522 lines
26 KiB
TeX
522 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-61-tempo}{%
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\chapter{Tempo}\label{chapter-61-tempo}}
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\epigraph{``It is true, Chancellor, that a house divided cannot stand. Why
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do you think mine is the only one I left standing?''}{Dread Emperor Callous}
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Legionaries were dying like flies. I'd never seen infantry assault a
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dug-in position held by mages and engines before, and now that I had I
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could only say it was ugly work. The enemy had been trained in
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counter-siege tactics, that much was obvious. The first killing grounds
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were the trench, deep and wide and filled with stakes at the bottom. The
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men of the Fifth set down planks to bridge it, but planks were mere wood
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and wood was no match for the sorcery being flung at it. The bridges
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rarely lasted longer than twenty heartbeats, forcing the legionaries to
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come at the palisade in clumps instead of a single overwhelming wave.
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The palisade itself was nothing special -- tall and well-built, but
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lacking wards or anything arcane -- but behind it stood an awaiting sea
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of wights. Goblin munitions made half a dozen breaches along the length
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of the fortification, but the legionaries were failing repeatedly to
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push back the undead behind the openings. This, I thought, would be
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where we began.
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Men scattered around the three of us, as much because they knew what we
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could do as because of some animalistic instinct that screamed
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\emph{Named, move aside while you still can}. I could have leapt the
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trench easily enough, but that would be defeating the purpose. My sword
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arced along the ground and thick, dark ice formed in a bridge large
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enough for ranks of ten to pass. Retaliation was immediate. The fluid,
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silvery spell that flowed towards my chest I cleaved through without
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missing a beat and felt the sorcery coming apart at the seams. The five
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scorpion bolts were a touch more difficult to deal with. My Name pulsed
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and I let the world slow around me, Winter coursing through my veins.
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The first bolt froze and shattered with but a twist of will and the two
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behind it followed suit effortlessly, but the trajectory of the other
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two was angled too far. Clucking my tongue I ducked under the shots, but
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the sound of screaming and flesh being pierced behind me told me the men
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of the Fifth had not been so quick on their feet.
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They were not the first legionaries to die today, nor would they be the
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last.
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``Archer,'' I said. ``Silence those engines. Leftmost bastion.''
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The arrow she nocked was more javelin than anything else, not even
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fletched -- given the ridiculous size of her bow, though, it still fit.
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Golden stripes ran down the side of the wood, glinting with something
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like power. Not a spell, I thought, but power inherent. That was much
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more dangerous.
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``Cover your ears, my darlings,'' she drawled.
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Thunder sounded with the loosened string. The javelin roiled with
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lightning before it was even released, and it flew ina crisp trajectory.
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Panes of power lit up above the bastion's ramparts like fireworks in
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shades of blue but the arrow sailed right through them. Lightning tore
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through a scorpion's wooden frame, shattering it like it'd been swatted
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by some irritated titan. I didn't know how many of those fancy arrows
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she had, but I'd leave her to it. This alone had been enough to panic
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the mages in the bastion, though I knew better than to think it would
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last.
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``Adjutant,'' I said, idly spinning my blade to limber my wrist. ``Let's
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make the Fifth a beachhead.''
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I heard Archer cackle behind me as I strode across the ice bridge,
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followed by the sound of spells tearing into the ground where she'd
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previously stood. Hakram and I advanced shields raised and found nothing
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but palisade ahead -- the legionaries pouring in behind us were already
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making for the sides where breaches had been made instead of remaining
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here.
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``Hold,'' I barked.
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Just wood, I thought, and almost snorted. There'd been a time where that
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would have been enough to slow me down, but I'd left that behind me
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years ago. My shield whipped into the palisade and there was a loud
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splintering sound. I'd felt the braces on the other side shake and so I
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struck again. Again, again, five times in whole before the entire
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section collapsed ahead of me. There was a heartbeat where the palisade
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fell back and that was all within my sight, but then the wights raged
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forward and the fight began. In the distance thunder struck again,
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Archer's laugh like the ring of doom, and then I rammed into the enemy
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ranks. There was no place for elegance or subtlety, here. It was just a
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slog through mud, blood and steel. The kind of graceless fight that had
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first seen me rise, back in Laure and the Pit. It was almost like coming
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home and there was a beat to it, a song of crushed skulls and scattered
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men, and as I sunk deep within myself I embraced it. Adjutant's blurring
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axe was another of my limbs, moving in accord to a will that was not
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entirely my own but still mine to shape.
