603 lines
28 KiB
TeX
603 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-sigil}{%
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\section{Interlude: Sigil}\label{interlude-sigil}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Peace is death, stagnation of the soul. Peace is a child closing
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their eyes to the truth of the world: the great will partake of the
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small, until they falter and they too are partaken of. Strife is life
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and death, and there can be no more evil in embracing it than in the act
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of breathing.''}
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-- Extract from the `Tenets of Night', ancient Firstborn religious text
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\end{quote}
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Rumena waited, patient.
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Many of the Mighty were growing restless, eager to seek excellence
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through strife as the\ldots{} cattle around them did, but the
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once-and-again general knew better. The Enemy had sent hordes to batter
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the walls and the gates, but the Pale Crown was not one to seek triumph
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through brute strength. The killing knives had yet to be bared. The
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Mighty studied another of its kind, Mighty Borislava, as it sat on the
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bares stone of the street with its eyes closed. Night pulsed from it in
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weak waves, a feat of control considering the strength of the Secret
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being used. Borislava suddenly breathed out, its silver-pierced face
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twisting into a smile.
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``They are found,'' Mighty Borislava rasped out. ``The tunnels expand
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too quickly to be dug by hand or pick. The Enemy has brought
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acid-worms.''
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Rumena nodded, expressing no displeasure. That worms were not
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unexpected, though this marked the first instance they were used on any
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front but Serolen or the Pass. This cattle-city of Hainaut was as jaws
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of steel, the general had come to suspect, a trap laid for any unwary
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foot willing to step into it. Soon enough they would begin to feel the
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bite of those teeth,
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``How many breaches?'' Rumena asked.
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``I have found seven, General,'' Borislava said. ``Five of these along
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the western shore of the basin.''
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Reluctantly, it added that it might have missed a few tunnels whilst
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looking. Good, Rumena would not need to discipline it again. Borislava
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usually required such a firm hand only every half century or so, and had
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earned that raspy voice the first time it had allowed its pride to
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delude it into thinking it might replace Rumena as sigil-holder, but its
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usefulness in the southern expedition was feeding the pride again.
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Perhaps the old Firstborn would not need to end it before they reached
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their fourth century together.
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``Zarkan,'' the general called out, without turning
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The rylleh had been still and silent, knowing that even though bearing
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the title it was the weakest of its rank among the Rumena and should be
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wary of giving offence. Wise, though lacking in audacity. The mark of
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one who was to be slain and harvested before it could reach any
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significant measure of power. Night rewarded the knife that struck, not
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the knife that waited for the opening.
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``Whisper into the Night,'' Rumena ordered its messenger. ``Tell Mighty
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Jindrich that it is to begin attac-''
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The wave rage that roared through the Night staggered them all for a
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heartbeat. Sve Noc were \emph{furious}, their earthly forms in the sky
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above cawing in pain and anger. The general knelt, mastering the
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feelings not its own, and sent its humble regards above. Its goddesses
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deigned to answer, sending a flicker of thought: the First Under the
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Night. face ripped apart by an unnatural arrow. Near dead, though not
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quite. Already Sve Noc had sent had servant to see to the matter, moving
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with swift and silent steps, and the Eldest went with it. It was the
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Youngest, who had ever favoured Rumena and commanded its own affections
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in return, that bade the old drow to turns its eyes to the sky. Where
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sorcery made the firmament creak and groan, opening three great gates
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above the city.
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\emph{Strike}, Komena ordered.
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The old drow breathed out, and Night flooded its veins. It filled it to
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the brim, seeping into the flesh and the organs as Rumena drew on a
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power it had not deemed worth using in seven hundred years. The Secret
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of Tolling Wrath was but a mimicry of something the Firstborn had been
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able to craft at will, ancient engines of destruction that the general
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had once turned on the unbreakable ranks of the \emph{nerezim} as their
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relentless advance broke one city after another, but in the old nights
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it had taken a company of sorcerers and a Sage to guide them for the
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ritual-engine to be used. The Tomb-Maker could now do the same with but
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an exertion of will and power, as if a company of one. The Night
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vanished from it without warning, as the Secret took its final shape,
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and Rumena shivered.
