398 lines
20 KiB
TeX
398 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-11-ballon}{%
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\chapter{Ballon}\label{chapter-11-ballon}}
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\epigraph{``You might say that they'll never see me coming.''}{Dread Empress Malevolent II, announcing the raising of her invisible
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army}
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``\emph{Your Majesty}?'' the Deoraithe mage stuttered out.
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I leaned down and gently touched his forehead with an armoured finger.
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``Don't resist,'' I said. ``It'll be uncomfortable, but not painful.''
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Unless he tried to fight me, but in this case the fear that trailed me
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as much as my cape saw to the matter. The man went rigid as a board. I
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breathed out mist and Winter crept through my veins. His soul wriggled
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under the tight grip of my will, as I rifled through vague memories. He
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had, I thought, a well-organized mind. Shame about the panic tinging it.
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I found what I needed anyway, the locations of the officer tent's he'd
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found as he'd been told.
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``You were thorough,'' I said, withdrawing my finger. ``Well done.''
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The fifty riders of the Hunt were too many for so small a tent, and one
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of the fae casually blew it away with a flick of the wrist before it
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could tangle the banners. Midnight was no bar to my sight, and what I
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saw around us was the Watch responding to our sudden arrival with
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flawless professionalism. Ah, the things I could do with an army's worth
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of these. It was almost tempting to hollow out Kegan's soul, tie puppet
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strings to the remnants and take them all for my own. I bit my lip until
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it bled, the flare of pain helping me focus. I reached for my saddlebag,
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taking out the seal of House Iarsmai I'd asked Kegan to send me months
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ago. I tossed it into the mage's hands.
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``Validate this,'' I ordered.
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The man shivered, though I was unsure why. I'd been very polite so far.
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Murmuring in the mage tongue he traced the tall dead oak on the seal
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with his fingers, gasping when it glimmered green.
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``It's real,'' he said.
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Unsheathing my sword, I flicked the blade behind me after gauging the
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surroundings. Creation folded unto itself, the fairy gate opening thirty
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feet wide and just as tall. I tied off the threads, giving it a finite
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lifespan. One of the newer Winter tricks in my arsenal.
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``By the authority granted to me by Duchess Kegan Iarsmai, I order the
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Watch to immediately withdraw,'' I called out. ``And quick about it, I
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don't have the time to hold your hand. You have half an hour before the
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gate closes.''
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Zombie was chomping at the bit, which admittedly was better than
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chomping at grass I'd probably need to have a goblin dig out of her
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later. I took a moment to calm myself, then dug into the memories I'd
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glimpsed. Reorienting myself was the hardest part of figuring it all
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out, since none of the unconscious markers the mage had used were
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markers I was familiar with. Masego and I had figured out a way around
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that through the Observatory with the card I'd been keeping up my --
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heavily armoured -- sleeve, but I was without the benefit of Hierophant
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tonight. My mind struggled with the discrepancies, until I let through
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another sliver of Winter and there was a sensation like a spike through
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my forehead. No pain, though, only terrifyingly clear understanding.
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``Riders of the Hunt,'' I called out.
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All fifty of them turned to me as one with unnatural smoothness.
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``Follow,'' I laughed. ``Tonight we ride.''
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``\emph{Finally},'' Larat hissed, blade in hand. ``Sound the horns. Let
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them hear us coming.''
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Banners were raised, not of silk or cloth but crow's feathers and
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shadow. Shining coldly like a raven's eye. A fae with hair like spun
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gold touched the horn to her lips, and doom screamed across the night. I
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spurred on Zombie, and felt her devour the distance easily as I guided
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us by memories not my own. The Watch parted for us, already preparing to
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retreat, and we fell unto the unprepared camp of the crusaders like
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hungry wolves. Men shouted out in Chantant, known to me regardless of
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sight. The heat of them could be felt on the tip of my tongue, the fear
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that set their hearts aflutter thundering in my ears. It pleased me. It
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was slaughter, wherever we rode. Men half-dressed and half-awake were
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torn apart by sword and spear and darker things: hounds of air and
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darkness, called forth by the horns. I wielded the monster like a knife
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as my thoughts cooled. The Alamans army closest to us had kept the tents
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of their officers together and I made them pay for that mistake. Before
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the hounds even reached them the soldiers I raised my hand and choked
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them with rings of ice and shade, a dozen dead in a heartbeat. Smiling,
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I leaned forward.
