991 lines
44 KiB
TeX
991 lines
44 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-lost-found}{%
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\section{Interlude: Lost \& Found}\label{interlude-lost-found}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``To sacrifice is to embrace end for the sake of beginning.''}
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-- Daphne of the Homilies, best known for ending hereditary rule in
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Atalante
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\end{quote}
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Special Tribune Robber of the Rock Breaker tribe threw himself to the
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side, landing in sprawl as the dead scrabbled at him. No point in even
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stabbing at those, he figured, there were too many for a knife to do any
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good. Nails ripped at his face before he bit the fingers off and spat
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out the fouled blood, wriggling through the hands and blades of the
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writhing mass of undead. A sharper went off close, biting thunder in a
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ball, and it was an opening. Tripping through shredded flesh and iron,
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sucking deep of the smoke, the goblin crawled beneath some Bind in
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bronze armour and tumbled down the stairs. He reached for a sharper of
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his own but found his bag ripped open -- half his munitions were gone,
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and he'd spent most of the other half.
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Cackling out a curse, Robber ducked under some skeleton's axe swing and
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pushed the dead down onto the corpse on the stair below it. A blade rang
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against his back, biting at the mail, but he scuttled down the corpse
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he'd pushed and leapt off the makeshift ramp. He landed among a pack of
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ghouls, all of them turning like bloodhounds with bared fangs, but there
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was a flash of heat as a streak of flame coming from above cut through a
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few. Claws ripped at his side, but these creatures he could wound. He
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stabbed the ghoul's eyes twice, moving so it shielded him from the
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others as it screamed, and made a run for it down the cobblestone road
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as a volley of shining spears began to fall from above.
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There were still a few skeletons in the way, but Robber slipped by after
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hamstringing one from behind with a laugh. The barricade was covered in
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soot and blood, but the legionaries manning it seemed in a decent enough
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mood as the opened their shields to let him through. Catching a few
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whispers of his name, Robber took a moment to preen under their gazes
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before getting to business.
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``I'm looking for Poulain street,'' the Special Tribune said, dusting
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off his shoulders. ``Happened to get lost on the way. Don't suppose any
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of you have directions to offer?''
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``We're two blocs west, sir,'' a young lass answered. ``It's the next
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barricade, can't miss it. We had to collapse the street in between when
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the lines buckled.''
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When the lines had broken, more like, but that wasn't the kind of talk
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the officers would be encouraging. Robber had been extracting himself
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from enemy lines while that disaster had come home to roost, but he's
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still been able to spare a glance or two for the sight of the Second and
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Fourth legging it. Someone -- probably one of the Woe, it was usually a
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safe bet when it came to shit like this -- had since hung a sun in the
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sky and what was probably Vivienne had led a countercharge that'd ended
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the rout. How long that would last, though, was a question digging at
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him. It'd take more than a lightshow and a banner to turn this around.
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``Good, I was already getting bored,'' Robber grinned. ``Do finish that
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Bone I stabbed earlier, would you? I hate to leave the work half-done.''
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A few laughs, some solemn vows, but some of them wanted more. Aside from
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a few stray attacks at their barricade they must not have seen much
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action tonight, considering they were too far to the east of the where
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the Grey Legion had struck.
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``Preparing another spot of goblinfire, sir?'' a sergeant asked. ``Most
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the city saw your last one, it'll be hard to beat.''
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Not exactly. The barricade on Poulain street was where his cohort was
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meant to rally after it had scattered during their deep strike on the
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constructs. It was where the goblin would learn how many of his
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marauders had made it out -- one in five, one in ten? For all he knew,
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he might be the only survivor. There'd been close calls, making his way
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back to safe grounds. Borer at least ought to have made it back, he
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decided. The good captain was already dead inside, Keter's boys wouldn't
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even notice he wasn't on their side.
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``Half the fun's in the surprise,'' Robber chided. ``Any of you lot
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heard where Lady Vivienne would be at?''
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``Word is the princess is out west, with the Hierophant,'' the same lass
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from earlier said. ``They're driving back the Grey Legion.''
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The \emph{princess}? He eyed the others, and though some eyes had been
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rolled at the title no one had apparently cared to contest it. Not even
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the few orcs in the crowd, the lot that tended to get touchiest where
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the Boss was involved. Dartwick wouldn't knife Catherine, mind you.
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Didn't have the stones, and she had the crown neatly lined up in a few
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years anyway. Her little charge tonight had made a splash, though, and
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that devil wasn't ever going to get shoved back in the circle. All above
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his paygrade that, so he didn't spare more thought for it. He took his
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leave instead, taking to the rooftops instead of sticking down in the
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streets where the dead swarmed. It was a good city for that, built
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mostly in stone instead of wood, and there'd been plenty of slate for
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the roofs.
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It was easy to find where sappers had blocked off the street in the
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middle, since they'd knocked down houses on both sides until the street
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reached a temple of the House of Light with a small belfry jutting out.
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It was through there that Robber passed, lingering beneath the bells so
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he could have a proper look at the battle below.
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Almost immediately, he let out a whistling hiss through his teeth.
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Looked good, at first glance, but he'd been in a battle or two since the
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College. The eerie sun up above was keeping the Grey Legion bogged down
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and the centre of the Army of Callow's line had steadied, but he wasn't
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seeing a lot of holes in the ranks of the steel-clad dead and that was
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bad news. Meant once Ol' Bones broke this binding, and he would, it
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would start smelling like rout again. The flanks, which were all Fourth
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army, were being pressured as well. The Crab was spitting out dead by
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the hundreds through ramps docked against the gates and the ramparts,
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and the only reason the lines hadn't shattered was that the bastions and
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ramparts were good bottlenecks.
