453 lines
22 KiB
TeX
453 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-17-contingent}{%
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\chapter{Contingent}\label{chapter-17-contingent}}
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\epigraph{``Peace is little more than the reognition that the reasons for
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which war was undertaken are no longer relevant.''}{Dread Emperor Benevolent the First}
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I came back to myself with a roiling sea of Winter at my fingertips.
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\emph{Fucking Hells, Akua}. The trap I'd set that ultimately brought me
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back had required that the Diabolist or another entity to essentially go
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mad with power for it to work in the first place, but this was still
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beyond my predictions. Even with oaths binding her and Vivienne holding
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a leash, what I saw beneath me was a dark reminder of the quantity of
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power that could be thrown around without breaking the letter of the
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limitations I'd imposed. Half of the lake I'd dumped over the head of
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the crusaders with Masego's help had apparently been used to smash the
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heroes, though I saw no corpses to show for the effort. Not that one of
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those would necessarily mean the end of it, with the Pilgrim around.
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Five contingencies, and this had been the one to work. I could not help
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but be pissed that even after all that planning in the end it'd come
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down to Akua making a mistake, however baited that mistake had been.
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Hierophant was nowhere in sight, so he was probably incapacitated. That
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was one down. Thief's secret set of oaths must not have been sufficient
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to call me back from that\ldots{} unpleasant journey, which made two.
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I'd not woken up to a sword through my back, so Larat hadn't worked out
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either -- but then that had always been the chanciest of the five. The
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oath forced on the fae had been comprehensive, but with that sort of
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creature it was hard to make one completely water-tight. He'd failed,
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either on purpose or not. I'd have to get the details out of him, but
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regardless that made three.
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As for the last trick, well, it had very specific requirements. I wasn't
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surprised it hadn't gotten me out, though I'd need to have Hierophant
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take a look at the overlay as soon as possible. We were pretty sure it
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wouldn't \emph{kill} me if it triggered by accident, but there were
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always risks in turning yourself into living munitions.
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I held the power in check, barely, as my gaze swept the battlefield. Ten
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heroes, looking ragged but unbowed. The Saint had taken an arrow, which
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meant Indrani was up and about. A relief, that. The rest were clustered
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together, protecting the Pilgrim and the wizard I'd scrapped with that
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one time. The thousand little bundles in the back of my mind made it
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clear Akua had indulged in a spot of necromancy, which brought mixed
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feelings. For all that Masego insisted there was nothing inherently bad
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about that kind of sorcery, after Second Liesse I had my doubts. Maybe
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there were applications that weren't inherently horrid, but no one
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seemed to be actually using those. On the other hand, if the undead were
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getting chopped up that meant fewer of my soldiers were dying. I could
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appreciate the results, even if the means had me more than a little
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uncomfortable. I'd take a closer look a those later. For now, I was
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juggling the difficulty of maintaining the ice beneath my feet that kept
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me on the surface of this eerie marsh while simultaneously trying not to
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blow up either myself or my surroundings with the power Diabolist had
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drawn. My grip was beginning to slip, so action was in order. Senses no
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mortal could have were in full extension, telling me of the humidity in
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the air and the spread of both water and ice in my surroundings.
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I dumped the power into the water beneath me, flash-freezing it with a
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loud snap as I continued spreading and shaping the working. The glacier
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formed at a mind-boggling pace, water rippling around it, and I closed
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my eyes to focus. Getting the paddles of the waterwheel all the same
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size was difficult, though it grew easier the more power I shed. I could
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have made it larger, not that it wasn't already massive, but just a
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structure of ice wasn't what I had in mind. Fingers clenching, I severed
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the platform I stood on from the wheel and lashed out with my will.
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Slowly, the wheel began to turn. The waters churned. I continued dumping
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power into the movement, accelerating it, and the tide of soiled water
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raged towards the heroes with a roar. \emph{Fuck it}, I thought, and
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tossed the wheel at them too. We were past subtlety at this point. Eyes
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flicking towards the Saint, I sighed as she carved herself a path above
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the current and stood atop the arc. That'd been too much to hope for, I
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supposed. An arrow whistled at her and I took advantage of the opening
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Archer had just gifted me to move further away as I riffled through the
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bundles in the back of my mind until I could find Zombie. Good girl that
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she was, she'd been waiting on the edge of the marshlands. She seemed
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pleased by my summons, taking flight with haste.
