327 lines
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327 lines
16 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-59-anacrusis}{%
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\section{Chapter 59: Anacrusis}\label{chapter-59-anacrusis}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Peace is a fine thing, but war is the crucible of crowns.''}
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-- Queen Elizabeth Alban of Callow
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\end{quote}
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There was something oddly intimate about being dressed, even if it was
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with steel instead of skirts. It began with the grieves, Hakram kneeling
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at my feet to tighten the straps. He was tall enough there was need of
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stool to put my foot on, since even kneeling he still reached near my
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chin. He had clever fingers, belying their size, and though he was not
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gentle he was quite meticulous. Then the \emph{pua}, the long thigh and
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lower leg piece with an articulation at the knee. Over my aketon I put
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on a shirt of mail in the legion style, six interlocked rings spreading
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into a thick cover, and as he reached out for the vambraces I set the
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breastplate over the mail myself. The straps were hardened leather,
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reinforced with iron, and they creaked as I tightened them. I held out
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my arms for him to fit with the vambraces, watching his face crease with
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concentration. Pauldrons followed, marked only with the Miezan numerals
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of the Fifteenth instead of the heraldry and titles that were gathering
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to me like flies to honey. Armguards were adjusted to my comfort and
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articulated gauntlets finished the portrait. The fingerbends looked like
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fins, I'd always thought. There were usually stained red by the end of a
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fight, with either my blood or my opponent's. The gorget clasped tight
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around my throat, and though uncomfortable I knew better than to whine.
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I'd killed enough people through the throat to know leaving it open was
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sheer stupidity.
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I'd expected to be presented with my old open-faced helmet as the last
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of steel to bear, but what I was offered was different. This one was not
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of Legion make, with hinged cheeks and a flat noseguard in front. It had
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a long tail to cover the back of my neck, true, but there was a flap in
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the back through which my ponytail was meant to go. The cheeks were
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fully covered, going into a long angled mouthguard crafted so it would
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rest against my gorget. The strip of steel that served as noseguard was
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shorter than I was used to, and above it was a ridge of steel meant to
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prevent blades sliding down into my exposed face. What had been forged
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above the ridge was what had me frowning: it was crown. Black iron set
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into the helmet, not jutting, but a crown nonetheless. My eyes flicked
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to Adjutant.
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``You know I do not wear ornate armour,'' I said.
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``I know your teacher does not,'' the orc said, and pressed my palm
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against the steel. ``It is not him we follow.''
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\emph{This isn't a squire's armour}, I thought. \emph{It is a queen's,
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and her crown is black.} For all that I had avoided the regalia of my
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rising rank, it seemed it had finally caught up to me.
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``Vicequeen,'' I reminded the orc.
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``For how long?'' he asked quietly.
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I winced. Months, perhaps a year. But Black was not one to go back on
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his word, and he'd given it. A crown for me, so long as I readied Callow
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for war. Maybe he was right. Maybe it was time to get rid of the fig
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leaf. Past a certain point reticence was more arrogance than humility.
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Or, even more to my distaste, a form of fear. I lowered my head and let
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Hakram set it down on my brow. The cold touch of steel was no burden,
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but the promise it bore was different story.
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``It is fitting, I think,'' I murmured, and Hakram's eyes met mine.
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``That you would be the one to crown me.''
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His face twitched at that, a flinch only half-swallowed. My gauntleted
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hand reach for his arm and squeeze him comfortingly.
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``I have relied on you for so many things, since you were my sergeant,''
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I said.
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``I did what I could,'' Adjutant replied gruffly.
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He looked away, and were he anyone else I would have thought him
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abashed.
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``We made a deal once, under moonlight,'' I said.
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``That was no deal, Catherine,'' the orc said. ``That was an oath and I
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stand by it. I called you Warlord then, and I don't regret it. I don't
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keep to the old ways, not like Nauk, but it is no empty word. I haven't
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used it since because it-``
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He scowled, unsure of himself for once.
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``It's not the right title, not for the two of us,'' he finally said.
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``Too shallow in the wrong places. We are more than war.''
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It was times like these I understood how peculiar Hakram truly was,
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compared to others of his kind. It wasn't his temperament, or his way
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with people. There was an underlying threat to the way orcs like Nauk
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and Juniper and every other orc I'd met saw the world, and in Adjutant
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it was absent. I thought much of the Hellhound, but never would I
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imagine her saying \emph{we are more than war}. It would go against her
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nature. To my general peace was the wait between campaigns, rule a
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necessary evil best left to the hands of others. Since he'd come in my
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service, Hakram had acted in myriad ways: diplomat, steward, tactician
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and warrior. A confidant, too, and how many times would my temper have
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led my astray if not for his calming influence? It'd been my Name that
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gathered the Woe, but it was Adjutant who was keeping them together.
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That much was becoming undeniable as the weeks passed. It would have
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been easy to dismiss this as part of his Name, becoming whatever I
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needed him to be, but Names did not come from nothing. There had to be
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will behind them, an intent to fill the gaps I left without ever
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realizing it. There were a great many victories to my name, nowadays,
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but few of them would have been possible without the tall orc quietly
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going behind me and doing the labour I never even considered needed to
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be done.
