424 lines
20 KiB
TeX
424 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-16-pirouette}{%
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\chapter{Pirouette}\label{chapter-16-pirouette}}
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\epigraph{``When the abyss stares back, wave. Offer refreshments. Being
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impolite to the abyss is never a good idea.''}{Dread Emperor Malevolent I, the Unhallowed}
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``Oh, \emph{come on},'' I complained. ``I know I don't have a lot of
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room to argue about healing, but that knife was tickling the back of his
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skull. Even I wouldn't walk that off so easily, and my body is basically
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lies and mirrors.''
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There was some shuffling from the opposition, either because of the
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reminder I'd just killed one of their crew or because grievances at how
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fucking ridiculous their powers were weren't what they'd been expecting.
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If they'd been waiting for despair, they were out of luck. Not that I
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was particularly pleased my work had been literally waved away by the
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Pilgrim, but that the heroes would be almost absurdly hard to put down
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wasn't exactly a surprise. The Heavens had already thrown their
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second-raters at me and I'd chewed straight through them over winter.
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They were done fucking around.
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``You could still surrender,'' the Grey Pilgrim offered.
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Instead I sighed and tapped the side of my helmet. The sliver of power
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was enough to activate the dormant rune.
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``Spell formula stable,'' Masego said. ``No divine interference.''
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``Confirmed resurrection,'' I said. ``Pilgrim's come out to play.''
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Thief had warned me that last-moment rescues were his specialty so it
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wasn't coming out of the blue, though after actually landing that blow
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I'd expected the hero to actually stay down afterwards. At least the
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first part was going more or less according to plan. Smacking around the
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greenhorns some had forced one of the real monsters to intervene before
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I dug a little too deep and Winter took the helm. I almost felt like
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shivering at the idea of facing the Grey Pilgrim when in a state of mind
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where monologues felt like a good idea. Akua might have been right that
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playing it up for Creation added some hurt to the swings, but there was
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a reason I was wearing \emph{her} as a cloak accessory instead of the
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other way around.
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``Noted,'' Hierophant replied. ``First contingency beginning.''
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``Skip straight to second,'' I grunted. ``I think we underestimated how
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much trouble the old man would be.''
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Which was a Hells of a thing to say, considering we'd planned for him
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being in the same wheelhouse as Warlock. But if I was reading this
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right, swinging his miracle dick around wasn't the Pilgrim's game. He
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was more a metaphorical full hand on the scales than the kind of Named
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that tossed around burning mountains. \emph{And that's only eight out of
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twelve accounted for}, I thought. \emph{Saint and at least one mage are
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still waiting in the wings.}
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``Understood,'' Hierophant said. ``Sunrise Final is-''
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Power flared, and his words cut out. I glanced at the Grey Pilgrim,
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whose staff was wreathed in light.
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``Rude,'' I said. ``You could have let him finish. Regardless, I'm
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reconsidering my stance on single combat. Theoretically, if I agree, do
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I get to pick my opponent?''
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I met the stare of the man I'd stabbed and winked on the same side my
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knife had gone through. He flinched.
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``She is temporizing while her ally prepares his strike,'' the Grey
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Pilgrim told the other heroes. ``Prepare yourselves, children. After
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that blow is weathered is the moment to strike.''
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Gods, but I hated fighting smart opponents. Banter would have kept
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William and his crew busy for a few minutes, at least. It didn't matter,
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in the end, because I hadn't spent the last year busying myself sorely
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with the affairs of rule. While they'd been assembling their armies and
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heroes, I'd been training the Woe. And the one amongst them I'd spent
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most time on was Masego, hammering in the basics of battle that he'd
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once ignored in favour of simply smashing everything in sight with
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sorcery. The first thing I'd taught him? A well-worn adage from
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Theodosius the Unconquered himself. \emph{Swiftness is the lifeblood of
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war.} Before the heroes could further prepare, Hierophant struck. Dawn
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rose from a sun unknown to Creation, the terrible heart of Summer
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shining down on the cluster of heroes. Even from where I stood, the heat
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was overwhelming. Wind picked up even as the Named before me winked out
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of sight, swallowed by scorching light. The Princess of High Noon had
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been one of our most vicious enemies to deal with, but we had gained
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much from her defeat: even this pale imitation of her power made mockery
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of the kind of sorcery we usually called on.
