``All he needs is my signal,'' Hakram replied.
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``\emph{Then let's get this going},'' Catherine replied, severing the
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link.
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From her tone, the orc decided, she'd be smiling. He found he was as
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well. Grim as the circumstances were, it had been too long since the Woe
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had fought as one. That Vivienne's skulking would be replaced by Akua
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Sahelian's was not an improvement to his eyes, but these days Vivienne
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had duties of her own and -- and it seemed that Sahelian wanted to
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speak. He touched the corresponding tone, and immediately her smooth
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speaking voice resonated in his ear.
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``\emph{I have eyes on the undead climbing the ladders},'' the shade
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said. \emph{``Most are unarmoured, not shock troops, and they appear to
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be bringing up barrels. Should I risk a closer look?''}
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In most battles, it was Catherine that would have made such a call.
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Weighed the risks and benefits, then send out another to see her will
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through. Tonight, though, the burden fell on him. With the Woe being
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split among so many places, there could be no easy coordination save
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through the artefact Hierophant had crafted for that very purpose. That
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also meant that the one handling the artefact would make decision that
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would, typically, belong to the leader of their band. Hakram had been
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unsure of his own feelings, when Catherine had pressed the duty onto
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him. On one hand, it was a mark of great trust on her part. On the
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other, it seemed like an assignment perfectly tailored to keep him away
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from the fighting.
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``Do it,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``Archer's going in, we need no
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surprises.''
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``\emph{As you say},'' Sahelian replied.
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It had been the delayed realization that someone would have to take up
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this task even if he refused it that settled the matter for him, in
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truth. And that anybody but him would either understand the Woe less, be
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distrusted by Catherine to see this done properly or be Vivienne
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Dartwick, who was needed to keep an eye on the Army of Callow in their
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stead. That the work existed beyond him, that it was not simply made to
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tuck him aside safely, had soothed the ugly assumptions that had been
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lurking in the back of his mind. He was shaken out of his thoughts by
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footsteps, one of his goblin attendants scuttling up the ladder leading
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up to the belfry overlooking the western rampart where he'd set up.
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``Word from the streets,'' Lieutenant Tweaker called out, popping her
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head over the edge. ``All invading gates are closed but two, and
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Beatrice Volignac is wounded but alive.''
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Hakram nodded.
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``Time estimate for the last two?'' he asked.
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``The Rogue Sorcerer is headed for the first one, so not long,'' the
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goblin replied. ``The other is still disgorging soldiers, though, so
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only when the Levantines get to-''
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The head popped away and there was some chatter further down before it
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popped back up.
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``The Peregrine took care of it,'' Lieutenant Tweaker corrected. ``Only
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the Sorcerer's left now, a half hour at most.''
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``Keep me informed,'' Adjutant simply replied.
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``That's the aim, sir,'' the goblin grinned.
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He snorted, eyes returning to the rampart where a storm still raged, but
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the calm was not to last.
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``\emph{Ah},'' Akua Sahelian suddenly breathed into his ear.
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``\emph{There appears to be something of a complication, Adjutant}.''
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``Define complication,'' Hakram warily said.
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``\emph{I have obtained one of the barrels in question},'' the shade
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said, ``\emph{and just opened it. While I've no alchemical kit at hand,
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I do believe this is highly concentrated poison gas.''}
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It fell into place a moment later. The storm growing, how the Scourges
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had been remarkably defensive in stance after their initial overwhelming
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strike. The Archmage had not begun to unleash offensive magics because
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he was about to turn his storm into one, by making the winds poisonous.
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``Can you delay this?'' Hakram asked.
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The fingers of his dead hand, one of two, drummed against the end of the
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arm of his wheelchair -- a small sculpted skull that Masego had been
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kind enough to add at his request.
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\emph{``Unlikely,''} Akua Sahelian replied. \emph{``My acquisition of
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the barrel did not go unremarked, and I am now pursued by an entire
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flock of --''}
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There was a loud screech on the other side, followed by some very
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unflattering comments about vultures and baldness in Mthethwa that he
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suspected the shade had not actually meant for him to hear. Either way,
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it was now clear who the information needed to be passed on to.
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Hakram's fingers found the stone and the dance began anew.