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``Up,'' I ordered. ``\emph{Kill}.''
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Corpses with broken necks and ugly marks around their throats rose up as
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the Hunt passed through. Screams followed in our wake. We would begin, I
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decided, with the outer ring. Princess Malanza's own host was closer to
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the centre, but I would let her people feel it coming. Know what was
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prowling the night for them. We carved our way out of the Alamans army
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camp, scything through the company of fantassins that tried to form up
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in our way. Men and women were trampled by horses, terror blooming again
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in the wake of death as the corpses rose and chaos spread.
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``You will go no further,'' a man's voice announced calmly.
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I cocked my head to the side. No fear in this one. And such
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\emph{power}. Young but scarred, his voice had echoed of faraway Levant.
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A large man with a war hammer hoisted over his shoulder, burdened with
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heavy plate. I neither slowed nor ceased, Zombie galloping straight at
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him. The hero hefted his war hammer and struck with impossible
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swiftness, aiming to shatter the legs of my mount. With a cold laugh I
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guided my horse and her wings unfolded, leaping tall above the man as
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the Hunt streamed around him seamlessly. We rode even as the man
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screamed of our cowardice, ever onwards. I had not come here to be
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waylaid by petty sidekicks. The camps had come alive and our prey was
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moving. It became slower work, picking off officers who'd joined their
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companies. Frustratingly slow. The riders slaked their blood on those
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that could be found instead. No surrender was offered and no mercy
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granted.
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Then the sky came down on our heads.
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Instinct allowed me to guide Zombie away from the worst of it, but wet
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earth sprayed over us as a massive gouge split the ground open. Even as
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it began to rain mud, a woman walked out of the mess. Old, I thought.
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Neither tall nor short, and she wore no armour aside from a cuirass over
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long cloth robes. In her hand was a simple sword of oiled steel, and she
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was rolling her wrists to limber them.
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``Saint of Swords,'' I said, voice echoing with the howl of blizzards.
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``Black Queen,'' the old woman said, light tapping the flat of the blade
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against her shoulder. ``Nice of you to visit.''
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My will spread, weaving glamour across the sky according to borrowed
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memories.
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``Go,'' I told the Hunt. ``Fulfil my purpose.''
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``Stay,'' the Saint grinned. ``Die screaming.''
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She swung again, and this time I grasped what was being wielded. Not an
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aspect or a spell. Nothing like the Lone Swordsman's power or the
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Gallant Brigand's. No, I'd only seen this once before: when Ranger had
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considered killing me seriously enough I'd felt myself die. When the
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Saint of Swords attacked, she did so with the sharpened intent to kill
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us. She had hardened her willpower so much that Creation counted no
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difference between her will and truth, the air howling as it cut itself
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apart. I drew deep and laughed, ice crashing against the blow with a
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gargantuan cracking sound. Shards sprayed everywhere as the Hunt obeyed,
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hounds and riders streaming out in every direction but that of the
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coming fight. I leapt off Zombie and set her aflight. Her wings made her
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too valuable to risk here.
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``Winter, is it?'' the Saint of Swords mused, strolling forward. ``Never
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had that before. Try to make it entertaining.''
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``You will make,'' I said, ``very useful artefacts.''
