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\hypertarget{interlude-north-i}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: North I}\label{interlude-north-i}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-north-i}} \chaptermark{Interlude: North I}
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\epigraph{``You cannot flee from fate, it is the road beneath your feet.''}{Levantine saying}
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The grass was coated with dust, blown in from a southern storm. It made
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for slippery footing and that was Borghold Bluesmile had tried her luck:
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she'd thought the dust would make it harder on his prosthetic leg. As if
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Masego would ever make such shoddy work. Hakram slapped away the other
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orc's axe with his own, nimbly letting her pass by him, then flipped it
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in his hand and tapped her shoulder with the butt from behind. There was
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raucous laughter from the circle of warriors around them, fists
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thundering against shields. It'd been an insult to hold back the blow, a
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sign of disdain.
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Adjutant had implied he was teaching a child, not duelling an equal.
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``You fucking tame dog,'' Borghold furiously snarled, turning around.
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``Servant to wallerspawn, whore for-''
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She struck at him when he took a step forward, hard and blind, but he
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didn't even bother to avoid it. He adjusted the angle of his steel limb,
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let the blow bounce off, and his dead hand snatched her throat. He
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squeezed hard enough the insults replaced by a gurgling choke, raising
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her high enough her feet left the ground. He met her eyes with his own,
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patient, and let the fear seep in. Then his bony fingers
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\emph{tightened}, a hard warning, and he dropped her. Borghold fell in a
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sprawl, coughing spittle through her blue-painted teeth.
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``Howling at the moon doesn't turn a hound into a wolf,'' Hakram
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snorted, then spat to the side.
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Fists on shields, the sound drowning out even his opponent's coughing.
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He did not bother to help her up, as he had some other foes. The Brass
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Wings Clan was no enemy of his, this was not a test or declaration of
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enmity. Borghold Bluesmile had just wanted to raise her reputation as a
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champion by bloodying him in the wake of so many more famous names
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failing. Hakram left the circle, shields parting for him but even as a
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few eager young greenhorns sought to offer him celebratory aragh he
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caught sight of a man waiting for him.
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There were few orcs as tall as Hakram and even fewer still that were
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taller, but Oguz the Lame was one of them. Juniper's father had been
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known as Oguz Sharphand once, one of the most famous champions of the
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Steppes until both his legs were broken in a fall. Even with a shaman's
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attention they'd never healed quite right, ending the warrior's stride
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just as he hit his pride. Still, he'd kept the edge he'd had when he'd
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given Grem One-Eye his sobriquet and served as the chief of the Red
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Shields in all but names for decades while General Istrid served in the
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Legions.
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He'd been proclaimed her successor, after her death, which Hakram
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counted as a blessing. Oguz the Lame made as useful an ally as dangerous
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he would have made an enemy. Adjutant drank a mouthful of aragh,
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slapping the stripling's shoulder in thanks as he returned the skin and
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heading straight for the chieftain before warriors could try to rope him
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into a bout of celebratory drinking. Oguz, leaning on his slender
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blackwood stick, eyed Borghold with scorn.
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``Kids,'' Oguz the Lame rumbled, shaking his head. ``There are times to
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make a reputation. A \emph{taratoplu} is not one of them.''
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It was an old term, that one. In translation it would mean
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truce-gathering but that would be missing a crucial nuance. In Old
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Kharsum, what the clans of the far north still called the noble tongue,
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taratoplu was the first of a pair of bond-words. The second was
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\emph{ordutoplu}, which meant camp-gathering. The Miezans had only ever
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bothered to learn the first and in their records they'd matched it to
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one of their own words after unwarrantedly making it a masculine:
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turbelus. \emph{Horde}, in Lower Miezan. Though it had been laziness
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that'd led the conquerors to make that mistake, they'd stumbled into a
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partial truth. Taratoplu was as day to the night of ordutoplu, the
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gathering under truce meant to lead to the making of a great war camp.
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Not even when the Steppes had been filled with talk of breaking ties
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with Ater under Grem One-Eye had a taratoplu been called. If the tales
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were to be believed, none had been called since the day the Broken
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Antler Horde was smashed into dust.
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``We are what we are,'' Hakram grunted back.
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The older orc scoffed.
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``They put too much in your heads, at the Carrion Lord's college,'' Oguz
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said. ``Too many words meaning too little. The Blackspears aren't wrong
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about that, even if they're the bloody vulture whoresons.''
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``The Blackspears would sell a wolf to a goat and boast of it,'' Hakram
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snorted.