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I wondered if this was what Scribe felt like to Black: a limb whose
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absence left you a cripple in all the worst of ways. I'd made much of my
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feelings for Kilian, lately, and the ever-complicated knot that was my
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relationship with my teacher, but if I had to name the person I loved
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most in the world it was the orc standing in front of me. Because he'd
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chosen to trust me when he had nothing to gain, long before a Name came
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into it. Because he was a decent man and he still believed in what we
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did -- and as long as I had that, that shining truth tucked away in the
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back of my mind, it did not matter what horrors I hitched my course to.
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Hakram was perhaps my closest friend in the world, but more than that he
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was compass. Without him I would be lost in more ways than one.
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``Oaths bind both ways,'' I said. ``The part that is mine to uphold, do
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you judge it upheld?''
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He laughed quietly.
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``You've always kept your eyes on the horizon,'' he said. ``On the next
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task, the next enemy, the next war. Look down, Catherine Foundling. See
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where you are.''
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In his deep-set eyes there was something feverish, the fire he always
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kept under lock and key let loose for my sake.
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``We're winning,'' he said. ``Just by standing here, we're winning.
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Because they only rule us only as long as we let them, and the moment
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that truth bleeds it dies. They can kill every last one of us and it
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won't matter, because as long as the banner's been raised once someone
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will rise to carry it again.''
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Baring fangs, he met my eyes.
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``They wouldn't let us have a seat at the table, so we \emph{broke}
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it,'' Hakram said, and there was a savage satisfaction to him. ``That
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will not go quietly into the night, no matter what happens today.''
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``It's going to get worse,'' I said quietly. ``After Diabolist. We know
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her kind, what it can do: rise tall and fall just as hard. It's the
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people behind her we need to end, and they've owned the Wasteland since
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before it had that name.''
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``\emph{How tall the spears, and great the host},'' he spoke in Kharsum,
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cadenced and low,'' \emph{This empire's bier, of graven ghosts}.''
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His smile grew sharp, and there was not a thimble of mercy to be found
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in it.
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``They say the last of the Warlords spoke that verse, after the Miezans
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destroyed the holy grounds of the Broken Antlers,'' Hakram said. ``We
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were great, in those days, great as any power birthed since.''
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The Beast stirred under my skin, coiling lazily as it tasted the stench
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of death in the air -- death past, and death yet to come.
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``That's the thing with eras, Catherine,'' Adjutant said, hard-eyed and
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proud. ``They come to an end. So let's bury it together, the two of us
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-- this fucking Age of Wonders they built on our backs.''
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I clasped the arm he offered, and it felt like an oath.
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---
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Liesse looked like the gates of some godforsaken hell. The walls of
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sun-kissed stone had covered in great runes and the pale blocks had
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withered like fruit on the vine. Atop them stood unmoving thousands
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facing us, and though this was a fortified city and not a fortress they
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were tall ramparts and well-built. Behind them the labyrinth of alleys
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and shops would be crawling with wards and undead: we'd bleed for every
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street. I'd taken this city once before, fought my way through the Lone
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Swordsman and his army, but this was a different kind of threat. This
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was Akua Sahelian, and though I bore her no small hatred I would not
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deny she was cunning, ruthless and powerful. The Diabolist had called
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the last of the Truebloods to her side, gathered sorcerers and warlocks
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and every breed of practitioner the Wasteland could boast. The elements
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unleashed was the least of what I could expect. There would be devils,
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and perhaps even demons. She'd gone too far to flinch at the notions of
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what might come if she failed. What made Akua dangerous beyond all that,
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though, was displayed before the city.
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Thirty thousand undead stood, but not in simple ranks. As I marshalled
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armies from every corner of Callow, Diabolist had prepared her grounds
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to receive me. A ditch had been dug and palisade raised behind it,
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wights with spears massed behind. Three bastions of rough stone had been
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raised behind, filled with mages and what few siege engines she had. No
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great fortifications, these, but our own trebuchets and scorpions would
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be lower on the ground and would have to be brought into range as hers
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awaited. To the sides of the ditch stakes had been hammered into the
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ground with broad depths, a clear deterrent for my knights. The nature
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of my forces was not unknown to her, and she knew that between the two
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of us it was me who was pressed for time. There'd been talk of
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assaulting the other walls, since this front was so deeply fortified,
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but though there would be such an attempt the main thrust would have to
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be through this direction. It was where the gates were, the weak point
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in the defensive wards. The fortifications facing Procer were the
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newest, since that side had once been facing Lake Hengest and had lacked
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any fortifications, but since then she'd raised walls atop a sharp slope
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of beaten earth and anchored wards in them. The stretch between those
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walls and the Ducal Palace had been made into a killing field worthy of
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Summerholm.