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The howling corpses of my people came for my head and they were swept
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aside. My shield smacked a wight into a spreading pool of green fire as
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my body pivoted to turn a sword-blow into a wasted swing, Hakram's axe
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tearing straight through the neck of the undead who'd swung it. Like a
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whirlwind we advanced, and the hordes of the dead were no match for two
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Named at the peak of their transient power. The Fifth Legion followed
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behind, rows of red shields streaked with mud, and what ground we gained
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was not given back. It wasn't enough, I thought. I went deeper, let the
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beat guide my hands and feet. Swifter, sharper, until they were just
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wheat before the sickle. The cold part of my mind knew this was
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dangerous, remaining in this place where all that existed in Creation
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was blades in motion, but victory did not come to those who hesitated.
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What ended it was the song, because it had refrain to it I'd not first
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heard. Threefold it crooned, feeding me whispers of destruction
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unending, and when I realized where it came from my blood ran cold. I
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tore myself out of the trance, limbs trembling, and prayed to any deity
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listening that it had not been too late.
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``Hakram,'' I croaked, ``stop. \emph{Now}. The demons\ldots{}''
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He let out a hiss that reeked of fear.
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``Hierophant should be containing them,'' he said.
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``Can you really contain something like that?'' I muttered.
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The thing that had been coursing through our veins was gone, and though
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we still stood strong before the tide our advanced had stopped cold. I
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didn't want to use an aspect, not out here before I'd even caught
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glimpse of Akua and the reckoning that lay between us, but the Fifth
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alone would not be enough to break through the wights. Thunder struck
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again, Archer a weapon in my arsenal not even the Praesi had answer for.
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The stone in my mouth warmed with sorcery, and Black's voice cut through
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the racket of battle.
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``Squire,'' he said. ``Leave the Fifth on its own. Move on the left
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bastion. I need you to draw fire if you can.''
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My eyes flicked to the right flank, and I finally noticed I had not been
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the only one to punch through the palisade. Black was on foot now,
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leading the Fourth's heavies, and where he went death followed. Tendrils
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of shadow punctured the ground with impossible precision, triggering one
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array of defensive wards after another while tight ranks of shields
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drove back the dead. Before long he would be at the foot of the bastion,
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though the only way up for the legionaries would be the ramp descending
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from the back of it. It was no mystery why he'd asked me to draw fire:
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the mages from the two closest bastions were filling the air with
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sorcery, and though the legionaries under his mantle were not so easily
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killed the spells still tore smoking holes in his formation every few
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moments. Casualties were mounting, faster than he could afford.
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``Understood,'' I said. ``The demons are proving an issue, Black.''
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``Purge protocols will be put in place after the battle,'' he simply
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replied, and the sound cut.
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Joy. That was going to be a glorious aftermath, herding together men
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who'd fought for us through literal Hells and torching anyone even
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remotely contaminated. Still, if the alternative was letting soldiers
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touched by demons back into the wild\ldots{} There was no winning when
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it came to dealing with demons, only limiting the damage as much as
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possible.
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``Hakram,'' I said. ``Go back for Archer. We're hitting the left bastion
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in full force. Tell her\ldots{} tell I don't care how she gets there, as
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long as it's fast.''
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I was going to regret that, I suspected. The orc nodded.
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``And you?'' he asked.
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``I'm going to remind Akua's minions why she keeps running when we
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fight,'' I grimly said.
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Slogging through the wights barring the path to the bastion would take
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too long, I decided. But I had option. A platform of ice and shadow
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formed before me and I leapt atop it, beginning my trek to the enemy.
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---
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There was a very important difference, I mused, between fighting one
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angry demigod in the sky and fighting a hundred mortal mages at range.