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A favorite expression of his mother's, implying terrible bad faith and
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shamelessness.
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``And it's serving them well,'' Oguz the Lame replied, sucking at his
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fangs in displeasure. ``Walk with me, Deadhand.''
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Around the tall walls of the fortress of Chagoro, a sea of tents had
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spread out. Once the great warring clans had called a truce and gathered
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for talks, the others had flocked from all over the Steppes. Even some
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of the faraway clans who'd only ever known the Golden Bloom and other
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orcs had come, drawn by the rumours of a Horde gathering in the south.
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Never had Hakram ever seen so many of his people in one place: over two
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hundred banners reached for the sky, more than a hundred thousand orcs
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swarming under them. Not all warriors, but many. Hard to find out
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numbers when the camp was violent mayhem, not a semblance of
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organization to it.
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Just finding your way to where you needed to go was a struggle: there
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was a reason the talks between the clans were held within the fortress,
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none allowed to set tents within.
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``The Winter Hooves changed sides,'' Oguz briskly said. ``Their
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champions now drink with Troke's and swear his fights will be theirs.''
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Troke Snaketooth, chieftain of the Blackspear clan, was proving to be a
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problem. Hakram had not anticipated that the man would be so able at
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making allies, much less as ambitious as he was proving to be. The man
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had ridden the story of being the maker of this truce to greater
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influence, painting his greatest rivals -- the Red Shields and the
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Howling Wolves -- as warmongers who would rob all the Clans of the
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wealth of the south. Worse, his deeper game was only now starting to
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emerge. There had been no chief that could unite enough of the clans to
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have a claim at being acclaimed Warlord, not even Troke whose clans
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still had many enemies, but the Snaketooth had traded axe for arrow. He
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had put it to the clans that, in the Praesi way, a High Lord of the
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Steppes should be elected to lead the Clans into war south. Avoiding the
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title of Warlord, couching it all in terms of \emph{Praesi} authority,
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had made the affair more palatable to clans who would have balked at
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proclaiming a Blackspear their Warlord.
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Many had taken up the banner in the weeks since. Too many, and more were
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rallying by the day.
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``The Winter Hooves were friends to the Howling Wolves,'' Hakram quietly
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rumbled. ``What changed?''
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``They were friends to Grem One-Eye,'' Oguz corrected. ``They wanted him
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as Warlord, in the old days. Now there is no getting him back: even if
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the Tower returns him, how are we to be sure it is not just some
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creature riding his skin?''
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There was an undertone of relish to the other orc's word at the ruin of
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his old foe's reputation, Hakram noted. That enmity had never quite
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faded, not helped by the old rumours that Grem was Juniper's true
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father. Empty words, as far as Adjutant knew, but it was too tasty a
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slander not to be kept moving from mouth to ear.
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``You're saying they care more about the throne than who sits it,'' he
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slowly said.
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``Talk about thrones and you'll get your throat ripped out,'' Oguz
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warned. ``But they're looking for a stallion to ride, that much is true,
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and Troke's the one prancing. They're not the only ones, Deadhand. Praes
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is looking ripe but no one wants to try the Tower without a firm axehand
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to follow.''
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\emph{On Rule}, the fascinating treatise on politics that so many
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Procerans treated as a second Book of All Things, described this very
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phenomenon. \emph{In times of crisis}, it wrote, \emph{authority will
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move from the periphery to the centre. In times of} \emph{plenty, it
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will move form the centre to the periphery.} Hakram had seen it unfold
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with his own eyes, the way a parade of enemies had pushed Callow deeper
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and deeper into Catherine's embrace. Now, to his displeasure, he was
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seeing an opponent sail the same current. Clans would back Troke
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Snaketooth not because they were ardent supporters but because he was
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looking like the rising candidate.
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The deed wasn't done, though. And Troke had made that old and most
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unforgiving of Wasteland mistakes: you never wanted to be the one
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looking closest to claiming the Tower until you were ready to actually
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take it.
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``The Hooves will bring over maybe three clans with them,'' Hakram said.
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``That brings Troke to over sixty backers, by my count.''
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``Just about,'' Oguz said. ``If he gets to eighty the tide will carry
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him over, mark my words. No one wants to be the last to proclaim a
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Warlord.''
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That Troke would be High Lord of the Steppes instead would matter not a
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bit in practice, Hakram knew. Once he was in the chair, people would
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obey. It was what orcs \emph{did} when someone was raised above. The
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Blackspear clan would make promises of lesser authority, of limits and
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restraint, but the moment Troke Snaketooth had a few victories under his
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belt he'd begin taking it back. And the Clans would let him, so long as
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he kept their axes red and their bellies full.