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I wasn't sure what Akua's plan had been but it hardly mattered. While it
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looked like she might have been getting the better of the fight with the
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heroes, fighting them at all was a mistake as far as I was concerned.
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Even if I killed a few they'd still get me in the end. In the distance I
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heard a gargantuan crack as the ice wheel fractured into pieces merrily
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carried by the currents, heroes having climbed atop them. That, as it
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happened, was an opening I'd left on purpose. I drew on Winter, feeling
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it whisper lovingly in my ears, and shattered the wheel shards. That
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dumped the heroes back into the water, though the fucking wizard made
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some kind of ring of fire that evaporated a safe place for them to
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gather and regroup. Saint was back on the offensive, making her way to
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me, but I wasn't having any of that. Zombie made a low pass and I leapt
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atop her saddle, fingers slipping into her mane to anchor me while I got
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my feet in the stirrups. We went high after that, the undead horse's
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wings beating hard as we ascended. My cloak was wet, I only then
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noticed. Like I'd been swimming. What the fuck had Akua been up to? No,
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not the time. By the height of the sun it was morning still, and
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promising to be a warm day. Not a cloud in sight. My mount gliding
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slowly, I took a look at the broader situation unfolding across the
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field.
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The undead were shambling forward into a defensive Proceran line near
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what must have been a shore, before most the water in the marsh was used
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as ammunition in the Named brawl below me. The dead were not making an
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impressive showing. They seemed to have some semblance of intelligence,
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but there was no real coordination. They went in waves and shattered on
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the formations of fantassins and the priests accompanying them. Still,
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casualties were slowly mounting. I suspected the first few waves must
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have been wiped almost without losses, but now the crusaders were tiring
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and beginning to make mistakes. There was, to my surprise, another front
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to the battle. The Army of Callow was out in force, though there were a
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lot fewer of them than I'd expected. Had Juniper left men to guard the
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camp? Regardless, if she was leading this engagement she was being
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rather conservative in her command. Mages on both sides were trading
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spells at a pace, but aside from a long shield wall of regulars pressing
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against crusader lines there was no other real fighting going on.
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\emph{She's not fighting to win}, I thought, frowning as I watched the
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Order of the Broken Bell manoeuver on the flank to draw away enemy
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cavalry without ever engaging. \emph{She's delaying and tying down men
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while incurring as few casualties as possible}.
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That was unlike the Hellhound, who tended to go for the throat whenever
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she could. Which meant she was relying on the dead to do the heavy
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lifting -- and by extension had relied on \emph{Akua}. That was a
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desperate measure if I'd ever seen one. The situation must be worse than
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it looked on the surface. The moment the front holding back the dead
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collapsed the battle was good as won, barring heroic intervention, but
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at the current pace that might take hours. My brow tightened as I
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scanned the battlefield for any hint of the Wild Hunt's presence, but
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they were nowhere in sight. Had the fae sat on their asses the entire
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time I'd been gone? Fuck. It was a solid assumption there'd been a
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battle while I was gone, and without the fae the Army of Callow would
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have been fighting Named with only Legion mages to back them up, while
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the enemy had wizards and priests both. \emph{It must have been a
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fucking slaughter.} Were the men I saw below all that was left of our
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host? There were what, maybe thirteen or fourteen thousand there? The
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Procerans looked like they'd taken a beating too, lost at least another
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few thousand since I'd dropped the lake on them, but Malanza could
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afford those losses a lot more than we could. She was throwing away
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levies and fantassins, not professional soldiers.
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While I'd been taking my look around, the heroes had gotten their shit
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together. A beam of radiant light -- fucking Pilgrim -- tore up towards
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me, followed by a swarm of little balls of flame that looked liquid. I
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led Zombie into a deep dive to shake the projectiles. Archer could take
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care of herself, I decided. She was probably half a mile away and
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picking her targets carefully, in no danger of being swarmed by the
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enemy. Just in case I wove a glamour into large streaks of yellow and
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red indicating she should disengage even as I spurred Zombie to head
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towards the shore battle line. I whistled loudly as my mount's hooves
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swept just above the water. It was not long before I had my answer.