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The mages didn't hit nearly as hard, sure, but they hit a \emph{lot.}
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That was proving to be something of a problem, given how gravity kept
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being a bit insistent about the whole falling thing. The orb of spinning
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black light hit me in the chest and knocked me straight off the platform
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-- I smashed my shield into it but the steel began to boil, so instead I
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let myself drop half a dozen feet before making another platform. Under
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me the sea of wights grasped upwards, some clever enough to begin piling
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up to reach me. Right, upper grade undead. Fucking Praesi and their
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endless magical bullshit parade of horrors. My shield was dripping
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liquid steel but I froze it back into a semblance of usefulness, part of
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my mind already forming another platform as I did. I'd learned pretty
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early on that picking up the pace was the most important part of this
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game.
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I was halfway there, but this close they were having an easier time
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pushing me back. I could see their faces from here, behind the glowing
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panes, and there was as much terror to behold as there was sneering. The
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way I kept stubbornly not dying was probably the reason for the former.
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Two leaps before I got my shoulder clipped again, and that had me
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slipping long enough for a lash of lightning to crack down at my head. I
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hurriedly hid under my cloak and the sorcery washed past, but then the
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fuckers shattered the platform under me and I dropped down onto the
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wights. I landed on one's head and even as a hundred hands and blades
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went for me I coiled my legs and jumped back up. The pane of ice I made
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at an angle, immediately leaping off it and ending up already in flight
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when the mage volley came calling. \emph{Steady, Catherine}, I told
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myself\emph{. Steady and careful is how we get there.} I faked a forming
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platform to the right then veered to the left on another, lips quirking
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at how eagerly they fell for it.
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I heard a hoarse yell, and my brow rose as I saw a trebuchet stone hit
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the wights ahead. The Legions had finally set up their engines in range,
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looked like. Then a silhouette rose slowly from atop the stone,
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resetting a broken arm with a scream, and Adjutant tossed his crumpled
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up shield at a wight's head. Had he just\ldots{} That had \emph{worked}?
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I knew he was tougher now that he was Named, but this was ridiculous. He
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got hit by a fireball right in the chest and thrown off the stone so I
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hurriedly made a series of platforms and reached him before he could get
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his idiot ass killed. I leaned over the hoist the orc by the scruff of
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the neck, smacking aside a smoky-looking spell, and resisted the urge to
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chew him out in the middle of an active battlefield.
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``Where's Archer?'' I asked instead.
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``Fire,'' he replied, eyes going wide.
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I cursed and dragged him through another jump -- less than a hundred
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feet now, they were getting quicker.
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``She said something about `stealing your stuff','' he got out.
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``She would,'' I bitterly complained.
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I focused on the little bundle in the back of my mind and found Zombie
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the Third in flight, Archer on his back and whooping joyfully. Her tone
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was not any less obnoxious heard through a necromantic abomination's
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ears, apparently. I'd learned something today.
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``This is going to hurt,'' I told Adjutant.
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``Catherine, don't-``
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I threw him, right at the bastion. My armour creaked under the strain
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but the orc flew and smacked right into the blue panes of light. Ah,
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they'd adjusted for physical stuff after Archer kept destroying their
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engines. That was unfortunate. On the bright side, they were now
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panicking so another two platforms had me landing atop the bastion while
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they did their level best to incinerate Hakram with hellflame. Break was
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on the edge of my lips, just waiting to be brought out and shatter their
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little protections, but I pushed down the urge. Not an aspect, not
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against second-stringers like these. My sword dug into the shield and my
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Name flared, sorcery impossibly turning into ice and cracking beneath
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the force. It shattered, and their protections must have been tied
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because the whole thing gave as one. I landed in a crouch, my
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frost-tinged armour glinting even in the shade, and let out a steamy
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breath. Hakram dropped down like a stone a heartbeat later, crashing
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without even the pretence of control and cursing loudly in Kharsum all
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the while.