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``Sixty is enough that the Weeping Arrows will be scared,'' Hakram said.
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``They're going to start bleeding clans and Inge Farsight knows if she
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drops under forty she's done. She'll negotiate now.''
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``You want us to back her?'' Oguz said, tone unconvinced. ``Dag is still
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our man.''
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``Unless you want your clan to serve as Troke's footrest for the next
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twenty years, you don't really have a choice,'' Hakram bluntly replied.
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``Dag's a hawk with lead wings, Grem's cousin or not. He's a solid
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champion but he's not even chief to the Howling Wolves.''
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The Howling Wolves clan was still led by Grem One-Eye, who they refused
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to name dead, though in practice much like the Red Shields had spent the
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last two decades led by Oguz in his wife's name Dag Clawtoe had led the
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Howling Wolves as chief in all but name for his cousin.
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``That lot is prickly,'' Oguz warned. ``They won't like going from rider
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to wolf.''
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``So we marry Dag to Inge,'' Hakram said.
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``She killed her last husband,'' Oguz the Lame flatly replied.
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``I'm sure Dag will enjoy the challenge,'' Adjutant lied.
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It needed to be done. The alliance between the Howling Wolves and the
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Red Shields was holding steady at forty clans but it'd not grown in
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days. Dag was respected but seen more a steward than a lord, to use
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Callowan parlance, and Oguz couldn't be put forward because no one would
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follow a cripple. Their clans were by far the two largest of their
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alliance, and the warriors would not hear of putting forward the chief
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of a weaker clan as the figurehead for the alliance. Hakram knew there
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was no point in forcing the matter. Even if it worked, challenges would
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see the chief slain by his own allies before the day was out.
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The bloody Blackspears were making gains, in large parts due to the
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skilled diplomacy of their Split Tree Clan allies. Hakram had been
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somewhat disposed to making peace with their ascension, as his and
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Catherine's plans did not necessarily require the Wolves or the Shields
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to be raised as the highest of the clans, but Troke's plans were a
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problem. The Snaketooth did intend to burn a swath through the lands of
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Okoro, but he'd called it madness to try the walls of a well-armed and
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forewarned High Seat. He had promised instead to keep raiding
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southwards, towards Nok.
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Whose defences had been weakened by an Ashuran sack and who had sent
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many troops out west to fight with Sepulchral.
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No doubt it was just happenstance that such an attack would cripple a
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rebellion against the very same woman who'd raised Troke to the rank of
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Lord of the Steppes and might just make her inclined to confirm him as
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High Lord of Steppes should the war end in her favour. Most of the Clans
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didn't give a shit about that, though. What they saw was that Troke
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wanted to take them after a softer but still rich target, which was a
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pleasant song to the ear of many.
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``I fucking doubt that, boy,'' Oguz snorted. ``But let's ask him.''
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Dag did not, in fact, enjoy the notion of that challenge. Hakram sold
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him on it anyway by pointing out that if he wed Inge Farsight even
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should his cousin return to become chieftain of the Howling Wolves he'd
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still have a high position as husband to the High Lady -- or Warlord,
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depending on how things fell out -- of the Steppes. Ambitious bastard,
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Dag, though personal loyalty to his famous cousin had kept that in
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check. A chance to step out of Grem One-Eye's shadow, though, was not an
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opportunity to be lost. All that remained was selling to Inge and the
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Weeping Arrows.
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She'd see reason, Hakram thought. Like most of the prominent chiefs, she
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had to know that food was beginning to run out. The countryside had
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already been stripped bare, Okoro no longer sent patrols that could be
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slain to eat and the clans had brought only so many herd with them to
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butcher for meat. Much as the chiefs would like to argue forever,
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someone would need to be acclaimed in Chagoro before the month was out
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or simple hunger would force the gathering to disperse.
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Within moments of getting to the great tent of the Weeping Arrows,
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Hakram found trouble. Trouble looked back at him with a come-hither
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glare, going by the name of Sigvin of the Split Tree Clan. One of the
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twins that'd come as speakers for their clan to Wolof, Hakram had gotten
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to know her better since. She had these long fangs and wore tunics that
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prominently displayed ritual scarring on her shoulders, and Hakram had
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always had a weakness for dangerous women. It'd only made the fucking
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better to know that they both knew she was trying to turn him to her
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side, which might have been while they'd kept doing it.
