498 lines
23 KiB
TeX
498 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{heroic-interlude-attaque-au-fer}{%
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\chapter*{Heroic Interlude: Attaque au
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Fer}\label{heroic-interlude-attaque-au-fer}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{heroic-interlude-attaque-au-fer}} \chaptermark{Heroic Interlude: Attaque au Fer}
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\epigraph{``Those who clap others in irons always end up choking on them.''}{Eleanor Fairfax, founder of the Fairfax dynasty}
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The Baroness Dormer was strikingly beautiful.
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\emph{Hair like spun silver}, men said, and even in her late thirties
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the sight of her smiling was enough to make his breath catch in his
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throat. William was evidently not immune to her charms, though he
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fancied he was less swayed by them than most. Still, of all the nobles
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involved in the Liesse Rebellion he thought her the best of the bunch.
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Unlike the Duke of Liesse and his now-betrothed the Countess Marchford,
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he knew that ambition did not drive the woman sitting across from him.
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Her fief would not grow from the liberation of Callow, and given her
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long-running enmity with Countess Elizabeth there would be no position
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of influence at court for her in the aftermath. She'd joined her force
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to the Rebellion because she wanted the land of her ancestors to be
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free, and such a purity of intent was laudable. Not often rewarded, but
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perhaps all the more laudable for that.
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``I can bring five thousand to bear, though I hesitate to commit some of
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them to a battle,'' the baroness said. ``They are peasant volunteers,
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untrained in the arts of war.''
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``Your household troops can take the lead,'' the Lone Swordsman replied.
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``I don't suppose you've managed to scrape up some knights?''
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Chivalric orders had been disbanded wholesale after the Conquest, but
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the south of Callow had never truly been invaded -- after the fall of
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Laure and the submission of the Deoraithe, the flight into exile of the
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Duke of Liesse had been enough to tip the balance towards surrender. The
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only southern demesne with an Imperial Governor assigned had been Liesse
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itself, and though William knew better than to think the entire sector
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had not been crawling with the Black Knight's spies the scrutiny of the
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Tower had not been as heavy down there. In northwest and central Callow
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the capitulation of the Kingdom had been greeted with wholesale butchery
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of horse herds across the land: the old promise that Praesi would never
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manage to suborn Callowan cavalry had been faithfully observed. Down
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south, though, some smaller herds had remained in the hands of nobles.
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Flat refusal to sell any to the Tower had caused tensions and threatened
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an uprising the year following the Conquest when a general had tried to
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force the issue, but in the end orders had come from above to let the
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matter go.
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``I had half a hundred when we started the war,'' the aristocrat
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replied, ``but they're all with Talbot now.''
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``We'll make do,'' William sighed. ``If she's to fight the Legions of
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Terror on the field, she needs all the help she can get.''
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``Especially now,'' the baroness murmured.
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The Lone Swordsman grimaced. Word of Foundling's unexpected victory
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against the Silver Spears had already spread even this far. Mages in
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Marchford, he expected. Now that the Praesi had made popular the use of
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scrying rumours flew even faster than messenger birds. \emph{I warned
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you, Prince. One misstep is all she needs.} With the eastern flank
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secure, the Ninth and Sixth legions could march towards Vale with their
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supply train safe. Countess Elizabeth would not be facing tired,
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half-starved soldiers: she'd be staring down the war machine that had
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triumphed on the Fields of Streges in the fullness of its might. At
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least it was only two legions: if it had been three or four the
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rebellion could be considered as good as over.
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``She'll hold,'' William promised. ``As soon as we've dealt with the
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Heiress' host we'll move to reinforce her.''
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``I am glad you heeded my call,'' the silver-haired beauty admitted.
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``Fighting a Stygian phalanx would have been bad enough on its own, but
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with a Named to lead them? I dared not force a battle with the forces at
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my disposal.''
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``You were right to wait,'' the Lone Swordsman said. ``I've never been
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to Stygia but the Bard assures me the tales are true -- on even ground
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they are one of the finest in the land.''
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The formation the slave-soldiers took in battle was a slow and
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cumbersome thing, but it had shredded hosts from Procer and the other
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Free Cities both. The Stygians did not retreat or hesitate, for the
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leather cord around their neck could choke them in an instant should the
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person owning them wish it.
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``So much for the Praesi being above slavery,'' the baroness scoffed.
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``I used to consider it their one redeeming feature.''