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Within the blaze, a star was born. Shining atop the Grey Pilgrim's staff
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as he stood unruffled, his loose robes untouched by wind or heat.
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``As there was first light, there will be last,'' the old man said.
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``Under radiant star was the first of mankind born, and it will shine
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long after our time is past. Transient we, yet unbowed by the passing. I
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refuse your verdict, usher of mysteries.''
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With a thunderous clap, the blaze was parted. A corridor opened, leading
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straight to me, and the heroes rushed down. I rolled my shoulder. Half
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the knockout punch was delivered, I was my responsibility to take care
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of the second half. The barefoot staff-wielder was first across,
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blindingly fast. Behind came the usual triumvirate: greatsword, war
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hammer, sword and board. Not the same as before, for the latter.
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Apparently coming that close to dying had shaken the man, because it was
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now another. The sorcery came down around me, too close to a ward for
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comfort. I grimaced. I'd have to suffer through, at least until the time
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to withdraw came. Stance wide, I raised my guard and waited for the
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first of the hunting hounds. She thrust high, towards my throat. Batted
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aside, but she was better with her weapon than I was with mine -- a spin
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was all it took for her to be smashing down at my pauldron. I took it.
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The steel shattered like clay, but the impact wasn't strong enough to
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screw with my own blow. It carved a wound across her cheek, narrowly
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missing the nose. I got in close to sucker punch her belly, but she
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parried the blow and I was forced to step back to avoid having my
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ribcage caved in. Light bloomed on her cheek, the healer's work.
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It healed nothing.
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Masego had fought demons at Second Liesse. One of them had been a demon
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of Order, what Praesi called a Beast of Hierarchy. Their essence, as I
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understood it, was a perversion of laws. Hierophant had learned to mimic
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that, to a a very limited extent. Inside my killing grounds one law had
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been established: Light had no effect. The barefoot woman withdrew
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before I could exploit her surprise, damnably well-trained, and then I
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had to deal with the second wave. Greatsword -- what was left of that
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weapon, anyway -- went for the left side. Hammer for the right, the
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fresh sword and board keeping me boxed in. I almost smiled. They'd had a
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limited amount of training together and it was showing: that made it the
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second time they were trying that tactic on me. Last time I'd gone for
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one of the sides, and they weren't idiots: they were expecting as much.
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Instead I barrelled forward. The hero's shield bashed forward to keep me
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in place for the others to hit, but they'd learned the wrong lesson from
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the last time. It wasn't that I \emph{couldn't} break their formation,
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just that I hadn't \emph{chosen} to. My armoured fist hit the shield and
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it dented, the man wielding it crying in pain as it broke his fingers
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behind it. It was a good opening to slice his throat, but the other two
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were at my back so there was no time. I ran into him, the two of us
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falling to the ground as weapons whistled behind me.
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Instinct led me to throw myself to the side instead of wrestling on the
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ground. It saved my life. Summer's dawn had not only been broken by the
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Pilgrim, it had been wielded: he shaped it into a beam and threw it at
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me. His aim was perfectly angled, enough that it didn't touch sword and
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board when he stayed on the ground. Behind me, earth exploded in
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desiccated chunks. Time was running out: I couldn't engage four heroes
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\emph{and} the old man simultaneously, that'd just get me killed. I'd
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have to get aggressive then.
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``They damaged the Light,'' the barefoot woman said in heavily accented
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Lower Miezan. ``Careful.''
