388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{heroic-interlude-prise-au-fer}{%
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\chapter*{Heroic Interlude -- Prise au
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Fer}\label{heroic-interlude-prise-au-fer}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{heroic-interlude-prise-au-fer}} \chaptermark{Heroic Interlude -- Prise au Fer}
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\epigraph{``There is nowhere angels fear to tread.''}{Callowan proverb}
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William's mother had been a woman of some education, a knight's
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daughter. His father had only barely known how to read and always deeply
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distrusted any writing but the Book of All Things, which was said to
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have been spoken to the minds of mortal men by the Gods. It had been his
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mother who'd taught him his numbers and letters, and she'd been the one
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to keep his attention on the lessons by weaving stories from ancient
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Callowan rulers into them. The Queen of Blades had been the kind of
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vivid story that fascinated, never once defeated in battle though her
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invasion of Daoine had failed. So had the story of Eleanor Fairfax, the
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knight turned founder of the Fairfax dynasty who'd risen in rebellion
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against Triumphant when the Dread Empress had ruled over the entire
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continent. Now, though, as he walked the streets of Liesse alone and the
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moon was high in the sky, it was a king's words he remembered. So had
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spoken Jehan the Wise: ``Evil is cruel, and so men think it follows that
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Good is kind. This is a mistake, my son. Though fire is warm and in the
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dark of night we huddle around it, it also \emph{burns.''}
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This had unsettled him, as a child. Jehan had been Named, the Good King.
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A hero. Why be so wary of the very power he wielded? He understood now.
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Had ever since he'd gone into the wilderness half-mad and been presented
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with the face of Contrition. He'd seen the searing fires and felt them
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scour his soul clear. There were sorceries in the East -- and even in
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some of the Free Cities -- that could make a slave of a man. There were
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some who would compare standing in the presence of a Hashmallim to such
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a thing, but that was a fundamental misunderstanding of the thing.
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William had seen his life through their eyes. Every sin, every wrong,
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every petty unthinking cruelty. All of it without the veil of lies
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everyone cloaked themselves in without even realizing it. The lies of
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well-meaning and wilfully chosen ignorance. It had stripped William of
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his delusions and allowed him to see what he truly was.
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Just a man, and not a particularly Good one.
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He'd gone through those fires and come out a sword of the Heavens,
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handed a single feather from the wing of Contrition to see its will done
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upon Creation. Had they known, even then? Perhaps they had. Angels saw
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deeper into the nature of the world than mortals could, beyond
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artificial constructs like time. There was, to them, no difference
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between the first step of a journey and the last. That was what really
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changed people, when they met angels. The realization that in the end
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they were nothing but an assembly of sins. Choirs helped you accept this
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truth differently. Those touched by Compassion never took another life
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again, not even those of the worst monsters in Creation. Those touched
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by Mercy spent their days alleviating suffering wherever they went.
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Those touched by Judgement\ldots{} did not survive the experience,
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should they be found wanting. Contrition was different from the others,
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in a sense.
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The Hashmallim had never once forced anyone to take up the sword to
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fight Evil, but then they'd never once had to ask. Once you saw the
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truth of yourself and then then truth of Creation, what was left but to
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take arms? The only path to contrition was to leave the world a better
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place than you'd found it -- and how could lesser be solutions be
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tolerated when so large a part of Calernia was still under the yoke of
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the Gods Below?
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Nine crusades had been waged, all in all. Of those, five had been led by
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heroes aligned to the Choir of Contrition. Sometimes it amused William
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that the red cross that was the mark of all crusaders had been a symbol
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provided by the Dread Empire. Triumphant, in all her cruel madness, had
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been fond of having children crucify their own parents as a sign of
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obeisance. She'd paid for it eventually, when a Duchess of Daoine who'd
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consigned her own father to the cross met with an idealistic young
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knight named Eleanor Fairfax. Eleanor had been touched by Contrition,
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and when she rose in rebellion all of the continent gathered behind her
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banner and carried it all the way to the foot of the Tower. In the
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beginning only the Duchess' soldiers had worn the cross, but symbols
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spread -- by the time Triumphant's empire was pulled down on her head
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every man and woman in that army had a scrap of red cloth sown on their
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clothes. Or branded into their skin.