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---
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Guillaume would, in the safety of his own mind, admit to being curious
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as to why the Black Queen was just standing there and waiting. He wasn't
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fool enough to ask, though, or to look in the mouth the horse that was
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her continued presence here warding danger away. Guillaume had been born
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in a proper town, been taught some letters by the House of Light, so he
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wasn't some countryside yokel. Most of the stories about the Black Queen
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had to be guff. Tales swapped around camp fires, getting bigger with
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time or just invented wholesale -- for some reason, some of the
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easterners kept insisting the queen had castrated an ogre in single
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combat. There had to be some truth to them, though, ands Gods knew there
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weren't a lot of monsters out there that the Queen of Callow wouldn't
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make think twice.
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That was reassuring, in a grim sort of way, which had Guillaume
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wondering if he had not ferreted out the quintessence of what it meant
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to be Callowan.
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``You'll need to run when we lift the storm.''
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Jolted out of his philosophical musings, Guillaume started and turned to
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look at the Damned that'd addressed him. The queen looked tense, face
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set in that frown again, but not otherwise particularly concerned. It
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was kind of soothing, to have someone around looking at the end times
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like they were some sort of irritating inconvenience instead of the end
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of the world.
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``You don't need to tell me twice,'' Guillaume feelingly said, then bit
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his lip. ``I didn't ask, Your Majesty, but my company\ldots{}''
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``If they were on the rampart, they're dead,'' the Black Queen replied,
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not unkindly, suddenly then raised a finger to silence him. ``I'm
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listening.''
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There was a long pause.
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``And Akua thinks the winds will carry it?'' the queen quietly asked.
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Guillaume blinked in confusion. He'd never heard of anyone of that name,
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though he then reminded himself it was exceedingly unwise to eavesdrop
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too hard here. Boys from proper little towns like him weren't meant to
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hear royal conversations.
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``We'll only get one clear short at the two of them,'' the Black Queen
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reluctantly said. ``What's the risk it could spread into the city?''
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A grimace ensued.
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``Archer should be able to burn out a single breath's worth,'' the queen
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muttered. ``And she's got the scarf to filter, afterwards. Shit. How
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many survivors left from that first strike, do you think?''
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Even as she leaned against her staff, the Black Queen -- \emph{Merciful
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Heavens}, Guillaume thought as he realized with a start that he was
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probably taller than her -- worried her lip. One of her hands was
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twitching, he noticed, fingers curling into claws as they clenched
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against her palm and then slowly unclenched. Brown eyes swept across the
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winds, and then moved to him. He looked away hurriedly, and three long
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breaths passed.
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``Fuck it,'' the Black Queen sighed. ``We'll improvise. I'm going in,
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let Hierophant know.''
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Somehow dimly relieved, Guillaume risked a glace at the villainess. She
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offered her him a wild smile, for a heartbeat turning that dour tanned
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face into one that had him blushing.
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``Hang on tight, Guillaume of Brabant,'' she said. ``This is going to
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get \emph{rough}.''
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---
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``Why even bother making a plan, if she was going to discard it?''
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Masego complained.
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\emph{``We hadn't accounted for the gas,''} Hakram replied. \emph{``If
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it gets into the city, this battle's over.''}
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``As our defeat,'' Hierophant hazarded.
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It seemed a reasonable guess, considering.
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\emph{``Yes, Masego, as our defeat,''} Hakram amiably agreed.
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\emph{``Catherine's striking, are you-''}
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The connection between the two paired stones fizzled for a moment,
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dimming the last of his words as in the distance Hierophant's glass eyes
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glimpsed Night rising up in a great tide of darkness. Catherine was
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putting her back into it, if the reverberations from her working
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affected even active spellcraft in the area. An interesting phenomenon,
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and he itched to have a closer look at that in more contained conditions
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where the extraneous factors could be filtered out, but alas it would
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have to wait. Glints of a faded summer sun lighting up every dark,
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Masego studied his friend's attack curiously. It seemed a brutish thing,
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at first glance, a mere tide of shadow slammed into the Tumult's storm.
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That the Scourge immediately answered with light magics, cutting beams
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of glowing power that tore into the darkness, was yet another reason why
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the Revenant was utterly underserving of being called an
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\emph{archmage}. The effrontery was galling, truly. Someone with proper
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master of the higher mysteries would have noticed that Catherine, ever
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clever behind her pretence of thuggishness, hadn't just gathered Night
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and tossed it at an enemy working. The light cut through so easily not
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only because of its properties as one of the classical elements but also
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because that wave of Night was \emph{meant} to be broken. It shook the
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storm some, when impacting it, but when the winds unmade it the darkness
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allowed itself to be carried by the gales like smoke.
