470 lines
22 KiB
TeX
470 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-10-release}{%
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\section{Chapter 10: Release}\label{chapter-10-release}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Did you really think I wouldn't cheat just because I was already
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winning?''}
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⁃ Dread Emperor Terribilis II
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\end{quote}
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``Oh? Things are about to-'' the Bard started, but I interrupted.
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``\textbf{Shut up},'' I Spoke, and wasn't watching her mouth snap shut
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the most satisfying thing I'd seen all week?
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The heroine tried to open her mouth, struggling in vain against the
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compulsion. That should take care of that, at least for a little while.
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The Hunter charged for me again but he was moving so very \emph{slowly}
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-- I stepped around the spear into his guard and opened him up from
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belly to throat with a single cut, letting him fall with a scream behind
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me as I stepped towards William without missing a beat. In the
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background Apprentice and the Conjurer had begun their magical duel
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anew, lights and shaped elements flying back and forth as the hero
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steadily lost ground. Things turned sour for the twit even worse when
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Kilian's mages started pitching in, a staggered flow of fireballs
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disrupting his casting and forcing him onto the defensive. They were
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adapting the rate of fire Legion doctrine taught to deal with dug in
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targets, barely a heartbeat passing between every strike. The mages
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would run out of juice in time, but hopefully by then Masego would have
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closed the deal. There were only so many times the Conjurer could bumble
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his way out of defeat: no Role could stave off death indefinitely.
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Hakram was keeping his opponent at bay by the skin of his teeth,
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collecting cuts but no wounds of any great import. His training was
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playing against him here: he'd never been taught to fight as a Named and
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legionaries were expected to kill in properly ordered ranks. Duels
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weren't taught in the War College, and that was one of the reasons the
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remnants of the barricade legionaries were getting mauled by enemy
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soldiers. That they'd been caught flat-footed and dispersed didn't help,
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sure, but when it came down to it Callowan swordsmen were just better at
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fighting out of formation. In a contest of shield walls the Empire would
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win nine times out of ten, but chaotic melees were a poor fit for a
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stabbing short sword and unwieldy tower shield. \emph{Warriors against
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soldiers. They won't last much longer.} Didn't matter: ultimately, all
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the other fights were sideshows. Black had always stressed that the
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place of a Named on the battlefield was to find the fulcrum, the tipping
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point, and then to yank that lever as hard as you could.
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For tonight's battle, there was no denying that the fulcrum was my duel
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with the Lone Swordsman.
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``I think this one will go a little differently. I'm not half dead this
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time,'' I told William, casting away the wreck of my shield.
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The dark-haired man smiled. ``Night's still young,'' he replied.
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As someone who got into pissing contests with alarming regularity, I
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could admire a good line like that. As the Squire in charge of a city
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the bastard had been busy putting to the torch, I fully intended on
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making him eat the words along with a mouthful of dirt while I buried
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him alive. I raised my now-free hand and strands of shadow wove
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themselves around it, forming a wicked-looking spear. I tossed it at
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William with a grunt, aiming for his abdomen, but the green-eyed hero
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raised an insultingly skeptical eyebrow. His sword came down and slapped
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the projectile to the side, where it dug into the pavestones with a
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howl. I hadn't figured out how to make it stop doing that yet. I wasted
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a heartbeat in surprise, though I really shouldn't have. The spear trick
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might have been the most dangerous ranged option in my arsenal, but I'd
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already known William's sword was far from a normal one. The whole
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keening sound whenever it cut someone was a bit of a giveaway. I pushed
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the thoughts away: Struggle would only raise me up for so long, and if I
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failed to get a definitive advantage before it was done then I'd be
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facing a full strength Lone Swordsman while exhausted. That way lay bad
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things, and not the kind of bad villains worked with. I focused on the
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power, let out a deep breath and \emph{moved}.