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The trouble with bottlenecks was that Keter tended to throw constructs
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at them `til they popped, and Robber wasn't seeing much that'd be able
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to handle them. If a few Named were to pop up, maybe, but with the
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entire city being squeeze tight at the moment there was no guarantee of
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guardian devils -- or angels. Special Tribune Robber, for the first time
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in years, allowed himself to curse quietly in the stonetongue. At this
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rate, the battle was lost. To that he only knew one solution: he'd pick
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up what was left of his cohort and find the Boss.
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---
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The Black Queen was as a needle in a haystack, were the haystack aflame
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and swarming with soldiers. It should have been impossible to find her,
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for the shade left to guard over her would be hiding her from the
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enemies still seeking her death, but in truth it was merely improbable.
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To Tariq Fleetfoot, that change of word made all the difference
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The Adjutant was not swift on his crutches, but that did not matter when
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their steps were guided by something greater than they. Listening to his
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instincts and the whispers that went beyond them, the Grey Pilgrim led
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them down alleys and through broken shops, weaving trough smoke and
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screams as the city began to die around them. The western wall was going
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to fall, the Ophanim whispered. Soon. Time was running out. It was in a
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pleasure house they found the Queen of Callow, the establishment long
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empty and closed save through passages that the dead would not find
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easily. Not so for the Pilgrim, who led the Adjutant down them until
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they were intercepted by drow in the colours of the Losara Sigil.
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From there it was not a long walk to the madam's room, where Akua
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Sahelian was zealously keeping watch over the unconscious body of
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Catherine Foundling. As always the shade's emotions were difficult to
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properly \textbf{Behold}, as if muted by night or smoke, but Tariq found
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both anguish and a shaded sort of pride there. As if she herself had
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done something worth lauding, though a feeling of\ldots{} transgression?
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Yes, transgression was threaded into it. She also held sway over the
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drow, who cleared the room when she asked them to and left the three of
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them alone with the slumbering Black Queen. Tariq was somewhat amused to
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see that even in times of hardship she made a point of greeting the
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Adjutant formally and first before cursorily acknowledging his presence.
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``And what is it that brings you here?'' Akua Sahelian asked. ``It will
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be some time before the way to the next safehouse is clear, we can
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afford to speak some.''
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``The Peregrine,'' the Adjutant growled, ``claims he has a way to wake
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Catherine. A ruinous one.''
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Wariness, in this one, but also expectation. Tariq was perhaps not
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trusted, but at least trusted to deliver. The insult, though, he would
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not let pass quietly.
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``You mistake me,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, tone sharp for all the
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calmness. ``Am I some petty conjurer, to pay my debts in the blood of
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others? I am a servant of Mercy, now and in all things: I will visit no
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ruin on others I am not willing to visit on me and mine.''
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The orc studied him a moment, then inclined his head.
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``You have my apology, then,'' Adjutant said.
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It was sincerely meant, and so Tariq let it end at that.
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``I can wake the Black Queen because the Ophanim will lend me their hand
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in the work,'' Tariq said. ``And when she wakes, I am to offer her a
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bargain.''
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The shade studied him.
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``Were they not willing to lend their help earlier?'' Akua Sahelian
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asked.
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Tariq did not answer, which he supposed was damning enough. The Ophanim
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would not be moved to lend their help to one of Below's, even one allied
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to them, were the consequences of refusing that help not calamitous. It
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was not simply in their nature to do so, to abet greater suffering to
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come for the sake of lesser suffering taking place. The greatest
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concession they could make was absence of action. Tariq had asked back
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then and they had refused, only for him to find his own skills with
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Light insufficient for the task. Even now, when they had conceded after
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he asked a boon of them, it ran against their nature to accept his
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request.
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``Charming,'' the shade said, tone dripping with aristocratic disdain.
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``Still, better late than never I suppose.''
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The Adjutant cleared his throat.
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``And what was is my presence required for, Peregrine?''
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Tariq cocked an eyebrow. He had believed it obvious.
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``Because you are the person Catherine Foundling loves most in the
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world,'' he said. ``If I were the one to call her out of her slumber, I
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would be refused. You will not be.''
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Something golden bloomed inside the Adjutant, in the wake of his words.
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Love returned, but there were shades to it. Relief, guilty surprise,
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shame, vindication? For all that they were often shallow, the orc's
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emotions were among the most complex that the Grey Pilgrim had ever
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seen. The Adjutant nodded, face grown taut.
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``What must I do?'' he asked, his voice rough.
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Before Tariq could answer, he was interrupted.
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``She will lose nothing through this ritual you press on her?''
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Akua Sahelian did not quite believe him, it seemed. She had not been
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raised to believe in fair dealings.
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``It is not a service I render her to wake,'' Tariq plainly said.
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``Speak the words, Pilgrim,'' the shade said, golden eyes gone hard.
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``She will not be harmed by this,'' the Pilgrim flatly said.
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The dark-skinned woman eyed him for a moment, then sighed and moved
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away. Frustration bloomed in her, regret and resignation warring.
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Heeding Tariq's instruction, the Adjutant took the hand of his mistress
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with his fingers of bone and held it. Eyes closed the orc began to
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breathe in and out evenly. The Ophanim murmured uncertainly in the
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Pilgrim's ears as he approached, but he reminded them of their promise.
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He laid hand on the Black Queen's neck, grimacing at the sight of the
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fresh scar she'd earned tonight. That eye would not be returned to her,
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not if it had been taken by an aspect. \emph{Enough distraction}, he
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chided himself. Turning his attention inwards, Tariq sunk into the
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Light.
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He did not draw it into him, to be wielded or shaped, but instead
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immersed his own soul into the light of the Heavens made manifest.