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Within thirty heartbeats, the entire storm was filled with a thick haze
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of Night. Masego felt a sliver of pride had how well she'd learned the
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foundational principles of Trismegistan sorcery: the essence of magic
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was, after all, usurpation. Akua Sahelian was to be commended.
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\emph{``-are you ready?''}
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``I am,'' Hierophant replied. ``You may tend to the others. My attack is
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at hand.''
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Surrounded by three dozen barrels of bronze rods positively dripping
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with invested sorcery, Masego had not held back in Wresting what he
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required for a fitting admonishment. The magic was thick and pure, its
|
|
tint strangely similar to that of a thin layer of oil atop water, and it
|
|
was slowly circling around him according to his will. In the distance,
|
|
his eyes piercing through the veil of Night surrounding Catherine, he
|
|
found her silhouette raising her staff into the air. Good, she was about
|
|
done then. The moment it struck down, to Masego's unspoken glee, the
|
|
Night spread out within the storm roiled for one moment as the Tumult
|
|
had his own spell stolen away from his control. Just long enough for
|
|
Catherine Foundling to disperse it, abruptly breaking the storm into
|
|
fading wisps of wind.
|
|
|
|
``And now my turn,'' Masego murmured, robes stirring in the evening
|
|
wind.
|
|
|
|
Like a streak of lightning the sorcery shot forward through the sky.
|
|
Hierophant's concentration stumbled when he saw Indrani walk out of thin
|
|
air -- she must have sidled through the Ways -- behind the Tumult, who
|
|
did not notice. The Pale Knight did, however, and before a heartbeat had
|
|
passed the Scourge had his great axe in hand and was moving towards her
|
|
as he shouted a warning.
|
|
|
|
``Too slow,'' Hierophant spoke through clenched teeth.
|
|
|
|
The filaments of magic snaked forward, sliding between them, and with a
|
|
curt gesture of the wrist Masego shaped the sorcery into one of the
|
|
first formulas he'd ever learned: out of the end of the filament a
|
|
textbook prefect magic missile erupted, splashing harmless against the
|
|
Revenant's armoured helm but blinding it for a moment. Archer ducked
|
|
under the burning flame unleashed by the Tumult before he even turned
|
|
completely, circling to stay behind his back, even as Hierophant began
|
|
shaping the sorcery again. That missile had cost him, he estimated, one
|
|
part out of a thousand.
|
|
|
|
Time to see what he might achieve with some halfway decent spellwork
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Of course Cat had gotten it into her head that was Indrani \emph{clearly
|
|
needed} was for her cover to be snuffed out just before she came out of
|
|
the Twilight Ways. You know, just so she could be extra visible for the
|
|
fucking Pale Knight and all. Gods, what a wench. Archer caught the axe
|
|
between the edge of two knives, struggling against the Scourge for a
|
|
moment before hastily stepping back when it became clear she wasn't
|
|
going to win on strength alone. The bastard was even stronger than she'd
|
|
come to believe from their first tangle at Lauzon's Hollow.
|
|
|
|
``This was unwise,'' the Pale Knight said.
|
|
|
|
``So was that second bottle of red last night, but that's life for
|
|
you,'' Indrani agreeably replied.
|
|
|
|
He might have continued the conversation, but instead a streak of
|
|
colourful magic darted in behind his head and seven wisps of hellflame
|
|
shot out. The Revenant batted at them with the side of his axe,
|
|
smothering a few, but more snuck around and slithered into the gap of
|
|
his armour where they burst. With the Pale Knight distracted, Indrani
|
|
went back on the offensive and moved to put him between her and the
|
|
Archmage -- which wasn't enough, damn it, the seventeen arrows of silver
|
|
light that shot out from the top of the Scourge's staff curved around
|
|
his ally. Shit, she was going to have to- and a gate into Twilight
|
|
shivered to life right in their way, swallowing them all up. Archer
|
|
grinned. Good, Cat was finally back in the fight.
|
|
|
|
She stepped around the gate, ducking under a swing of the Pale Knight's
|
|
axe and darting forward. The undead in his pale plate tried to knee her
|
|
at the junction of the shoulder and neck but Indrani tumbled forward and
|
|
under him. Her longknives cut at the back of the knees as she rose,
|
|
where most armours had a weakness, but she found no purchase as her
|
|
blades scratched only steel. That they scratched at all was an
|
|
improvement on her previous record against the armour, so- ah, she'd
|
|
been right. There had been a weak point in the armour dead, it was just
|
|
that the Revenant had had melted steel poured into the back of his knee.