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The stone under my feet broke as I barrelled forward towards William. He
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met me with calm, measured precision. His stance perfect even by the
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exacting standards of my teacher, he pivoted to let me pass him and
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struck for the back of my neck. I ducked under it, momentum carrying me
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in a slide on the stone, and cut at his legs. Pointless, now that he'd
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traded his leather duster and chainmail for actual plate, but just the
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force of the blow was enough to throw off his stance. He took a single
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step back and adjusted so he was facing me as I stood back up. He waited
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with his sword raised, unhurried. I was the one with a time limit, he
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could afford to let me go on the offensive and wait for me to make a
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mistake. I grimaced. For all that I'd stated that this fight would be
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different than the last one, I'd never had a real confrontation with the
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Swordsman before. Taking him by surprise when half-dead didn't count,
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and before that he'd trounced me effortlessly. Both our Roles were
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related to combat, but there was no denying that he was a better
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swordsman than I was a swordswoman. \emph{It's in his bloody Name, it
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shouldn't come as a surprise.}
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I probed his guard, hoping for him to move, but he didn't bite. Green
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eyes remained trained on me, that fucking little smile never leaving his
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face. My Name snarled at the sight of it and I let the power guide me,
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following the set of instincts that weren't my own but not someone
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else's. My arming sword came high, for his eyes, but he stepped into my
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guard and our forearms met. Sucker punching was usually what I would
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have gone for in a situation like that, but with his armour there was no
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point: I could hit hard and my gauntlets would add that little extra
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twist, but it wouldn't be enough to damage good plate. Instead I grabbed
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the back of his head and smashed it into mine, the top of my helmet
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slamming into his forehead. For once being this short had come in handy.
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He grunted but pushed me away, slicing at my sword hand without pause --
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I dropped my sword and caught the handle with the other one, ramming the
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pommel into his stomach. It wasn't enough: his fist caught me in the jaw
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and my teeth clattered together painfully. If he'd hit a moment later I
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might have bitten through my own tongue, I realized with a start.
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I used the fear like the fuel it was, weaving my Name into a lesser
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trick: the blast of dark power erupting from my hand threw him back.
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Finally, a solid hit. I wasted no time in weaving a few strands into a
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proper spear that took him right in the chest as he was trying to get
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up. I'd seen that working punch through plate, but aside from knocking
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him back again it left him unharmed. Weeping Heavens, what would it take
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to actually hurt him? Face still serene, William rose and went on the
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offensive. The flat of my blade slapped the side of his in a display of
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dexterity that would have been beyond me if not for my Name, carefully
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avoiding for either blade to bite into the other. I flowed into a cut
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that would have torn through his forearm if he hadn't kept pace, blade
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twirling and coming down on the top of my head. I felt the metal give
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but I mostly managed to step out of the blow, sweat pouring down my
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back. That had been close. Way, way too close. Another heartbeat and
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that screwed up sword of his would have hacked straight into my skull.
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``I see you're beginning to realize it,'' William spoke calmly.
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He didn't sound like he was gloating or dramatizing, for once. In fact,
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the moment blades had come out he'd turned into an entirely different
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man, the frills of his personality falling away to leave only naked
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steel intent on killing me.
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``The Bard was right,'' he noted. ``You have an aspect that serves as an
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equalizer.''
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``I'd be a little more worried about that, if I were you,'' I replied
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through gritted teeth.
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I'd been taught to fight by some of the most dangerous people to ever
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grace Praes, and they had kept me sharp over the last year. I came for
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his head again, and there was nothing uncertain about it this time. He
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needed to die. For all of this to work, he needed to \emph{die}. Darting
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back and forth around him, I put all the swiftness my Name granted me to
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work. The moment I stepped out of his field of vision I stepped into his
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dead angle and went for a crippling blow, but the Swordsman remained
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unfazed. He might as well have had eyes in the back of his head, given
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how easily he seemed to predict my movements.
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``That's the thing with Names, Squire,'' he continued in that same even
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tone. ``An equalizer can put you on even footing with me power-wise,
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but\ldots{}''
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He took a hand off his sword and caught my wrist with it a moment before
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my blade went through the back of his neck. I tried to blast him away
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but a flare of blinding power killed the manifestation of my Name before
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it could get anywhere.
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``\ldots{} but it doesn't account for \emph{skill},'' he finished, and
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his blade dug deep into my shoulder.
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The kick caught me in the stomach a moment later, sending me rolling on
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the stone with shoulder bleeding. I came to a stop on my back, the
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now-broken arrow I'd been shot with earlier seeking deeper into my body.