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It would not be able to call on the Secret twice tonight, it decided.
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Once had already set its bones to aching.
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In the sky above, water had begun to pour from the gates. The Youngest
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cared not to suffer this affront, so see the wiles of her First Under
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the Night turned against a city under its protection, and so it had
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struck as well. The great crow had was growing, turning from a small
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blot of darkness in the sky to a great nightmare blotting out the stars
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themselves. It was, Rumena thought, beautiful to behold. And at last the
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Secret of Tolling Wrath finished shuddering its way through the air,
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striking the side of one of the gates with a sound like a bell. Power
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tore at power, tearing at the edge of the sorcerous gate, and it was
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with amusement that Rumena saw a long beam of Hateful Light spear
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upwards from somewhere in the city, cutting at the edge of another gate.
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The Peregrine was a reliable foe even as an ally.
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It was after the Light faded that the Youngest Night struck, the great
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crow's wrath covering the sky as its wingspan streamed with the sea of
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water she had flown in the way of. Bending under the weight of the
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water's strength, the great crow raked her talons against the third gate
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and there was an immediate eruption of power. Rumena's crooked fingers
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tightened as it saw the Youngest Night tumbled downwards, her shape
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diminishing until she was simply a crow once more and she began circling
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above the city once more. There had been something in the gate that had
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hurt its goddess, the general thought. At least all of the gates were
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now -- another one blinked into existence, Rumena's sharp eyes catching
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the side where the Peregrine's Light had cut it.
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The same gate, not completely destroyed?
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Whatever the truth of it, it began pouring water again and the old drow
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watched as the torrent fell like sea of stones on the Fourth Army of
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Callow. The shields made by sorcery were not enough, breaking instantly
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under the impact. Soldiers died, engines were shattered and the repaired
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gate shuddered. Before the annihilation could be complete, however, the
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side cut by Light snapped and the gate exploded in burst of sorcery that
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lit up the sky.
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``Mighty One,'' Zarkan quietly said. ``Mighty Jindrich has claimed the
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right of vanguard and begun assault the tunnels. I have word from other
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sigils of dead erupting from other places within the city.''
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``Then whisper this order to all sigils, Mighty Zarkan,'' Rumena said.
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``Strike now at the dead, and hold nothing back.''
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``Chno Sve Noc,'' Zarkan fervently replied, and others with it.
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Rumena the Tomb-Maker did not say more. Instead it walked to a stretch
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of starlight on stone and softly spoke a word of power, its will
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reaching for the deepest depths of its shadow where it kept only things
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it had not meant to see Creation while it still drew breath. Yet it
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would make an exception, tonight. It would have been arrogance to
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refrain when its goddesses took the field.
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It would put on, one last time, the armaments it had once worn as a
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general of the Empire Ever Dark.
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---
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Ivah of the Losara Sigil, Lord of Silent Steps, moved with purpose.
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The Eldest Night had sent it to seek its mistress' side with all haste,
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and so it skimmed along the edges of the Pattern to quicken its pace. It
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was not a fortress or a fight Ivah found when its steps slowed but
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instead a house. Masses of water falling from the firmament had
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devastated swaths of the city, including most of this street, but though
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Ivah saw fighting on the ramparts to the west there seemed to be no
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immediate threat here. Instead a fire had been lit inside the house, and
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Night whispered to the Lord of Silent steps that Losara Queen was
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within. It rapped knuckles against the door, as was the human way, and
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only then opened it.
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This was no great palace or library, simply a hovel of humans, and so
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within there was only one room. The lit hearth did not catch its
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attention, not when instead it saw Losara Queen wan and bloodied on a
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mattress of straw. By her side sat the shade it knew as the Mighty Akua,
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though no longer did she have the scent of one who could draw on Night.
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Curious. The shade did not turn and so Ivah took a step forward, closing
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the door only to then turn to the sensation of a blade resting against
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its neck.
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``Don't move,'' the Mighty Archer said, eyes hard. ``There'll be no
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vulture's meal tonight, Ivah.''