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Earthly senses began to fade even as the voices of the Ophanim became
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clearer, louder. They guided his hands, patient teachers that they were,
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even as he shared a shard of the Light with the Black Queen's body. She
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was not entirely human, he saw with startlement. Differences had been
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made, set into the essence of her body. The work of the goddesses of
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theft and murder she worshipped, the old priest decided, for this seemed
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not dissimilar to the boon that kept the Mighty ageless: Catherine
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Foundling's lifespan had been stretched out, as if every day she had
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been born to live was to take a hundred instead to be spent. And there
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was more, a deeper shaping that he found only as the shard of Light
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found its way to what he sought.
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The very soul of the Black Queen.
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It was still the same mangled thing it had been since that first time he
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glimpsed it by campfire, scarred and cut and hacked away at. The
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difference was that it had been\ldots{} facilitated towards Night. It
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had helped the stretching of the lifespan, the Ophanim spoke in their
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coldly ringing voices, but it had not been the purpose. Catherine
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Foundling could hold more Night than a mortal should, \emph{absurdly}
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more. More than she would be able to wield, Tariq thought, which meant
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wielding had not been the purpose. A receptacle, the Ophanim said. A
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vessel. Not for possession, but for the hiding away of their power and
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godhead should it be threatened. It no longer seemed words of simple
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trust, when the Eldest Night had told him that had their chosen been
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awake the Dead King's trap would not have been a threat.
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Tariq went deeper still, finding the great wisps of the Bestowal shaping
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itself around the unconscious woman. It tasted of authority, he thought,
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as if the commanding ring of her words had not told him that already. Of
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steel. And of something else, something that eluded his understanding.
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East, the Ophanim said. What would birth her Bestowal lay in the east,
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not this endless nightmare war. And it was a purpose bound to another,
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like bound stars, calling and casting away. \emph{Is this what is to
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come?} The Ophanim could not tell. The future was clouded, darkened. And
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the Pilgrim's flicker of Light went deeper still, until it touched the
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sleeping mind of the queen. The consciousness swatted away the touch, as
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hard-bitten in the throes of dreams as it was when awake.
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So Tariq left another to the work, simply bringing forth the presence of
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the Adjutant and the Black Queen he served. What was spoken there
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between souls he did not watch, for it was not his place, but as the
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Grey Pilgrim emerged gasping from the Light he heard another gasping
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breath along with his. Catherine Foundling, helped into a sitting
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position on the bed by Akua Sahelian, was opening her eyes. Eye, now, he
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supposed. He watched the realization of that particular change sink in
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as she groped at her face. Her lips tightened, then she breathed out.
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Tariq was surprised to realize that he could sometimes glimpse the
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outermost edges of her soul now, of her emotions. The protection of the
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Crows had weakened.
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``Fuck,'' the Queen of Callow cursed. ``I got shot by the Hawk, didn't
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I?''
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``Yes,'' Hakram Deadhand fondly rasped. ``Even after all that talk about
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keeping an eye out.''
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``Hey now,'' Queen Catherine blearily muttered, ``did I do hand jokes?''
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``Yes,'' the Adjutant said.
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``Constantly,'' Akua Sahelian agreed.
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``It was one of the first things you said to me after your return from
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the Everdark,'' the Adjutant noted.
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Tariq kept silent, letting her draw on the comfort of their company
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without spoiling it by reminding her of his presence, and she gathered
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herself with a sigh as the shade pressed a cushion under her back.
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``That one's going to sting, and the Night feels like it's gone through
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a wringer,'' the Black Queen frowned. ``Don't suppose you could bring me
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up to speed, Tariq?''
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``We have,'' the Grey Pilgrim simply said, ``lost the battle.''
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Disbelief, tempered by what he suspected was a reminder to herself about
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patience. It had that self-inflicted note to it.
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``Breaches?'' she asked.
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``There have been,'' Tariq says. ``And there will be more.''
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``That can be turned around,'' the Black Queen said. ``Even if your
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Choir disagrees.''
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``The Crab has made an appearance,'' the Adjutant gravelled. ``The Grey
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Legion breached the gates and the Fourth and Second routed until
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Vivienne rallied them.''
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That gave her pause, Tariq saw, though her soul was obscured to his
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sight.
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``Your opinion?'' she asked the orc.
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``If we do not retreat,'' the Adjutant said, ``we risk annihilation.''
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Tariq watched the shudder of fear and fury and recrimination go through
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her, taking no pleasure in it. He, too, understood what this night would
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cost them. What it had already cost them. The queen glanced at the
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shade, who shook her head. Her opinion was no different.
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``I reserve the right to change my mind,'' the Black Queen coolly said,
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``but let's say I believe you. You didn't spend time and tricks in the
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middle of this nightmare to wake me up so we could have a pleasant chat,
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Pilgrim. What is it you want from me?''
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She thought differently than the Black Knight did, Tariq noted. He
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tended to begin with larger concepts and then narrow in, while she
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instead went down winding but narrow paths. That way of silencing almost
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all of their mind in order to focus on the opposition, though, was
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eerily similar.
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``There is something that can be done,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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``Something that will deny the Enemy its victory. But the price of it
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will be, as I have told the Adjutant, ruinous.''
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``To you,'' the Black Queen said, eyes narrowing.
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\emph{And that is why half the world fears you, child}, Tariq thought,
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not without fondness.
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``Yes,'' he simply said.
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``The price?''
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``Blood and smoke.''
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She breathed out shallowly.
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``A dear price,'' the Black Queen murmured. ``And so now you would
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bargain.''
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She paused.
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``Your prayer, it will end this?''
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``As if it were written in the stars,'' Tariq smiled, amused at his own
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expense.
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``What do you want for it?'' she asked.
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``Three boons,'' the Pilgrim said, ``Once before, I entrusted you with
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the two I believe will be the future of my home.''
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``Those troublesome lordlings,'' she frowned.
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Underneath it, though, he glimpsed a flicker of affection threaded with
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irritation. They had learned more from her than she knew, though she had
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never claimed them as students.
