643 lines
34 KiB
TeX
643 lines
34 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-kaleidoscope-vi}{%
|
|
\section{Interlude: Kaleidoscope VI}\label{interlude-kaleidoscope-vi}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{quote}
|
|
\emph{``You can have the throne when I'm done with it, which will be
|
|
never.''}
|
|
|
|
-- Dread Emperor Revenant, initiating the First War of the Dead
|
|
\end{quote}
|
|
|
|
Rozala had only felt it once before, throughout the whole of her life.
|
|
That limpid clarity that was perfect understanding, the crystallization
|
|
of thought and moment into a single flawless shard. She'd been a child,
|
|
last time, and her mother had kissed her brow before sending her out of
|
|
the hall. She'd remained alone on the ancient throne of Aequitain, a cup
|
|
of poison in hand. In that moment, as the oak doors closed behind her,
|
|
Rozala Malanza had known that she would take Cordelia Hasenbach's head
|
|
or die trying. Known it in a way deeper than she knew her breath or the
|
|
flow of her blood, felt that certainty become part of her soul. Now,
|
|
standing at the centre of a storm of shouting men and bared steel, she
|
|
learned something else.
|
|
|
|
She had overestimated her own cleverness.
|
|
|
|
It was a bitter lesson. She'd learned the ways of war since she'd been a
|
|
young girl, been taught them so deeply her grasp on the Ebb and the Flow
|
|
had paid for it. There were perhaps a handful of generals in all of
|
|
Procer that were finer commanders than her, and all had decades of
|
|
experience that in time she would come to match. The Iron Prince, she'd
|
|
fancied, had been the only one who could match her own discernment in
|
|
matters of battle. And Klaus Papenheim was old, stepping closing to
|
|
death's threshold every year. As the blue-eyed dead advanced in utter
|
|
silence, Rozala Malanza realized that the waters of the world were deep
|
|
and her understanding of them shallow. What had seemed like cleverness
|
|
days ago might very well cost her this day, this battle, this campaign
|
|
and perhaps even this crusade.
|
|
|
|
That the dead would rise was no great surprise. There were reports of
|
|
the Black Queen having raised them for purpose of war in the past, and
|
|
though the Army of Callow lacked Wasteland mages it would have been
|
|
naïve of her to expect complete ignorance of necromancy. And so, even
|
|
after the Queen of Callow was laid low, Princess Rozala had laid a trap.
|
|
She'd crafted it carefully, drawing on the knowledge of the Rogue
|
|
Sorcerer and the Grey Pilgrim. Even if the Black Queen woke, as the
|
|
Pilgrim had hinted she might should defeat loom tall over the Callowans,
|
|
Catherine Foundling had limits to the power she could draw. Great
|
|
workings such as raising a mile of marshlands' worth of dead would
|
|
exhaust and weaken her. And so, patiently, she had ordered preparations.
|
|
Rozala had no lack of priests and Chosen, and if there was one truth to
|
|
be had about water it was that it could be \emph{blessed}.
|
|
|
|
It would have been a beautiful counterstroke. The moment the Black Queen
|
|
invested her power into the dead, heroes and priests would have gathered
|
|
together to bless it and the touch of holy would have broken both the
|
|
host of undead and the villain raising them. Two birds taken with the
|
|
same stone, turning the Enemy's arrogance into just demise. And so when
|
|
the alarms had rung and the call to battle trumpeted, when she first
|
|
received report that blue-eyed undead were rising from the marsh to
|
|
attack the camp she had smiled. She might, after all, have just won the
|
|
battle. Then the priests and the Chosen sallied out, carving an island
|
|
of Light by the shore until they could finish their holy blessing, and
|
|
when the ripple of pale shivered across the surface of the water triumph
|
|
coursed through her veins.
|
|
|
|
Until the moment she saw the dead were still advancing, and Rozala
|
|
Malanza was struck by terrible clarity.
|
|
|
|
The dead were coming. Thousands of them, leashed to the Black Queen's
|
|
will. It was possible for her host to successfully defend, even if
|
|
caught by surprise and still half-asleep. With the Chosen holding the
|
|
shore until enough soldiers could be assembled, it was possible to
|
|
weather the storm. Unless the crusaders were forced to defend on two
|
|
fronts. The Princess of Aequitan swallowed her fear and despair,
|
|
soothing her mind. It was not yet done. If the Chosen managed to slay
|
|
the Black Queen, the tide could be turned.
|
|
|
|
``Gather the men from Orne and Cantal,'' Princess Rozala barked, her
|
|
raised voice stilling the chaos. ``We are, I believe, about to be
|
|
attacked by the Army of Callow.''
