369 lines
16 KiB
TeX
369 lines
16 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-6-backlash}{%
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\chapter{Backlash}\label{chapter-6-backlash}}
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\epigraph{``One learns more from defeat than victory. Therefore, fear the
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general that has never won a battle.''}{Isabella the Mad, Proceran general}
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Masego hadn't changed a bit since I last saw him. Tall, dark-skinned and
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boyishly chubby under his loose clothes. His spectacles were fogged by
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the cold. He'd put on a thick cloak and his trinket-threaded braids were
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covered by\ldots{} I was honestly at a loss as to how to describe that
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abomination. Knitted colourful yarn vaguely shaped like an ugly hat
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trying to devour an equally awful hat?
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``I'm sorry. I'm happy to see you and all but what is \emph{that}?'' I
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asked, pointing at the inanimate creature squatting over his head.
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``My father knitted it,'' Apprentice replied, tone defensive. ``Didn't
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want me to go out in the cold with my ears uncovered.''
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I almost asked him which father had committed that crime against anyone
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with eyes, but I wasn't sure whether that thing would be more disturbing
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if made by the Warlock or by an incubus, so I refrained from finding
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out. Probably the incubus, I morbidly thought. Warlock had always been
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impeccably dressed every time I saw him. Even the occasional casual
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worse-than-death threat hadn't been enough for me to stop noticing how
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ridiculously attractive the man was. Between him and Malicia, Evil had
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the whole hot and dangerous thing covered. Though Kilian was all I
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needed, of course, I loyally added afterwards. Certainly much less
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likely to kill me, and I'd come to learn that was not a given in
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relationships when you were a villain.
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``Catherine,'' Hakram said.
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``I'm here,'' I hastily replied.
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``Masego, you've got something?'' the orc prompted.
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``Yes,'' the Soninke mage said, pushing up his spectacles. ``The anchor
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for the blizzard is further inside. I've narrowed down a location.''
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``You can't just break the spell from here?'' I asked.
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``It's not a spell. And spells cannot be broken, only dispersed,''
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Apprentice said. ``This blizzard is pouring out of Arcadia through a
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semi-stable gate.''
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``Shut the gate, shut the weather,'' I said. ``Got it.''
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``Possibly,'' the bespectacled man said. ``It depends on how strong the
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bleed over from Arcadia into Creation was.''
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``I'm not having permanent winter in the middle of my city, Masego,'' I
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said. ``Broke, demon-tainted \emph{and} covered in ice is where I draw
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the line.''
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``We take the hard stances,'' Hakram said gravely.
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The prick. I was about to reply when I caught sight of movement ahead in
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the storm. Within a heartbeat my sword was back in hand and Adjutant's
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axe raised.
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``We'll revisit that later,'' I said, taking the lead and moving into
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the blizzard.
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``I'm a rebel,'' I heard Hakram tell Masego in a pleased voice.
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``And you cheat at shatranj,'' Apprentice replied peevishly.
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``I don't even need to, with you,'' the orc said.
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I sighed. Did heroes have to deal with this much bickering? At least
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neither of them were prone to monologues, there was that. The howling
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winds and the snow they carried were blinding but not a problem for my
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little crew: a bubble of translucent blue power formed the moment we
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entered, courtesy of Masego. Between that and the warmth he was
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radiating, this was almost comfortable. Almost. No sight of the movement
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I'd glimpsed, which I naturally took as a bad sign. Just because
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\emph{I} couldn't see more than a few feet ahead didn't mean the fae
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could not. For all I knew they were quietly surrounding us even as our
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boots crunched in the snow. Stealthy we were not.
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``Masego,'' I said. ``If we were surrounded, could you tell?''
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``Yes,'' he said. ``With the right instruments.''
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I paused.
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``\emph{Do} you have the right instruments?'' I asked.
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He blinked behind his spectacles.
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``No,'' he said. ``With the amount of fae magic flooding the area the
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best I can currently do is locate the direction of the gate.''
