352 lines
19 KiB
TeX
352 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-31-sleight}{%
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\chapter{Sleight}\label{chapter-31-sleight}}
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\epigraph{``Oh, give me a bloodthirsty, fire-and-brimstone conquering
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villain any day. It's the schemers you have to watch out for.''}{Queen Elizabeth Alban of Callow}
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Before I could properly process the sight of a hero actually being
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helpful for once, I felt the metaphysical equivalent of a hammer fall
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down over the entire avenue. The pressure lightened after a heartbeat
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but\ldots{} No, lightened wasn't the right word. It had been
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\emph{gathered}, into walls that sealed off the battlefield. I shot a
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look at Masego but he seemed as surprised as I was. Not his work, and
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neither of Lady Ranger's pupils could do magic as far as I knew. A
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consequence of Hakram's finally formed aspect? \emph{Ah. Juniper.} Of
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course she had a contingency in case the demon actually showed up. We'd
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been fairly certain it wouldn't but the Hellhound wasn't one for leaving
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things to chance. The mages who'd helped Masego with the ritual had been
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given an additional set of instructions, was my guess. Why hadn't she
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told me, though? Because I'd been crippled? The thought made me grind my
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teeth, but I dismissed it as unfair. Juniper had not treated me any
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differently after my failed foray into dream visions.
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So what was it about the nature of our opponent now that would make her
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wilfully keep me in the dark? It was a demon, and very dangerous. Not
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much of a justification there, even if it was a demon of --
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\emph{corruption.} Oh. It was a given I'd be in the thick of any fight
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with the abomination, and the longer I stayed there the higher the
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chances I got corrupted. She hadn't told me the contingency plan because
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I might end up being the Fifteenth's opponent, before the battle was
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done. I felt a flare of grudging admiration for my grim-faced legate:
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she didn't balk in the face of bad scenarios. She prepared for them
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however she needed to, and if someone's feelings got hurt then so much
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for that. Still the ward, for I was pretty sure that was what it was,
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that had sealed off the avenue wouldn't be enough on its own.
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Given enough time I might be able to break through it and Masego
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definitely could which likely meant the demon could as well. So it was
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meant as a containment measure, until the actual killing stroke could be
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readied. That might very well explain why I hadn't seen trace of
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Robber's sappers since their scrap with the devils, and I doubted this
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was the last contingency she'd had the Legion mages lay. Had Kilian been
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privy to all of this, I wondered? She must have been, as Senior Mage. I
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wasn't quite sure how I felt about that, but now was not the time to
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linger on the subject of my lover. Hunter had been -- well, doing pretty
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good against the demon actually.
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\emph{``Feel the might of my wrath, hellspawn!''}
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Could have done without the heroic declarations, but I wasn't about to
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look this useful of a gift horse in the mouth. The haft of Hunter's
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spear spun and caught the bloody form of the demon in the mouth,
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scattering the guts that made it up. Lack of head did not seem to hinder
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it: it grasped for the hero with misshapen hands, only for a violent
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explosion of blinding light to knock it back. I had to close my eyes,
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and even after that my vision swam. Of the demon there was only a
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smoking smear on the ground left, but I knew better than to get my hopes
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up. Screams came from the few remaining Silver Spears as flesh and
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corruption began to flake away from them, sliding to the ground in
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trickles. From some of my legionaries too, I saw, and I found Nauk's
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eyes across the battlefield. Feeling sick in the stomach, I inclined my
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head in their direction and slid a finger across my throat. He grimaced
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but nodded -- crossbow quarrels took the afflicted men in the back
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moments later. It didn't stop the demon. The flecks of flesh slithered
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across the ground until they formed some sort of foul pile, then began
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coalescing into a larger form.
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``Apprentice,'' I called out. ``We need options. Can you banish it?''
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The dark-skinned mage shook his head.
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``Not from inside the threshold,'' he said.
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Bloody, Burning Hells. Had it planned that? Known that as long as we
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covered the city in a ritual, we couldn't trap it in a ward and force it
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back to the Hell it had escaped? Demons weren't supposed to be sentient
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but this one had proved capable of deception. \emph{Then again, so are
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animals.} Anyhow, who knew what being bound to an Imperial standard for
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a few hundred years could do to a creature like that?
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``What \emph{can} you do?'' I asked.
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Apprentice let out a long breath.
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``I can go all out,'' he said. ``But you'll need to buy me time.''