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``The Heiress is from the old breed of eastern villainy,'' William
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acknowledged. ``They tend to break even their own rules when it gains
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them advantage. Keep priests close, I would not put it above her to
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summon devils if things go sour.''
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The House of Light did not officially take sides in mortal conflicts,
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though it occasionally did produce a clerical Named who carried the
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banner of the Heavens into battle. Mundane priests who felt the calling
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to combat Evil could join religious martial orders but those were not
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part of the House proper, merely affiliated with it -- hence why the
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Empire had slaughtered every last paladin from the Order of the White
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Hand but allowed the many churches and cathedrals in Callow to continue
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existing after the annexation. Most priests did, however, take a very
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dim view of bringing devils and demons into Creation. Those they would
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fight regardless of who did the summoning.
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``I'll make sure to have them on hand,'' the aristocrat replied. ``Luck
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in battle, Lord Swordsman.''
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William smiled thinly. ``That'd be a first.''
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---
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The tent they'd prepared for him had a cot and a table, the latter of
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which he would never use. The dark-haired man was no general and he knew
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as much -- the strategizing was better left to individuals with a talent
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for it. The one time he'd thought he had a plan he'd gotten almost all
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of the people he'd brought with him killed, including another hero and
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the only observer the Duchess of Daoine had bothered to send. Taking off
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his coat, the Swordsman threw it on the cot. He'd been about to sit down
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and remove his boots when he paused, smoothly unsheathing his sword and
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bringing the edge to rest against the throat of the other Named in the
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tent.
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``One of these days,'' Thief said, ``you'll tell me how you do that.''
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``Unlikely,'' William replied.
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Forcing the Penitent's Blade back into its scabbard was an effort. It
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disliked returning without having drawn blood, even if no one worthy of
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being bled was around.
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``I wasn't sure you'd come back,'' he admitted a moment later.
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``I wasn't sure I would,'' the short-haired girl shrugged. ``But here I
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am.''
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With a tired sigh, William sat down on his cot as she perched herself on
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his table.
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``I'm sure you've noticed the host surrounding us,'' he began. ``We'll
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be marching on the Praesi army camped by Lake Hengest tomorrow.''
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``They're not camped by the lake anymore,'' the Thief informed him. ``I
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paid them a little visit while considering my options. They're half a
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day's march away from you now, though they've stopped for the night.''
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He did not insult her by asking if she was sure of this. It would be the
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same as if someone asked him if he was certain his guard stance was
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correct.
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``Heiress knows we're after her, then,'' he grunted in dissatisfaction.
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It had been too much to hope for that she wouldn't see them coming.
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Still, he was confident in his chances against this particular villain
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-- unlike Squire in Summerholm, she wasn't fate-bound to survive the
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encounter with him.
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``Heiress isn't with the army anymore,'' the pale-skinned heroine
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corrected him. ``She took the commander of her Proceran mercenaries with
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her and went into the hills. The man in charge is some Wastelander
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lordling called Ghassan.''
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The Swordsman honestly wasn't sure whether to be pleased by the news or
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not. Lack of a Named meant their victory was all but certain, but what
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in the Burning Heavens was the villain doing in the hills? An army
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couldn't pass through them. That much was common knowledge in Callow.
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``Where's Bard, anyhow?'' Thief asked.
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William snorted. ``You know Almorava. She comes and goes as she wills.
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For all I know she's passed-out drunk in some ditch and she'll catch up
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tomorrow.''
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Thief -- she'd never revealed her true name to them -- shook her head.
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``William, you should know better by now. She drinks like a fish, but
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when have you ever seen her \emph{drunk}?''
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The Swordsman raised an eyebrow. ``Every day since she first crashed
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through the window over the room where I'd assembled the rest of you.''
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Apparently Almorava had meant to sit on the windowsill to look
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mysterious and all-knowing but slipped on rain-slick stone and fallen
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through the glass. The sultry pose she'd tried to affect afterwards had
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been largely negated by the fact that her face was bleeding heavily.
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``The thing about being a thief,'' the heroine said, ``is that you have
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to learn to read people. Catch when they're tired enough to dismiss
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footsteps on a rooftop, guess when they're so impatient they'll send a
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replacement servant through instead of checking the story.''
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She drummed her fingers against the table, crossing one leg over the
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other.
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``She plays it up well, the clumsiness and the slurring, but no matter
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how much hard liquor she puts away she's never been more than tipsy.''