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``How long have we been walking?'' Hakram frowned.
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``I can't tell,'' I said. ``That is probably not a good sign.''
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``Time dilation inside Arcadia varies wildly from place to place,''
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Masego contributed helpfully. ``In some sections a night could last a
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century in Creation, in others merely a few heartbeats.''
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``We're not \emph{in} Arcadia, though,'' I said. ``Right?''
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Apparently howling winds did not make awkward silences any less awkward.
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You learned something every day. I glanced at Apprentice.
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``Masego?''
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``We're close to the gate,'' he said.
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``Masego.''
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``Should be there soon,'' he said.
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``\emph{Masego}.''
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The chubby Soninke cleared his throat.
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``I cannot tell,'' he admitted. ``To my senses it \emph{feels} like we
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are, but that shouldn't-``
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With a quiet ping the javelin punched through the shield bubble and
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would have taken the mage in the throat if I hadn't snatched it out of
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the air by reflex. I glanced down at the weapon. Bronze, covered in
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runes. That were glowing. I managed to throw it away a moment before it
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blew up in shards of metal and ice, some of the shrapnel scoring lines
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on my cheeks.
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``We come in peace,'' I blatantly lied, calling out into the storm with
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a sword in hand.
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Hakram tried to turn his laugh into a cough.
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``Catherine,'' Masego said, ``the fae are unparalleled masters of
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deception. They're not going to fall for-``
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The blizzard cleared ahead of us, revealing a slender silhouette. A man
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in a scale armour of woven dead wood and obsidian, horned helmet
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covering his entire face -- even his eyes -- save for his chin and
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mouth. The pale skin revealed under was pale as a corpse's. A spear in
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hand, he sat astride what would have been a long-legged shaggy horse if
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not for the long horn protruding from its forehead.
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``I hate it when you do that,'' Apprentice muttered.
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``Good evening, Lady of Marchford,'' the fae said.
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My wariness immediately went up a notch. The lesser fairies hadn't quite
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managed to sound human when they'd spoken, too melodic and sing-song to
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be entirely mortal. The deadwood soldiers hadn't even tried, magic and
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images dripping from every word. This one, though? He sounded like a
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person. The most dangerous monsters were always the clever ones.
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``That's me,'' I agreed. ``And you are?''
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``A Rider of the Host,'' he replied politely, inclining his head. ``A
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pleasure to make your acquaintance.''
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I could feel the capitalized letter in that, the same way you did when
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someone spoke a Name. This was not headed in a pleasant direction.
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``Rider, then,'' I said. ``I don't suppose you're moving people behind
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us as we speak?''
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``You have my word no fae will attack while under truce,'' he replied
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calmly.
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That wasn't a no. I glanced at Masego, who nodded sharply. Whatever was
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coming at our back when negotiations inevitably broke down -- and if I
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was being entirely honest with myself, there was no real chance they
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would not -- he'd be the one to handle it.
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``So you're in charge of the fae invading my city?'' I said.
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``I was given command of this host,'' the Rider said.
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Eh, close enough. The way he'd worded that instead of giving me a yes or
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no probably meant he was omitting something, but the intricacies of fae
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politics were something I gave a remarkably low amount of fucks
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about\emph{. Do not make me learn fae politics, you bastards,} I
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silently thought. \emph{I can barely handle the human ones.}
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``I don't suppose you'd just scamper back into Arcadia if I asked?'' I
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said.
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The Rider smiled, revealing a mouthful of milky sharp teeth.
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``Are you offering a deal, Lady of Marchford?'' he said.
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``Gods, am I ever \emph{not} falling for that one,'' I muttered. ``Look,
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whatever you are. I could drum your sorry excuse for an invasion out of
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my backyard, but I'll take losses doing it. No getting around that. I've
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got other cats to skin, so why don't we just call it a night and both
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walk away?''
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``That sounded like a threat,'' the Rider noted.