|
|
|
|
She did not look to the shores, where the Named were gathering. The
|
|
Pilgrim and the Saint would understand the situation without need for
|
|
her to send a messenger.
|
|
|
|
It was as all on their shoulders now.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Christophe raised his shield and the undead's blow glanced off the
|
|
polished silver. The creatures were slow, for all that the Rogue
|
|
Sorcerer had been astonished by them. The man's insistence that they'd
|
|
been raised through the pure power of Winter instead of a Damned's fell
|
|
abilities or even necromancy seemed to make little difference when it
|
|
came to meeting them on the field. Flicking his wrist, he separated the
|
|
abomination's head from its body and the corpse dropped to the ground.
|
|
The blue eyes winked out a moment later and he settled his stance. The
|
|
wave was at an end, though already more were rising from the tepid
|
|
waters. The Mirror Knight feared no Evil, yet he misliked the lay of
|
|
this battle. His fellow Chosen were too few to hold the whole shore, and
|
|
there were dangers in standing alone against the horde. Kallia had lost
|
|
an arm to a dead crusader but a half-hour past, the thing clutching at
|
|
her body until the munitions within detonated. Goblin devilry, the mark
|
|
of a degenerate breed. The scuttling greenskins were without honour. The
|
|
Forsworn Healer had reattached the arm and healed the wound, but the
|
|
Painted Knife had been shaken. He could not blame her. Unlike him, she'd
|
|
fought the monster up close. Christophe would never forget the sight of
|
|
the Black Queen laughingly tearing apart an entire band of heroes almost
|
|
by herself. She'd ripped out their lives like errant weeds, making a
|
|
game of their struggle. Antoine, his young Alamans brother-in-arms, was
|
|
still plagued by nightmares from having his arm torn out and tossed in
|
|
Mansurin's face as a \emph{distraction}.
|
|
|
|
Yesterday had been almost worse. Christophe had come within a hair's
|
|
breadth of death leading the fantassins in their advance, saved only by
|
|
the intervention of the Regicide. A second time he had felt the Cold
|
|
Lady's breath on his neck, when the Callowans had plied wicked sorcery
|
|
and made river where there was once solid ground. He'd been on the wrong
|
|
side of it, surrounded by the enemy, and prepared for his last stand
|
|
when death suddenly bloomed in green flames. The impotence of it had
|
|
been what stung the worst. Men and monsters he could meet sword in hand,
|
|
but how did one fight \emph{fire}? Soldiers he'd spilled blood with,
|
|
comrades under the Heavens, had died screaming while the power he'd been
|
|
bestowed by Above proved useless to save anyone. He was the Mirror
|
|
Knight, granted his armaments by the spirits of the Old Lake after he
|
|
passed their harsh trials. His power was the reflection of Evil against
|
|
Evil, the conception of the snake biting its own tail. Yet he'd crawled
|
|
away shamefully from the blazing green, fished out of the waters by a
|
|
soldier after almost drowning in his flight. The Enemy had failed to
|
|
scar his body, but the remembrance of that shame would leave mark on his
|
|
soul until he drew his last breath.
|
|
|
|
Not all had been so lucky that dishonour was the price exacted.
|
|
Mansurin's second death had taken him beyond even the Grey Pilgrim's
|
|
reach.
|
|
|
|
Christophe chased away the thought and let the light of day wash over
|
|
him. He drew strength from it, from the \textbf{Dawn} that was one of
|
|
his aspects. He rose with the morning sun, tiredness and uncertainty
|
|
leaking out of his body. The Elfin Dames had shaped him in this, granted
|
|
him the boon that with every dawn his soul would rise -- and never
|
|
retreat. The Mirror Knight had once been a thin and sickly child, but
|
|
the passing of the years had made him a warrior beyond mortal capacity.
|
|
It was a slight thing, but every morning saw him a little stronger. A
|
|
little faster. A little more enduring. Another decade of this, the
|
|
Regicide had told him, and he would be beyond even her ability to match.
|
|
Perfect within and without, as the Heavens meant him to be. His strength
|
|
reaching its peak and a sliver beyond, he waded into the shallow waters
|
|
and scattered the marching dead. He scythed limbs and shattered skulls,
|
|
his silver blade breaking steel and the dead flesh beneath. He retreated
|
|
only when none were left to stand against him, soiled water dripping
|
|
from his greaves. The whistle caught him by surprise, and he turned so
|
|
his helm would allow him sight.
|
|
|
|
``Mirror,'' the Vagrant Spear said in broken Tolesian. ``We gather. Take
|
|
head of queen.''