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Bastion, I thought as I placed it all in my mind's eye, was the right
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word for this. From the outside it looked like a broad tower of hewn
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stone, but up here it was revealed for what it was: a large fortified
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platform, for the use mages and engines. Fewer than a hundred mages left
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-- attrition had taken its toll -- and maybe thrice that in household
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troops and men who worked the engines. Actually taking the bastion, I
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thought, was perhaps not within my means. Wrecking it, though,
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absolutely was. It would have to do. The Fifth was lagging too far
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behind to be counted on for this.
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``Though I be a speck of dust, I-`` a man began incanting, and without
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blinking I raised my hand.
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His throat filled with ice, his eyes froze over and just like that he
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died.
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``Oh Merciless Gods,'' a woman whispered, then gathered herself.
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``WARDS.''
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Too late for that, I thought. Adjutant was back on his feet, though
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given his armour always looked like it had been put to the torch it was
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hard to tell whether the earlier flames had hurt him or not. He was
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moving fine, though. That would be enough: all I needed him to be was a
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target. The buzz of sorcery filled the air and the household troops
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advanced, but I ignored them entirely. I'd not come to kill rank and
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file, however pretty the armour. I dashed forward and lowered myself
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under a man's swing then slipped past him, shield coming up to swat
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aside the man behind and then I was through, past their forming
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defensive line. There were shouts behind but I paid them no attention,
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running to the mages. I carved through the first man's chest before he
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could even finish making a ball of flame, moving to the next before his
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corpse had even dropped. Taghreb and Soninke all of them, in rich robes
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and jewellery. The finest of the Wasteland. They died, one after
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another. Once I might have thought there would be something cathartic
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about scything through the very kind of people who'd plundered my
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homeland for decades, but I'd been wrong. All I felt was sickened.
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This wasn't a fight, it was a massacre.
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They formed their first ward before I'd slaughtered my way through the
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first dozen but it had been done in haste. I let Winter flow my veins
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and it broke under two swings, a pair of mages falling to their knees
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bleeding out of their eyes and nose when it shattered. I flicked my
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sword and a spear of ice went straight through a Taghreb's stomach even
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as I broke a man's skull with a smash of my shield. They were terrified,
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and the Beast was drinking it in like fine wine even as bile rose in my
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throat. A few of them banded together and managed to bind my shield with
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lightning, convulsions running up my arm, so I dropped it immediately.
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Before a heartbeat had passed I was elbow deep in a man's ribcage, flesh
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parting like mud under gauntlet and Name strength.
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``Monster,'' a sorcerer hissed.
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``Amateurs,'' I judged them.
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I withdrew my hand from the dead man, dripping red, and conceded the
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stranger might have something of a point. I stepped around the ten bolts
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of shadow he threw at me and ran him through anyway, because it was too
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late to flinch now. Not when I was surrounded by an army made up of my
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dead countrymen, lashed to these people's will. That I had blood on my
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hands did not make these mages better in some nebulous way: all it meant
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was that we were sharing similar gutters. The household troops were
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trying to get ay my back, but they'd run into a problem called Adjutant.
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By the way he was moving, swifter and stronger with every swing, he'd
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called on his first aspect of the day. Rampage, I thought, would be
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enough to keep those out of the way for a while. I danced around another
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volley of spells, too quick for any of them to handle this close up, and
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Archer joining the fight was heralded by the loud crack of shattering
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wood. Zombie whinnied as he crashed into a trebuchet, his rider fluidly
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leaping down before impact, and my lips thinned. If Archer had broken my
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flying horse I was going to be \emph{cross}. It wasn't like I could just
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waltz back into Arcadia to get another one.
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``Sorry I'm late, had to make a detour,'' Archer called out.
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``Mages first,'' I replied, in no mood for banter. ``Then the engines.''
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It was poor form, I supposed, to tell the enemy or plan before it was
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carried out. I'd have hesitated if they actually stood a chance of
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stopping us. It'd been bad enough when I was the only fox in the
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henhouse, but with Archer having her knives out the mages were finished.
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After she cut the first one's throat any semblance of coordination went
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out the window and from there on it was just\ldots{} work. Red labour,
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moving from one soon-to-be-dead man to another. Cut through the
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half-summoned devil, go around the spell, and then another corpse hit
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the ground. Dimly I realized I felt like throwing up. I pressed on
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anyway. After the last mage was dead Archer went to back Hakram and I
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turned to the engines. Seven trebuchets, twice as many scorpions.