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I let out a hoarse cry and force myself to get up. \emph{Keep moving,
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keep fighting.} Hune would have reinforcements coming, I just need to
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stay alive a little longer.
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``You're a decent swordswoman, for someone who can't have been at it
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more than a year,'' William admitted casually. ``You even seem better at
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working your Name into the fight than I am.''
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``I'd blush,'' I gasped, raising my sword. ``But I don't think there's
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enough blood left to spare.''
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Heartbeat by heartbeat, my Name's power bled out. And with it went the
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burst of energy I'd felt, the wall that had prevented me from feeling
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the pain in my body. My acrobatics had torn something in my leg and all
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the jumping had wiggled the arrowhead around enough that muscles had
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been cut into. My shoulder was a bloody mess, and with it went my sword
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arm. I traded hands with my sword, but I was painfully aware I was much
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sloppier with my left. Against an opponent of this calibre, I might as
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well have been waving a stick. Gods, I felt tired. My eyes wanted to
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close, to let me sink into a sleep where all the pain and throbbing
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would go away.
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``This? This is what I do. I've been learning the sword since I could
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walk,'' William said, smiling mirthlessly. ``I am not a general, you
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see. I am not a politician or a scholar. I'm self-aware enough to know
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I'm not even particularly clever.''
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It saddened me that I was too tired and sluggish to make something out
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of that.
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``All I'm good for is swinging a sword, Squire,'' the Lone Swordsman
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told me, ``but sometimes, that's all that's needed.''
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The blade rose, and a bolt of lightning struck him in the face.
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``Would you \emph{shut up} already?'' Kilian snarled, strands of energy
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whirling around her.
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William fell to the ground, body wracked with spasms as the redhead
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continued to pour power into the spell.
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``Hakram,'' she yelled. ``Take care of this, she's badly wounded.''
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My vision was swimming but I recognized my adjutant's silhouette ambling
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towards the Swordsman.
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``Finish him,'' I croaked. ``Quick, before he recovers.''
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Kilian laid a hand on my shoulder and whispered a few words, frowning
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when the wound failed to heal.
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``I can't do much more than stop the bleeding,'' she told me.
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``The sword,'' I said. ``It's\ldots{} wrong.''
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``Preaching to the choir here,'' she replied as she passed a hand
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wreathed in a green glow over my wound. ``Just looking at it gives me a
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headache, there's no way that thing is made of metal.''
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She helped me back to my feet. With a rush of panic, I saw William was
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already on his, sidestepping Hakram's blows effortlessly. Fucking Hells,
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what would it take to put the man down? I knew heroes were more durable
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than most, but this was ridiculous. I frowned as a thought suddenly
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struck me.
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``If Hakram's here, where's the Thief?'' I asked.
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``She disappeared after he punched her in the face,'' the redhead
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snorted. ``I guess she's not the fighting type.''
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``So to speak,'' an amused voice acknowledged from behind her.
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The short-haired woman appeared out of thin air, dagger in hand aimed at
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Kilian's back. No.~I tried to push the redhead down but I knew before
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moving that I'd be too slow and \emph{no}.
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``None of that,'' Masego growled, snapping a hand in our direction.
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An invisible force yanked the Thief back in the air, her eyes widening
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in fear and surprise as she continued to gather speed until the spell
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threw her through the window of a house on the other side of the street.
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The bespectacled boy winked in my direction before contemptuously
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slapping aside a fireball sent in his direction by the Conjurer who was
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still, against all odds, standing. The patches of darkened skin had
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spread over most of his face by now, though his other eye remained
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untouched.
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``Kilian, go back to your line,'' I spoke urgently.
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``I hear that,'' she muttered, face pale.
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Coming that close to death had a way of shaking people. Well, sane
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people anyway. The jury was still out on whether I qualified for that.
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She smiled at me and opened her mouth to speak, I followed her eyes and
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saw William casually rip up his sword, tearing his way through Hakram's
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chest and taking a hand with it.
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``\emph{No},'' I screamed, already running. ``Not Hakram, you son of a
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bitch.''
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The Swordsman spared me a glance, face expressionless.
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``Let's get this over with,'' he spoke.