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It was the right move, telling her comrades healing mistakes was no
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longer an option. It was also the wrong one, because for a heartbeat
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they were surprised. I shot back towards the boy with the wrecked
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greatsword, ducking under a swing and catching the wrist. Hammer-wielder
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would have smacked me away, aiming for my hips, but a flex of the legs
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had me putting my feet on the boy's chest while the hammer passed under
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me. For a heartbeat I was vulnerable, and that had the staff-wielder on
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my ass. \emph{Not quick enough, for once,} I thought. My thighs
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tightened, and using the boy's own chest as a counterweight I ripped his
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arm off. There was a spray of blood and an anguished scream as I fell
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into a roll, the staff smashing down where I'd been a heartbeat before.
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Left with a bleeding arm wielding the remains of a greatsword in my free
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hand, I threw it in the hammer-wielder's face before he could aim
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another strike. He was horrified enough to take a hand off the hammer to
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push it aside, and that was a mistake. I landed the roll on my feet,
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angled my stance and smoothly rose. My blade thrust in an upwards
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diagonal into his throat. He opened his mouth, trying to gurgle out a
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word -- aspect, probably -- but I smacked the pommel and the sword went
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straight through his spine. It was an uglier death than a clean
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decapitation.
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``\emph{Enough},'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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He pointed his staff at me and a star came to life. The beam hit a pane
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of force three heartbeats before it would have incinerated me, both of
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them exploding deafeningly. Gods bless Hierophant. Sword and board was
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getting back on his feet, greatsword boy still screaming about his
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missing arm -- seriously, what a wimp, I lost limbs all the time and you
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didn't hear \emph{me} yelling about it -- and staff-wielder was\ldots{}
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back on me. Godsdamnit. I threw myself to the side, swiped at her feet
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and got treated to a kick in the face for it. While I was rocking back
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she flowed into a thrust at my throat. Ah, experience. She'd gone for
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that too often, I'd expected it this time. I caught the tip of the staff
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with my hand, feeling the steel give and the palm bones break, but I
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kept my grip on it while I slashed at her throat and she tried to
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withdraw for a parry. Blood spilled on the ground. Two down, though it
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was anybody's guess for how long.
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``\textbf{Sever}.''
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Masego's miracle vanished. So did my sword, my hand up to the wrist and
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the armour over it. Fuck. I backpedalled hastily as the Saint entered
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the fray.
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``Aspect already?'' I said.
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My hand formed again, though much slower than it should have. And it
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remained ice instead of looking like flesh. That was a problem.
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``Your little mage's trick was impressive,'' the Saint of Swords said.
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``But time to wrap this up, if we want it over before sundown.''
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The lack of sword was more a problem than the severed limb, ice or not.
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A flick of the wrist had a knife falling into my palm, but that was
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rather cold comfort against this particular monster.
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``Fine,'' I said. ``I've been thinking on how to beat you anyway,
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Saint.''
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The Grey Pilgrim, apparently uninterested in banter, sent another
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fucking star at me. Hierophant, bless his soul, split it in four and
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forced it to shoot in four different directions.
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``Have you?'' the old woman drawled. ``This ought to be interesting.''
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I could not help but notice none of the heroes I'd put down were getting
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the resurrection treatment. Was it just comprehensive healing at the
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last moment, then? Too little to go on to be sure.
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``One swing,'' I said. ``If you can take that, I'm probably out of
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luck.''
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The heroine laughed.
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``Well,'' she grinned. ``Give it your best shot.''
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Ice formed a sword blade out of my knife as I shifted my grip. Steadying
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my stance, I allowed the power of Winter to gather in me. Motes of blue
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emanated from my frame. To my surprise, the Saint actually bothered to
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get into a stance of her own. Huh, she was taking me seriously. That was
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kind of flattering.
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``Welp,'' I said, and run away.
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I legged it as fast as I could, which was very considering my mantle.
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They really must have taken me for a complete idiot, if they'd thought
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I'd stick around to fight a crew of heroes \emph{and} the two old
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beasts. I heard the air howl behind me as the heroine cussed me out in
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Chantant, leaping onto a platform of shade to get out of the way. I
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tapped the side of my helmet as I leapt back down, running as fast as I
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could towards the relative safety of the palisade.