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Not that hers was the only bed he'd rolled in. Being the first Named of
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his kind in centuries and an unbroken streak of duelling victories had
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made Hakram a desirable orc. He wasn't one to say no when the question
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was asked right.
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Sigvin was leaning against a marking post outside the tent. Inside was a
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lot of shouting, not a pot he wanted to dip a toe hastily, so he came to
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lean on the other side of the post. Silence held between them, Hakram
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pricking an ear to try to discern what was happening in the Weeping
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Arrow tent. Names were being shouted, but also oaths and insults.
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``If I didn't know better,'' Adjutant said, ``I'd say it sounds like the
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acclamation of a chief, in there.''
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The early part of it, at least.
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``You haven't heard?'' Sigvin said, flaring her teeth provocatively at
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him. ``Inge Farsight got killed. Some feud with a Black Tongue champion
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that went hard.''
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The Black Tongue weren't backers to Troke Snaketooth, from what Hakram
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recalled. At least not officially. How many knifes like that had the
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Blackspears kept in wait?
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``No telling who they'll raise now,'' Hakram said.
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Inge had led the clan almost twenty years but had no clear successor.
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Those kinds of acclamations always got messy and often left clans
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divided in their wake.
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``Except that it won't be Inge Farsight,'' Sigvin laughed.
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She met his eyes boldly.
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``One step behind, Deadhand,'' she said. ``Might be time for you and
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your queen to talk with Snaketooth instead of keeping lead weights on
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your feet.''
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Swift as a doe, she pushed away from her side of the post and swatted at
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his buttocks.
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``Don't worry,'' Sigvin said, ``I'll not kick you out of my bedroll even
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after you lose. It'd be a waste.''
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Hakram took the time to enjoy the sway as she strolled away, for he was
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only mortal, but as soon as she was gone he turned cold eyes to the
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tent. That was a setback. The Weeping Arrows were done, their alliance
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would collapse. The practical thing would be to take the offered branch
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the Blackspears had sent through Sigvin and have private talks with
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Troke. He would only pull further ahead in the coming days, and even if
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he couldn't be turned against Malicia he still needed to be sounded out
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over\ldots{} other matters. As the Adjutant, that was his duty. Much as
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it irked to have been outplayed, he had been. Now he needed to make sure
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Catherine's plans were not too heavily damaged. Yet Hakram found his
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feet refusing to move. He thought, suddenly, of Scribe. Of the look
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she'd had on her face, that night he had taken her by the throat with a
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ghostly hand he could no longer make. How the glint in her eyes had
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scared him for the way he could so easily understand it. He looked down.
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The grass at his feet was coated in dust, blown in from a southern
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storm. Tricky footing.
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Just a few more steps, he decided.
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---
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The night sky would have been beautiful, were it not for the plumes of
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foul smoke clawing across it. The Dead King's devilish machine, the
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dragon-furnace that had been meant to incinerate the armies that'd held
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Hainaut, had not ceased burning after being toppled. Miles of land had
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turned into a sea of fire as black pitch spread, and though the fuel was
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running out it was as if a curtain of black and pungent smoke had been
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drawn across the world. The kind of sight that would make men mutter
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about the end of the world, had they not already all known it had
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arrived.
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``In Ashur, Speakers do not like to deal in simple truths,'' Hanno of
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Arwad said. ``Simplicity is a brittle thing, they claim. What lessons
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they have to share, they prefer to share through stories. To let us find
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our own meanings.''
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``I hatred riddles,'' Rafaella admitted. ``And poems. Even Hidden Poets.
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Words trying to get clever.''
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Hanno shifted in his seat, wincing as the bandages pulled tight against
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his wound. The priests had seen to his impalement as best they could but
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the enchantment on the Revenant's spear had fought the Light. It would
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be days before he was truly fit to fight again.
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``Cleverness isn't the point,'' he told his old friend. ``It is a mark
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of respect, I always thought. A recognition that few truths are true for
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all.''
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``Stories not about truth,'' the Valiant Champion chided him. ``They
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about glory and sex. And killing. Sometimes Gods, but mostly other
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three.''
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He chuckled.
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``But you can speaking bad Ashur story,'' Rafaella allowed. ``I am best
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of friends, will pretend to listen.''
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``Convincingly?'' he teased.
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``Am not that best a friend,'' Rafaella replied without batting an eye.