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Well, Black had never promised this would be an easy job. I glanced at
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Archer, who'd allowed the string of her bow to slacken as she eyed the
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forming body of the demon. No immediate solution from there. I found
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Hakram already looking at me when I turned towards him and sighed.
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``Fuck it,'' I said. ``Not like running's going to help.''
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He snorted and we moved towards the enemy as one. Getting the child-form
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brutalized by a hero had apparently prompted the abomination to trade up
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for a larger model: the coalescing shape was easily the size of a
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two-story house. Not as thick though: two clawed legs with half a dozen
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articulations had already formed to supports its spindly torso, but
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offhand I counted at least five arms aggregating flesh into long limbs
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touching the ground. That the fingers at the end of those limbs looked
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suspiciously human-like wasn't something I wanted to think about too
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much. At first I thought it wouldn't bother to make a head but when a
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long, thick strand of skin formed and started dangling from the torso I
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realized with disgust I'd been wrong. At the end of the strand a bubble
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of flesh expanded, sprouting eyes by the dozens that were set in dark
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purpled flesh. Muscles popped from underneath the bubble and grew large
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horse-like teeth, because apparently it hadn't been looking nightmarish
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enough.
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While Hakram and I moved, Hunter hadn't been wasting his time. The tip
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of his spear wreathed in light, he charged forward with a wince-inducing
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war cry. The hero scythed through one of the arm-limbs effortlessly,
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only to back away with haste when it started crawling close to his legs.
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While he put some distance between them, the demon picked up the limb
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with another arm and casually shoved it into what was likely supposed to
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be its spine. With a wet squelch, the severed limb re-joined the whole.
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\emph{Well, that's going to be problematic.} We arrived at Hunter's side
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just as the abomination put on the finishing touches on its form.
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``If we can hold it back for a while, Apprentice has something that will
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harm it enough for you to finish it off,'' I said.
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``Squire,'' he greeted me with disdain. ``You are only slightly less of
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a blight upon Creation than this thing.''
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``If I could cut off your hand twice, I would,'' I replied cheerfully.
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``There, we're friends now. Maybe we could attend the thing that wants
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to swallow all of the city?''
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He sneered, but did not disagree.
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``I'll take the lead, minion of Dark,'' he decided, and before I could
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argue he was charging again.
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``You know he has another hand, right?'' Adjutant said. ``So
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technically\ldots{}''
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I didn't have time to reply because the fight had finally started again.
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Hunter, either entirely fearless or magnificently stupid, had slipped
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under the demon's jaw and was evading its limbs with impossible
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swiftness while scoring wounds on its abdomen. The light on his spear
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had dimmed, but heroic Names must have been painful to the monster: it
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was ignoring us and focusing on him. Even limping close to the demon was
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enough for me to feel the corruption wafting from it, creeping at the
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edge of my mind. I gritted my teeth and pushed back against the feeling,
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ducking under a flailing limb and hacking through the tip with my sword.
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The dark ichor that spilled from the wound blackened the steel, but I'd
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have to worry about that later -- as long as it didn't touch my skin I
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should be fine. I could have used a helmet right about now, though.
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From the corner of my eye I saw movement headed for Hakram's back, but
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there was a sharp whistle and an arrow took the corrupted man-at-arms in
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the throat -- the mercenary collapsed to the ground twitching, then
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suddenly burst on fire. Archer has a few tricks up her sleeves,
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apparently, and we could stop worrying about the last of the enemy host
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getting to us. Arrows kept singing as Hakram and I started methodically
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going for one limb after the other, one of us getting close enough to
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bait a strike and the other hacking through while it was overextended.
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Eventually it realized that while Hunter's spear was more painful the
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villains were doing more actual damage: it flexed its legs and with a
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push forced itself upright on two hands, spinning in a whirl of limbs
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that forced all of us back. Hunter got slapped away by a hand and the
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part of his bare chest it touched started warping but he screamed and
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another burst of violent light burned away the corruption, leaving only
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singed flesh.
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The legs wriggled back into the demon's torso with a squelch and spray
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of ichor, bursting back out in front as it steadied its footing. I
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frowned. Staying too close wasn't an option for Hakram or me, given how
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much more vulnerable to corruption we were. Hunter would have to handle
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that part. What could we do that would actually hurt it, though? Three
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times we'd cut away an arm, only for it to shove it back somewhere more
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convenient to attack us with. I glanced at Apprentice, who fifteen feet
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away from all this was kneeling on the ground with his eyes closed and
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his palms held upright. \emph{Gods Below, Masego, you could have at
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least gone further away.} Sweat was dripping from the bespectacled
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mage's forehead, and even from where I stood I could feel the weight of
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the power he was gathering. No incantation though. \emph{Unusual, that.}
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How much longer would he need? There was no way to know for sure.