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``See them through this war,'' Tariq quietly asked. ``And when they take
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leave of you, see them off ready to face the trials that lay ahead.''
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She considered him for a moment, that sole eye cold and measuring.
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Slowly, she nodded. There was something of a commotion outside the room,
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but Tariq paid it no mind. Nothing could be more important than this
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single conversation.
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``Make peace with the White Knight,'' Tariq asked. ``That this civility
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may one day pass to all in service of Above and Bellow.''
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He glimpsed her soul the briefest moments, seeing it weigh\ldots{}
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consequences, stories? Dozens of them in a moment, keeping and cutting
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and settling on an answer. The old priest found it as frightening as he
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did fascinating. The Queen of Callow nodded once more.
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``Two boons,'' she said. ``Your last?''
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``The Ophanim will sing with me,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``I alone do
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not have the strength. Yet the Dead King has brought with him one of the
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fortresses that moves, a Crab. These bear wards and enchantments, among
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them a great working that restricts the touch of angels on Creation.''
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``I do not have the strength to bring it down anymore,'' the Black Queen
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admitted. ``Perhaps if Sve Noc were with me, but even so I'm not sure my
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body can take the strain. The poison left marks.''
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Tariq shook his head.
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``They know where the magic was laid that fights them,'' the Pilgrim
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said. ``In the belly of the best. I require of you someone that will
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journey there and destroy it.''
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She went still as stone.
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``There will be no coming back from that,'' Catherine Foundling said.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Tariq quietly agreed.
|
|
|
|
``You want me to send one of the \emph{Woe}?'' she hissed. ``Fuck you,
|
|
Peregrine. I'd rather roll the dice on fighting. If you really-''
|
|
|
|
Akua Sahelian gently laid a hand on her wrist. The queen paled, teeth
|
|
clenching.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``It would be just,'' the shade softly said. ``Or close enough.''
|
|
|
|
The Adjutant, tellingly, spoke not a word. His soul had measured deaths,
|
|
and found this one the most acceptable.
|
|
|
|
``I said \emph{no}, Akua,'' the Black Queen harshly repeated. ``You
|
|
don't get to just jump off a bridge and call it quits, that's not-''
|
|
|
|
``Well now,'' a voice drawled. ``Looks like I came in at just the right
|
|
time.''
|
|
|
|
Tariq turned, brow raising when he saw a goblin covered in soot, blood
|
|
and dust swagger in. A sapper, he recognized, and he'd even seen this
|
|
one before. Special Tribune Robber, he believed? He was rather famous in
|
|
the Army of Callow as one of the Black Queen's finest men.
|
|
|
|
``Robber, what are you doing here?'' the Queen of Callow frowned.
|
|
|
|
``Volunteering,'' the goblin grinned. ``Sound like a proper evening, it
|
|
does. Raiding a Crab, destroying ancient magics, calling down the wrath
|
|
of angels? Can't believe I almost missed it.''
|
|
|
|
Yet he had not. Whose hand had it been, Tariq wondered: Above or
|
|
Below's?
|
|
|
|
``Come off it,'' the Black Queen sharply said. ``Your cohort-''
|
|
|
|
``Only thirty-two of us left,'' Robber said. ``It's not even a company.
|
|
But we'll do, Boss. For this, we'll do.''
|
|
|
|
``The war's not over, Robber,'' she tried. ``There's still battles-''
|
|
|
|
``That'll be more glorious than this?'' the goblin laughed. ``Doubt it.
|
|
Wouldn't matter even if there were, Cat. This one's got our name written
|
|
on it.''
|
|
|
|
``Why are you all \emph{so fucking eager} to get yourselves killed?''
|
|
Catherine Foundling roared out, lights dimming in the room. ``Robber, I
|
|
swear on the Gods Below that-''
|
|
|
|
``It's settled, Boss,'' the goblin smiled, almost gently. ``We're going.
|
|
Even if you tie me up, you know I'll slip the bounds and go. It's done.
|
|
The arrow's been loosed.''
|
|
|
|
The anger went out of her like a flame guttering out. The glimpse of her
|
|
soul that Tariq found had him looking away. He'd not seen such violent,
|
|
exhausted grief in a long time. It was\ldots{} not pleasant to behold.
|
|
|
|
``It doesn't have to be like this,'' the young woman said, voice raw.
|
|
|
|
``Only cowards live to fifteen, Cat,'' Special Tribune Robber said,
|
|
smiling. ``It's been coming a long time, tonight.''
|
|
|
|
Tariq closed his eyes, knowing it had come to a close. The pieces were
|
|
falling in place. One more, now, and it would begin.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The clouds of acidic smoke that the great undead dragon spewed out were
|
|
so large they must have been visible from the other side of the city.
|
|
|
|
The mages would do what they could -- the Rogue Sorcerer had gone to
|
|
lead them -- but the damage was already done. The Brabant conscripts,
|
|
freshly returned back to the rampart, broke and ran again. The officers
|
|
that would have been their backbone laid dead in a marsh to the east of
|
|
Hainaut, where Klaus himself had ordered them burned. Panic was a
|
|
vicious thing, in a battle, worse a killer than any sword, and tonight
|
|
it bit deep at the men holding the western wall. Once the conscripts
|
|
fled the fantassin reinforcements they'd been screening were left
|
|
exposed, and as another wave of beorns came over the walls to protect
|
|
the ladders being secured the fantassins began to waver as well. They
|
|
were not cowards, that lot, but they were stuck between two
|
|
strengthening enemy beachheads with no real way out.