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Loyal dogs that they were, the Wild Hunt came as summoned. There was an
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eldritch glimmer on the surface of the water at my side before Larat
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came riding out in full armour, sword in hand and grinning broadly. Even
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as his horse kept pace with mine, the rest of the Hunt emerged in our
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wake.
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``Your Majesty,'' the one-eyed fae greeted me. ``Was your journey a
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fruitful one?''
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``We're going to have a talk about that, you little weasel,'' I darkly
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said. ``But it'll have to wait. I have work for the lot of you.''
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``We await your will eagerly,'' the raven-haired man replied.
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``Ignore the heroes unless they attack you,'' I ordered. ``See those
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Proceran formations ahead?''
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My sword helpfully pointed out the Proceran defensive line.
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``Their fear and desperation wafts most pleasantly to my nostrils,''
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Larat informed me.
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They did to mine as well, and Winter grew hungry for the banquet, but I
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forced myself to focus.
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``Break them,'' I said. ``Killing's not the objective, the Hunt is to
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concentrate on shattering their lines.''
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``Tasteless meat,'' the one-eye fae complained.
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``That sounds like the talk of a man hungry for fingers,'' I noted very
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mildly.
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The bastard laughed.
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``Your will be done, Sovereign of Moonless Nights,'' he smiled.
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``It better, for your sake,'' I smiled back cheerfully. ``Because you
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seem to have fucked around in my absence, and we're going to have a nice
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chat about that.''
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I didn't even allow him to respond, pulling Zombie up and willing one of
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her wing beats to splash water in his face. Let him try to look all
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elegant and sinister with muck everywhere. I absently tugged on the
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reins to lead my mount towards the crusaders, but my mind was elsewhere.
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I needed to keep the heroes busy for a while, there was no telling what
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they'd get up to unattended. I reached for the dead, grimacing after a
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moment. Ordering them one by one would take too long. I thinned my will
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and cast it broadly, grabbing a rough thousand still roving around. Pain
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spiked through my forehead. \emph{Too much feedback.} I grit my teeth
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and ordered them to assault the heroes before withdrawing my will. They
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weren't going to win that fight -- a band of tired and encircled heroes
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fighting back to back against a relentless tide of undead? It had
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victory written all over it -- but it should keep them out of my hair
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for a while. I tasted the warmth of the enemy Named, trying to get a
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sense of their readiness, and my fingers clenched. There should be ten.
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There were only eight. Where had they -- no, it wasn't even worth
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asking. They would be at the very worst possible place for me.
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Guarding Rozala Malanza.
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I allowed myself a moment to contemplate the unpleasantness that was
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fighting people both stronger than me and certain to be where I least
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wanted them to be before pressing down against Zombie's back. She
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neighed and angled for descent as we flew towards the back of the
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Proceran lines. A handful of archers loosed arrows upwards, but I was
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too far and too swift for them to have any real chance of hitting me.
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Unfortunately, mages were bullshit and evidently I was both recognizable
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and a favoured target. Panes of opaque yellow force formed around me in
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an airtight box, but they were in above their heads this time. When it
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came to power, pound for pound, there were only a few people in Calernia
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who could beat me if I put my back into it. A lance of ice and shade
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formed around my hand and Zombie dove down. There was a heartbeat of
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resistance when the tip of the lance met the sorcery, then they both
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shattered and we flew through as my cloak trailed behind me. With a
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target painted on us so blatantly, it was no surprise I had to lead
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Zombie into a desperate roll to avoid being incinerated by a beam of
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light. It caught the edge of my cloak, leaving it singed and smoking.
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Fucking Pilgrim. It was supposed to be resistant to magic, wasn't it?
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He was down there, as I'd suspected. Leaning on his staff, the Saint of
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Swords by his side and waiting patiently for me to gain enough momentum
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I wouldn't be able to pull out of the dive when she struck. Malanza was
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behind them, and as the air whistled around me I got a glimpse of her
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face. Fear, yes, but much more anger. I had to respect that she remained
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on her horse and unmoving even as my descent quickened. Her officers
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were not so brave, scattering to the winds. I'd have to play this one
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precisely, if I wanted to avoid getting skewered in the process of
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landing. Fortunately, I was spending increasingly large amounts of my
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life either falling from things or being thrown off of them. I'd become
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a fair hand at it. I drew on Winter and shaped it, tossing ahead of me a
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spear of mist that detonated into a cloud. Throwing myself off Zombie, I
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ordered her to peel off even as my relationship with gravity took a
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sharp turn downwards. This, I mused, had seemed a better idea
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\emph{before} I'd gone through with it. The timing held. A cut dispersed
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the mist, missing Zombie by a mere inch. Then the Saint struck again and
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I cursed.