|
|
|
|
The Arlesite tongue was not his most fluent, but he had made some study
|
|
of it during his years defending the convent. Sidonia, as the other
|
|
Chosen insisted they all call her in private, seemed unruffled by the
|
|
darkness besieging them. Christophe admired this greatly, as she had
|
|
been returned from the side of the Gods Above for nary an hour. The
|
|
Pilgrim's power had breathed life back into her still body so recently,
|
|
yet she returned to their holy struggle without hesitation. The strength
|
|
of her resolve was worthy of praise. No all the Grey Pilgrim had
|
|
returned had been so unflinching in their devotion. There was no trace
|
|
of daze and confusion in her eyes, only certainty, and the Mirror Knight
|
|
wrestled with the strange thing that was attraction towards a Levantine.
|
|
Had his vows not forbidden it\ldots{} He cleared his throat, cheeks
|
|
flashing with embarassment.
|
|
|
|
``Are we to leave our fellow crusaders to stem the tide alone?'' he
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
She nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Great Elder say, battle won only when queen dead,'' she replied.
|
|
``Strike strong. Avenge dead.''
|
|
|
|
Reluctantly, the Chosen withdrew. Already crusaders were forming in
|
|
proper ranks behind him, priests mingling amongst them. Holy flames
|
|
would not burn as bright as they should against these queer undead, but
|
|
burn they would regardless. It would have to be enough, until the Black
|
|
Queen was slain. Christophe saluted the brave soldiers with deep
|
|
respect, and there was a flicker of guilt within when they responded in
|
|
kind. He knew this was retreat with purpose, but it still felt wrong to
|
|
leave them to stand alone. He followed Sidonia, who led him surefooted
|
|
to the gathering of Chosen further down the shore. The Knight was the
|
|
last summoned, he saw. The others greeted him, grim but resolute. The
|
|
Saint of Blades stood apart from the rest, lazily carving through undead
|
|
without even relying on her Name, while the rest of the Chosen clustered
|
|
around the Grey Pilgrim.
|
|
|
|
Some he knew by name, others only by Name. Kallia, face painted in a
|
|
fresh coat of red as she held her twin knives, stood besides young
|
|
Antoine. The Blade of Mercy had his greatsword propped up on his
|
|
shoulder, eyes gleaming white as he drew on the Light to slay his fears.
|
|
The Forsworn Healer had his eyes closed as he mastered the pain of
|
|
feeling so many deaths bloom around him. The Silent Guardian, tongue
|
|
forever stilled by her oaths, kept her shield close even with her sword
|
|
sheathed. Christophe had shared a shameful escape with her, yesterday,
|
|
and their eyes met with unspoken understanding. \emph{Never again}. The
|
|
Myrmidon, garbed in bronze and faith, was sharing quiet words with the
|
|
Rogue Sorcerer. Often these two kept to themselves, as the Sorcerer was
|
|
one of the few Chosen that could speak her obscure Free Cities dialect.
|
|
This was the sum whole of the Chosen of the Heavens in this blighted
|
|
place. Mansurin and François had been taken by the green fire, never to
|
|
grace Creation again. Christophe sheathed his blade and formed the wings
|
|
against his breastplate, commending the souls of the lost to the Gods.
|
|
They had served unflinchingly to the end, and deserved endless felicity
|
|
for it on the Other Side.
|
|
|
|
``Hear me,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, and a ripple went through all of
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
None dared disobey, when the Peregrine spoke. The Mirror Knight felt a
|
|
thrum of excitement. When had such a gathering of the Good last taken
|
|
place? Blessed souls were a rarity in the lands of his birth, and like
|
|
him often served their purpose in isolation. The Tenth Crusade had
|
|
gathered them all for greater design, and they would see it through.
|
|
\emph{The Heavens will it}.
|
|
|
|
``We go now to make war on the Black Queen,'' the old man said. ``We
|
|
were twelve, once, but no longer. Do not forget this. As the Heavens
|
|
protect us, the Gods Below look well upon her -- for she serves their
|
|
purpose, however unwilling. Victory is not assured, for we now venture
|
|
in her realm of death and ice.''
|
|
|
|
The elder Levantine smiled sadly at them.
|
|
|
|
``There is no glory in this,'' he warned them. ``Bards may write songs,
|
|
one day, and chronicles sing your praises, but this is earthly luster.
|
|
We march in the spirit of sacrifice, to bring light into the dark. Do
|
|
not look ahead or behind, only to each other. There is no salvation to
|
|
be found save at the hands your comrades.''
|
|
|
|
Christophe kept himself from frowning. This was far from the exaltation
|
|
that he had expected, and suspected they all needed.