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``It was,'' I replied frankly. ``You're probably some sort of force to
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reckon with back in Arcadia, but this is \emph{my} wheelhouse. I've
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walked away from the corpses of scarier stuff than you.''
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``Lady of Marchford, this \emph{is} home,'' he said, smiling.
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``Catherine,'' Masego whispered.
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``I'm a little busy at the m-``
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I bit down on that. Last time I'd passed on Apprentice's advice in a bad
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spot I'd walked right into demon fun time, swiftly followed by the
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screaming soul surgery interlude. Learn from your mistakes, Foundling.
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``Yes?''
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``Remember that question you asked me?'' he said.
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I nodded.
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``We are,'' he whispered. ``They took across a shard of Arcadia.''
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Oh, this just kept getting godsdamned better.
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``Rider, did you pricks fairy-land the middle of my city?'' I growled.
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``The truce is over,'' the fae replied.
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The blizzard swallowed him instantly.
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``So that's a yes,'' I said. ``Gods Below and Everburning. You bastards
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are starting to catch up to Heiress on my murder list.''
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I didn't hear them coming, because they didn't make a sound. It was the
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kind of instinct my Name gave me, the same that allowed me to catch an
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arrow in flight or roll out of a building on fire before it collapsed --
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both of which had happened to be depressingly often since I became a
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villain. A slender wedge of mounted fae ghosted out of the howling
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winds, spears at the ready. Like the Rider who'd spoken to me they were
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astride the murderous-looking cousin of a unicorn, though their own
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armours lacked the obsidian that had been on the last one's. Maybe he
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\emph{had} been in charge. My eyes narrowed at the sight of their hooves
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never leaving a mark in the snow. I wouldn't put that above them,
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really, but more likely\ldots{} My wrist snapped up and a spear of
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shadow coalesced, tearing unfailing through the wind and straight
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through the lead rider's chest. He dissipated, the lot of them just a
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cold mirage.
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``Cat,'' Hakram said, tone alarmed.
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My eyes swivelled where he was pointing his axe, to our left. Another
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wedge of mounted fae. A trickle of Name power drifted up to my eyes,
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forcing them to sharpen in the poor light. They weren't leaving a trail
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either. Which meant\ldots{} And would you look at that: another silent
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wedge was coming up from our back. They, one the other hand, were
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leaving hoof prints. The answer seemed clear, which two years of dealing
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with Akua Sahelian had taught me meant they were probably fucking with
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me. I formed another spear of shadow and swivelled to throw it to our
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right, the only avenue that they weren't visibly using. A heartbeat
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later the faint silhouette of a rider ducking under the spear, pressing
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against her mount, flickered into visibility for the barest moment.
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\emph{There you are.}
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``Brace yourself,'' Apprentice said.
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Blinding blue light flared up, his bubble turning into a broad
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rectangular panel straight in their path. The rider at the tip of the
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wedge, still closely pressed against her mount, guided her unicorn into
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leaping over it. And hit another panel with a dull thump, this one
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entirely invisible. I snorted. That was a new trick. The two wings of
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cavalry split smoothly, beginning the way around before the lead fae had
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even hit the ground. The blue panel's glow intensified before it blew
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up, detonating in a flash of heat and light.
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``Masego, can you tell me where the talker is?'' I asked.
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``Behind them,'' the Soninke replied without missing a beat.
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``That's where I'm going, then,'' I said. ``You boys try not to get
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yourself killed -- I'm pretty sure I can't afford a double funeral.''
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I began moving before they could reply. I'd barely taken a dozen strides
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before the protection of whatever ward Apprentice had going on ceased,
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the wind almost battering me down. I'd gone through the middle, since it
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was the clearest path, but the riders in the back of the two columns
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peeled off and went straight for me. So much for the easy way. That made
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one, two, three\ldots{} eight in all. Joy. I was going to be feeling
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this in the morning, wasn't I? Stilling my breath, I stood my ground
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with my sword in hand. I'd been taught to deal with mounted men, though
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not fae. \emph{The only dangerous part of a lance is the tip}, Black's
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voice reminded me. \emph{Watch the horse. Cavalry tramples what it can't
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skewer.} These were spears, not lances, but the principle held. The
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riders were used to hunting together, I noticed. They silently adjusted
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their angles so they wouldn't charge into each other if I managed to
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avoid them.