|
|
Still a weakness with the right tool, then.
|
|
|
|
And one more strike for Cat's theory that the Pale Knight's strange
|
|
immunity was related specifically to his armour.
|
|
|
|
Archer kept moving forward, letting her enemy's backswing pass less than
|
|
an inch behind her quiver, and got to the Archmage's flank. The Revenant
|
|
was struggled with Zeze's latest bout of cleverness, a pool of raw magic
|
|
he'd Wrested and was using to pump out spells from a distance by giving
|
|
shape to parts of the pool -- at the moment it was shooting out small
|
|
tendrils of darkness that Indrani's Name screamed at her to avoid, so
|
|
probably some kind of nasty Wasteland curse. The Archmage was
|
|
frontloading a shield to deal with it, a pane of transparent light, and
|
|
while its attention was there\ldots{} ah, not so much of a sucker. Her
|
|
attempt to sneak a blade into its back was met by a rippling circle of
|
|
space that almost blew the longknife out of her hand.
|
|
|
|
And now the Pale Knight was on her again, only for a gate to open in
|
|
front of him. Indrani went around, putting the gate between herself and
|
|
the Archmage, which allowed her to see Catherine come out with a bare
|
|
sword and sock the bastard in the side of the head with her pommel.
|
|
|
|
``Took you long enough,'' Archer said.
|
|
|
|
Cat snorted, the two of them eyeing the Pale Knight as he steadied his
|
|
footing and the gate closed behind them.
|
|
|
|
``Took the scenic route,'' Catherine Foundling idly said. ``It's such a
|
|
nice night out.''
|
|
|
|
And behind them there was a scream as the wind began spinning above the
|
|
Archmage, who never did like fighting without a storm to cover his --
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Hierophant cocked an eyebrow. Did the Tumult take him for an utter fool?
|
|
Certainly he could not \textbf{Wrest} to separate entities at the same
|
|
time, but what kind of a second-rate conjurer would he be if he'd not
|
|
accounted for such a weakness in his chosen strategy? He set the magic
|
|
he'd gathered to spinning around itself, slowly feeding a spell that
|
|
made it rotate as a globe to insignificant costs, and dug into his
|
|
aspect with relish as he reached for the dawning storm and-
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
A column of condensed lightning struck the Archmage three times, and
|
|
Indrani's heart skipped a beat. It simply could not be denied she had
|
|
good -- nay, exquisite -- taste in men. The Pale Knight suddenly went
|
|
stiff, turning towards, Catherine and in a strange voice spoke a single
|
|
word to her in a language that Archer did not recognize.
|
|
|
|
Catherine went still.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``\emph{I can't stop them any longer},'' Akua Sahelian said.
|
|
\emph{``They have enough casters concentrating on me that should I
|
|
linger capture is certain.''}
|
|
|
|
Hakram grimaced. The shade had done well at keeping anyone from climbing
|
|
the ladders and joining the melee atop the bastion, but it'd only been a
|
|
matter of time until Keter put together a force capable of dealing with
|
|
her. He'd honestly not expected her to last so long. Much as he disliked
|
|
the woman, Adjutant would still acknowledge the skillful performance she
|
|
had offered tonight given her\ldots{} reduced capabilities.
|
|
|
|
``Retreat,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``Are Revenant coming up?''
|
|
|
|
\emph{``At least two, neither Scourges,''} Sahelian replied.
|
|
|
|
``I'll pass it along,'' Hakram said. ``You know what to do.''
|
|
|
|
She did not acknowledge his words, only severing the connection, a sure
|
|
sign she was being attacked by enemies but trying not to show it too
|
|
obviously. Hearing someone come up the ladder, Adjutant turned to see
|
|
Lieutenant Tweaker's head pop over the edge.
|
|
|
|
``Movement at the front gate,'' she told him. ``At least three wyrms
|
|
seen, and it's looking like an all-out assault.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram, idly, touched his prosthetic. A beautiful piece of work by
|
|
Masego, that. He laid a finger against a groove in the wood, as if to
|
|
scratch at a phantom itch.
|
|
|
|
``Sir,'' Lieutenant Tweaker began, ``should we-''
|
|
|
|
Skeletal fingers closing against the length of wood, Hakram whipped out
|
|
the wand and pressed his thumb against the rune sculpted into the side.