|
|
|
|
``Stand with pride, nonetheless,'' the Pilgrim softly said. ``You came
|
|
here of your own will, proving yourself worthy of all that was bestowed
|
|
upon you. Much has been demanded, yet nothing is promised but duty
|
|
fulfilled. Stand proud, children. We are the torch taken into the night,
|
|
and though our flame is passing today we burn \emph{bright}.''
|
|
|
|
The Mirror Knight shivered. He felt it, just like the others. The eyes
|
|
of the Heavens on them. That sacred thing that made them who they were.
|
|
The trance was broken by a cleared throat, to his vexation.
|
|
|
|
``All right, kids,'' the Saint of Swords said, idly decapitating another
|
|
undead. ``We're going after the tiger in her own lair, so expect this
|
|
fight to be a notch above anything you've been in before. This is the
|
|
third dawn, and she's fresh returned: she will be at her \emph{peak} and
|
|
out for blood. Guardian, you're to cover Forsworn against anything she
|
|
tosses out.''
|
|
|
|
The silent woman nodded, edging closer to the healer.
|
|
|
|
``Myrmidon, you're sticking by Rogue,'' the Saint added. ``If she hits
|
|
you, buy him time to retreat and hold her in place until we can flank.''
|
|
|
|
The old woman looked upon the rest of them with a hard smile.
|
|
|
|
``Knife, Vagrant and Blade,'' she said. ``You're our knife. Stay out of
|
|
it until Tariq gives the signal. As for you, Mirror\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
The old woman's grin had Christophe uneasy, though the light of dawn
|
|
pushed the failing away soon enough.
|
|
|
|
``You're with me,'' she said. ``We're claiming the first dance.''
|
|
|
|
The Chosen nodded gravely. If he could save the lives of others by
|
|
enduring pain, there was no real choice to be made. His power had
|
|
granted him the ability to withstand much.
|
|
|
|
``Steel yourselves,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``It begins.''
|
|
|
|
The old man struck the ground with his staff, and the marsh
|
|
\emph{parted}.
|
|
|
|
Standing tall, the Chosen advanced.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Kallia's heart grew steadier the longer they walked. The Painted Knife
|
|
adjusted her stride so would not leave the shorter Vagrant Spear behind,
|
|
silently hinting the Blade of Mercy should follow suit. The boy was
|
|
taller than either of them, regardless of his youth. He'd have to be, to
|
|
lug around that chunk of steel he called a weapon.
|
|
|
|
``There will be honour to be found today, strife-sister,'' Sidonia
|
|
murmured in Lunara when she caught up. ``Worthy strife to offer the
|
|
Blood.''
|
|
|
|
Kallia almost rolled her eyes. \emph{Alavans}. The hill people were a
|
|
ferocious lot, but they did clutch the old traditions a little too
|
|
tightly for her tastes. She was from Levante, herself, which was a true
|
|
great city instead of a remote valley of orchards and cattle fences. No
|
|
one could deny the people of Alava were great warriors -- their city was
|
|
the home of the Champion's Blood, after all -- but Sidonia wasn't
|
|
someone she'd ever be able to discuss the latest songs from faraway
|
|
Smyrna with, or even the latest couplets from the Hidden Poets of the
|
|
old city. Still, she found her mood lifted by her fellow Levantine's
|
|
eagerness. In times of strife, it was heartening to remember the old
|
|
ways.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not of any of the lines, Sidonia,'' she reminded her comrade.
|
|
``Either greater or lesser.''
|
|
|
|
The records of the Holy Seljun had shown that there had once been a
|
|
Knife of Night a century past, who shared purpose with her, yet the man
|
|
had never had children and so had spawned no lesser line to be added to
|
|
the families of the Blood. Should Kallia ever have children of her own
|
|
her line would be added to the rolls, but she had never been hungry for
|
|
that honour. Only the greater lines won more than empty titles and
|
|
emptier privileges from being recognized, as was only fitting for the
|
|
descendants -- in Blood or Bestowal -- of the five heroes that had
|
|
founded the Dominion.
|
|
|
|
``We Spears have timid boasts,'' the other woman shrugged. ``It will be
|
|
good, to add this strife to our histories. We stand too deep in the
|
|
shadow of the Champion lines.''
|
|
|
|
Not so deep, Kallia thought, now that Mansurin had been felled. He'd
|
|
been born to the thinnest of the lesser Champion lines, but he had been
|
|
descendent in Blood. His death was worthy of grief, but not unexpected.
|
|
The descendants of the most fruitful of the founders of Levant were many
|
|
and often Bestowed, but were known to die as often as they were
|
|
empowered. None of those lines had ever learned fear, or the virtues of
|
|
retreat in the face of the Enemy. The Painted Knife still felt awe at
|
|
the remembrance of her meeting with the Valiant Champion, months ago.