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Whatever sorcery had made them almost invisible was gone, but I was
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smelling a rat. So far they hadn't once used a straightforward attack,
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there would be more to this. Frowning, I formed a small orb of shadow
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and shot it at the leftmost rider -- who guided his mount a little to
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the side to avoid it, never breaking stride. Not a fake? There was a
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flash of flame behind me as Masego got serious and my question answered
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himself: only half the riders cast a shadow in the sudden light. Gods, I
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was already starting to hate fighting fae. So, how did one dodge a blow
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they couldn't see coming? \emph{Don't be where it hits}, if Captain was
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to be believed. I'd been taught that lesson one hammer swing at a time.
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Name power trickled into my legs and I pushed off, sending a spray of
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snow behind me. I kept a low profile, eyeing the spears headed for me
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across a loose half-circle, and shifted tracks to head \emph{under} a
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unicorn before I could be turned into several bloody pieces of
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Foundling. My sword flashed up, opening the creature's belly as I slid
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under it and I winced as the ice-cold water that flooded out of the
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wound.
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I landed in a sprawl behind the faltering beast, forcing myself to my
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feet and running in the direction Apprentice had told me. I could feel
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the riders wheeling around for another charge behind me and resisted the
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urge to blindly shoot a spear of shadows in their direction. My well was
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deeper since my Name had been restored, but there were still limits to
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what I could draw on. I couldn't afford to waste too much power on
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longshots, not with a hard fight ahead of me. Now, running away from a
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mounted killer with your back to them and flat fields around you was
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about the single worst position you could be relative to cavalry. I was
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not unaware of this, of course, but standing my ground back there with
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the other two at my side was a losing battle. Our bag of tricks was
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nothing to sneer at, and had only grown since the Liesse Rebellion, but
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there was only so long we'd hold our own against creatures that were
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literally defined by trickery.
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No, the way to end this was ahead of me. Cut the head of the snake,
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other assorted and vaguely violent metaphors. The riders behind me would
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catch up soon enough, but I was banking on that changing nothing. The
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silhouette of the Rider of the Host was hard to make out, even with Name
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sight, but it was there. On a hill, overlooking the scrap and radiating
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genteel disdain. Yeah, that one had all the little marks of nobility to
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it. Even in Arcadia, some things were the same. I got to the foot of the
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hill before the enemy caught up. Glancing at the Rider, I was
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considering my options while the spears got ever closer when he spoke
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up.
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``Enough,'' he said. ``I will deal with this. Break the others.''
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Ah, there it was. I did love a bit of hubris in my opponents. I'd
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mouthed off to the big bad fairy and gotten in front of it, of course it
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was going to want a piece of me. And it wouldn't want its underlings to
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get involved, because it was making a point. Probably not about honour,
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with the fae, but arrogance would do in a pinch. I wasn't picky.
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``Yeah, good luck with that,'' I said. ``Last time I saw Masego get
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pissy he torched a demon so hard it melted the stone under it.''
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``We are not demons,'' the Rider said, raising his spear. ``We are not
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mindless abominations. Our existence has purpose.''
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``You're also supposed to have brains,'' I said. ``So I genuinely don't
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understand why you're making a mess here. Even if you somehow manage to
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beat my men, you have to realize the Empire is going to throw all you
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until you break.''
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``These matters are beyond your understanding, Lady of Marchford,'' he
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said.
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``I'm going to enjoy punching that line \emph{right} out of your
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mouth,'' I replied cheerfully, baring my teeth.
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The spear lowered, the Rider charged and my Name howled in joy so loudly
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it drowned out the wind.
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