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He should have known better by now. The chariot barrelled through the
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sky at breakneck speeds, the two pitch-black winged horses pulling it
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running the hero over with almost inappropriate enthusiasm. The wooden
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wheels creaked as they rolled over him, breaking bones, and Warlock put
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down the reins casually, pulling at his gloves.
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``Well,'' the Sovereign of the Red Skies said, ``this is a mess. It used
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to be such a nice city and now there's blood everywhere. Think of the
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resale value, children.''
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``You're late,'' I called out, relief slumping my shoulders.
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The older Soninke raised an eyebrow. ``There was this-'' he paused as
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Conjurer sent a column of fire in his direction.
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With a put-on sigh he wiggled his hand and the spell redirected to his
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left, looping behind him and coming out as a flock of crows made of
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fire. They lost none of their momentum and flew to the other side of the
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street, where they caught Thief in the chest as she crawled out of the
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house's wreckage. The explosion threw her back out of sight.
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``Fire,'' Warlock finished. ``Just a moment, Catherine.''
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Conjurer was already casting, but the Calamity lazily pointed a finger
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in his direction.
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``Boom,'' was all he said.
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A perfectly symmetrical charred hole appeared in the middle of the
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hero's forehead, and a heartbeat later his skull imploded. A shiver of
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dread went up my spine when the body dropped and I saw that the house
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behind the Conjurer was also a burning wreck.
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``Now,'' Warlock said calmly. ``Who's the rapscallion responsible for
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all this arson?''
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The chariot flipped over, the Calamity almost losing his footing before
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landing on his feet and brushing away a few flecks of ash.
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``That would be me,'' William grunted. ``Finally, villain, you crawl out
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of your hole.''
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``Mind your manners, boy,'' the dark-skinned man replied. ``It will do
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wonders for your life expectancy.''
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The Lone Swordsman smiled. ``You should worry more about yours.
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\emph{Now!}''
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He brought down his hand in a sharp gesture. I started moving towards
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them, but nothing happened.
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``Was that a bluff?'' I asked as I slowed down, a little puzzled.
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``Because we're pretty much past that phase of the fight.''
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A shape emerged from one of the rooftops. Not a human, I saw. One
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goblin, drenched in blood from head to toe.
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``Boss,'' Robber saluted. ``Sorry for the wait, ran into some shady
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Thieves' Guild folks. Lots of bows, skulking around rooftops, you know
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the type. I'm happy to report we stabbed everything until it stopped
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moving, just like you taught us!''
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``I didn't teach you that,'' I replied automatically. ``Don't implicate
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me in your future crimes.''
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William's face dropped, as well it should. Hunter was a gory mess on the
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ground, and while I suspected he might not be entirely dead he was done
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for the night. Conjurer had just been served the Calamity special and
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Thief had just taken a second hit in the face. The Bard was -- my eyes
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turned to the rooftop where she'd been, finding it empty. \emph{Oh, that
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could be trouble.} Regardless, the enemy soldiers had killed through the
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rest of the barricade legionaries only to get wrecked by Kilian's line,
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if the scorch marks were any indication. The amount of casualties left a
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foul taste in my mouth but it could have been much, much worse.
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``Doesn't matter,'' the Lone Swordsman finally said. ``Maybe it was
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always supposed to be this way. Just me and the monster.''
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``You're about forty years too early to take a crack at me, boy,''
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Warlock sighed. ``For one, an older hero would have known not to give me
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all this time to cast.''
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He snapped his fingers and William flipped, something dragging him up by
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his feet. He snarled and his sword lit up, but Warlock frowned and the
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glow winked out.
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``A nasty piece of work,'' the Calamity acknowledged as he levitated it
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away from the hero's grasp ``but I've handled nastier.''
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``Permission to make a joke about your sex life, sir?'' Robber called
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out.
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``Denied,'' I interrupted.
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The Soninke cast an amused look at my tribune before turning his
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attention to me.
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``You'll have to kill him yourself, of course,'' he said, ``but there's
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no reason we can't put him on ice until we can arrange that in a more
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controlled setting.''
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``Nah, that's not gonna happen,'' a voice called out.
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The Wandering Bard sauntered onto the scene, undaunted by the fact that
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my legionaries immediately formed a circle around her. Warlock frowned.