|
|
The woman was no descendant in Blood, but she had inherited the full
|
|
Bestowal of her line's founder. This was a rare thing, considered omen
|
|
of great strife. Not, Kallia thought, that there was not even greater
|
|
rarity ahead. Her eyes lingered on the crooked shoulders of the Grey
|
|
Pilgrim as her hand unconsciously reached for the pouch of red paint at
|
|
her side. She'd almost drawn the Mark of Mercy out of habit. And, she
|
|
would admit to herself, wonder. The Great Elder was full inheritor in
|
|
Blood and Bestowal of the ancient Grey Pilgrim that had been the first
|
|
Seljun of Levant. Royalty beyond royalty, no matter what lesser kin now
|
|
held the earthly title in Levante. More than that, he'd saved her life.
|
|
Years ago, when that Spirit if Vengeance --
|
|
|
|
``Eyes ahead,'' the Blade of Mercy spoke in Chantant. ``We are
|
|
nearing.''
|
|
|
|
Kallia's mastery of the Proceran tongue was better than Sidonia's, but
|
|
both understood him perfectly. Her instinct was to move closer to the
|
|
boy, stand shoulder-to-shoulder against the threat, but she could not --
|
|
he needed room, to swing around that greatsword of his. The Painted
|
|
Knife flicked a careful glance at the walls of water flanking them on
|
|
both sides. After the Saint of Swords dispatched the first few undead to
|
|
wander out effortlessly, the probing assaults had ceased. Their march
|
|
had been unhindered; the path of mud they strode across leading to a
|
|
tall glacier ahead. The Levantine stared at the mass of ice, still
|
|
unused to the sight. These lands were strange ones. She had never seen
|
|
snow nor ice before crossing the Stairway and glimpsing the tall peaks
|
|
of the Parish, but now she had seen too much of it for her tastes. All
|
|
the Bestowed grew tense when the enemy came within sight, save for the
|
|
Great Elder and the Saint. It settled Kallia's nerves some to see them
|
|
so calm. They were a mighty pair, no lesser than the foe ahead. The
|
|
Black Queen, she saw, was patiently awaiting them.
|
|
|
|
The Painted Knife's fingers clenched around the hilt of her blades when
|
|
she took in the full sight. The glacier had been turned into a
|
|
blasphemous challenge to the Heavens, sculpted by eldritch power to
|
|
nestle a great throne upon which the Enemy was seated. No, not seated.
|
|
She was lounging, almost mockingly, with a long dragonbone pipe in hand.
|
|
The Black Queen blew out a stream of smoke, eyeing them nonchalantly.
|
|
The Bestowed slowed, spreading out as the Saint had ordered. Kallia felt
|
|
Sidonia let out a delighted breath.
|
|
|
|
``Now that,'' the Vagrant Spear murmured, making the Mark of Valor with
|
|
shaking fingers, ``is a worthy foe. Honoured Gods, a thousand singing
|
|
praises for offering a great struggle to this humble one. Blood spilled
|
|
on these holy grounds I dedicate to your name, my unworthy life placed
|
|
on the scales of your judgement.''
|
|
|
|
Naturally, the Alavans was \emph{excited} by the sight of this. She
|
|
should have known better than to expect wariness from a Heavens-maddened
|
|
lover of war. The Blade of Mercy glanced at them.
|
|
|
|
``Prayer,'' Kallia explained in Chantant.
|
|
|
|
The boy looked approving. It was probably for the best he did not know
|
|
about Levantine battle prayers. Whatever chatter had bloomed was whisked
|
|
out then the Great Elder strode to the forefront, passing even the Saint
|
|
of the Blades and the Mirror Knight.
|
|
|
|
``Child,'' he said, tone appalled. ``What have you done to yourself?''
|
|
|
|
Sidonia shuffled impatiently. She did not know Lower Miezan, and so had
|
|
no understanding of the conversation taking place.
|
|
|
|
``What needed to be done,'' the Black Queen calmly replied. ``My side
|
|
doesn't get to walk away clean, Pilgrim. I see you've been tossing
|
|
around resurrections like they're godsdamned solstice treats, too.
|
|
Charming. Not going to have any long-term ramifications at all.''
|
|
|
|
The monster paused, then leaned forward.
|
|
|
|
``Did that register as a lie?'' she grinned. ``It didn't, did it? Have a
|
|
good think about that one next time you try to sleep, Pilgrim.''
|
|
|
|
``Surrender,'' the Great Elder said. ``Abdicate. It is not too late.''