|
|
There was a ripple of kinetic force as the enchantment was unleashed,
|
|
the lieutenant's shape fading and turning into a misshapen Revenant
|
|
halfway into a leap at him. Adjutant dropped the wand, hand finding the
|
|
skull on the arm of his wheelchair and drawing out the axe it was the
|
|
pommel of. He rose with the movement, Name pulsing with joy, and the
|
|
blade split the skull in half as the undead's iron claws failed to
|
|
pierce his chain mail. The Revenant dropped to the ground twitching as
|
|
the necromancy tried to assert control of the limbs again. Half his body
|
|
felt aflame, but he steeled himself through the pain.
|
|
|
|
``You got a goblin's speed right,'' Adjutant clinically assessed, ``but
|
|
not the weight. Sloppy.''
|
|
|
|
The axe went up, the Revenant's eyes going wide, and Hakram of the
|
|
Howling Wolves bared his fangs.
|
|
|
|
``Next time, Dead King? Send a Scourge.''
|
|
|
|
The axe went down.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was the aptness of the counters that allowed Hierophant to understand
|
|
what he had been dealing with all this time. It was obvious, in
|
|
retrospect.
|
|
|
|
The Tumult had answered the Liessen Chisel with a perfect shield in the
|
|
Pelagian school, hellflame with a Stygian dry dousing developed during
|
|
Maleficent the Second's wars against the League, used Jaquinite
|
|
uncertainty principles to disrupt the magic he'd wrested halfway through
|
|
a spell. The uninitiated among the heroes had insisted on calling the
|
|
Revenant the `Archmage' because of its broad variety of masteries in
|
|
magic, but they'd never noticed that the masteries were
|
|
\emph{impossibly} broad. The only individual Masego had ever seen use so
|
|
many different magics was the Rogue Sorcerer, and if he had never met
|
|
Roland he might have dismissed this interpretation as him misreading the
|
|
enemy's spellcraft. His eyes opened at the possibility, though, it was
|
|
impossible to miss the telltale marks. This should not, however, be
|
|
possible. Roland used a great variety of principles, but he had the
|
|
protection of an aspect and though knowledgeable he was not a
|
|
\emph{master}.
|
|
|
|
The Tumult, however distasteful an entity, was.
|
|
|
|
Which was absurd, because those masteries could not have been acquired
|
|
after death: the dictate that undead could not learn was not as absolute
|
|
as some seemed to believe, but understanding the mysteries of an
|
|
entirely new school of magic definitely qualified. And it was highly
|
|
unlikely to have been achieved by living, as Hierophant was rather
|
|
skeptical that someone capable of mastering multiple schools of magic,
|
|
whether it drove them made or not, would not have made it into the pages
|
|
of history. Which meant he was missing something. On a hunch, he tried a
|
|
repeat: sending both a Liessen Chisel and a spurt of hellfame at the
|
|
enemy from opposite ends of the massed sorcery. And he got his answer,
|
|
at last.
|
|
|
|
The Tumult did parry both, but when it did it used Pelagian shields for
|
|
both instead of the apter answer he had shown himself capable of using.
|
|
Moreover, the Tumult had already shown he could cast two spells
|
|
simultaneously so there was no reason for it not too. Unless it could
|
|
not\emph{. He can only use one school of magic at a time}, Masego
|
|
deduced. And there was an obvious explanation as to why. He reached for
|
|
his paired stone.
|
|
|
|
``Hakram,'' Hierophant said. ``I have a theory about the Tumult.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{``I'm listening,''} Adjutant replied.
|
|
|
|
He sounded a little out of breath, strangely enough.
|
|
|
|
``It is not a single Revenant,'' Masego said. ``It is a multitude of
|
|
dead spellcaster souls stitched onto the same corpse, likely with an
|
|
oversoul -- perhaps the body's original one -- handling matters of
|
|
control.''
|
|
|
|
There was a moment of silence.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``If we target that oversoul?''} Hakram asked.
|
|
|
|
``The King of Death is a skillful necromancer,'' Hierophant reluctantly
|
|
replied. ``It will not destroy the Revenant. It should, however, make it
|
|
highly erratic as different souls struggle for control.''