|
|
|
|
The original order likely had been to clear the bastion the Archmage had
|
|
hit earlier, as it was the easier flank of the two, but it all went sour
|
|
when the dead began striking at their back as they fought. The dead in
|
|
the bastion withdrew just enough that the fantassins would be able to
|
|
flee down into the city, and flee they did. The last stretch of the
|
|
western wall, to the north, was still in the hands of the Prince of
|
|
Bayeux and holding strong. Even if they held, though, it would change
|
|
nothing. All that Arsene Odon would achieve was preventing the dead from
|
|
hitting the back of the Army of Callow by the rampart, with the rest of
|
|
the wall in the hands of Keter they were free to push into the city
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
Prince Klaus Papenheim knew better than to shy away from uncomfortable
|
|
truths after swords left the sheath, so he did not flinch away from this
|
|
one: the battle for Hainaut was lost. It was now his duty to act so that
|
|
the nature of this defeat did not end up destroying the Principate and
|
|
the rest of Calernia with it.
|
|
|
|
He ordered barricades raised to block most streets along the line of the
|
|
fallen rampart, manned by soldiers of Hannoven that would not hesitate
|
|
to kill anyone trying to force their way, but left two large avenues
|
|
free for the conscripts and mercenaries to feel down. He sent for
|
|
Princess Mathilda, and so received his first blow of the night: the only
|
|
answer brought back by his captain was a black-feathered arrow, sodden
|
|
with blood. Pushing down the grief -- he still remembered her as a girl,
|
|
close as sisters with his own -- the Iron Prince forced himself to keep
|
|
his mind on the battle. He sent the Neustrians to secure the gate into
|
|
Twilight, and his most trusted captain to make sure that the Gigantes
|
|
were out of the city before they could be killed and raised.
|
|
|
|
Word was sent out east to the Dominion informing them of the situation
|
|
and warning that an orderly retreat was the only path left to them if
|
|
the Grand Alliance did not want to turn Hainaut into the doom of the
|
|
continent. Klaus sent word to General Bagram so that the Army of Callow
|
|
might join the effort, learning that while the Second Army still held
|
|
the Fourth was buckling on the walls. If they broke too early, the
|
|
Prince of Hannoven knew, then this would turn into a massacre. The
|
|
surviving parts of the Fourth Army held the bastions on both sides of
|
|
the gates that were preventing the dead from striking at Prince Arsene
|
|
and the Dominion form behind. Bayeux would fold in mere moments should
|
|
that happen, if they hadn't already, and the Levantines were already
|
|
seeing redoubled assaults on their positions. They were at risk of
|
|
breaking too, should they be flanked, and if they did break then the
|
|
battle would grow beyond salvaging.
|
|
|
|
``We need to bolster the positions of the Fourth,'' the Prince of
|
|
Hannoven told his captains. ``If we do not, this city takes us all.''
|
|
|
|
``Horse won't cut it for holding a bastion,'' Captain Engels said. ``And
|
|
we can't move foot quickly enough, my prince, even if we can even move
|
|
it at all. Callowan lines are bunched up, they can barely even move
|
|
their own troops.''
|
|
|
|
``We could cut through the Bayeux positions,'' Captain Abend suggested.
|
|
|
|
``If they rout while we cross, or even after, then we'll be trapped
|
|
there,'' Captain Tietjen objected.
|
|
|
|
There was no easy answer, the Iron Prince thought, and the longer they
|
|
dithered the fewer options they would have left. And yet he found
|
|
himself at a loss. His army was already stretched too thin, and the
|
|
Neustrians needed to keep the gate. Could the Firstborn be called on?
|
|
They seemed to have rallied enough to aim fire at the undead scaling the
|
|
pit sorcery had made in the heart of the city, but they had lost a step.
|
|
Worse, General Rumena missing they had no leading officer: only a mass
|
|
of bickering tribes which it might take to long to gather into cohesive
|
|
reinforcements even if they were inclined to lend a hand. They would
|
|
have to risk it, Klaus finally decided. What else was left?
|
|
|
|
The answer of the Gods came in the face of another weary old man in
|
|
faded grey robes.
|
|
|
|
``Prince Klaus,'' the Grey Pilgrim tiredly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Peregrine,'' the Prince of Hannoven replied. ``You bring word?''
|
|
|
|
``I bring death,'' the Pilgrim said. ``Nothing more or less.''
|
|
|
|
The old general softly laughed.
|
|
|
|
``Death is our sole birthright, Peregrine,'' Klaus Papenheim smiled.
|
|
``It's why it matters to spend our lives well. It will be a good one I
|
|
hope?''
|
|
|
|
``Among the finest,'' the Grey Pilgrim tiredly smiled, and told him the
|
|
plan.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Between his height and the orc's crutches, they had about the same pace.
|
|
|
|
``Did you know,'' Robber idly said, ``that you were the first person I
|
|
ever spoke to, at the College?''
|
|
|
|
``Liar,'' Hakram snorted. ``I heard you picked a fight with Yagin from
|
|
Tiger Company while you were still waiting in line for dormitory
|
|
assignments.''
|
|
|
|
``It's really quite unpleasant how hard you are to lie to,'' Robber
|
|
complained.
|
|
|
|
``It's not easy, you're just a naturally honest man,'' Hakram assured
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
Mortally offended, the goblin gasped and put a hand over his heart.
|
|
|
|
``Fighting words, greenskin,'' Robber said. ``The honour of my deep and
|
|
ancient house-''
|
|
|
|
``Your tribe is called the Rock Breakers,'' Hakram skeptically noted.
|
|
|
|
``Because even our newborn babes are mighty enough to split a boulder
|
|
with a single punch,'' Robber lied.
|
|
|
|
Hakram looked him up and down, then cocked an eyebrow. He said nothing,
|
|
which made it even worse.
|
|
|
|
``Don't think I won't stab a cripple,'' Robber warned. ``We do it all
|
|
the time, it's much easier than stabbing people who aren't cripples.''