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But he knew her enough to see she was curious, under the ribbing, so
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Hanno idly thumbed the stumps of his missing fingers and chose his
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words.
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``There is one that I cannot seem to shake, lately,'' he admitted. ``It
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is a story about the Patient Man.''
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``He villain?'' Rafaella asked interestedly.
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``I am not sure,'' Hanno murmured. ``Which I suppose is the point.''
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In the distance, red lightning crackled across the sky. The aftermath of
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Antigone's duel with the Archmage had left great scars on an already
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devastated land: power still lashed out wildly where they had clashed.
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``In the far land across the sea, in the city of Akra, there was once a
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Patient Man,'' Hanno said. ``He was a man of faith and wisdom, who had
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grown wealthy before retiring and raising his two daughters. In time
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Akra went to war with the city of Yane, and so his eldest asked his
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blessing to fight. The Patient Man hesitated, for war is a dangerous
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trade and he did not want her to perish but neither did he want to shame
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the courage that made him proud. Knowing not which was the just course,
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he kept silent.''
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The cadence came back to him easily, tradertalk having enough of High
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Tyrian to it that the tales he had learned a child could be recited to
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the same beats he had once learned. Hanno had never found the tale put
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to writ anywhere, and not for lack of looking. Like much of the wisdom
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of the Speakers, it was estranged from ink. Tales were living things, to
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the masked priests of Ashur, and the corpse of them on parchment would
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be almost as sacrilege.
|
|
|
|
``The eldest went to war without his blessing, captaining her ship, and
|
|
though the city won the war her ship was lost,'' Hanno gravely said.
|
|
``Dead, they said, but the Patient Man did not yet grieve. His younger
|
|
daughter grew wroth and cursed his silence as heartless. She blamed many
|
|
for the death of her beloved elder sister but none more than the rulers
|
|
of the city whose greedy ways had led to war. So that no sister would be
|
|
lost again, the younger daughter sought to become a ruler herself.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella had never been one to hide her thoughts, for all that she
|
|
delighted in feigning false ones, so it was easy to see how she approved
|
|
of the eldest daughter who had gone to war and less so of the youngest
|
|
who sought to rule. Violence was familiar to the Valiant Champion. She
|
|
had won her Name triumphing over others in honest battle, but it was no
|
|
coincidence she had then left the hills of her native Alava. To stay in
|
|
the lands of the Champion's Blood would have seen her drawn into the
|
|
feuds and schemes of the dynasties of the Blood, made precious by her
|
|
inheritance of Bestowal.
|
|
|
|
It was a hard irony, that the same character that had made her the
|
|
Valiant Champion had led her to want little to do with the Valiant
|
|
Champion's Blood.
|
|
|
|
``The younger daughter sought the Patient Man's blessing and the help of
|
|
his riches. This would be a long and arduous path, the Patient Man knew,
|
|
for rulers do not like to share their power,'' Hanno of Arwad said, with
|
|
a wry twist of the lip. ``Yet he held in esteem the conviction of his
|
|
daughter and desired not to stand in the way of it. Knowing not which
|
|
was the just course, he kept silent. Once more his daughter cursed him
|
|
and rose to rule without help, but in rising she forgot her conviction
|
|
and grew wicked.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno paused.
|
|
|
|
``To punish him for his silence she swore never to hear a word from him
|
|
again, but the Patient Man did not yet grieve.''
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' Rafaella grunted, speaking of the daughter and not the father.
|
|
``Silence for silence. Honour in balance. Good girl.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella had never once, in all the years they'd known each other,
|
|
spoken of her family. It was not unusual for heroes to be born of
|
|
tragedy but Hanno had long suspected that was not the truth of this.
|
|
Sometimes he wondered at the kind of mother and father it would have
|
|
taken, to raise a woman like Rafaella. Who could claim and hold such a
|
|
hallowed Name at the age she had: seventeen, barely a woman grown.
|
|
|
|
``There came a day where a man came from the city of Yane,'' he said,
|
|
ignoring her guffaw and muttering of Yanu, ``who was from there a
|
|
prince, and he sought audience with the Patient Man. The man had been a
|
|
captain for his kin in the war and found the shipwrecked eldest
|
|
daughter. Falling in love, he wed her and had spent time gathering great
|
|
gifts to bring the Patient Man to ask his blessing. A ship was sailing,
|
|
with the eldest daughter and the gits among it, and the old man sent a
|
|
messenger to his younger daughter to tell her of this wonder. It was a
|
|
merry day, but the Patient Man did not yet rejoice.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella's brow tightened. Heroes did not live as long as either of them
|
|
had without learning to catch the scent of tragedy in the air.