|
|
|
|
``You missing the part where I'm currently winning the battle?'' the
|
|
Black Queen drawled. ``Hells, it's not too late for you either. Terms
|
|
were offered and they hold. Take your army and go home. This doesn't
|
|
need to turn into a Named pissing contest.''
|
|
|
|
``You would argue this, after slaying thousands?'' the Pilgrim asked.
|
|
|
|
``I feel like we might need to revisit the concept of foreign
|
|
invasion,'' the villain noted. ``Specifically the part where it has
|
|
fucking \emph{consequences}. Like, you know, people dying. You'd think
|
|
that one would be a given, but apparently you're slow learners. Wahwah,
|
|
my attempt to conquer a -- sort of -- sovereign nation wasn't met with
|
|
flowers and a godsdamned parade. It's almost like we're not happy about
|
|
the whole thing. Go figure.''
|
|
|
|
``And you think your reign a better alternative?'' the Grey Pilgrim
|
|
asked calmly.
|
|
|
|
``Hells, Pilgrim, I was \emph{born} to rule,'' the Black Queen replied
|
|
with a toothy grin. ``But I'll settle for getting you fucks out of my
|
|
backyard, this once. Any takers?''
|
|
|
|
The monster's gaze swept across the crowd of Bestowed as she idly
|
|
emptied her pipe and put it away within her cloak. The only answer was
|
|
Light blooming and weapons raised.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, well,'' the Black Queen mused. ``Pissing contest it is, then.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
If Akua had always known heroism was this entertaining, she would have
|
|
begun dabbling \emph{years} ago. A hook of Light lashed out at her as
|
|
the healer Named shaped the heavenly power and tore through her throne,
|
|
but she'd already been moving when the working had just begun. Landing
|
|
in a crouch atop her glacier, she unsheathed her sword and tapped it
|
|
pensively against her armoured leg. It was unfortunate that the
|
|
deception required her to remain in dearest Catherine's garments, as
|
|
they were admittedly horrid, but needs must. The body was wonderfully
|
|
responsive, and though without the Gift the mantle allowed her powers
|
|
not fundamentally different. Tainted with Winter, perhaps, but that was
|
|
no great trouble for her. Her angry little overlord had, as usual,
|
|
allowed herself to fear her own power to such extent it crippled her
|
|
when instead she should have been learning to master the influence. One
|
|
never quite escaped one's origins, it seemed. A shame Catherine was
|
|
disinclined to take lessons from her in such matters.
|
|
|
|
Akua Sahelian was no stranger to otherworldly influences, and so she
|
|
embraced Winter eagerly.
|
|
|
|
The mantle howled through her veins, and eyeing the healer and his grim
|
|
little sentinel she flicked her wrist. Her glacial throne, a useful mass
|
|
of ice she had chosen as her seat for purposes both practical and
|
|
theatrical, twisted sharply and speared forward. The Saint of Swords
|
|
shattered it within a heartbeat, sword clearing the scabbard, but Akua
|
|
was unmoved. Ice remained ice, even when broken to pieces. An exertion
|
|
of will transmuted the shards into cold mist and it fell over the pair
|
|
of heroes like a blanket. Beneath her a man with a mirror-like shield
|
|
was climbing the glacier with unseemly haste. And was that sorcery she
|
|
felt? What familiar taste. A pilum of concentrated yellow flame tore
|
|
towards her, and she raised a contemptuous eyebrow. The Half-Hornet,
|
|
truly? How provincial. No one she knew would be caught dead using that
|
|
in a serious battle.
|
|
|
|
She leapt down, feet landing on the climbing hero's head, and measured
|
|
the angle so the only corrective action the spell formula allowed for
|
|
would fall well short of her. The sorcery hit the glacier with a
|
|
thunderous crash, splitting it in two. Ugh, he'd even overcharged it. It
|
|
was like watching a grown woman improperly dose last season's poison.
|
|
Movement flicked at the edge of her vision and Akua's boot came down to
|
|
smash the helmet beneath her, forcing the hero down and allowing her to
|
|
avoid the Saint's blow by less than an inch. The tips of Catherine's
|
|
pathetically unadorned crown were shaved cleanly off. The sorceress
|
|
threw herself to the side, sliding down the falling glacier as streaks
|
|
of light further shattered what had been a very tasteful throne, in her
|
|
opinion. A piece of the crown fell at her side, and once more Akua
|
|
mourned Catherine had not even been willing to add some sapphires to it.
|
|
They were only moderately costly to import through Mercantis, and they
|
|
would have fit a Queen of Winter perfectly. A triad of heroes, two of
|
|
them Levantines by the skin tone, charged towards her as she caught her
|
|
footing at the edge of the slope. The pair still shrouded in mist, she
|
|
noted, were beginning to disperse it.