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The Mighty would strike him down without batting an eye, for though
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human she was admirably ruthless even with long acquaintances, but Ivah
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shook his head. The edge bit into the throat of its skin, but only
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shallowly.
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``This is not my purpose,'' Ivah said. ``I have been sent by Sve Noc.''
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The Mighty Akua finally turned towards it, her eyes like golden flames.
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Its face was not composed as the Lord of Silent Steps had always seen it
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before. It was\ldots{} drawn.
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``This one's not looking to wet its beak red, Archer,'' the shade said.
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``It enjoys its place too much.''
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The blade moved away slightly and Ivah nodded, pleased to have been
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properly understood by such a dangerous creature.
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``Service to Losara Queen is pleasant and I could not sit her throne,''
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Ivah told the Mighty Archer, slightly embarrassed as it was rather
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forward of it to speak so plainly. ``I seek not Night in this house.''
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``I would hope not,'' Mighty Archer smiled. ``You wouldn't live through
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an attempt at harvesting it.''
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It was always rewarding for Ivah to see others proclaim such loyalty for
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Losara Queen. To serve an accomplished sigil-holder was rewarding, for
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who should the Firstborn learn from save the great?
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``Can you help?'' the Mighty Akua asked. ``Hierophant did what he could
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and I have further slowed the spread, but we've not turned the tide.''
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``We sent for healers,'' Mighty Archer quietly said, ``but she's in no
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state to be moved. We can't do shit but wait, at the moment.''
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``I have no such talent,'' Ivah of the Losara Sigil said. ``This matters
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not, for I am the tool in the hand of a greater power.''
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The blade was sheathed, a tacit permission, and Ivah approached the
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bedside. It unwove the bandages delicately, revealing the deep wound
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below, and unexpectedly found its heart clenching. Losara had\ldots{}
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done much, for Ivah. Opened its eyes to paths that could be tread,
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raised it to a position of trust and power. It did not please the Lord
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of Silent Steps to see the sovereign it had once sworn oaths too so
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harshly hurt. The left side of Losara Queen's face had been torn through
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by an arrow, ripping through her eye and cheek as well as shattering the
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chin bone. Not a mortal wound, perhaps, save if the arrow were invested
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with power. It must have been, for someone had clearly tried to heal the
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wound with sorcery and it had opened anew since.
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``Poison,'' Mighty Akua said. ``It got into the blood. And something
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more, too. An aspect.''
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It nodded, closing its eyes and breathing deep.
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``I know nothing,'' Ivah murmured in Crepuscular. ``I am nothing. I am a
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vessel, filled with Night.''
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Power surged, power beyond Ivah's understanding. The Lord of Silent
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Steps felt the house around it shudder as the Sve Noc herself came upon
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it, flowing through the cracks and forming anew on the drow's back as a
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great crow. Her talons dug into its skin, drawing black blood, and it
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breathed out raggedly.
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``Fuck,'' Mighty Archer muttered, voice shaken.
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The golden-eyed shade stared at the goddess, unmoved.
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``Your intentions, godling?'' Mighty Akua asked.
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``I will see to my chosen,'' Sve Noc said, voice like the cawing of
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crows. ``Do not think to interfere in this, shade.''
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``We will trust in your intentions,'' Mighty Akua smiled, a cold thing.
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``Trust in ours, Sve Noc, should you \emph{overstep}.''
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Ivah swallowed a gasp as talons sunk deeper into its skin, tearing at
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flesh as a mind infinitely greater than its own moved its hand to rest
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against Losara Queen's forehead. Night flared, moving into the First
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Under the Night's body, and knowledge came to the rylleh.
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``It is a poison that resist sorcery,'' Ivah spoke for its goddess.
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``And it was empowered, as was the arrow, by an aspect.''
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Night slithered down the veins of the unconscious queen, feeling out the
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transcendent nature of the wound, and Ivah cocked its head to the side.
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``Murder,'' the Lord of Silent Steps conveyed. ``That is the essence of
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the trouble, the concept that seeks to kill her even now. This `Hawk'
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was no servant of the Pale Gods when she still drew breath.''