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And so the First Crusade came to an end. The Second came when the Praesi
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rose in revolt against the crusader kingdoms their realm had been
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divided into, and they were crushed into dust. When the Wastelanders
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rose the second time, though, they were led by the man who would become
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Dread Emperor Terribilis II. The Third Crusade ended in disaster and the
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end of the crusader nations -- to further compound the disgrace, a
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weakened Callow was occupied by Procer in its wake. The Fourth Crusade,
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a last-ditch attempt to reclaim Praes, was drowned in such a sea of
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blood by Terribilis that never again was a crusade to turn East. After
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that the four crusades that followed were led by the hand of Contrition.
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Failures, all of them, for they were fighting the Dead King and his
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realm of horrors, a monster who called even devils to heel. Of those it
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was the Seventh Crusade that William found important, for as far as he
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knew it was the only time in the history of Calernia a Hashmallim had
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come into Creation.
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Contrition had touched Salia, the capital of the Principate of Procer,
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and every soul inside had taken the cross -- including the First Prince
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of the time. The rest of the continent had gathered behind that holy
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host, and for a time it seemed the endless hordes of the dead would
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finally run out. Siege was laid to Keter, the seat of the Dead King and
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ancient capital of his derelict kingdom. They'd lost, in the end. The
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Dead King has poisoned the land and called forth infernal hosts until
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there was nothing left standing in front of him but bones. But they'd
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come \emph{close.} Liesse was smaller than Salia, only a hundred
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thousand people lived within the walls, but it was not the Kingdom of
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the Dead it would fight. Malicia was no great warlord, not the way
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Terribilis had been, and her greatest general was getting old. Sooner or
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later, a hero would finally manage to slay the Black Knight.
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The First Prince of Procer was plotting a Tenth Crusade, holed up in her
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capital, and William would give it to her. But it would not be a
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Proceran enterprise, and it would not end with Callow as her
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protectorate. The rest of Calernia would not stand for that sin being
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committed a second time. The Lone Swordsman came upon the shores of the
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Hengest lake and looked up at the stars, breathing out slowly. There
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were small docks with fishing boats further down the waterside but that
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would not take him where he was headed. Every Callowan child knew there
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was a holy place somewhere in the waters, an island said to be untouched
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by war and the depredations of time alike. An island, it was said, but
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none could be seen from the city. Boots in the sand, William watched the
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shining waters and waited.
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The white ship came, a small thing rowboat without any trace of an oar.
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It did not float so much as glide, the swan-shaped prow and stern almost
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lifelike. It beached in front of him and without a word William climbed
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on board, sitting on the only seat. It had been a clear night out but
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the ship led them into mist. How long he sat there alone with only the
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dark waters and the mist for company, he could not say. He'd been into
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Arcadia Resplendent, where time ran to a different stream than in
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Creation, but this was different. Whatever lay ahead was not in another
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realm, just a part of this one mortals were not lightly given access to.
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The Penitent's Blade, always at his hip, was warm to the touch. It felt
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the proximity of its likeness. An angel had died in the waters of the
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Hengest, the legend went. He would soon find out the truth of that. He
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didn't see the island until they were almost upon it, to his surprise.
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Pale sands formed a perfect circle in the water, entirely bare for a
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small chapel of roughly hewn stone.
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William had been to Laure before and seen its beautiful cathedrals. He'd
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seen the many basilicas of the south, for that matter, and the
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outrageous wealth and splendour of Salia -- capital of the mightiest
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nation on Calernia. For all that, the sight of that small chapel brought
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out\ldots{} something in him. A sense of wonder. There were no grand
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materials or sculptures: it was, in truth, little more than a stone
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house with a pointed ceiling and a tower. The ship beached on the sands
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in perfect silence and the Lone Swordsman stepped onto the shore. There
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was, he now saw, no bell in the tower. Yet there was an empty space for
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one, a bar of ancient wood to hang it from. It was the first
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imperfection he'd glimpsed here, and he almost frowned at the sight.
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Dismissing the thought, he strode inside through the open door.
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There were seven rows of benches on each side, little more than bare
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slabs of stone. No murals on the walls of paintings on the ceiling. Even
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the window in the back was without stained glass, revealing only endless
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waters blanked by swirling mists. For all that, he felt a little awed.
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The chapel felt unearthly, more than even Arcadia had. It was too real.
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The stone was the very essence of stone, the air the very essence of
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air: the only intruder here was him, a living imperfection in an
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otherwise flawless scene. Beyond the benches lay a small altar of pale
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stone, with a single mark on it. A sigil. It was a sinuous, complicated
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thing but his mind could not help but perceive it as the number three,
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in Miezan numerals. The Penitent's Blade was so warm it almost burned
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his fingers when he touched the handle.
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``You know what happens next, don't you?''