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A quiet voice in the back of my mind howled, screaming that revealing
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any unknown capacity to the enemy was sheer stupidity. I could not seem
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to care. It had felt\ldots{} right to chastise her that way. We closed
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the distance as one, swords bared. I feinted to the side but she slapped
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it away contemptuously, a half-step bringing her into my guard and
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without missing a beat she cut my throat. Red gushed out, but it was
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more Winter than blood -- an exertion of will was all it took to heal
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the wound. I spat out the blood in my mouth, making distance between us.
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``Regenerators,'' the Saint sighed. ``You never bother to learn how to
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fight properly, with a crutch like that. Sloppy.''
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The nonchalance tasted fouler in my mouth than the blood, called for
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\emph{utter destruction} in answer, but I breathed out and smoothed the
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edges growing ragged. I attacked again, low and quick. Parry, but when
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she closed in again I was ready: a spear of shadow formed out of my free
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hand and tore towards her. Snorting, the heroine raked her bare fingers
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down and tore through the darkness like wet parchment. In the heartbeat
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where I hesitated, she struck quick as a viper -- aiming to cut off my
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head in full, this time. I ducked under by the barest of margins but she
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kicked me in the face, and as I rocked back she struck again. My parry
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was effortlessly turned, blade twisting around to carve through my wrist
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like it was butter. I pivoted, caught the hand still holding the blade
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with my other pne and forced it back on even as I avoided a thrust that
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would have gone through my eye if I'd been a moment slower. Winter
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flared and the pieces reattached, my fingers twitching as the power
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skittered through them.
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``I can see it,'' the Saint mused. ``Take the crippling to avoid the
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killing. There's a hint of Ranger in there, however diluted. A bastard's
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bastard.''
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I rolled my shoulders as she watched me indifferently.
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``Again,'' I said.
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``Change of plans,'' the old woman smiled.
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The spell struck me from the side like than fist of an angry god. I felt
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my flesh melt off, my blood boil -- until I opened the floodgates, and
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shot out of the fire storm as my face peeled off flake by flake. That
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had \emph{stung}.
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``Reinforcements, my dear lady,'' a man's voice drawled. ``Though you
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seem to need them not.''
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My eyes flicked to the side. Three of them. Short man with a leather
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coat and a casting rod must have been responsible for the flame. An
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olive-skinned woman with two knives and a red-painted face started
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walking towards me, while the last was unarmed. Priest, I decided,
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looking at his ornate robes. Attrition was no longer feasible if they
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had a healer. On the other hand, now it was four on one. My odds had
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just gotten a lot better.
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``Well,'' I grinned, my teeth grown sharp. ``Now it's a party. Have at
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it, heroes.''
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``How uncouth,'' the man in leather said, wrinkling his nose.
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When the fire came again, erupting in a cone from the rod, I flicked
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away. Two Knives closed in from the side as the Saint was forced to go
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around the spell. Eyes following the arms, I let the knife-wielder
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commit to a cut from the left before half-stepping out of the way, hand
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snaking up to catch the extended wrist and \emph{snapping} it. There was
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a scream, but I slapped her open mouth and filled with ice. She began
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choking until Light bloomed and melted it. It even streaked down to
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unsnap the wrist. No matter, I was already past her.
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``Damnation,'' the spellcaster cursed, seeing me close the distance in
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the blink of an eye.
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A sphere of what looked like liquid flame formed around him, but what
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was fire to me? I gathered power and struck at it, ripping off a chunk
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of the protective sphere to get at the terrified man beneath. Instinct
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warned me and I listened. Leaping above the flames, I narrowly avoided
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being run through by the Saint -- though, twisting halfway up the arcing
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jump, I shaped a spike of rime and sent it howling after Two Knives. The
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heroine flickered, as if she'd been an illusion all this time, and what
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should have torn through her abdomen instead put a hole in the ground
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twenty feet behind her. Displacement? Useful trick. Too useful to be
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anything but an aspect. I landed in a crouch.
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``Keep away from her, kids,'' the Saint ordered. ``She's a few years
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ahead of what you can handle.''