|
|
|
|
That just wouldn't do.
|
|
|
|
Akua flicked her wrist and turned the mist they'd inhaled to ice again,
|
|
clogging up their throats and lungs. Transmutation, she noted
|
|
approvingly, came particularly easy to the mantle. Likely a consequence
|
|
of the ever-fluid nature of the fae, or that these waters had come from
|
|
Arcadia in the first place. The triad closed in, an inexplicably
|
|
barefoot woman serving as the tip of the wedge.
|
|
|
|
``Glory in strife,'' the beggar screamed out in Lunara.
|
|
|
|
Did Catherine know any Levantine tongues? Most likely not. Still, a
|
|
responding battle cry was in order. It was the heroic thing to do.
|
|
Something about Callow? Akua pondered her understanding of Catherine's
|
|
temper. \emph{I am angry}, the sorceress decided, \emph{because I am
|
|
disappointed as I have mystifyingly failed to grasp that the Heavens
|
|
prefer their pawns powerful yet rather dim. I must now protect the
|
|
venerable sanctity of farms and countless peasants everywhere, as I am
|
|
very concerned with their fate even though they are ignorant and full of
|
|
lice.}
|
|
|
|
``Fuck off and die,'' Akua called back, tinting her voice with wroth.
|
|
|
|
There. Crass more than witty, but Catherine did tend to walk that line.
|
|
Entirely disinclined to engage three Heavens-empowered hardened killers
|
|
with only a sword and dubious moral grounds in hand, she retreated into
|
|
the waters and let them envelop her fully. Breathing was not necessary
|
|
to this body, after all, and she could feel her foes where eyesight
|
|
failed. She took a moment to touch the marching dead with her mind,
|
|
noting with approval that though after the heroes claimed her attention
|
|
she'd only succeeded in making them mindlessly advance and attack, they
|
|
were bleeding the crusaders. Slowly but surely. She'd been rather
|
|
displeased at the haste the enemy approached her with, as she'd been
|
|
amusing herself by redeploying Catherine's old goblin tricks against
|
|
fresh opposition. A heartbeat later, the water surrounding her blew away
|
|
as the Saint's blow forced the marsh to recede.
|
|
|
|
``There you are,'' the unseemly old woman grinned.
|
|
|
|
``Dodge,'' Akua replied with a friendly smile, greatly enjoying herself.
|
|
|
|
Two massive blocks of ice formed into the waters on each side, their
|
|
mass smashing forward and sending the tide hurtling back towards both of
|
|
them. The wicked enemy of all things Callowan blinked in surprise, but
|
|
alas it was not to be. Starlight stolen and made a streak cut towards
|
|
the sorceress, evaporating the water and prompting a frown. This was not
|
|
mere heavenly lightshow: it was the principle of untainted radiance
|
|
directly from firmament, made into a weapon. Such a thing could be
|
|
interrupted by workings, but it would take nothing less than a miracle
|
|
to usurp or reshape it. Fortunately, she was not without answer. The
|
|
gate opened before her, a perfect circle pressing back the fabric of
|
|
Creation, and Akua carefully threaded the needle. Difficult, on such
|
|
short notice, yet not impossible to a practitioner of her skill.
|
|
Orienting the gate properly, she wove will into forming the
|
|
corresponding exit behind the trifling Proceran who'd tried to hit her
|
|
with childish sorcery. The radiance hit him in the back before he could
|
|
react, though to Akua's displeasure it did no harm. The Pilgrim could
|
|
control his working to a truly despicable extent. Tying off the two
|
|
gates so she could not be made to suffer the backlash of their breaking,
|
|
the sorceress condensed a platform of ice to leap off of before the
|
|
Saint could bisect her.
|
|
|
|
She landed smoothly atop the water on a foothold of ice, moving towards
|
|
the flank of the assembled heroes before the old cutter could catch up
|
|
with her. The enemy seemed puzzled, she saw, by her refusal to engage
|
|
them on their own terms. Had Catherine truly traded blows with them up
|
|
close? The sorcerers almost wrinkled her nose. Waving about swords was
|
|
the business of people who \emph{failed} to murder demigods for power.
|
|
Perhaps it was time to make that exceedingly clear to the opposition.
|
|
Winter burning gloriously through her frame, Akua Sahelian shaped the
|
|
full power of the mantle. Half a mile of marshlands turned to ice as she
|
|
remained standing on an elegant pillar, the surrounding waters
|
|
disappearing as they froze and gathered into a monumental ball of frost
|
|
hovering over the heroes. The Saint was running on now solid ground,
|
|
sword flashing to carve a groove through both Creation and the pillar,
|
|
but the sorceress merely cocked an eyebrow. Even severed, the upper part
|
|
of the pillar remained unmoving in the air. Fire and starlight shattered
|
|
the mass of ice, but the heroes were gravely mistaken if they thought
|
|
this was a mere foot to stomp on them with. A flick of the wrist had the
|
|
ice transmuting back into water and falling into a shower over the
|
|
Named.