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Wreathing my sword with my Name was no longer an option, both because I
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was running low on power and because I didn't like the looks of what the
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demon blood had done to the blade. \emph{Don't think of this as a fight,
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Catherine, it's a puzzle. How do you solve it?} To keep it contained,
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its mobility needed to be hindered. Simply cutting off the limbs was
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useless. What else did I have in my arsenal? The avenue was thick with
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corpses and I could probably raise one, but given the nature of the
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demon that would be more liability than asset. I didn't know what would
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happen if it touched a corpse with my Name's power invested in it, or if
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it could reach through the strings I used to control my necromantic
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constructs. I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them. No obvious
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solutions, so I'd just have to try things. Hunter charged in again with
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a cry, so it was time for round two.
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Adjutant moved like an extension of my body, always where I needed him
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to be exactly when I needed him there. Something about his Name, or had
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we simply been through enough battlefields together? I half-stepped out
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of an arm's way and scored a long mark against the side but it wasn't a
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strong enough hit to go through. No matter, Adjutant finished the work a
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moment later with the side of his sword, bringing up his shield to
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prevent the blood from touching him. The demon picked up the arm but
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disdained putting it back this time: instead it swung it at us like a
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mace. I knew, even as I saw the hit coming, that I wouldn't be able to
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get out in the way in time. Not with the way my leg was hobbled. Hakram
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squared his shoulders and I felt his Name flare up, but it wouldn't be
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enough. I still remembered how drained using an aspect for the first
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time had left me: that he'd been able to fight at all afterwards was a
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testament to orc constitution. With a sharp whistle, an arrow fell on
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the mace limb. Larger than the previous ones, and spinning wildly on
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itself, it tore through the flesh and dispersed it like smoke before
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clattering uselessly against the ground.
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Saved, for now. I glanced to where the Silver Spears had been and now
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stood only a field of corpses. Weeping Heavens, she'd killed at least
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forty corrupted men in less time than it took to say morning prayers. A
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good person to have on yours side, Archer. Oversized fingers spread
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against the ground and pushed the demon up as it tried to swing its legs
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at Hunter, but the man deftly dropped to the ground and let the limbs
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pass above him. That was as much attention as I could grant the hero,
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because some of the other fingers weren't merely holding up our
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opponent. They were scrabbling around the broken pavestones and took a
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handful, carelessly tossing them in Masego's direction. I cursed: it had
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been too much to hope for that it wouldn't notice what was going on
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there.
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I reached for the last scrapings of my power, formed a spear of shadows
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and shot it without missing a beat, bursting through a pavestone and
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clipping another. There were four other rocks flying and the same
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spinning arrows took out one, then a second, then a third -- until the
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angle took the last beyond Archer's angle of fire. It would hit
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Apprentice in the head, I gauged. And kill him instantly. \emph{Fuck,
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fuck fuck}-- Adjutant stepped in front of Masego, shield up and legs
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spread. The impact caved in the shield and broke the arm behind it, but
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the orc remained on his feet and the stone fell to the ground. Teeth
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bared, Hakram ripped away the useless wreck of steel and forced back his
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arm in its socket with a horrible cracking sound. Gods, he hadn't even
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screamed or flinched. Just\ldots{} taken it, and moved on. Slowly,
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Apprentice rose to his feet. I called out for Hunter to run and he did
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so without argument for once, scything the lesser half of an arm on his
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way out and leaping through a house's window with all the grace of a
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rushing bull.
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Lines of flame rose from the ground into the sky from all over the city,
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too numerous to count. The threads of fire linked into a single point
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high above the demon and I finally understood what Masego had been
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doing. He'd broken his ritual, piece by piece, and taken the wild flames
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that would have exploded from the hearths as his own. \emph{Usurpation
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is the essence of sorcery}, Apprentice had once told me, paraphrasing
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some Dread Emperor. He'd usurped his own work, and was now bringing its
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full strength to bear against our enemy. From the point where all the
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flames had gathered an enormous pillar of flame descended, enveloping
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the demon in the blink of an eye. I'd half-excepted the spell to
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disappear after a moment, but it kept on going. There was a strange
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sound coming from our mage's direction, and I realized with a start it
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was a laugh. Masego was grinning madly as he convulsed in laughter, the
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glare of the flames reflecting on his glasses as he peered over them at
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his work. His hands were thrusting forward, unmoving as the fire raged
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and waves of heat scorched stone and distorted the air.