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``But you can fix it?'' Mighty Archer pressed.
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``It can be done,'' Ivah agreed, bowing to the pressure in its mind.
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``But it will not be a panacea. The eye is gone for good, and a scar
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will remain.''
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``Fuck,'' Mighty Archer cursed. ``Would the Pilgrim do better? He said
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he couldn't, when he came to pick up Masego, but if we lean on the
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Ophanim through him\ldots{}''
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``It will make no difference,'' Ivah regretfully said. ``An aspect is an
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aspect. Sve Noc must see to it now, before the wound worsens, and you
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are given warning that it will be hours before Losara Queen wakes.''
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The two humans traded glances, Mighty Archer hesitating.
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``Go,'' Mighty Akua said. ``I will stay.'
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``You sure?'' Mighty Archer asked.
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``Trust me,'' the shade replied, wryly smiling.
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There was a heartbeat of silence between them, until Mighty Archer
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nodded.
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``I do,'' she said, sounding almost surprised. ``Take care of her,
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Akua.''
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The shade went still, and somehow looked pained. Mighty Archer offered
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them all a hard smile.
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``Meanwhile, I'm going to go \emph{express my displeasure} to the
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Hawk.''
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---
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Mighty Jindrich picked up the corpse by the throat, idly tossing it down
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the tunnel.
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Its armour clattered as it toppled another few skeletons, the lot of
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them ending up in a writhing pile. Jindrich advanced on two legs, head
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slightly bent for the height of the tunnel, and fell upon the pack. One
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strike was enough to plaster a skeleton into the stone of the wall,
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another was stomped to dust and out of bored disgust the sigil-holder
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smashed the last two's heads into each other until both broke.
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``Disappointing,'' Mighty Jindrich said. ``There has not been worthy
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strife since we slew the worms.''
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``We could head back,'' Mighty Lasmir said. ``Head down another breach,
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see if there is stiffer resistance there.''
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Lasmir was sill growing back the arm it had lost to the acid spit,
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having not found enough dead flesh to devour for the Secret of
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Consumption to truly show its worth. There was a reason Jindrich had
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never bothered to kill Lasmir for it even before the First Under the
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Night had decreed that Firstborn of the southern expedition could not
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slay each other.
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``No,'' the sigil-holder decided. ``The Tomb-Maker implied there would
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be worthy strife, should we push far enough. We will quicken the pace
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instead.''
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The rylleh bowed, passing the order down to the rest of the sigil as it
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had been meant to. The breach they'd forced had been a pleasant fight,
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but below the cattle-city the dead had seemingly dug a maze of tunnels.
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Jindrich found the feeling of treading underground stone once more
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sweet, yet it had found little opposition aside from a continuous flow
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of skeletons. Even splitting the sigil down several tunnels had not
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yielded greater prey, but the sigil-holder was wise to the Enemy's ways.
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Once, a very long time ago, Jindrich of Great Strycht had wielded a pick
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and dug tunnels for souls it had believed to be wise. Sve Noc had shown
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it a better path, the \emph{true} path, but it had not forgot. These
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tunnels were for moving around, but there would be somewhere further
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below where the broken stone would be dragged so it could be thrown away
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instead of clog up tunnels.
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There, Mighty Jindrich decided, there would be enemies worth destroying.
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Its sigil moved swiftly after the order was given. They ran into undead,
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a larger battalion standing together -- forty dead, armoured and armed
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-- which was a good sign and decent entertainment. Mighty Draha was
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allowed to use the Secret of Impalement to stick them all in a line
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before they were smashed into the walls until destroyed. Always good for
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a laugh. Until then the tunnels had been a slope, but after this they
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were a sheer drop with an iron ladder going down. \emph{Promising},
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Mighty Jindrich decided, and leapt. It landed atop the helm of a
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skeleton, crushing it with its weight, and let out an approving noise at
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what it beheld: a great cavern that was a hive of tunnels, swarming with
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corpses and dead stitched-up monsters. Even a few of the Greater Dead,
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these who had been Named in life, if its eyes were not being fooled.