|
|
|
|
The orc chuckled.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Well, let's see what we can do about that.''}
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
They'd taken too long to put down the Scourges, so now it was all going
|
|
south. Indrani backpedalled, letting the axe pass half an inch away from
|
|
her chin as behind her a blue-tinted shield took the impact from the
|
|
four black streaks of sorcery that'd been aimed at her back. She flicked
|
|
a feint at the Pale Knight's face that the Revenant didn't even bother
|
|
to parry, ending up touching his helm, but the shaft of his axe was
|
|
smashed into her elbow and she was forced to abort her actual blow and
|
|
scuttle away as she swallowed a scream. Fuck, was it broken or just
|
|
sprained? Either way, it strung like a bitch. She spared a glance for
|
|
Cat, who'd just set a Revenant aflame and blown a few skeletons off the
|
|
bastion but had just been forced to coat herself in a bubble of Night as
|
|
a pack of undead mages tossed fireballs at her.
|
|
|
|
Indrani's straying eyes were not, to her surprise, rewarded by the Pale
|
|
Knight pursuing. Instead the Revenant was going for\ldots{} shit,
|
|
barrels? As in those things full of poison Hakram had mentioned? One,
|
|
two, three, strokes and three were split open as grey fog came billowing
|
|
out. She hastily pulled up her scarf, trusting the enchanted weave to
|
|
filer to toxins, which was long enough for the Archmage to attempt
|
|
birthing another storm and Masego to shut him down. Unfortunately, the
|
|
figure in grey and purple robes seemed indifferent to the lightning that
|
|
was cast down on it. It flickered down the robes, grounding itself into
|
|
the stone floor, and the Archmage began casting again\emph{. Keeping
|
|
Hierophant tied up}, Archer decided.
|
|
|
|
On the bright side, Indrani had just been given a moment to breathe so
|
|
she reached for the pouch at her side and carefully unfolded the green
|
|
cloth folded within before sliding it down the length of both her blades
|
|
and tossing it to the side. It left them coated in a heavy transparent
|
|
film, as she'd been told it would. Breathing deep, she went for the fog
|
|
even as Cat wove some kind of bubble of darkness to suck it out and keep
|
|
it from spreading too far. As she'd expected, the Pale Knight came out
|
|
of the smoke aiming at Catherine's flank. Indrani sped forward, leaning
|
|
into \textbf{Stride} to quicken her steps, and had to leap when just
|
|
before she got into range the Revenant turned and swung at her.
|
|
Catherine hammered at the Pale Knight's knee to hinder him, but a lesser
|
|
Revenant was going after her again with a spear so\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Flow}, Indrani thought, letting the aspect fill her up.
|
|
|
|
The axeblade went up, but she slapped it aside with a longknife and spun
|
|
on herself. She landed on the Pale Knight's shoulder, tempted to attack
|
|
but knowing that if she ended movement the aspect would end with it. She
|
|
slid down the Revenant's back at is tried to catch her foot, landing
|
|
behind it in a crouch and smoothly stabbing into the back of both knees.
|
|
She found only a little bite, but it would be enough. The Pale Knight
|
|
turned and struck at the same time, sweeping along the ground but she
|
|
rolled between his legs and emerged in front of him. His extended arm
|
|
was an opening, and she swiped the flat of a blade against the armoured
|
|
elbow. The kick caught her in the ribs and one broke, but it was with a
|
|
smile of triumph that she rolled against the ground and drew herself
|
|
into a crouch.
|
|
|
|
The Pale Knight froze for a moment, before dropping his axe and pawing
|
|
at his elbow as her aspect flickered out.
|
|
|
|
``Bad choice,'' Archer said. ``The doses on the knees have had longer to
|
|
spread.''
|
|
|
|
Idly, she reached in the pouch and picked out a white cloth she used to
|
|
wipe her blades clean with.
|
|
|
|
``What did you \emph{do}?'' the Pale Knight asked.
|
|
|
|
He stumbled, finding his footing hard to maintain.
|
|
|
|
``Delivered to you with the Concocter's regards,'' Indrani coldly said.
|
|
``An alchemical acid that devour only bone and steel, repelled by all
|
|
other substances.''
|
|
|
|
The Pale Knight collapse to the ground, the only think keeping his upper
|
|
legs connected to his thighs the stretch of pale plate covering them.
|
|
|
|
It was, Indrani thought with a hard smile, just the start.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Hierophant Wrested control of the storm again, jaw clenched, and
|
|
shattered the spell.