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My eyes flicked to the sky. Of the five glamoured markers I had placed,
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three were left. I'd have to play with these a little longer, lest they
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pursue the Hunt. I grimaced. I'd drawn on Winter enough already that
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anything more was going to starkly affect my judgement instead of just
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reinforce bad instincts. \emph{Until the markers are gone}, I told
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myself. \emph{Then retreat}. I drew deep, and this time when the Saint
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struck at me I drowned the world in ice. Massive spinning blades tore
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through the air and ground, though I felt them shatter within a
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heartbeat. The hound had teeth. No matter. The creature with Two Knives
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had retreated to protect the thing that wielded Light, but the
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spellcaster was vulnerable. I wove around balls of flame effortlessly,
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parted a burning wall with a flick of my sword and found the human
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behind it staring back defiantly. It had gathered sorcery before it, a
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hundred hanging needles that burned the very air around them.
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``Dodge \emph{that},'' the human hissed, and they flew.
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Laughing, I formed a gate that swallowed them into Arcadia and closed it
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just as swiftly. The human was casting again, and I could feel death
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coming. Light, from the side, and something more dangerous from the
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hound. I shaped glamour with but a thought, mine own silhouette striving
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for the spellacasrer as I leapt up shrouded in nothingness. The illusion
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was broken by a beam of Light, but the hound had caught the scent: even
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as I landed atop a ring of shade, she cut a wound into the air and ran
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atop it towards me. I broke the ring and fell as the other humans
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finally saw through the glamour, slow things that they were. Abandoning
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the spellcaster, I made for the Light-bearer and its protector. The
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knife-wielding thing shouted out a word in some foreign tongue that
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tasted of spice and blood, charging me with blinding speed. Ah, the
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arrogance of mortals. Gracefully, I stepped around the blow and simply
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left my sword in her way. It carved through her shoulder, blood spraying
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as the arm fell to the ground. I took a modified sharper from the
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satchel and shoved it into the stump, triggering the mechanism inside
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with a shard of ice. The detonation broke bone and tossed her away even
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as the Light-wielder shot another brilliant beam at me. My free hand
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caught it, fingers beginning to melt away, and I forced it to careen
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aside.
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It had slowed me. The gout of flame I avoided with a mere half-step even
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as my fingers grew back, but the Saint struck harder. Holding the wound
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she had carved in the sky like a massive blade, she scythed through the
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side of me. I was quick enough it went through my shoulder instead of my
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head. In a heartbeat, arm and leg and flank were pulped. Winter hissed
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in fury, and they began to coalesce anew in ice.
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``Not regeneration,'' the Saint frowned. ``Creationally fixed body. Just
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pour power until it remakes itself. You've turned yourself into proper
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abomination, girl. If there's still any of you left in there.''
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``Irritating,'' I noted, voice echoing with the death of embers.
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``Beat it, kids,'' the hound ordered. ``This one's going to take a
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\emph{lot} of killing before she goes down.''
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Already the Light-wielder was fixing the creature I had mangled. The
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hound was an irritant, she must be dealt with before the rest was tended
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to. I seized threads of glamour and sent them into her mind, but
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they\ldots{} broke. That was no soul. It was a sword, and somehow more.
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``You hold dominion,'' I said.
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``Only over the one thing,'' the Saint grinned. ``But that's usually
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enough.''
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My eyes flicked to the sky. Another glamoured marker had vanished. Only
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one left now. And when it did, I would\ldots{} I frowned. It was hard to
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remember. The hound took advantage of my distraction, striking anew. I
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let instinct guide me and steel rang against steel. She batted aside my
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guard but the spike of frost I shot at her throat forced her to turn her
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follow-through blow into a parry as I returned on the offensive. Cut
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high, swept away, but I turned with it and lunged at her back. She
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caught the tip between two fingers and \emph{twisted}, the steel
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shattering. Frost filled the break as I withdrew, tasting her movements
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in the air. The footing gave her away. Or so I had thought: what should
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have been a strike at my arm was a slide forward instead, and when I
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tried a head-butt she met me with her own. We hit halfway through,
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neither hurt until she raked her fingers across my chest plate and cut
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through still boiling-hot steel. I let Winter loose, screaming cold
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winds blowing the both of us back. Some part of me insisted I look at
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the sky. The rest wanted to carve open that insolent hound and add her
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entrails to my cape. One was more pleasing than the other.