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``A Bard,'' he spoke with distaste. ``By far the most irritating type of
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Name ever inflicted upon us by Creation.'' He paused. ``On the other
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hand, I \emph{have} been meaning to dissect one of those. I thank you
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for the sacrifice you've volunteered to undertake on behalf of the
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Empire.''
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``That got personal \emph{really} quickly,'' Almorava announced. ``But
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as I was saying, we're totally going to escape. We got our asses kicked,
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so William needs to go all brooding for a while so he can pull his shit
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together before the third fight and lead our little band of misfits to a
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last minute victory.''
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I opened my mouth but she raised a hand.
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``I get it, things aren't ideal what with Conjurer having gone all
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esplody and Hunter doing his best imitation of a pile of fresh pork
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chops. But come on, any team with a woman as outrageously beautiful as
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me on it is basically mandated by the Heavens to win.''
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``The only thing outrageous about you is the size of that nose,'' I
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muttered.
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The Bard gasped. ``That actually hurt my feelings a little,'' she
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admitted. ``Now I don't even feel guilty for threatening you guys.''
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Warlock drummed his fingers against his leg impatiently. ``Do get on
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with it. Exactly why shouldn't I put you in a block of ice and have
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Masego buy a very reliable set of gags?''
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``Right,'' the Bard said, shaking herself. ``So when that whole tower
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ward went down, I took whatever power you didn't sink into you and
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shoved it in a bottle. Think sharper multiplied by about a thousand.''
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She fished a bottle out of her knapsack and presented it triumphantly. I
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squinted.
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``That's a half-empty bottle of rum,'' I told her.
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Apparently my waitressing days \emph{could} come in useful, who knew?
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``That's embarrassing,'' Almorava admitted, not looking in the least
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embarrassed. She took out another bottle, this one emitting an ominous
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blue glow.
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\emph{Shit.} She hadn't been lying. Warlock cocked his head to the side.
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``Are you trying to bluff me with a bottle full of common Callowan
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sprites?'' he asked incredulously.
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The Bard cursed. ``All right,'' she replied. ``So that could have gone
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better. I'll admit, the plan still has some kinks to work out. But
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that's okay! I was just a distraction.''
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The arrow took Warlock in the shoulder. The Calamity barely blinked
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before turning in the direction it had come from -- before I could even
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see what was there, half the rooftop was on fire. A single silhouette
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fell off, trying to smother the flames. A handful of smokers blew around
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William, but by the time Masego dispersed the smoke with a gust of wind
|
||
there was no trace of the Lone Swordsman. I didn't even bother looking
|
||
for the Bard: she would have disappeared the moment we'd stopped looking
|
||
at her. It was my turn to curse.
|
||
|
||
``Mages, see to the wounded,'' I called out. ``The rest of you, secure
|
||
the archer. And someone check if the Hunter's still alive.''
|
||
|
||
They snapped to it. I headed for Hakram immediately, pleased to see
|
||
Masego was already taking care of him. The orc looked paler than usual,
|
||
and it was disturbing to see an orc his size looking so\ldots{} frail.
|
||
|
||
``You'll be all right, Hakram,'' I spoke, kneeling next to him. ``You're
|
||
in no danger of dying.''
|
||
|
||
``Well,'' my adjutant replied, ``I suppose my clapping days are over.
|
||
Good thing I was never much of a theatre enthusiast.''
|
||
|
||
I nearly jumped out of my skin when a hand came to rest on my shoulder.
|
||
It was Warlock. The touch made me uncomfortable, but after he'd pulled
|
||
our asses out of the fire I suppose I should grit my teeth and take it
|
||
without comment.
|
||
|
||
``We won't be able to reattach the hand, child,'' the Calamity said.
|
||
``Things cut by that sword remain so, as your leader well knows.''
|
||
|
||
I absently traced the length of the long scar across my chest hidden by
|
||
my armour. A good thing I'd never been particularly vain about my looks,
|
||
as it was pretty disfiguring.
|
||
|
||
``That said,'' Warlock spoke with an interested glint in his eye,
|
||
absently ripping the arrow out of his shoulder, ``some interesting
|
||
discoveries have been made in the area of magical prosthesis, these last
|
||
few years.''
|
||
|
||
A real grin split my adjutant's face.
|
||
|
||
``I'm listening,'' he said.
|