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``Masego,'' I said. ``I need you to-``
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``\emph{Dodge},'' he screamed through the spell.
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I threw myself to the side, and idly reflected that the smoking wound in
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the ground to my left could easily have been my corpse. Lovely.
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``Mage lines on her,'' I continued. ``Artillery too. Gods, everything we
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can throw.''
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The sharp tang of lightning filled the air as what must have been no
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less than thirty feet behind me exploded in a screaming storm. I did not
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look back.
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``She just ran \emph{through} that,'' Hierophant said through the spell,
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sounding somewhat offended by the notion.
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Engaging the heroes far away from the fortifications had seemed like a
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good idea at the time, but I was perhaps coming to realize it might have
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been a tactical mistake. The air howled again and I leapt onto an angled
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platform, immediately leaping onto another to remain above ground. Where
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there was now a hole. Shit. A handful of Pickler's engines began firing,
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but I wasn't holding my breath for scorpion bolts stopping that one. I
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heard the screaming wind of another strike coming my way and shaped a
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platform, but it was immediately hit by a beam of light. \emph{Fucking
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Pilgrim}. I had to reach for Winter and slap down half a ton of ice
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behind me, not that it stopped the Saint for more than a heartbeat. I
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gave part of my attention to the little bundle in the back of my head
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that was Zombie, ordering her to take flight and guiding her towards me.
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``I'm not hearing her anymore,'' I said through the link.
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``Put wards around her,'' Masego replied stiffly. ``Can't talk, she's
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cutting them as fast as-``
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The spell cut out again. \emph{Fucking Pilgrim}. My damnably short legs
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devoured the remaining yards as quickly as they could. Seriously, you'd
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think Winter would have the decency to give me another few inches when
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rebuilding my body from scratch. Fine. I'd cope. I should get there
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without -- \emph{don't you fucking dare blow it now, Foundling}.
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Naturally, the Heavens rewarded my hubris by a neat little box of yellow
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opaque shields appearing around me. No rescue was incoming from my mage
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lines: the moment those had appeared, I'd felt sorcery bloom in the
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distance and shoot towards enemy lines. I was regretting the tactical
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decision of aiming my casters at the enemy's, right about now. I opened
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the floodgates, let Winter course through my veins and smashed through
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the shield in front of me the exact samemoment the Saint of Swords
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scythed through the one at my back.
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``Seriously, what does it take to put you down?'' I called out.
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``\emph{More than you've got},'' the old woman hissed.
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I was on the move before I even began speaking, but not quite fast
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enough. I lost my left leg up to my knee before I could dodge, though by
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the time I came out of a roll it had formed again. Fuck, I was digging
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into Winter way more than I'd wanted to this early in the fight. We'd
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have to use our trick as soon as I got back, even if that made it less
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effective than it could be. I leapt up onto a platform, a beam of light
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hitting a pane of force that blew them both up again a heartbeat later.
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I decided then and there Masego was getting a raise. Which shouldn't be
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hard, considering I wasn't paying him. The Saint carved through the
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platform, and my other leg that still had armour on it, but I was
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already in motion and I landed on Zombie's saddle. Awkwardly enough I
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almost fell, which would have been a very humiliating way to die, but my
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mount flew up and finally we made it out of the Saint's range. For now,
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anyway. Already she was cutting the sky to run up that same cut.
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``Masego,'' I said, tapping the side of my helmet. ``Get \emph{all our
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godsdamned mages} to hit the target I'm marking.''