|
|
|
|
How very irritating. Having grasped that he was facing a superior
|
|
practitioner, the Tumult no longer even tried to do more than toss the
|
|
occasional spell the way of Catherine and Indrani: instead he now
|
|
repeatedly spent his power trying to birth another storm, not in hope of
|
|
success but because doing so would command Masego's attentions.
|
|
Hierophant himself rarely had long enough to do more than to form the
|
|
occasional second-rate spell and send it flying before he must focus his
|
|
attentions on the spell again, and the repeated struggle of wills
|
|
against the Revenant was starting to tire him. Unlike the magic taken
|
|
from inert objects, the Scourge's own must be forcefully usurped.
|
|
|
|
Masego felt sweat beading his forehead and going down his back. No, this
|
|
stalemate was not to his advantage or that of his companions. The Tumult
|
|
indicated the rhythm of their clashes, which meant he had an easier time
|
|
sending spells at Catherine and Indrani than Hierophant had of defending
|
|
them. The last three times it'd begun using increasingly obscure curses,
|
|
and for the last Masego would admit that he'd been largely guessing when
|
|
he'd used Sisi's Sphere as a defence -- he'd not been certain it would
|
|
actually work. He must regain the momentum, and that meant one thing:
|
|
when the storm next began to form, Hierophant let it.
|
|
|
|
Instead he gathered all the sorcery he had left in a spinning globe,
|
|
shaping it in one great working.
|
|
|
|
``Seven pillars hold up the sky,'' he began.
|
|
|
|
The world shuddered, seven wooden pillars forming out of raw magic
|
|
around the Tumult. The Revenant tried to abandon the spell hastily, but
|
|
Masego smiled. \emph{It is too large,} he thought. \emph{And it takes
|
|
you a moment to change between schools.} Four runes formed above the
|
|
Revenant's head, linked by a circle of pale light.
|
|
|
|
``Four cardinals, one meridian,'' he continued. ``The wheel unbroken,
|
|
spokes that are not. Thou shall not leave the circle.''
|
|
|
|
And \emph{that}, Hierophant decided, was a stalemate he could live with.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Funny thing,'' Catherine Foundling said. ``It was actually the Mirror
|
|
Knight that helped me figure out how to kill you.''
|
|
|
|
The Mantle of Woe fluttering around her Cat -- no, in that moment
|
|
Indrani could only think of her as the \emph{Black Queen} -- parried the
|
|
last lesser Revenant's spear blow and severed its head with a brutal
|
|
riposte, ripping out the blade and kicking the body over the edge of the
|
|
bastion and onto a skeleton trying to climb up. The Pale Knight tried to
|
|
push itself up with its axe, but Indrani kicked it away. The Revenant
|
|
fell to his knees. She stepped away, sheathing her blades and reaching
|
|
for her quiver.
|
|
|
|
``It's the Named you avoided in Cleves,'' the Black Queen idly
|
|
continued. ``The Red Knight and the Myrmidon. The Red Knight I
|
|
understand -- Devour is a headache and a half to deal with, but the
|
|
\emph{Myrmidon}? I couldn't figure out why.''
|
|
|
|
The Pale Knight brought out another axe but Indrani had an Unraveller in
|
|
hand -- a great javelin artefact, one she'd adjusted so it could be
|
|
fired from her bow but still very much a javelin. A swipe had that axe
|
|
clattering away again and Archer added a smack against the helm so he
|
|
would fall down on his back.
|
|
|
|
``But then I remembered that I never struck at you without adding Night
|
|
to the blow,'' Catherine added, Night gathering to her like rivers to
|
|
the sea. ``And it fell into place. It's strength you have trouble with.
|
|
Of that front, aside from the Mirror Knight who's damned slow those two
|
|
are the physically strongest Named.''
|
|
|
|
It was kind of hot, Indrani admitted to herself, when she monologued.
|
|
She got that gleam in her eye, like she\ldots{} well, maybe after this
|
|
if they could spare the time. Probably counted as a form of healing, if
|
|
you squinted a bit. Night caught her by the shoulders and tendrils began
|
|
hoist her up into the sky. Higher and higher and higher, until the Pale
|
|
Knight was barely more than a silhouette trying to get up, and then the
|
|
darkness seized her tight.
|
|
|
|
``And down we go,'' Archer manically grinned.