|
|
|
|
``Have I lately mentioned my deep respect for you culture?'' Hakram
|
|
gravelled.
|
|
|
|
Magnanimously, Robber only kicked his chin. Godsdamnit, the bloody thing
|
|
was armoured. That prick.
|
|
|
|
``You'll be one of the last to die when the Great Goblin Conspiracy
|
|
finally takes the world,'' Robber conceded.
|
|
|
|
``Merciful,'' Hakram praised. ``You are in a fine mood indeed, Lord
|
|
Robber of the House of Lesser Footrest.''
|
|
|
|
The goblin preened, glorying in the way that he'd worked himself back up
|
|
to Lesser Footrest last month. His was an ancient and honourable title.
|
|
And when Hakram leaned over to slip something into his munitions bag, he
|
|
was even in a good enough mood to pretend not to notice. They'd reached
|
|
the end of the path, anyhow. The last of his cohort were gathered, Borer
|
|
having just come back with a fresh loadout of munitions. Now all that
|
|
was left was for the Lycaonese to open the dance. The two of them
|
|
lingered in silence for a long moment.
|
|
|
|
``Anything you want Pickler told?'' Hakram quietly asked.
|
|
|
|
``There's nothing to tell,'' he said. ``I left her a letter, though.
|
|
Make sure she gets it?''
|
|
|
|
His friend -- his oldest friend, perhaps even his first friend --
|
|
nodded.
|
|
|
|
``I won't say it's been an honour,'' Hakram smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Gods forbid,'' Robber grinned back, then hesitated.
|
|
|
|
He looked to the side, embarrassed.
|
|
|
|
``We had\ldots{} we had times, didn't we?''
|
|
|
|
``The best,'' Hakram replied, voice hoarse.
|
|
|
|
They stayed like that for a longer while still, until the sound of
|
|
horses nearing told them time had run out.
|
|
|
|
``Make sure Cat doesn't let it eat at her,'' Robber quietly said. ``It's
|
|
not about her, not really.''
|
|
|
|
``I know,'' Hakram said.
|
|
|
|
They met eyes, the goblin and the orc, and clasped arms.
|
|
|
|
``Somewhere, somewhen,'' Robber grinned.
|
|
|
|
``We'll meet again,'' Hakram finished, smiling.
|
|
|
|
They let go of their arms and not another word was spoken.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Strike hard and do not slow,'' Prince Klaus Papenheim said. ``Stay
|
|
with your captains. If you are split from your company\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
He paused, raising an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Find a nice place to die,'' he suggested.
|
|
|
|
Laughter shook his riders. The jest was an old one, well-worn gallows
|
|
humour of the kind his people tended to prefer.
|
|
|
|
``Our duty is not to be victorious,'' the Prince of Hannoven said, ``for
|
|
there is no victory to be had there. We open the way for the handpicked
|
|
sappers of the Black Queen, that they might destroy the enemy's sorcery
|
|
and free the Pilgrim to strike down evil.''
|
|
|
|
The answering cheers were hoarse, but they were wholeheartedly meant.
|
|
There were less than a thousand of them left now, even after they'd
|
|
taken southern horses to fill the ranks. The Prince of Hannoven looked
|
|
at them with old affection, that old soldierly lot that'd followed him
|
|
through a hundred battles on a hundred fields. Not so young now, for he
|
|
was long past his own youth, but though the faces had grown wrinkled and
|
|
the hair had gone white the eyes remained iron.
|
|
|
|
``We've had battles,'' Klaus Papenheim said. ``And we have kept the
|
|
oaths we swore. I'll not preach to you what is at stake, sons and
|
|
daughters of Hannoven. Haven't we all heard that song a hundred times
|
|
already?''
|
|
|
|
The world was always ending, one piece at a time. There was always a
|
|
doom over the horizon, taking its first newborn steps even as you buried
|
|
the last.
|
|
|
|
``Behind us is spring,'' the Iron Prince said. ``Ahead of us is the
|
|
Enemy. You are Lycaonese, so what more is there to say?''
|
|
|
|
Klaus Papenheim, Prince of Hannoven, unsheathed his sword. A thousand
|
|
riders did with him, the steel bright under the stars of the Twilight
|
|
Ways. Before them the gates yawned open, revealing a city devoured by
|
|
nightmares. Horns sounded, defiant in the gloom, and backs straightened.
|
|
|
|
``Forward,'' the Iron Prince shouted, and forward they went.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Tariq sat, not in a dignified stance as some straight-backed sage but
|
|
instead like an old man lowering himself against the broken wall of a
|
|
temple, his bones aching. He would not be found easily, he had been
|
|
promised this. He sunk into the Light, as easily as taking breath, and
|
|
let it fill him. The Ophanim, his old friends, were close. Yet they
|
|
could not help him through the last step, not yet. All that was left to
|
|
do was wait.
|
|
|
|
Wait and trust in the valour of others.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
They plowed into the enemy ranks, smashing and hacking as they went.
|
|
Through the flat grounds of the gatehouse, green flame licking at their
|
|
sides as they rode through death and broken engines, trough ghouls and
|
|
skeletons and even a roaring beorn. The old banner of Hannoven held high
|
|
in the wind, the lone spearman on the wall and the old boast of the
|
|
House of Papenheim beneath it. War cries resounding through the night as
|
|
hooves thundered, Klaus Papenheim and his thousand rode up the ramps
|
|
leading into the Crab. That city-monstrosity, laden with monsters and
|
|
corpses it was pouring out into Hainaut. Undead and horsemen tumbled
|
|
down below but they pierced through the dead and took the ramp, clearing
|
|
it for the sappers to follow them. But a few of them, small creatures
|
|
that they were, and so quick on their feet.
|
|
|
|
They would make it to the end, if the Iron Prince and his riders died
|
|
loud enough.