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There was no reply, because the spell was cut -- \emph{fucking Pilgrim}
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-- so I'd have to hope he heard me. Weaving glamour into a glaring red
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arrow pointing at the Saint even as she moved, I guided Zombie into a
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sharply angled descent towards the palisade. Darkness formed into an orb
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above the Saint, and a heartbeat later a smaller beam shot out of it to
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hit the location I was indicating. To my vocal disgust, she somehow
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\emph{parried} the fucking darkness. Gods Below, what was it going to
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take? After scorpions reoriented to fire on her, the Saint finally
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withdrew. I knew better than to believe that would be for long. She'd be
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back with the first wave of crusaders, which shouldn't be long. I'd been
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a little too busy fighting for my life to notice, but enemy archers had
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gotten close enough to the palisade to begin firing and the infantry
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wasn't far behind them. Zombie landed at Masego's side and I got off,
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slapping her rump as thanks for saving my own. She whinnied, which I
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definitely hadn't told her to do, and smugly trotted away.
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It was telling that, at this point in my life, even my undead horse was
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sassing me.
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``Hey, Zeze,'' I panted. ``We having fun yet?''
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``I've contained demons with the Ivory Globe,'' he replied, panting as
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well. ``\emph{Demons}, Catherine. She just cut out a door and kicked it
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open.''
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``Yeah, we're not going to be fighting her head on any time soon,'' I
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snorted. ``Not unless we have a mountain range at hand to collapse,
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anyway.''
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His glass eyes flicked down to my bare feet, the movement visible even
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through cloth.
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``What happened to you boots?''
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I gestured vaguely backwards.
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``Oh, they're somewhere back there,'' I said. ``Along with what used to
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be my legs.''
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He snorted.
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``One of those days, is it?'' he said.
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``Well, at least I don't have to bluff an angel,'' I mused. ``So there's
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that.''
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We shared a smile.
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``You ever see what happened to the heroes I killed?'' I asked.
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``They were not resurrected, last I saw,'' Masego said. ``I suspect what
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the Grey Pilgrim uses is merely a much more powerful version of priestly
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healing, not true resurrection. Which seems logical, as that is usually
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the province of purely healer Named.''
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And the old man definitely wasn't that. His little light show had
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carried quite the punch. I adjusted my cloak around my shoulders, which
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did little to hide the fact that I was barefoot in the middle of an
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active battlefield. The crusaders were bringing ladders to the fore, I
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saw. If there was ever a time it was now.
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``Our turn,'' I told Masego.
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The blind mage smiled, and a whispered incantation had a water-filled
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bowl appearing in the palm of his hand. He'd not made it, of course.
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Materializing something even this small would likely kill him. It'd been
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brought out of a personal dimension, if I had to guess. Within the
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carved wooden bowl was dark water, the same that could be found within
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the pools of the Observatory.
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``Let's hope this works,'' I said, glancing at the enemy army. ``We're
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in the shit otherwise.''
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``The formula is-''he began.
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I interrupted him by plunging my hand into the water. I went straight
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through, but did not reach the bottom of the bowl. My eyes fluttered
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closed as Masego whispered soothingly in the arcane tongue. Absolute
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positioning, he'd called this. I could feel my mind\ldots{} expand.
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Beyond a perspective a mortal could bear, but I was hardly that anymore
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was I? One spike of painful clarity after another went through my
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forehead as I saw them whole. Calernia. Arcadia. The juxtaposition of
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them.
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\emph{One end}, Masego's voice whispered into my ear.
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I knew it well, that place. I'd fought there twice, once against the
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Duke of Violent Squalls and the second time against the Diabolist. The
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Fields of Wend. A depthless lake filled with moving glaciers, sprawling
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as far as my not-eyes could see.
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\emph{And another}, Masego reminded me.
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I could see the battlefield before us, from above. The armoured
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multitudes advancing towards palisades, like toy soldiers on the ground.
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Devices of wood and metal firing bolts into men, the shining silhouettes
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advancing with the host. So many of them.
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\emph{Align}, Masego whispered.
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And so I did. Gates, I called them, but that was the barest
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understanding of what they were. There were no words in any tongue I
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knew to express it, but instinct bridged the gap. In the sky above the
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army of crusaders, a circle a mile wide opened.
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Through it poured a lake atop their heads.
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