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There'd been a few more of each before, but Archer had taken her toll
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earlier. I'd anticipated some fighting before breaking them, but
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apparently there'd be no need: all the people operating them had fled
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down the ramp while I whet my blade. Scorpions were easily dealt with,
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finicky things that they were: rip out the string, shatter the frame.
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The trebuchets were hulking masses I only vaguely understood the working
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of, so I kept it simple. There was a thick beam connecting the sling to
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the counterweight, going through the pivot above. I put my hand to the
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part of the beam next to the string and froze the wood, then shattered
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it with the pommel of my sword. It should be enough to take them out of
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the battle. I turned to the still-ongoing scrap with the household
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troops and my brow rose.
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They were still keeping in formation, to their honour. But Archer kept
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killing their officers whenever one spoke, so what had likely been meant
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as an orderly retreat down the ramp and into the wights was turning into
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a rout. Adjutant, I saw, was beginning to wind down. His Name thought
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the fight was spent, so the aspect was petering out. That could be
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dangerous, if he was still surrounded by soldiers. There was a mass of
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wights below the ramp in the back, but they'd not engaged. They
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were\ldots{} fighting? But there were no legionaries down there.
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\emph{Ah}, I realized. \emph{We killed the mages guiding them. Now
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they're just tearing at anything in sight.} Some pockets still seemed to
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be orderly, and my guess at the culprit for that was the mages on the
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central bastion. The battle wasn't done because we'd softened up the
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left flank, though now the Fifth would have a much easier time punching
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through. I looked at the other strongholds, and saw the one on the right
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had already fallen. The Sixth's banner flew above it, now, and unlike me
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Black had been followed by legionaries. He'd not destroyed the engines:
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he'd ordered them turned on the undead. Of him I saw no trace, but in
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truth I didn't look for long.
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The Twelfth, I saw, had followed behind the Sixth. They were fighting
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their way to the central bastion, though advance was slow and costly.
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How long had all of this taken? An hour, in whole? \emph{And Akua must
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have prepared this field for months.} Even without the other Calamities,
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Black was a weight on the balance unlike any other. I went to reinforce
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Archer and Adjutant, and that was the last straw. The household troops
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fled into the clawing field of wights, judging all too accurately that
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they had better chances of survival down there than against the three of
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us. There was a heartbeat of silence, the three of us panting atop a
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stronghold surrounded by corpses, and I closed my eyes. I willed a
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sliver of my Name into the Link, finding it highly receptive. I had no
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fondness for Masego's father but he knew his way around enchantments.
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``Black,'' I said. ``My bastion's done.''
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There was the sound of steel against steel on the other side.
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``Can you see the way into Liesse?'' my teacher asked.
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I squinted in the distance, towards where Kilian had pointed on the map
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earlier. There was, I saw, a pit. I couldn't see what was in it and it
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was surrounded by wights, but it was the only thing close to a gate I
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could find.
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``I think so,'' I said. ``Hole in the ground?''
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``I will arrive momentarily,'' he said. ``Have your Named join with the
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Twelfth for the assault on the last bastion. You and I will proceed into
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the city.''
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``I don't like the shape of that,'' I admitted.
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``It has been taken into consideration,'' he replied. ``Do not dawdle.
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Resistance is intensifying close to the pit, I will not be able to wait
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for long.''
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The sound cut and I frowned, trying to look for him on the field. There
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was a single man on a horse, swiftly cutting his way through the wights.
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Huh. He wasn't even fighting them, not really. He trampled exactly as
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many as he needed to go forward and ignored the rest\emph{. And he's
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getting close}, I thought. Time to go.
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``We've got orders,'' I said.
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Archer snorted.
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``Because I'm so fond of those,'' she said.
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``They involve a lot of killing,'' I said.
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``You have my attention,'' the wretch grinned.
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``The two of you are going with the Twelfth to hit the last
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stronghold,'' I said. ``Follow into the city after if you can, but that
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might not be feasible.''
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Hakram frowned.
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``You're going on without us?'' he said.