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I threw ice at the cut, saving my hide just long enough for my feet to
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land on wet earth. Mud sucked at my boots and both my knees snapped, but
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they were reforming before I even stood. The Saint of Swords was lazily
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advancing, the Pilgrim pointed his staff and Malanza looked like she
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\emph{really} wanted to be pretty much anywhere else.
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``Truce,'' I called out. ``I'm here to talk.''
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``I'm not seeing a banner,'' the Saint noted.
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\emph{Really}? She was such a godsdamned asshole. I flicked my fingers
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and wove one out of glamour, but she pointedly did not look at it.
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``I don't want to fight you,'' I insisted.
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``So don't,'' she suggested. ``Angle your neck a little to the side,
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it'll be a cleaner cut.''
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She was closing distance, which I knew from experience would result in
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my getting chopped up painfully and repeatedly.
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``Pilgrim,'' I tried, looking behind her. ``This can end \emph{right
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now}.''
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``Gods forgive me,'' the old man said. ``But you are right. It will.''
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``The battle is lost,'' I said. ``Your lines by the shore are collapsing
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as we speak. Even if you force me to flee, none of that changes.''
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``Armies are armies,'' the Saint shrugged. ``Named are Named. More than
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one way to win a war.''
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One step away from striking range, now. And the moment she got there we
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entered the wheel of pain, where every spoke was me losing a limb and
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trying very hard not to scream. The bundle of instincts that were not my
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own was licking its chops, hungry for the fight. To crush my enemies and
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savour their screams. The rest insisted I make some distance, because
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this was about to get ugly. I unsheathed my sword. \emph{This isn't
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going to work}, I thought, but I had to try anyway. My fingers came
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loose and I dropped the blade.
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``Unarmed,'' I said. ``Under truce banner.''
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``You're a weapon unto yourself,'' the Saint of Swords snorted, and
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stepped forward.
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From the corner of my eye I saw implacable light bloom at the tip of the
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Grey Pilgrim's staff. If I got hit by that, I suspected the consequences
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would be much more unpleasant than a sword wound. Nothing friendly felt
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the way that power did.
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``Stop.''
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I'd been reaching for Winter, but stayed my hand. That was not the
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Pilgrim's voice, and certainly not the Saint's. Rozala Malanza took off
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her helmet, sweat-soaked curls falling across her face.
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``You want to talk, Black Queen,'' she said. ``So talk.''
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``You fucking yellow-bellied-'' the Saint began.
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``I am the ranking general of this army, Regicide,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan coldy replied. ``I take no orders from you. Slay me or stay
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your tongue.''
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By the looks of her, the heroine was feeling inclined towards the
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second. The light winked out on the Pilgrim's staff.
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``Laurence,'' he said. ``She cannot easily retreat. If talks fail, we
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will strike.''
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That wasn't how fucking truce talks were supposed to work, but then I'd
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not exactly respected the usual etiquette either. Disinclined as I was
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to give them a full pass, I would at least recognize they had some
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wiggling room when it came interpretation. The heroes were a distraction
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here, I decided. The one who mattered was the princess watching me with
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hard eyes.
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``Battle's over, Malanza,'' I said. ``Let's end it before any more
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people die pointlessly.''
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``I was assured you could not open your deathly gate again without the
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Hierophant,'' the Proceran said flatly. ``He is not here. The battle is
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not yet lost.''
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``So maybe you wreck my army,'' I said. ``Even if you manage that, yours
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gets wrecked in the process as well. And you can be sure enough of my
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people survive to run that we can defend Hedges against what you have
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left. Logistically, you're \emph{done}. You don't have the supplies or
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the men for a successful offensive into Callow.''
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``If we take your supplies-''she began.
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``Not happening. I gave standing orders to burn what we can't carry, if
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we lose,'' I interrupted brusquely.
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Her eyes flicked to the Pilgrim, and reluctantly the old man nodded. The
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Saint's already grim expression darkened further.