|
|
|
|
``The following day his younger daughter sailed into the harbour,
|
|
bringing with her what she claimed a great war prize,'' Hanno said. ``A
|
|
ship whose hull had been filled with great gifts and hated enemies from
|
|
Yane, which she had all slain with her own hand. She had refused to hear
|
|
the Patient Man's messenger, keeping to her oath, and so in ignorance
|
|
slain her own beloved sister. The prince was furious with grief, named
|
|
her a kinslayer and swore revenge. He asked that the Patient Man condemn
|
|
her, to show not all Akra was wicked, but the old man kept to his
|
|
silence and so there was war.''
|
|
|
|
He'd told Antigone the story once, long ago in an airy city where they
|
|
had been the only humans to be seen, and this had been where she balked.
|
|
\emph{The Patient Man is made wicked by this}, she had insisted.
|
|
\emph{He and his daughter both deserve to be slain as reparations to
|
|
Yane, for one committed a great crime and the other abides it.} Rafaella
|
|
did not balk, for her world was a vastly different one. The Dominion was
|
|
bound as much by ties of blood as it was feuds between families: many a
|
|
time would Blood forgive or ignore their trespasses of their own while
|
|
the same dealt by the hands of their foes.
|
|
|
|
The Ashen Gods of Levant were not as the benevolent Hallowed of Procer
|
|
or Callow's stern Heavens. In the Dominion, the Gods were partisans.
|
|
They had favourites, they took sides.
|
|
|
|
``Yet the younger daughter, broken by her crime, found her old
|
|
conviction again,'' Hanno continued. ``She offered herself to the city
|
|
of Yane as a penitent, and the truth of her earnest grief moved the
|
|
hearts of the people. In time she was wed to the prince, who forgave
|
|
her, and the cities of Akra and Yane were bound in peace and friendship.
|
|
The Patient Man died in his bed, father to a grave and a woman
|
|
estranged.''
|
|
|
|
His voice trailed off, leaving thoughtful silence in its wake. Rafaella
|
|
was frowning, then eventually she sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Fucking hate riddles,'' the Valiant Champion said. ``Patient Man fool,
|
|
good daughter dead bad daughter should have become priest?''
|
|
|
|
``That is an answer,'' Hanno agreeably replied.
|
|
|
|
She sharply elbowed him.
|
|
|
|
``Is it right answer, though?'' Rafaella asked.
|
|
|
|
``I was once told there are as many answers to that tale as there are
|
|
Faces,'' Hanno smiled, thinking of the masks hanged in the temples of
|
|
Ashur and the priests who wore them. ``You're not any more wrong or
|
|
right than any of us.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella looked skeptical.
|
|
|
|
``So what's \emph{your} answer?'' she seriously asked.
|
|
|
|
Hanno breathed out, looking at the marred sky.
|
|
|
|
``I don't have an answer,'' he quietly admitted. ``All the story ever
|
|
taught me was a question.''
|
|
|
|
He felt her eyes on him even without turning to look.
|
|
|
|
``Is it a greater evil to act unjustly,'' the White Knight asked, ``or
|
|
not to act at all?''
|
|
|
|
The Patient Man might have saved his daughters great pain, even death,
|
|
had he spoken. Had he grieved or rejoiced. Yet in keeping his silence,
|
|
in trusting the Heavens, he had lived to see the birth of peace and
|
|
friendship between once-warring cities. Was that great good worth the
|
|
little evils caused by silence? The Choir of Mercy would say it was, had
|
|
made a sword and law of that belief. But Hanno of Arwad was not the
|
|
Sword of \emph{Mercy}. And there had been a time where he had held an
|
|
answer to the story, the one shown him in the depths of that unearthly
|
|
place where he had become the White Knight. Mortals could not be just,
|
|
he had been shown. Not truly.
|
|
|
|
They were flawed, blind creatures and even their finest intentions were
|
|
blades without a handle. He could trust instead in the judgement of the
|
|
Seraphim, impartial and farseeing. There was justice, beyond the
|
|
fallibility of men. Hanno of Arwad palmed a small silver coin, one side
|
|
bearing crossed swords and the other laurels, and deftly flipped it. It
|
|
went spinning, a glint of silver in the dark, but it held no answers for
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
The Seraphim were yet silent.
|
|
|
|
``It true the coin woke?'' Rafaella quietly asked.