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``Bonding time with Black,'' I said. ``I assume some form of murder will
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be involved, possibly also a chilling speech on the nature of power. As
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|
prelude to further murdering.''
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``You have the weirdest relationships with people,'' Archer muttered.
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Archer. \emph{Archer} had said that. I did not dignify it with a
|
|
response. I whistled sharply and Zombie rose from the trebuchet wreckage
|
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where he'd been lazing about this whole time, trotting up to me. I
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slipped a foot in the stirrup and mounted the saddle.
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``Try not to bite off more than you can chew,'' I said. ``I have a hard
|
|
time believing \emph{this} is the best Diabolist could do with months of
|
|
preparation.''
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``I'll keep her out of trouble,'' Adjutant said.
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Yeah, from that look on her face that wasn't happening. Ah, well. So
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|
long as neither of them died I'd live with it. Sheathing my sword, I
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|
spurred on my mount and after a gallop to the edge of the bastion his
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|
wings unfolded and we took flight. Black, I saw, was already at the edge
|
|
of the pit. He'd either dismounted or lost his horse, but didn't seem
|
|
all that hindered for it. I winced as I saw his shadow and blade move
|
|
simultaneously, tendrils severing three spines and sword sending a head
|
|
flying over the span of the same heartbeat. I used more power making a
|
|
platform than he had using his shadow right then -- he'd be able to keep
|
|
this up for hours, no matter that he'd told me to hurry. Still, I guided
|
|
Zombie in a low pass and threw myself down. I landed at his side, legs
|
|
bending, and watched a dead hand flop the ground neatly severed.
|
|
Charming. Zombie flew off and I straightened my back. Green eyes took in
|
|
the state of me, then returned to the enemy.
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|
|
``So is there a secret knock to get in?'' I asked, glancing at the pit.
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|
All I saw inside was darkness, and not even a kind my Name sight could
|
|
see through.
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|
``We're going to jump,'' he said.
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|
``You're enjoying this,'' I accused.
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|
``Am I?'' he hummed, and pushed me.
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|
I said some very unkind things about his ancestry in Taghreb as I
|
|
dropped, and didn't stop even when he started falling at my side.
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|
|
``You've considerably improved your vocabulary,'' he noted.
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|
|
|
I sighed. Around us was only darkness, anchored by the sensation of
|
|
falling. Considering this place was out of phase with Creation, I was
|
|
wary of the fact that this felt like so long a drop. Akua had already
|
|
shown she could meddle with the span of time in her little horror
|
|
bubbles. After half an eternity our fall slowed and we landed softly on
|
|
what felt like stone. Nice touch, that. She wasn't even going to pretend
|
|
she'd not expected company. There was a tunnel ahead, its boundaries not
|
|
marked by solid so much as absence. I could see again, at least. And
|
|
what I saw was a large and looming silhouette at the end of it, ram
|
|
horns sprouting from its head.
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|
|
``A gatekeeper,'' Black said. ``Quaint.''
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|
|
|
``She's a real traditional girl, our Akua,'' I drawled. ``Twenty denarii
|
|
she yammers at us through a runic array when get in.''
|
|
|
|
``Twenty more she compares herself to Triumphant,'' Black replied
|
|
amusedly. ``They always do, Catherine. I've heard three dozen variations
|
|
on that speech by now.''
|
|
|
|
He paused.
|
|
|
|
``They quote the play,'' he said, pained. ``Every time. I know the
|
|
entire third act by rote.''
|
|
|
|
``I'll take that,'' I mused. ``She probably thinks she's above
|
|
name-dropping, like this isn't basically a glorified flying fortress.''
|
|
|
|
I raised my voice.
|
|
|
|
``That's right, Diabolist, I went there,'' I catcalled. ``Your whole
|
|
plan is so last millennium, and I bet you actually call your lair a lair
|
|
when talking to other people.''
|
|
|
|
I didn't look, but I got the impression Black's lips were twitching.
|
|
Heavy footsteps sounded ahead, followed by the cloying smell of
|
|
brimstone wafting up to us.
|
|
|
|
Two blades left their scabbard as one, and we advanced.
|