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How long we stood there, watching the son of the Sovereign of the Red
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Skies proving the truth of his lineage, I did not know. Long enough for
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my limbs to turn mellow as the stress of the fight left me, and long
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enough for Hunter to burst out of a different house than the one he'd
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entered and join us. Archer leapt down from her perch moments later,
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eyes wary.
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``Will that kill it?'' she asked.
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I chuckled tiredly. ``Well, it probably won't be moving for a while.
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We'll still need Hunter to finish the fight: I don't think Masego will
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have enough juice left to cage and banish it after that.''
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She arched a fine eyebrow.
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``That was an option?''
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``From what I understand,'' I said, ``our chances of managing to trap it
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if it saw us coming were\ldots{} not promising. This is probably as good
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as the Fifteenth can reasonably have expected this fight to have gone.''
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Hunter himself was studiously ignoring us, and I returned him the
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courtesy. He'd been eager enough to attack so far, I had no doubts he'd
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finish the monster off when the time came. Hakram was more important to
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me, and I had to limp as quick as I physically could to catch the orc
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when he began to collapse.
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``I think I'm done for the night, Cat,'' he rasped.
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``You did good, Hakram,'' I murmured, gently setting him down against a
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wall. ``Better than anyone had a right to expect.''
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``I-'' he started, but exhaustion caught up with him.
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His mouthed closed and unconsciousness finally took hold of his body.
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``Steady fighter, this one,'' Archer commented.
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``The steadiest,'' I agreed softly.
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Masego's spell showed no sign of thinning. I limped to his side and put
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a hand on his shoulder.
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``How much longer?'' I asked.
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He remained silent for a moment. At the edge of my sight, Hunter raised
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his spear -- immediately, my hand dropped to my sword and I cursed
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myself for having ever sheathed it. I'd thought the hero too
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straightforward to turn on us, but now that the battle was done he must
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have thought he could take us out when weakened and then take care of
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the demon on his own. Shit, what side was Archer going to take? She was
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the least tired among us.
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Hunter spat blood, and the demon's hand finished ripping its way through
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his chest.
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It looked almost human now, though naked and with unsettlingly large
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eyes. Archer's retort hit him in the throat but it didn't even seem to
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notice. It withdrew its hand from the dead hero and tossed him at
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Masego, breaking the mage's concentration -- the column of flame
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immediately rippled, then went up in an explosion that flattened all of
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us to the ground. I forced down a scream of pain as my bad leg snapped
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at an angle but desperately scrabbled back to my feet just in time to
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see the demon go for Apprentice. The same blue panes of light that had
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stopped the corrupted monster earlier materialized in front of the mage
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when the abomination leapt at him, holding it at arm's length as its
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caressed the magical shield. Masego grunted as I moved to flank the
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demon, the shield light bursting and throwing it back. The impact had
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wiggled the arrow in its throat, spraying blood in an arc as it landed
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fluidly on its feet.
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A single drop landed on Apprentice's left wrist. Immediately he brought
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up the other hand, the tip of a finger glowing red-orange, and with a
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hoarse scream he cauterized the skin. Would that be enough? Shit. It had
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to be. I heard Archer unsheathe her blades and the demon lazily turned
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to look at me. It took a step, and then stilled. The sound of hooves
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against stone was heard in the distance, coming towards us from where
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the Silver Spears had once stood. The pace was unhurried, like the rider
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had all the time in the world. I let out a breath of relief.
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\emph{Black.} My teacher had come for us. Through the smoke and dust
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kicked up by the breaking of Masego's spell, a single silhouette rode. A
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cage of bright red and green flames formed around the demon, spinning
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slowly at first and then quickening until it took the shape of a
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whirling cone and then \emph{burst}, tearing into the sky so high the
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whole city must have been able to see it. Behind it, no trace of the
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demon remained. The horse was reined in twenty feet away from us, and
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finally I was able to make out the rider.
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``Well,'' Heiress spoke with a pleasant smile. ``Quite a mess you've
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made here, Squire.''
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