|
|
|
|
Another flick had it freezing again, and they were buried in falling
|
|
ice.
|
|
|
|
``Come now,'' Akua said. ``This is as obvious an opening as you'll
|
|
get.''
|
|
|
|
The Saint of Swords was a wizened old killer, with an impressive
|
|
reputation. She was not, however, invincible. Even as she turned around
|
|
in an instinctive parry, the old woman took the arrow in the shoulder as
|
|
the Archer finally made her presence known. The sorceress felt the
|
|
trembling heat of the wounded heroine, and Winter demanded her screaming
|
|
death. She clicked her tongue against the roof of her mind, will lashing
|
|
out to take the mantle by the throat and choke it. The urges receded
|
|
ever so slightly. More dangerous than she'd believed, this influence.
|
|
The principle alienation was similar in nature to the bleed from binding
|
|
an ancient devil, but unlike the latter it did not recede after the
|
|
moment of binding. Akua leapt down from the pillar, power lashing out to
|
|
smash both broken halves on the Saint. The heroine flickered with Light
|
|
and it pulsed in a perfect ring around her. Aspect, the sorceress
|
|
decided. Weak enough it could likely be used more than once, which would
|
|
be difficult to deal with. No matter, there were more tempting prey.
|
|
Akua felt mild revulsion at the term her thought had ended by, to her
|
|
surprise.
|
|
|
|
She did not have the time to linger on the matter, as the heroes had
|
|
escaped her little greeting gift. Light broke through the ice, once,
|
|
twice, and then in an eruption of steam the entire structure vanished.
|
|
The second-rate wizard's doing, she suspected. For a heartbeat she mused
|
|
leaving the battle entirely, going to lead the dead personally, but
|
|
found she could not. It would mean leaving Archer on her own, something
|
|
she could not accept. The notion displeased her, even. The sorceress'
|
|
brow creased. This was not coincidence. She could feel her mind even
|
|
struggling to consider the subject, which was telling. Feeling the Saint
|
|
pivot to cut through a second arrow, Akua moved towards the other heroes
|
|
as she fought the influence.
|
|
|
|
``Oh,'' she murmured to herself after a moment. ``My dear, that is
|
|
\emph{exquisitely} done.''
|
|
|
|
The sorceress had slipped her bindings by snatching an errant piece of
|
|
Winter and making it her own. Through it she'd opened a path to the
|
|
greater mantle that she'd eventually managed to crawl through, entirely
|
|
so when she found no opposition awaiting. In her current state, it would
|
|
be impossible for her to claim this body if Catherine disallowed it. The
|
|
discrepancy in will and power was overwhelming. Yet using the sliver of
|
|
Winter, Akua had succeeded in stabilizing the construct she now
|
|
inhabited and claiming use of the full mantle -- which she'd drawn on,
|
|
this entire fight. The path going both ways, the mantle itself was now
|
|
influencing her. Which had seemed a minor concern, until she realized
|
|
that Catherine Foundling had bound her very soul into its fabric. The
|
|
more Akua drew on the mantle, the more she called back the body's true
|
|
owner\emph{. I had wondered, as to why you never had Hierophant lay
|
|
deeper bindings on me}, the sorceress thought\emph{. It never truly
|
|
mattered, did it? You left yourself a backdoor.} She could not help but
|
|
approve. Perhaps some mundane sorts would have been horrified, but Akua
|
|
had first ripped out her own soul to use as a tool as the tender age of
|
|
thirteen. Ruthlessness turned against yourself could be a very useful
|
|
tool, if properly employed. In matters of self-mutilation for the sake
|
|
of advancement, she must admit Catherine Foundling had few rivals.
|
|
Eyeing the spreading steam, Akua made a decision. Struggling against
|
|
this was pointless, and might be taken as treachery she did not intend.
|
|
|
|
``Let it not be said, my Empress, that I did not offer service leal and
|
|
true,'' Akua Sahelian mused.
|
|
|
|
She called on Winter again, the fullness of the mantle, and kept digging
|
|
deeper until her vision blurred. Her reward did not take long to be
|
|
delivered.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Back into the box, Diabolist.}
|
|
|
|
Darkness came, yet Akua smiled.
|
|
|
|
A useful tool, after all, was never allowed to rest for long.
|