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It was the most direct way to the heart of her ritual, but the
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casualties we'd taken forcing our way through there would be\ldots{}
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staggering. That knowledge, about the anchor of her ritual, had come
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without any need for spying. Above Liesse, Akua Sahelian's madness was
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laid bare for all of Creation to witness. Pillars of darkness rose from
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the roof of the palace half a dozen leagues into the sky, where their
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true nature was revealed: a cage. Like claws the darkness clasped a
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gargantuan orb of roiling smoke, ever-moving and testing the confine.
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Only a handful of people on the field knew the true nature of it for
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sure, though I suspected the Warlock would divine it after a closer
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look. He'd helped design the containment wards about to be activated
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around the city, after all. The souls of the Deoraithe cast a heavy
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shadow on the morning sky, becoming more a stormy dusk the closer one
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came to the city. Millions upon millions, accumulated since before Praes
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stood a single nation or the Miezan so much as caught sight of
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Calernia's shores. It was, I thought, almost as deep a desecration as
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Akua's casual slaughter of a hundred thousand innocents. Almost.
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``Not impressed,'' Archer volunteered. ``Now if she'd set the sky on
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\emph{fire} that would be something, but this is just decorative.''
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``Shut your fucking mouth,'' Juniper spat. ``Lord Black is about to
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speak, and if I miss a single word because you're whining you'll regret
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it.''
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The Fifteenth, for once, would not take the vanguard of the fight. That
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would be the duty of the veteran legions, with my men serving as a
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mobile reserve to be deployed when the city was breached. The field
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outside was not ours to take. I'd gathered most my people regardless,
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since the Woe would have duties before it came to the fighting in the
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streets. Thief was the most glaring absence, come to camp only for a few
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hours when we'd first arrived and then disappearing into Liesse again.
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She'd given me priceless information, though, and though she would not
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be fighting there was one last task ahead of her. Hierophant was clearly
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bored out of his skull, impatient with anything that did not involve
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toying with the wards he'd spent several weeks designing, and Archer was
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even worse. She'd gotten restless the moment she saw the armies
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arranged, spoiling for a fight. Juniper's general staff stood with her
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and as usual Hakram was the lone isle of serenity to be had. As for
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Robber and his cohort, they were my knife in the night. What I had in
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mind for them did not involve being out in the open.
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``Archer, don't assault my general,'' I said absent-mindedly. ``I don't
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have a spare.''
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Juniper sneered in my direction, but did not comment. She'd been telling
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everyone to be silent for a half hour now, long before Black was even
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close to making an appearance. He was out now, though. Atop his dead
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horse barded in steel, in bare plate from head to toe and black cloak
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streaming behind him. He'd offered me the right to make the address, but
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I'd declined. Speeches had never been my strength -- I worked best with
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small numbers. I would have to learn the skill, eventually, but this was
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too important a battle for fumbling. Horse passing before the armoured
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ranks of the Legions, my teacher slowed his mount and came to rest. When
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he spoke, it was with sorcery behind his voice: there was not a soul in
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our host that would not hear him.
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``We have fought this war before,'' he said, and his words washed over
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us like a wave.
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There was pause, but not long enough for stillness to set in. I could
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admire the skill of it -- his fame as an orator was not unearned.
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``Forty years ago, we fought it from the Steppes to the Hungering
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Sands,'' he said. ``Twenty years before that it was fought as well, and
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again and again all the way back to the days of the Declaration. A
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thousand battles spanning a thousand years.''
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The Black Knight's power filled the air like a haze, and even where I
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stood I could feel it whispering to me.
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``\emph{Legionaries},'' he called, a bone-deep shiver giving answer.
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``Look atop those walls and know you face a millennium of blood and
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arrogance staring down at you. You know that banner. Your fathers and
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mothers fought under it, against it. Under that standard Callow was bled
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a hundred times. Under that standard, Praes tore itself apart at the
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whims of the mad and the vicious. Are you not tired? I am.''
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He laughed, a thing of dark and bitter anger.
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``I have fought this war since I was a boy,'' he said. ``And so have
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you, in every shop and field and pit there is to be found in this
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empire. There is no peace with this foe, only struggle from dawn to
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dusk.''
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His voice rose.
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``Legionaries,'' he called. ``You of Praes and Callow, of Steppes and
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Eyries, you have fought this war before and \emph{won it}. Forty years
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ago, we broke the spine of the High Lords. Yet here they stand before
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us, fangs bared. Will you let this challenge go unanswered?''
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It was the orcs that begun. Feet stamped the ground, swords were
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hammered against shields. It came and went like a summer storm,
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deafening in sudden fury and sudden absence.
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``I will not tell you our cause is just, for justice does not win
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wars,'' he said. ``I will not tell you victory is deserved or assured,
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for Creation owes nothing. If the world refuses you your due, then
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\emph{declare war upon all the world}.''
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His sword cleared the scabbard, the sound of sharpness and steel a call
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to war.
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``On this field, on this day, two truths rule,'' he said. ``There is
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only one sin.''
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``DEFEAT,'' sixty thousand voices screamed back.
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``There is only one grace.''
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``VICTORY.''
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Shields rose, swords unsheathed, horns sounded and with that last word
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filling the air the Second Battle of Liesse began.
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