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``You think she's deceiving us,'' William frowned.
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``I think she's playing it up for her audience,'' Thief replied. ``Isn't
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that what Bards do?''
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``She's a heroine,'' the Swordsman eventually said. ``That much can't be
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faked. Why would she bother to trick us when she's on our side?''
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The other Callowan passed a hand through her short hair, ruffling the
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tomboy cut as an uncomfortable look settled on her face.
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``When we left for Summerholm, there were five heroes in our band,'' the
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heroine said. ``And we all knew going in that one of us would die to the
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Warlock -- monsters like that don't go easy. It couldn't be you, because
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you have a mirror on the other side. Hunter was meant to be your right
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hand, ill-suited as he was to the role. You needed me to get into the
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city and to get out afterwards. That left\ldots{}''
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``Almorava and Simeon,'' William finished. ``Your point?''
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``Both of them are bumblers,'' Thief spoke quietly. ``There was a
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redundancy. But how much of an impression did Conjurer make, compared to
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the Bard? He barely talked while she was always in the background,
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larger than life, drinking and badly strumming her lute.''
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The Swordsman breathed in sharply. ``What you're suggesting borders on
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murder.''
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``All she did was cover her bases,'' she replied. ``I can respect that,
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I really can. But I can't trust it.''
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``Almorava has always given me good counsel,'' William said hesitantly.
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``She's given you advice that keeps her story moving along,'' Thief
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retorted. ``And I don't know about you, but I'm not looking for a
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starring role in a tragedy.''
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The dark-haired hero chuckled mirthlessly. ``You might have joined the
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wrong cause, then.''
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``Oh \emph{fuck this},'' she snapped, falling to her feet. ``I've had
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enough of the tormented warrior tourine. I don't care how fucking tragic
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your backstory is: \emph{this isn't about you}. You wanna know why I
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came back? Because even if you screwed up spectacularly in Summerholm,
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you're still the only option we've got. I've stolen some outrageous
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stuff in my time, but an entire kingdom? The Empire makes my Name a
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mockery every day, and it's not going away on its own. So put on your
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big boy pants and get your shit together, William. Nobody's asking you
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to clean up every mess in Callow, just to kill some villains with your
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godsdamned horrifying angel sword.''
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Fury flashed through the Swordsman's veins but he kept a lid on it. He'd
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earned this much and worse, for his failure against Warlock.
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``I tried that, if you'll recall,'' he replied sharply. ``It got Simeon
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killed and lost us our best chance at getting Daoine into the war.''
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``Because you went about it wrong,'' Thief informed him bluntly.
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``You're the \emph{Lone} Swordsman. The whole band of heroes motif runs
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against your Role. Gods know you couldn't stand us half the time,
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anyway, and to be honest spending more than a day at a time with you
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makes me want to jump off the nearest cliff.''
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``The whole point of assembling heroes was to even the odds against the
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Calamities,'' the dark-haired man barked back, patience running thin.
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``And that worked out great,'' the heroine snorted. ``So what if the
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odds are horrible? That's what heroes \emph{do}. Hells, when I first
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heard about you you were the guy who'd assassinated an Imperial
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Governess in broad daylight and blown up half of General Sacker's face.
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You're not incompetent, William. What you can't handle, we will. Stop
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doing the things you think are clever and start doing what you're
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actually good at.''
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``And what,'' the Swordsman replied coldly, ``would that be?''
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She tossed a parchment at him.
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``Here's a plan of the Praesi encampments. Kill the people that need
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killing. And before you slaughter your way through every officer in
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there, I want you to consider something.''
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Thief leaned forward and looked into his eyes.
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``Do you know what an antihero is? An idiot who thinks they can use
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Evil's own methods to beat it. Here's the thing about Evil, though --
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they've used those methods for a lot longer than you. \emph{They're
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better at them.} If you want to make a better world, maybe you should
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act like someone who deserves to live in it.''
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She walked out of the tent before he could think of something to reply.
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It took him a quarter bell to realize that at some point during the
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conversation she'd stolen his purse.
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---
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The moon was almost full.
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The white-enamelled armour he'd taken to wearing after the Hanging was
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back in his tent, traded in for his old chainmail and leather coat. It
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was\ldots{} comfortable. Like he'd shed a skin that didn't quite fit for
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one that did. The Stygians ran a good camp, with sentinels patrolling
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regularly, but that was the weakness in their system. Fixed intervals
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made it easy to infiltrate the place, once he knew the pattern. \emph{It
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wouldn't do for the slaves to show initiative, would it?} he thought
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with disgust. How many times had the whip been cracked on their back,
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before the ability to improvise had been beaten out of them for good?