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The sigil-holder smiled, power thrumming in its flesh as it began to let
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it loose.
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``You will be Night,'' Mighty Jindrich promised.
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``You trespass on the realm of the dead,'' a voice replied. ``And so
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will join them.''
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A tall silhouette, in heavy armour and bearing a large morningstar,
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strode forward.
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``You are the one they call Mantle, yes?'' Jindrich grinned.
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The Greater Dead spoke not a word, but the sudden darkness not even
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Mighty could see through was answer enough. Mighty Jindrich laughed,
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letting Night rip through it and rent its body asunder before reforming
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it with a shell of Night.
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\emph{Finally}, strife worth having.
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---
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The lamellar of steel and obsidian still fit as it had when Rumema had
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been young, tightened at the hip with a belt, and the red-plumed helmet
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was still comfortable around its long pale hair. The marks of the
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ancient honours bestowed on it under the Empire Ever Dark, that of Great
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General Who Shook The World and Victorious Commander of the South, each
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claimed a shoulder with twisted braids of gold and iron. And at General
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Rumena's hip, the long single-edged sword of steel it had once borne
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into battle rested comfortably. Waiting, eager to be used at last after
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all this time. Sighing, the old drow straightened its back and heard it
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crack as if someone were treading on twigs. It popped its shoulders,
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loosening them, and only then did it lay a hand on the pommel of its
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sword.
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``Mighty Borislava,'' the general said.
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``I listen, Mighty One,'' Borislava cautiously said.
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None of Rumena's sigil had ever seen it wear the armour. It had even the
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strongest of its rylleh feeling\ldots{} cautious. A refreshing feeling,
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it would admit.
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``You are to command the sigil in my absence,'' Rumena said. ``Look for
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breaches and settle them, ensure the cattle are not overwhelmed.''
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``It will be done, Mighty One,'' the other drow replied. ``If this one
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may enquire, what is it the Mighty One intends?''
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Rumena's fingers tightened around its sword, and slowly it unsheathed
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the blade.
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``Do you know why they call me the Tomb-Maker, child?'' the general
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said.
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``The tale is well-known, Mighty One,'' the Mighty said. ``You slew many
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a sigil, in your pursuit of Mighty Kurosiv's end.''
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``The truth is older than that,'' Rumena chuckled. ``Ysengral, I am
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told, meant it as a compliment.''
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And it flicked the blade downward, not to cut but as the focus of its
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will as it called on the Secret of Stone. The stone below its feet
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parted like a receding tide, and General Rumena walked into the earth.
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It closed behind its footsteps, a sealed tomb, and with a hunter's smile
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the Tomb-Maker burrowed deep into the earth. It felt the first tunnel
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within moments, moving to emerge into it and stumbling into a heated
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strife between dzulu and corpses. Rumena wasted no time, heading to the
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fore and closing the tunnel behind it with a glance. Slapping the head
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off the nearest skeleton, it walked back into the earth after closing
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the rest of the visible tunnel on the dead with a flick of its sword.
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The dead had dug beneath the city like ants, and now were crawling like
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them.
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Rumena was not above stepping on the likes of them.
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It wove between tunnels, closing them and burying the dead wherever it
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passed, until it reached a tunnel where some enchanted spikes digging
|
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into the earth resisted its will and kept it from moving the nearby
|
|
stone. Unimpressed, Rumena seized the stone at the edge of the sorcery's
|
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range and moved the spikes close to the surface by indirect pressure
|
|
before collapsing the tunnel. It took the time to clear the western side
|
|
of the shore before moving further down, finding sheer drops leading
|
|
into a large cavern where a sigil had already arrived. The fighting was
|
|
heavy and the general recognized the enraged roars, having shared a city
|
|
with Mighty Jindrich for some years once upon a time. It was far gone,
|
|
to be this loud.