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``I will not \emph{surrender} to the likes of you,'' the princess
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snarled.
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My fingers clenched.
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``Gods Below, what will it \emph{take}?'' I hissed. ``Do I have to
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murder ever last Proceran on this field before negotiations can be had?
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Are you really so unwilling to consider not invading you'll let dozens
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of thousands \emph{starve}?''
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``Your doing,'' Malanza hissed back. ``You steal our supplies, harass us
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and then claim affront at our desperation? You are the architect of this
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madness, Catherine Foundling.''
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Winter whispered in my ear, urging me to rip apart the righteous little
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shit who had the gall to pretend she was the victim here while leading a
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fucking invasion army. My fingers dug into my palm until steel gave and
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flesh beneath it, blood dripping on the ground. The Saint's stance
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shifted ever so slightly. Breathe in, breathe out. Pride was a
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liability. Anger an unhelpful bias. \emph{Be cold}, I told myself.
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\emph{Be clear. Be a creature of logic, because logic is what gets you
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through this. Everything else is distracting noise.} I thought of pale
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green eyes, and lessons I had not yet outgrown.
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``Then do not surrender,'' I said calmly. ``Sound a withdrawal. My side
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will do the same. We can discuss terms for your retreat from Callow when
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our people aren't dying.''
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``And allow hunger to do your work for you?'' the princess retorted.
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``I'd be putting down an army of the dead as a gesture of good will,
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Malanza,'' I said. ``My concession is greater than yours.''
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Her face remained unmoved by the statement, but she was silent for a
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moment.
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``Supplies for the night,'' she said. ``Food, water and tents. Delivered
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after we tend to the wounded.''
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I forced myself to consider the counter-offer calmly. Would those make
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enough of a difference I should bargain down? Vivienne still had their
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old foodstuffs in her metaphorical pocket, so it shouldn't lead to
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logistical issues for the Army of Callow if I shelled thse out. It would
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still mean that the enemy, while not fresh, would at least have full
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bellies. They'd be closer to fighting fit. If negotiations broke down
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afterwards -- no, wrong way to think about it. If we had a night to
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spare, odds were I'd be able to get Hierophant back up. My comparative
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advantage was greater, even with the undead tossed aside.
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``They'll be added to your bill,'' I said.
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The princess opened her mouth.
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``Flat cost,'' I added. ``No surcharge.''
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Her mouth closed. Grudgingly, she nodded. We both knew that if
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negotiations failed any talk of coin would become academic anyway.
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``Truce until negotiations come at an end,'' I said. ``First session
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held at noon tomorrow.''
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``Granted,'' Malanza replied.
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My eyes flicked to the Named at her sides.
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``That includes heroes,'' I said.
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``I take no orders from mortal rulers,'' the Saint flatly said.
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I ignored her. She was irrelevant in this, unless she was willing to
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fight the entire Army of Callow on her own. Even if she got the rest of
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the heroes to back her, it wouldn't be enough.
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``You can't seriously expect me to feed and shelter your army while
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we're under attack by your allies,'' I told Malanza.
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The Proceran looked like she'd swallowed a lemon.
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``I will formally renounce alliance with any hero resuming hostilities
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while we are under truce,'' she said. ``I can do no more.''
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It'd be enough, I decided. Might even be better if the Saint attacked
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after that, we'd get a clean shot at her without making a diplomatic
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mess.
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``I strike bargain under these terms,'' I said.
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I got my gauntlet off and offered my hand. Revulsion flickering across
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her face, the princess spat on the ground.
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``I strike bargain under these terms,'' she replied. ``Get out of my
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sight, Black Queen.''
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I supposed we were past courtesy, at this point. It'd never been my
|
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strong suit anyway. I crouched to pick up my sword and sheathed it,
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keeping an eye on the furious Saint as I did. She turned and walked
|
|
away. The Pilgrim sought to meet my eyes, studying me a pensive frown,
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but I was done with him. Zombie landed moments later, a handful of
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arrows having sprouted in her flank since I'd last seen her. The enemy
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|
archers had been busy. It still took half an hour before the battle came
|
|
entirely at an end, the last of the dead dropping into the mud like a
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stringless puppet, but it ended.
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None of this felt like a victory, but at least it wasn't a defeat.
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