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``Let us test it, then,'' I smiled. ``The mettle of our domains.''
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Darkness fell, and came cold with it. The world fell away. Yet under an
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ink-black sky stood the Saint of Swords, radiant and unruffled.
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Unimpressed. I inhaled the scent of it, puzzled.
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``Your dominion,'' I said. ``It is not projected. Only within.''
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``Took me a decade of hard killing to get that down,'' the hound
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replied. ``But there's always a fight to be found in Procer, if you know
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where to look.''
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My frown deepened and the cold focused on her, but all it did was cool
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the blade. It had been forged of great fires, I thought. What coldness I
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had to offer was insufficient.
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``Gods, I'm going to feel this one in the joints,'' the Saint grunted.
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She had no sword in hand, when she took her stance. I grit my teeth and
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poured all of my domain into her, but slowed was not stopped. She swung,
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and the light was blinding. Something\ldots{} not broke, but it was
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wounded. Damaged. As I screamed the night fled, and I found myself
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kneeling over grounds rent asunder by our fight. Returned to Creation.
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The heroine was panting. \emph{Shit}, I thought. \emph{What the fuck was
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that?} I was feeling like myself again, but I was also feeling my heart
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beat. Like it actually mattered, like I was \emph{human} again. The last
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marker was gone, I saw. And I sure as Hells wasn't sticking around to
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take another of whatever in that'd been. Seizing reins gone frail, I
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called back the Hunt. Fewer than anticipated answered my call, but I
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realized with ugly surprise it was not rebellion I was dealing with. The
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heroes must have killed some of them. At least ten were gone, maybe
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more.
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I legged it. No two ways about it, I made like a proper villain and fled
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the field. The heroine tried to follow and almost caught me around the
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corner behind a tent, scything straight through with another of those
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not-blows, but Zombie answered my call and landed just behind. We took
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flight even as the old woman cursed and carved another wound into the
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air, immediately running on it after me. Yeah, fuck that. I wasn't
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picking a second fight with a Named who could shrug off my full domain.
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I opened the gate in the sky even higher, seeing the Hunt take flight
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behind me, and went straight through into Arcadia. I didn't even stop
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there, flying Zombie far from the entrance. The Saint, thank the Gods,
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did not follow. I learned why when another four of the Hunt disappeared
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from the back of my mind.
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I could not help but be thankful she'd chosen to whittle away at my
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trump card instead of trying to go after me. It might have been possible
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to trap her in here, but that smelled of the Saint cutting her way back
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out at the worst possible moment down the line. The Hunt gathered to me,
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having lost a few feathers, but Headsman had been a success. Not without
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losses, but I wasn't entirely opposed to the Hunt being thinned out
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before they inevitably stabbed me in the back. Larat was the first to
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address me after I landed, drenched in blood from head to toe. Someone
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was in a good mood.
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``A victory, my queen,'' he said.
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I looked up at the Arcadian sky and smiled. Sure, it'd been that. But
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more importantly, it had been a \emph{very} good distraction. After all,
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the very moment I'd opened the gate for the Watch someone had come
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through. And while we were busy being loud and visible?
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Thief had been on the prowl.
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``All right, saddle up,'' I called out. ``We need to find the Watch
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contingent before retreating.''
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We needed to hurry. The sooner we got back to camp, the sooner I could
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ask Hierophant why my skin was capable of bruising again.
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