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For all that Stygia was one the Free Cities, few enough of the men
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living there knew anything of freedom. Moving from shadow to shadow,
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William made his way to the large tent in the centre of the camp. Thief
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had marked it as the officer's tent, and even from where he stood he
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could see lamps had been lit inside. Leaning behind a crate full of
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rations, the Swordsman waited as a single man passed him by on the way
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to the latrine trench. The wind moved a tent flap and the olive-skinned
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soldier glanced in his direction, mouth opening in surprise.
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William's fist impacted with his stomach, knocking the breath out of
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him. An armoured elbow to the back of the head saw the slave fall into
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unconsciousness, his body unceremoniously dumped into the crate where no
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one would find it. The hero hastened his steps after that: eventually
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someone would realize a man was missing, and the alarm would be raised.
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There were more guards around the command tend, a tenth on patrol and
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one sentinel at every corner of the square hide structure. The patrol he
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outwaited, crouched behind a rack of pikes, but for the others he'd have
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to take a more proactive approach. Loosening the strap binding his
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sheathed sword to his belt, William took the makeshift blunt weapon in
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hand and closed his eyes. Breath in, breath out. His Name lit up inside
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him, turning his blood to smoke and dust. The cold strength took hold of
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him and in a single leaping bound he crossed the distance between
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himself and the closest guard, the pommel of the Penitent's Blade
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hitting the back of his head. He could see the other guard in the back
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of the tent beginning to turn in his direction, but the movement was
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comically slow. The man might as well have been swimming through mud.
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Three steps blurred and the flat of the sheathed sword slapped the chin
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upwards, the strength of the blow enough that just sailing through the
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air it caused a small gust of wind. He had to catch the man by the back
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of the neck to prevent his unconscious body flying into the back of the
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command tent. Setting down the sentinel gently, he stepped away to drag
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the first one out of sight as well before Creation began to catch up
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with him. He let out a long breath, letting the power flow out of him.
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Quietly, he unsheathed his dagger and cut a flap for him to slip inside.
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Eight men, he counted when taking a first glimpse. All olive-skinned
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with their heads shaved closely and wearing nothing but brown cloth
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pants and a leather cord around their necks. Miezan numerals had been
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branded between their shoulder blades. A man in his late fifties had a
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one, he glimpsed a pair of twos and the rest were threes. \emph{Officer
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rankings.} He'd heard Stygian slavemasters gave sets of enchanted irons
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to burn away the numbers and brand new ones when the purchase was made,
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to accommodate field promotions. The inside of the tent was bare, with
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eight cots on the ground and a single low table where they were all
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seated on the ground. A carafe of wine sat in the middle of the table,
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with eight clay cups around it that were still mostly full. Sheathed
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short swords were laid on the ground behind each of them, within easy
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reach. They noticed the moment he entered the tent, and all the threes
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reached for their weapons -- but the highest officer present raised a
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hand to stop them.
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``Hero,'' he said, his Lower Miezan lightly accented.
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``Lone Swordsman,'' William introduced himself.
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``First Spear Ophon,'' the man replied.
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One of the officers spoke in a tongue the hero didn't recognize, but
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Ophon smiled sadly.
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``I'm afraid we are all already dead, Parthe,'' he said. ``Finish your
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cup. Raising an alarm will only cause the death of more brothers before
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he leaves.''
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William stepped closer, then cast a look at the leader.
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``May I?'' he asked.
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The older man looked amused. ``By all means.''
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He sat himself between the twos, setting the Penitent's Blade across his
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lap. Ophon said something in the same tongue as earlier and the younger
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man picked up a cup and poured him wine, glaring heatedly all the while.
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William took a small sip, having no idea whatsoever whether this was a
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good vintage or not. He'd always preferred ale to wine in those rare
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instances he drank.
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``You are here to kill us, yes?'' Ophon asked mildly. ``To hurt your
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enemy.''
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William set down his cup. ``You don't sound very worried about that,''
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he observed.
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``I have seen heroes fight, unlike these young men,'' the leader
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replied. ``I know the strength of a Name. Struggle will just mean a bad
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death. I would rather leave Creation peacefully, enjoying my last cup of
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wine.''