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Almorava's voice was soft, almost kind. He was not surprised she'd
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turned up, though he glanced in her direction nonetheless. She was
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seated to his right, for once without a bottle in hand. Even she would
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not desecrate this place with idle drinking.
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``The sword goes into the stone,'' he said. ``I may not know stories the
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way you do, but I know that.''
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He'd also stay in prayer until dawn. There would be exactly seven hours
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left before the sun rose, no matter when he started praying. These
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things saw themselves into being.
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``I wonder what the last hero though, when they called on Contrition,''
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he said quietly. ``If they had doubts, too.''
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``She didn't,'' Almorava replied. ``The White Knight was in Salia, when
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the Dead King's offer came. Five hundred children every year for peace
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on the borders. That the First Prince even considered it had her in such
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disgust she did it that very same night.''
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He didn't ask how she knew that. He wasn't sure he'd liked the answer.
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Heroes were bound to the lifespan of a mortal, unlike villains, but the
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Wandering Bard had always known too much about things she seemed much
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too young to ever have witnessed with her own eyes. Perhaps it was part
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of her Name. \emph{Perhaps it is something else entirely.}
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``A better woman than me, then,'' William said. ``I know what I will be
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putting them through. It is not a gentle thing.''
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``Good doesn't have to be nice,'' Almorava murmured. ``Just righteous.''
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The Lone Swordsman remained standing, looking at the pale stone and the
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sigil on it.
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``She could take the Fifteenth out of range,'' he finally said.
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``Forty-nine hours is more than enough time.''
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``She won't, though,'' the Bard replied. ``That's not her nature. She's
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the very worst kind of villain, you see -- the kind who thinks they're
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doing the right thing. In that sense, she's even more dangerous than her
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teacher. He doesn't labour under that impression.''
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``And us?'' he asked. ``Are we also just clutching a delusion? I had a
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talk with Thief, before coming here. She told me she's staying for the
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siege, but that she'll be leaving Callow afterwards.''
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Some vestige of amusement quirked his lips.
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``She was, I believe, quite disgusted with me.''
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``Thief sees Creation through the lens of her Name,'' Almorava said.
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``That allows her more clarity than you'd think, but people with her
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kind of Role are not meant to look at a broader picture. She fights what
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she perceives as injustice wherever she sees it, but she'll never root
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out the causes.''
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The same, he thought, could be said of so many heroes. Theirs was a
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losing fight, from the onset. You could bring down the mighty who abused
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their power, turn back the great tides of Evil that would sweep over
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mankind, but how could a single person change the world? There was a
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reason for that, he believed. The Heavens had put the Fate of mankind in
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the hands of mankind, not the Named. Heroes, given extraordinary
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abilities, were meant to deal with extraordinary threats. Not to take
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the reins of the world.
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``There are no root causes,'' he said tiredly. ``Or only one, if you
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prefer. People are people, with all the flaws that come with that. We
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strive to do Good and fall short, because we're not meant for
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perfection. Sometimes I wonder if it's all just a great jest at our
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expense, Almorava. If they placed a better world just out of our reach
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so that they can watch us try and fail to touch it.''
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The Bard hummed. ``Did you know it's a matter of some debate among the
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priests of the House of Light whether or not Evil is inherent to the
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soul?''
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William was Liessen: of course he knew that. Even after the Conquest the
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brothers and sisters were everywhere in the south of Callow, and their
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public debates on theological matters were considered a good show in
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most villages. People actually travelled to witness famous debaters at
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work. There was a great deal of betting involved, which was a lot less
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pious, but people tended to remember the arguments made even after money
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changed hands.
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``Are you about to impart some great revelation onto me?'' he asked.
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``That debate has been raging for as long as the House has stood, and
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some say the priests who built it were arguing as they lay the stones.''
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``I think it's a very interesting question, when you look at the current
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breed of villains we're dealing with,'' the Bard said. ``There's only
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three that matter: the Empress, the Knight and the Squire.''
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Almorava raised a finger.
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``Malicia has made a point of of improving the lot of common Callowans
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whenever she can. Purely out of self-interest, but she does it
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nonetheless.''
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She raised a second finger.
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``The Big Guy is stricter about enforcing those laws of the old kingdom
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he kept than the Fairfaxes were before him. He's not gentle about it,
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but he keeps order and enforces something that looks like justice if you
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squint a bit.''
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A third finger.
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``Foundling. Well, you've met her yourself. She thinks she's saving
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Callow. You could argue her intentions are heroic, even if she's a
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little more complicated than that.''