|
|
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|
Rumena landed softly on the floor, knees creaking, and eyes the deep
|
|
darkness around it with irritation. Some Greater Dead was playing a
|
|
trick. The Mantle, yes? Losara had spoken of her. This war would be well
|
|
rid of her continued presence. The general sped forward, knowing the
|
|
darkness would be fixed in range, yet it died before the old drow even
|
|
reached the edge. Unimpressed, it leapt over Jindrich -- now the size of
|
|
a house, half an insect and killing even its own sigil when it strayed
|
|
too close -- and swept a wave of blackflame through the throng of
|
|
corpses on the upper floors where javelineers were massing. They went up
|
|
like dried leaves, though the use of Night caught Jindrich's attention.
|
|
It struck out with a long, articulated leg but Rumena only sighed and
|
|
caught the end of it. It shifted its footing, tossing the other Mighty
|
|
deeper into the enemy ranks.
|
|
|
|
That ought to keep it busy for a while.
|
|
|
|
Streaks of black smoke snaked along the ground towards the general,
|
|
leading back to an armoured silhouette it decided must be the Mantle.
|
|
Some middling thing with a helmet looking like a hound charged at it as
|
|
well, a sword and shield in hand. Disinclined to play, Rumena sunk into
|
|
the stone instead of moving out of the way. Cursed spike went into the
|
|
floor not long after, but it was already moving and too deep below
|
|
besides. The cavern seemed to a major outpost for the dead, the source
|
|
feeding all the breaches to the west of the city's great basin. Clearing
|
|
it out in a single stroke ought to end the better part of that offensive
|
|
in its tracks. Slowing its heartbeat the old general sunk deep into the
|
|
Night and let the Secret of Stone settle at the heart of its soul.
|
|
|
|
Slowly, carefully, it began to sink Night into the bedrock beneath this
|
|
city of Hainaut. As it did, extending fingers outwards, a greater force
|
|
reached out and clasped its hand. The Youngest Night, talons puncturing
|
|
skin even when the touch was meant to be tender, touched the general's
|
|
soul. She was wroth, and her anger was cold ruin inflicted unto the
|
|
world: her hands guided its own, her eyes seeing beyond the reach of
|
|
what any mortal might, and together they made for the Enemy an answer.
|
|
Tunnels moved, closing and then weaving themselves anew as an intricate
|
|
web leading to the five great caverns dug far beneath the city. And
|
|
then, one by one, the two of them bound the ends of the web to the
|
|
bottom of \emph{le Bassin Gris}, the great water basin at the heart of
|
|
Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
Water began to pour, and with panting breath Rumena leaned against stone
|
|
as it felt Komena begin to withdraw from it. Begin and then stop. No,
|
|
the Tomb-Maker realized with dread, not stop.
|
|
|
|
Fail.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Ivah of the Losara Sigil went still, as two goddesses screamed and the
|
|
city shook.
|
|
|
|
It had found the waterside, returning to its sigil after the Eldest
|
|
Night had ended her use of its body for the mending of Losara Queen, but
|
|
the once-still waters were now as a sea taken by a violent storm. And
|
|
the ground shaking had not ceased, as if some titan was hammering at the
|
|
city from below with desperate strength. It turned to the terrified drow
|
|
looking at it for answers, knowing it had none save for the furious
|
|
howling of the goddesses in its mind.
|
|
|
|
``Disperse,'' Ivah ordered the sigil. ``Survive.''
|
|
|
|
They scattered to the winds. The Lord of Silent Steps could afford to
|
|
spare them no more thought, for now the attention of its goddess was
|
|
once more hammering at its mind. The rylleh stumbled forward, ending up
|
|
on its knees by the shore of the basin. The waters were not only
|
|
roiling, it realized with distant horror, but lowering. As if emptying.
|
|
Before the revelation could sink in, talons punctured Ivah's shoulders
|
|
once more and the Eldest Night screeched in its ears. The wrath that
|
|
bled into its mind made the world go white and brought it to the brink
|
|
of unconsciousness, until those sharp talons brought it back with sharp
|
|
pain. \emph{Service is required of you, Ivah of the Losara}, a voice
|
|
whispered into its soul. And though the talons were sharp, the voice
|
|
was\ldots{} cool. Soothing. A companion that Ivah had kept all its life
|
|
without ever knowing it.