|
|
|
|
Curses streaked at them in swarms, arrows and javelins flew, but tonight
|
|
the Heavens were with the Lycaonese. The wind turned, the Crab shook,
|
|
and onwards the riders went into the city. A thing of iron and bone, of
|
|
stone and dead flesh, and the fumes it belched out billowed foul as the
|
|
horsemen pressed through. Pikes came for them first, gathered hastily in
|
|
a street, but Klaus Papenheim laughed and began to sing.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{The moon rose, midnight eye}\\
|
|
\emph{Serenaded by the owl's cry}\\
|
|
\emph{In Hannoven the arrows fly.''}
|
|
|
|
Voices swelled his own as the refrain came and their riders fell into a
|
|
wedge.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Hold the wall, lest dawn fail.''}
|
|
|
|
They punched through, pikes skittering against heavy armour or finding
|
|
enough purchase that horse and rider tumbled into the mass and broke the
|
|
formation. The rider went on, down the street and towards the burning
|
|
forges ahead.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``No southern song for your ear}\\
|
|
\emph{No pretty lass or merry cheer}\\
|
|
\emph{For you only night and spear.''}
|
|
|
|
Too few pikes, the second time, but the Enemy laid the ranks on thick.
|
|
As if to make a rampart of bone and armour, a barricade of writhing
|
|
dead. Skeletons raised swords and axes, put up shields and their ranks
|
|
kept swelling. But it would take greater wheat than this, to dull their
|
|
scythe.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Hold the wall, lest dawn fail.''}
|
|
|
|
Screams as javelins and curses came at them from the sides, biting
|
|
through even plate, but even as the riders died the ranks of the dead
|
|
shuddered under the impact of a thousand heavy horse. It was in the
|
|
hands of the Gods, for a moment, but even through the melee the
|
|
Lycaonese pressed until there was only room ahead once more.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Come rats and king of dead}\\
|
|
\emph{Legions dark, and darkly led}\\
|
|
\emph{What is a grave if not a bed?''}
|
|
|
|
The forges were deeper, into the belly of the beast, and their fires
|
|
burned bright as a noonday sun. It was a place precious to the Enemy
|
|
this, and it mustered a worthy defence for the last hall barring entry
|
|
to it. Undead by the hundred, and looming above them were monsters.
|
|
Beorns and great snakes, even flocks of cacophonous buzzards. And above
|
|
them all, the mightiest wyrm that the Prince of Hannover had ever seen.
|
|
A hulking beast, large as a fortress and with blood-red eyes.
|
|
|
|
``Hold the wall,''Prince Klaus shouted, ``lest dawn fail.''
|
|
|
|
It was to be their last, he could feel it in his bones. The wyrm spat
|
|
out poisonous green flames and fumes, sweeping through the front ranks,
|
|
but even the panicked and dying horses tumbled forward into the tightly
|
|
packed ranks of the dead. Buzzards came down in swarms, sorcery lashed
|
|
out with eerie screams, and the last riders of Hannoven smashed into
|
|
their enemies. They were too few, too tired, and still they pressed on.
|
|
A spear killed Klaus' horse under him and he fell on his stump,
|
|
screaming hoarsely, but he rose before he could be slain and fought on
|
|
sword in hand. They sang still, but the voices were fewer. The charge
|
|
spent.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Quell the tremor in your hand}\\
|
|
\emph{Keep to no fear of the damned}\\
|
|
\emph{They came ere, and yet we stand.''}
|
|
|
|
One corpse after another, his arm was burning his face bleeding from
|
|
half a dozen cuts. He'd taken a spear in the side, a wound that would
|
|
kill him before long, but still Klaus Papenheim pushed through. And
|
|
again and again and again, until a roar shook his bones and a gaping maw
|
|
opened to reveal the flames igniting within. The Iron Prince struck with
|
|
all his might, with all his rage and his sorrow and his pride, and with
|
|
a great crack a fang broke.
|
|
|
|
``So we'll hold the wall,'' the Iron Prince murmured, ``lest dawn
|
|
fail.''
|
|
|
|
The fire swallowed him whole, and the last though Klaus Papenheim ever
|
|
had was for his niece.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
It was an entire city trying to kill them, even the stones and the
|
|
streets., and Robber could not remember the last time he'd had this much
|
|
\emph{fun}.
|
|
|
|
Tabler croaked it when something that liked looked like a massive bone
|
|
scorpion speared her through the stomach with a stinger that was
|
|
screaming, which was a very sporting heads up from Keter that their
|
|
infiltration had been noticed. The dead were thousands they had nasty
|
|
little critters, but what was that to a sapper of the Army of Callow?
|
|
They were quicker, better at scaling walls and objectively prettier in
|
|
the eyes of the Gods Above and Below.
|
|
|
|
``Mind you,'' Robber told his flock, ``Borer does bring down our
|
|
hallowed company's average in that regard.''
|
|
|
|
``I apologize, sir,'' Captain Borer dutifully replied. ``Shall I write
|
|
myself up for distractingly ungainly looks again?''
|
|
|
|
``Eh,'' Robber mused, ``we'll see how I feel about it tomorrow.''
|
|
|
|
That had them all cracking up, of course, which got Wiggler a javelin in
|
|
the throat but that was a cheap price for comedy of such quality. The
|
|
Pilgrim had burned where they needed to go into their minds, though the
|
|
old man had refused to entertain the Special Tribune's inquiry about
|
|
whether being marked by angels in such a way could be considered
|
|
theologically inappropriate workplace touching, so there'd be no getting
|
|
lost. Brasser died blowing himself up so that a flock of buzzards
|
|
wouldn't kill them as they crossed a makeshift ladder-bridge, but that
|
|
was a sign they were making progress!