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``You despise the Empire even more than I do,'' the hero frowned. ``Yet
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this seems like a fairly impassioned defence of it.''
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``The thing is, William,'' she said, ignoring his interjection.
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``They're not the first villains to ever win a few battles. It's without
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precedent for the Empire to keep Callow for over twenty years, though.
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Why are they different?''
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``We've never dealt with villains quite as skilled who did not
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compulsively backstab each other,'' the Lone Swordsman said. ``Or get
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killed by rivals.''
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``That's another thing, yes,'' Almorava said. ``There's loyalty there.
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Affection, even. Not traits you usually associate with villains. Not
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that they're incapable of them, but Names magnify everything you are --
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and you don't get to shake hands with the Gods Below by being a choir
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boy.''
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``I don't follow your point,'' William admitted.
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``These are some of the most successful villains in the history of the
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Empire,'' she said. ``And they became that by going through the motions
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of being Good.''
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The dark-haired man's brow rose. ``They are most definitely not.''
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``Oh, I'm not arguing that they are,'' the Bard said. ``See, I think
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that we \emph{are} born Evil. Because Evil is instinct. It's that animal
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part of us that wants things for ourselves no matter what it does to
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others. It's been dressed up in philosophy since, but that's the heart
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of it.''
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She smiled mirthlessly.
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``But I want to believe that when the Gods made us, they gave us thought
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as well as instinct. We teach ourselves to be Good, William. Because we
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want to be better. It's not as easy but maybe, just maybe, if we do it
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long enough it will be what comes naturally to us.''
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``So you're saying the \emph{Carrion Lord} is trying to be Good?'' he
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said sceptically.
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``I'm saying these are the first villains in a long time who're going
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with thought instead of instinct,'' Almorava replied. ``It's why they're
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weaker, too. They're leaning in the wrong direction and it has
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\emph{cost} them.''
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``I don't see how that makes anything better,'' the Lone Swordsman
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sighed.
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``Earlier, you spoke of a root cause. People being people, was it?
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Except people are learning, William. Even the other side's noticed, to
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the extent that they try to bastardize what we are. They say that the
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Heavens gave us laws, but that's not really true is it? What they
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actually gave us is guidelines, to make a better world. \emph{And it's
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working}.''
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The Wandering Bard rose to her feet. Almorava wasn't pretty, though in
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some light she could be called striking. The dark skin, curly hair and
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strong nose made her face interesting to look at but not so attractive
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to be intimidating. Normally she had her lute, but tonight it was
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nowhere in sight. She always wore the same clothes of silk and leather,
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but this time they were freshly cleaned. \emph{And for once she doesn't
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smell like a brewery}, William added a little less kindly.
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``Day by day,'' she said. ``Year by year, century by century -- we're
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making Creation a better place. Even the bottom of the barrel is pulled
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up when you hoist the whole thing.''
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``It's a pretty thought,'' the hero said. ``Doesn't help all of us who
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live in Creation now instead of in a hundred years, though.''
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``I know,'' she said, laying a hand on his shoulder. ``But I don't want
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you to put that sword into that stone thinking it's for nothing. We're
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part of something larger than us, William of Greenbury. Something that
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uses us \emph{sorely}. But\ldots{}''
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``Good doesn't have to be nice,'' he quietly echoed her words from
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earlier. ``Just righteous.''
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He'd shivered, when she'd said his full name. He'd never told it to her,
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and no one had called him by that in years. What felt like a lifetime
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ago. Almorava stayed close to him and for a moment he thought she was
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going to kiss him. She'd certainly not been subtle about being attracted
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to him, or to quite a few other people. If she did, he would turn away.
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Instead she lay her head on his chest and looped her arms around him,
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sighing quietly. After a moment he hugged her back.
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``Every time,'' she whispered. ``You poor Contrition fools break my
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heart every time.''
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She drew away, hand lingering on his chest, and left without another
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word. Silently, William of Greenbury stepped to the altar. He unsheathed
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the Penitent's Blade and slid it inside smoothly, the sword entering
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without resistance or leaving a mark. He knelt before the stone and
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closed his eyes. Behind all that Almorava had said about thought and
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instinct, he found a deeper truth. It Evil was truly inherent, as she
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seemed to believe, then to be Good was to make a choice. The thought
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moved him more than he thought it would.
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``It is, we are told, the only choice that really matters,'' he
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murmured.
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The last line of the first page from the Book of All Things. He was
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making his choice, tonight. For seven hours he would pray, and then
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return to Liesse.
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Forty-nine hours later, a Hashmallim would come into Creation the exact
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moment he died.
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