|
|
|
|
``We are born under Night,'' Ivah murmured. ``We die under the Night.
|
|
All that I am belongs to it.''
|
|
|
|
The answer pleased the goddess. The pain of talons was fading, replaced
|
|
with a pleasant coolness instead. Power intertwined with Ivah's own,
|
|
like a sea pouring into a lake. And the binding was deep, so deep that
|
|
the Lord of Silent Steps\ldots{} glimpsed. There was another crow,
|
|
trapped deep below in a cage of curses and spells. Bound to the
|
|
Tomb-Maker, the Youngest Night was striking at her surroundings with
|
|
impotent fury. And though the plateau shook, it did not shatter. And
|
|
looking closer, Ivah saw\ldots{} hooks. Someone was binding the crow,
|
|
containing it. Its mind was wrenched away from the sight forcefully,
|
|
made to look upon the power being poured into its frame. Veiled Gods, so
|
|
much Night. More than a hundred lifetimes would have let it win.
|
|
|
|
``Why?'' Ivah croaked out. ``It is\ldots{} it is \emph{too much}.''
|
|
|
|
Footsteps sounded behind it, but it was too exhausted to move. It felt
|
|
as if eve twitching a finger would be enough to kill it, and still the
|
|
Night would not cease pouring into it. A shape formed before it, a drow
|
|
with silver eyes and ornate robes. It -- no, she -- bore a silver mask
|
|
at her hip.
|
|
|
|
``You come at an inauspicious time,'' Andronike said. ``Return when we
|
|
are less occupied.''
|
|
|
|
``One of you was caught.''
|
|
|
|
The voice of an old man. The Peregrine.
|
|
|
|
``It will be dealt with,'' the Eldest Night said.
|
|
|
|
``Then why are you cramming your godhead into this one?''
|
|
|
|
A younger voice, calm but curious. The Hierophant. The Eldest Night did
|
|
not answer.
|
|
|
|
``The Dead King is usurping the Night,'' the Peregrine said. ``Of that,
|
|
the Ophanim are certain. You are losing.''
|
|
|
|
``If our First Under the Night was awake, it would not be so,'' the
|
|
Eldest Night furiously replied.
|
|
|
|
``Your weakness exists regardless of Catherine,'' the Hierophant evenly
|
|
said. ``Do not blame others for your shortcomings.''
|
|
|
|
Ivah felt a sudden surge of mind-shattering pain, the Night's flow into
|
|
its body flowing, and it let out a hoarse scream. It was\ldots{} Night
|
|
was being pulled at from another side, through the other crow.
|
|
|
|
``He has his hooks in you,'' the Peregrine harshly said. ``This can no
|
|
longer be allowed. If he devours your power whole, it means our
|
|
annihilation.''
|
|
|
|
``We are,'' the Eldest Night said, sounding pained, ``still fighting.
|
|
The strife has not yet come to an end.''
|
|
|
|
``We cannot allow him to devour you,'' the Peregrine said, voice gone
|
|
eerily calm. ``You know this. Better to end Night than that.''
|
|
|
|
``You would kill them all,'' Andronike hissed.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' the Hierophant said. ``There is another way. One that leaves
|
|
enough they will live, if only as mortals. And with what you have put
|
|
aside in this one, you will still be goddesses as well.''
|
|
|
|
``Paltry things,'' the Eldest Night said. ``Remnants.''
|
|
|
|
``Time,'' the Peregrine softly said, ``is running out.''
|
|
|
|
There was a long silence, and in its soul Ivah of the Losara felt
|
|
goddesses speak words only they could understand. Eyes closed, it saw
|
|
the truth of things: a crown of obsidian, skeletal fingers wrapping
|
|
around it.
|
|
|
|
``Do it,'' Sve Noc spoke as one, and offered up a hand.
|
|
|
|
A dark-skinned finger was laid against it.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Ruin},'' the Hierophant said, and Creation obeyed.
|
|
|
|
Night broke, and the city broke with it.
|