|
|
|
|
She angled the unraveller downwards and the tendrils of Night drew back
|
|
a bit before \emph{throwing} her down. Eyes wide open, silent as she
|
|
went down, she watched as the Pale Knight hacked away at the tendrils of
|
|
shadow tripping him and slowly began to rise just in time to look up and
|
|
see her. She met his eyes a heartbeat before the impact, too late for
|
|
him to swing at her, and she slammed the unraveller through his throat
|
|
through the gorget of pale steel. The Scourge gasped and she leaned in,
|
|
ignoring the tremors of pain going down her legs from the landing.
|
|
|
|
``His name was Lysander,'' Indrani whispered. ``Where you end up, carry
|
|
that with you.''
|
|
|
|
And with a final wrench she severed the head clean. Panting, Archer
|
|
tried to get up but stumbled only for Cat to reach her side and help her
|
|
stand. She also, bless her petty soul, kicked the Revenant's head.
|
|
Indrani cocked an eyebrow at her.
|
|
|
|
``Fucker killed my horse,'' Catherine said, unrepentant.
|
|
|
|
Indrani saw that already undead were coming over the wall, the iron
|
|
ladders steadily disgorging their lot, but it was the Archmage her gaze
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strayed to. Though bound by Masego's miracle, the Scourge had barely
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scuffed his robes throughout the fighting. For a bastard who preferred
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to fight at range, he'd proved remarkably resilient up close.
|
|
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``Still need to finish that before we retreat for healing,'' Catherine
|
|
muttered, ``though at least he's still-''
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|
|
|
A wooden pillar loudly cracked.
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|
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|
``Fuck,'' Cat said, ``I really ought to know better by now.''
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|
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|
Three of them blew and the Archmage's hand swept out, but no magic
|
|
ensued. Indrani pushed away and reached for her longknives even as Cat
|
|
struck out with a spear of Night, but a shape moved in the way before it
|
|
could hit the Revenant. Akua Sahelian, dressed in threads of shadow,
|
|
moved stiffly so stand between the Archmage and the Night. Cat pulled
|
|
the blow at the last moment.
|
|
|
|
``Go through,'' Akua said through gritted teeth. ``I'll-''
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|
|
|
Her mouth shut. The last pillars shattered one after another and the
|
|
Archmage shook free. Masego struck from a distance with brilliant blue
|
|
flames but they splashed harmlessly on a shield, and when Cat threw a
|
|
few threads of shadow they were carved through with arrows of silver
|
|
light. Archer cautiously approached, keeping an eye on Akua as she did.
|
|
They couldn't let the Revenant flee, as it was obviously ramping up to.
|
|
The Wastelander must have been sneaking up on the Archmage and gotten
|
|
caught, she thought, only that didn't seem like Akua at all.
|
|
Weapon-wise, if the Archmage put her in the way it shouldn't be an
|
|
issue. She had only a silver dagger in hand, enchanted by the looks of
|
|
it, but wait wasn't that a --
|
|
|
|
A flock of yellow bee-like spurts of flame from Masego had the Scourge
|
|
putting up a swirling ball of power to suck them up, while Catherine's
|
|
curving arrows of darkness were met with matches in silver light. And
|
|
with both hands occupied, the Archmage had nothing left to spare when
|
|
Akua Sahelian thrust a ritual dagger into his left eye.
|
|
|
|
``Please,'' the shade amicably smiled. ``As if I would allow myself to
|
|
be snatched like some petty errant soul. For that presumption, allow me
|
|
to take one of yours.''
|
|
|
|
The Revenant screamed with a dozen different voices as she ripped out
|
|
the knife, its blade glinting with eerie light, and the Wastelander
|
|
smiled in triumph. Indrani hurried forward. If they could finish the
|
|
Archmage here and now\ldots{} All Indrani saw was a flicker, but she was
|
|
the Archer and so she knew what she'd glimpsed. An arrow. And, heart
|
|
clenching, she knew where it'd been aimed. She turned, watching a circle
|
|
of Night flare around Catherine but failing to stop the black-feathered
|
|
arrow that punched into the side of her face. Cat fell the floor,
|
|
spurting blood, and even as Akua let out a scream of dismay the Archmage
|
|
leapt off the edge of the bastion.
|
|
|
|
In the distance, two crows screeched in agony.
|
|
|
|
In the sky above Hainaut there were great rumbling sounds as power
|
|
gathered, thousands of mages in the plains below unleashing their
|
|
rituals at least. One after the other, three great gates above the city.
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|
|
|
And water began pouring out of them.
|