|
|
|
|
Hanno caught the coin, snatching it out of the air.
|
|
|
|
``For a moment,'' he said. ``Would that it had not.''
|
|
|
|
The hope had burned, after the years left adrift. And burned harsher
|
|
still when Hanno had understood what had truly happened: somewhere in
|
|
the south, hidden away, Cordelia Hasenbach had ordered that the corpse
|
|
of an angel be desecrated. \emph{Ealamal}, such a corpse was called in
|
|
the Dominion. Priests and mages in the service of the First Prince had
|
|
meddled with something beyond mortal understanding, tried to turn the
|
|
remnants of a Seraphim into a weapon. And the shadow of a shadow had
|
|
woken for the barest of a moments without calamity ensuing. It had lit
|
|
up like a beacon in an empty place within Hanno's soul, blaring to him a
|
|
warning of how far and fast the First Prince was falling.
|
|
|
|
Twice over her had been stung, in the Arsenal, and much had he thought
|
|
of those days. Considered how he might have done things differently,
|
|
looking into past lives for guidance -- for the man he could have been
|
|
and had failed to be, the one who would have passed that test. He had
|
|
found no answers, the search only dwindling his power in the Light even
|
|
as he warred against the dead, left to study only with his own meagre
|
|
eyes. Catherine Foundling had startled him out of their pleasant
|
|
détente, that day, but his anger there had waned. What wisdom was there
|
|
in blaming a scorpion for striking? He would not allow himself to be
|
|
lulled into complacency again, but neither had he misread the Black
|
|
Queen as he'd once feared.
|
|
|
|
He had simply never been at odds with her before. It had been a lesson
|
|
well worth learning, and cheap at the price.
|
|
|
|
Yet Cordelia Hasenbach had been looked upon with approval by the Choir
|
|
of Judgement once. Her convictions been judged worthy, even as she
|
|
denied the Name was her rightful mantle to bear. A scant year later and
|
|
the same woman had been reduced to someone feeding people into the
|
|
grinding gears of the Principate of Procer so that the machine's wheels
|
|
would be kept wet. Hasenbach had no ideals, only an ideal Procer. And
|
|
though that land would be a beautiful thing to behold, Hanno thought, it
|
|
would be grimly built and as Evil made it slip further and further away
|
|
the First Prince was dipping her hands deep in the red.
|
|
|
|
Already she was up to her elbows, how long before she began to
|
|
\emph{swim}? Conviction and despair had been mothers to many a horror.
|
|
|
|
``Truth then,'' Rafaella grunted, studying him. ``Talk of ealamal.''
|
|
|
|
``It is,'' Hanno simply said.
|
|
|
|
The Valiant Champion weighed him with her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``That why you been middling?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
He blinked.
|
|
|
|
``Meddling?'' he suggested.
|
|
|
|
``Middle, meddle, muddle,'' she growled. ``Tradertalk is fool tongue.
|
|
You understand, Hanno. Now you finger on scales.''
|
|
|
|
Her face grew serious.
|
|
|
|
``Time was you did not.''
|
|
|
|
He did not deny it.
|
|
|
|
It had begun as a small, simple thing. But then was the same not true of
|
|
the first pebble before the avalanche? There had been trouble in the
|
|
army, after the Black Queen left. The Lycaonese had begun to elect their
|
|
own leaders, after the death of the Iron Prince and Mathilda Greensteel,
|
|
of marching to fight with their kin in the north. The leading captains
|
|
all agreed in this. And Hanno could have stood aside and watched, as he
|
|
had when the Iron Prince had hung mutineers, for it was not his place to
|
|
meddle in the affairs of Procer.
|
|
|
|
But he had glimpsed the shape of it, how it would unfold. They would
|
|
leave and there would be no stopping them without a battle. Hainaut
|
|
would weaken, then fall. So instead of standing aside, he instead had
|
|
stood to the side of those captains who shamed the others for speaking
|
|
of leaving the fight. And though he had said not a word, his presence
|
|
had spoken volumes. The White Knight agreed. The Sword of Judgement,
|
|
like the Ashen Gods of the Dominion, had picked a side.
|
|
|
|
Once he'd dipped a toe, it had seemed pointless to balk when the Alamans
|
|
princes began to bicker and their hosts to desert. He'd brokered a truce
|
|
between Beatrice Volignac and Arsene Odon, exhorted the levies of Bayeux
|
|
whose shame about routing at the Battle of Hainaut had been eating away.