|
|
|
|
It was fairly dickish of the Dead King to begin setting fire to
|
|
buildings so they wouldn't be able to cross the rooftops, in his
|
|
professional opinion, but that was nothing that liberal use of sharpers
|
|
and a healthy disregard for personal safety couldn't fix. You absolutely
|
|
\emph{could} blow up a fire, if you had enough munitions at hand. They
|
|
lost Racker to the beorn awaiting them on the other side of the
|
|
explosion, though, which was a genuine loss since with her gone there
|
|
was no one at hand that everybody else disliked the most among them.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, it seemed like the streets ahead were now swarming with
|
|
dead and buzzards. Fortunately, there was a solution: they used
|
|
demolition charges to blow through the layer of stone and bone beneath
|
|
them, then slunk down a rope onto the lower level. They only had enough
|
|
charges to do it once more, so naturally they immediately repeated their
|
|
exploit. Grabber stayed behind just a little too long, though the
|
|
greater tragedy was that Lilter's joke about `grabbing the opportunity'
|
|
was better than the one Robber had been mulling over about grab-bags.
|
|
|
|
The ran into devils when they got close to the ritual chamber, which was
|
|
a nice change of pace. Not even the Praesi kind, these ones were like
|
|
pulsing pustules of flesh whose proximity alone was enough to cause
|
|
intense pain. Lilter blew herself up to make them a path, which had the
|
|
secondary benefit of ensuring that Robber was once more without the
|
|
contest the funniest of their little band. There were only seven of them
|
|
left, by then, but they were nearly at the chamber. Trouble was that
|
|
literal hellhounds were on the trails, by the barking and smell of
|
|
sulphur.
|
|
|
|
You learned to recognize all sorts of stuff, if you spent enough summers
|
|
in Ater.
|
|
|
|
``We'll hold,'' Captain Borer said, sword in one hand and sharper in the
|
|
other. ``Go ahead, Special Tribune.''
|
|
|
|
Robber met his eyes, surprised even though he shouldn't have been.
|
|
|
|
``You were a treat,'' Robber finally said.
|
|
|
|
``Always thought you were a prick,'' Borer cheerfully replied. ``Go die
|
|
like a sapper, Rock Breaker.''
|
|
|
|
He grinned back, scampering away before he could be caught up in the
|
|
coming mess. He found the chamber below, just the way the Pilgrim had
|
|
seared it into his mind. No more mages around, just a massive chamber of
|
|
obsidian with carved runes everywhere. Gingerly he tried a foot first,
|
|
and when it didn't burst into flame went further in. His own bag had
|
|
been filled, from the start of this waltz, purely with goblinfire. And
|
|
one more thing, he recalled late, that Hakram had slipped in. In the
|
|
distance he heard the crack of sharpers going off. Little time left.
|
|
|
|
It was a scroll, Robber found out. A fancy one, there was even a seal at
|
|
the bottom. He scanned the contents, curious, and froze. \emph{By my
|
|
authority as Queen of Callow, I so raise Robber of the Rock Breaker
|
|
tribe to the title of noble, under the aforementioned honour: Lord of
|
|
the House of Lesser Footrest, to be held in perpetuity.} It was the
|
|
royal seal below but there were fresher words, the ink a little smudged.
|
|
\emph{No matter where you end up}, Catherine Foundling had written in
|
|
that ugly scrawl of hers, \emph{you will be one of mine. Sooner or
|
|
later, I will come to collect.} Screams, fighting. The devils were
|
|
close.
|
|
|
|
Robber's throat closed as he traced the words with a trembling finger.
|
|
|
|
``The best,'' he whispered.
|
|
|
|
He struck the match, the parchment taking fire, and with a wide grin he
|
|
plunged the burning scroll into the bag. He closed his eyes, feeling the
|
|
burst of fire washed over him, but it didn't hurt at all. He thought,
|
|
somehow, that even in this deep place he was hearing something.
|
|
|
|
Robber died hearing the wind.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The sky cleared, and Tariq looked down from above.
|
|
|
|
All those who would be able to escape tonight had. There was no more
|
|
call to delay. The Ophanim, the companions of his life, laid their hands
|
|
on him. They were sad, grieving, but he smiled.
|
|
|
|
``It is a beautiful thing,'' Tariq Isbili said, ``to die smiling.''
|
|
|
|
Tariq of the Grey Pilgrim's Blood breathed out, the world breathing out
|
|
with him, and let his blood sing out into the world. The oldest treasure
|
|
of his line, the secret of the \textbf{Shine}. The pilgrim's star, his
|
|
people called it, and they spoke truer than they knew. Every Isbili that
|
|
ever lived had it coursing through their blood, the blessing of that
|
|
star. It was a tie, and though Tariq could no more move the star than an
|
|
ant could move a tower he was not alone.
|
|
|
|
The Grey Pilgrim pulled, and the Choir of Mercy pulled with him.
|
|
|
|
The warmth filled him, pleasant at first but soon burning. Searing. But
|
|
he was in a place beyond pain, filled only with light, and so Tariq
|
|
Isbili did not flinch. Not even as he felt the burn spread through the
|
|
bloodline, through every last one of his kin. Through everyone with so
|
|
much as drop of Isbili blood. And the Ophanim threaded their fingers
|
|
through his, heaving even as his insides charred and his kin turned to
|
|
ash, until at last the sky gave.
|
|
|
|
In the darkness above, a star went out.
|
|
|
|
The Grey Pilgrim opened his eyes, looking down at the city below and the
|
|
hordes of the dead. And though her bore the weight of many griefs, in
|
|
that moment it was not his many sins he thought of. It was a balcony in
|
|
Alava that came to him, the pears trees beneath and the woman he had
|
|
once loved. Perhaps, he thought, he might yet see her again.
|
|
|
|
Tariq Isbili saw streaks of white pierced through the night sky and
|
|
died, smiling, as stars began to fall.
|