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``Spears of Stygia do not break,'' the man to William's left broke in.
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``Three cities stand between us and the Magisters, Thenian,'' Ophon
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gently chided, ``yet I hear their words still.''
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The younger man looked down, abashed.
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``I'd heard Heiress had freed you,'' the Lone Swordsman murmured.
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The man from earlier, Parthe, scoffed.
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``Free, yes. Slaves do not get pay, she said, and we are to be paid
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after the war. Yet we bear the Strangler still,'' he spat, tapping the
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leather cord around his neck. ``A strange thing, this Praesi freedom.''
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``Gifts from the Wasteland are always poisoned,'' William said. ``My
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people have learned that the hard way.''
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``Yet it is not the Heiress who has come from our lives,'' Thenian
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barked. ``No matter the side, it is always the brothers who pay the
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corpse-price. \emph{My} people have learned this the hard way.''
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The Lone Swordsman brought the cup to his lips again. If he decided so,
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he could have every man in this tent dead before the cup hit the table.
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\emph{Swing}, his third aspect. Not even Squire had been able to match
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his hits when he tapped into it, whether in swiftness or strength. The
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hero calmly put down his cup, rose to his feet, and let his Name flood
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his frame. The power spread through the air, thick and lingering.
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William put his hand on the hilt of his sword and followed his
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instincts.
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One after the other, the leather cords dropped.
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``There are no slaves in the Kingdom of Callow,'' he said. ``Not as long
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as I live.''
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Most of them groped blindly for the collar they had been branded with
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since birth, faces alight with wonder at the reality that they could no
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longer die to whim of anyone owning their command rod. Not Ophon,
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though. Ophon finished his cup of wine with guarded eyes.
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``And what, I wonder, is the price of this freedom?'' he asked quietly.
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The light winked out of the others' eyes, and it made William want to
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flinch. Because he knew, here and now, that he could convince them to
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fight for him. He could feel the pivot forming, the weighted decision
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that would set the course of Fate. And the rebellion needed the troops
|
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so very badly, didn't it? They would still be free, and fighting for a
|
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just cause. \emph{Would I not have been tempted, if I were a better
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man?} Maybe. But he'd just seen the joy, and seen it disappear. Even now
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the faces shuttered at the prospect of trading one master for yet
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another. \emph{If you want to make a better world,} Thief had said,
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\emph{maybe you} \emph{should act like someone who deserves to live in
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it.}
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``Nothing,'' he replied, and the words tasted like ashes in his mouth.
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|
``Once, years ago, my sister told me that freedom is the Gods-given
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right of everyone who was ever born. Would that I had listened to her
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sooner.''
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He settled the sword back at his hip.
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``I'll need one of you to escort me as I go around the camp breaking the
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cords,'' he said. ``I can draw you a map if you need one, but south of
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|
Dormer along the river you should be able to find passage to Mercantis.
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|
There will be a battle with the Proceran mercenaries tomorrow, so I'd
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|
recommend swinging around north to be careful.''
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|
Ophon poured himself a second cup. A long moment of silence passed, as
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all the others watched him carefully
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|
``Above the gates of Stygia there is a statue of a magister,'' he
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|
finally spoke. ``He is a tall, proud man this magister. On his shoulders
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|
are two cranes, named Redress and Retribution. They are the patron
|
|
spirits of the city, said to speak in the dreams of those deemed
|
|
worthy.''
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The soldier peered into his cup.
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``Never has a slave been graced with such favour, but all men of Stygia
|
|
live with that hope -- even those who are not men at all, by the laws of
|
|
the city.''
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|
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|
Ophon smiled.
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|
``I am an old man, hero,'' he said. ``I find I no longer have the
|
|
patience to wait for the cranes. I would seek redress, of this girl who
|
|
bought me. I would seek retribution, for the lie of false freedom.''
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|
``First Spear-'' one of the threes began.
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|
|
``You are still young, Mamer,'' he interrupted gently. ``Do not be so
|
|
eager to follow. You still have a life ahead of you.''
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|
``Spears of Stygia do not break,'' the two who'd remained silent until
|
|
now rasped out. ``Oaths were given. I would seek the cranes with my
|
|
brother Ophon.''
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|
``Retribution,'' Thenian agreed softly, hands closing around his sword.
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``Redress,'' Parthe growled, and it had the weight of a promise.
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|
William smiled, and for the first time in years it was genuine.
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