|
|
It had seemed almost just to him to speak to those levies, balancing the
|
|
scale of the way he had done nothing as Klaus Papenheim slew and
|
|
imprisoned their officers. He had not expected for them to look to him
|
|
for command, after, but he was a high officer of the Grand Alliance --
|
|
he could serve as a commander if he chose, he simply had not. They had
|
|
fought like lions since, to regain their pride.
|
|
|
|
They called him Lord White, and meant it not as a courtesy.
|
|
|
|
Hanno had remembered the clarity he'd felt, when he had been fighting to
|
|
the north to destroy the bridge, and then the sickening feeling when he
|
|
had heard about the bloody battle at Hainaut. And with those memories
|
|
following him around like loyal hounds, he had found his hand moving
|
|
again and again. Stiffening General Abigail's spine when she began to
|
|
consider retreat further south, killing the dispute through a scrying
|
|
ritual when the Red Knight and the Myrmidon almost came to blows in
|
|
Cleves, advising the Kingfisher Prince to retreat long before the
|
|
Morgentor came at threat of being encircled.
|
|
|
|
Small things, all. But many of them. And others had noticed. There was a
|
|
deference to the way the princes now spoke to him that had not been
|
|
there before, and it was slowly passing to Named. Many now looked to him
|
|
for advice who had merely taken it when offered before.
|
|
|
|
None had noticed that his power was waning all the while, save for his
|
|
closest friends. That troubled Hanno, for it would have been easy to
|
|
decide from this that the Heavens were frowning on his action, but for
|
|
all that he was weakening he did not feel\ldots{} shunned by the Light.
|
|
But it was his doubts, he suspected, that were behind it all. The end of
|
|
his certainties. For Hanno of Arwad had once believed himself as a
|
|
Patient Man vindicated, but as the silence of Judgement lingered his own
|
|
was beginning to break. These days he often he dreamt of the story he
|
|
had told Rafaella, the question burning in his mind as he woke.
|
|
|
|
The Valiant Champion had been watching him through his long silence, the
|
|
sky above them alive with writhing smoke.
|
|
|
|
``Is it a greater evil to act unjustly,'' Hanno quietly repeated, ``or
|
|
not to act at all?''
|
|
|
|
And he could not shake the fear that he had not heeded the warning of
|
|
the story. That he had seeded a doom at the heart of the Grand Alliance
|
|
by his action. Would Cordelia Hasenbach grown so desperate, if he had
|
|
not begun to step beyond his old lines in the sand? He had proof,
|
|
ruinous proof, that his actions and hers were interlinked. Yet some part
|
|
of him balked at the notion that simply acting, trying to do all the
|
|
good that he could, would be a seed of doom. What had he done here, save
|
|
try to keep the dark from blowing out the last trembling lights in the
|
|
west?
|
|
|
|
``Not fighting Evil,'' the Valiant Champion said. ``\emph{Rolling over}.
|
|
That is greatest evil. You cannot be others, only you. That is what you
|
|
owe the Ashen Gods.''
|
|
|
|
He thought on that, for a moment.
|
|
|
|
``I could do more,'' Hanno of Arwad quietly confessed. ``Even now, I
|
|
stay my hand.''
|
|
|
|
Rafaella smiled gently, and pressed a kiss against the side of his head.
|
|
He looked at her in surprise, for love or lust she had never been shy in
|
|
expressing but affection was rarer.
|
|
|
|
``It's end of the world,'' his friend said. ``When, if not now?''
|
|
|
|
The words lingered long after she departed, leaving him to silence and
|
|
the smoky sky. \emph{When, if not now?} Was she wrong? He felt as if she
|
|
should be, but he could not say how. And that left only a broad,
|
|
terrifying expanse ahead of him. One that could be filled with anything.
|
|
|
|
``I could do more,'' Hanno of Arwad said, voice pensive.
|
|
|
|
Then perhaps he should. He already knew how to begin. Speaking with
|
|
Antigone, so that she might lead him to the one who had taught her. The
|
|
sole man who could bring the Titanomachy fully into the war, the last of
|
|
the ancient Titans. The thought fixed, firmed, became a decision. And in
|
|
that moment, Hanno felt it fully for the first time. Not in parts, in
|
|
moments, as he had until now. Like a beacon. The claim that was stirring
|
|
in him, to a Name he could not yet grasp. He had his suspicions,
|
|
however. He was feeling another claimant, after all, to the south.
|
|
|
|
If Hanno had to put a name to where, it would be Salia.
|