498 lines
23 KiB
TeX
498 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{inexorable}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Inexorable}\label{inexorable}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{inexorable}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Inexorable}
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\epigraph{``Courage and cowardice fill the same grave, but earn different
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eulogy.''}{Lycaonese saying}
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Otto Reitzenberg's crown sat ill on his brow, and always would. On it
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weighed the three deaths that had carried him through the gates of
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Sternlerin fortress: his father and sisters, every one of them a better
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and braver soul than he. They had perished at the Enemy's hand, and with
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every death further down the line of succession the crown was passed
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until it sat on his brow. Sat laden with the weight of those who should
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have led their people instead. Sometimes he thought he could hear them
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in the wind. Father's rasping laughter, his throat never quite recovered
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from the poison on the ratling spear. Gude's calm and steady drone,
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never moved to haste by fear nor displeasure. Elsa's thundering wraths
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and kindnesses, neither any less terrible than the other. The Enemy had
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come for the House of Reintzenberg, that day, and spared only the runt
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of the litter. For the blood he carried on his brow his people had named
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him Otto Redcrown, and in his hands the heavy charge of turning back the
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tide of the Dead had been left.
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He was not that charge's equal.
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``Come now, Reitzenberg,'' the other man drawl, ``no need to look so
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grim. The situation's markedly improved since this morning.''
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The Prince of Bremen scowled at his companion, unamused by the attempted
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levity. Prince Frederic Goethal was the very personification of every
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mocking tale shared around fires about the Alamans -- covered in silks
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and ribbons, his long flaxen hair cascading down in ringlets all the way
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to his shoulders and usually drunk well before noon. The Prince of Brus
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was also the only ruler from south of Neustria to have sent so much as a
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single sword to join the defence of Lycaonese lands. And it was more
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than a sword the man had ridden with: near the entire army of Brus had
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made for Twilight's Pass under the prince. Frederic was, Otto believed,
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both a finer soldier and a finer tactician than the Prince of Bremen
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himself. Yet he was also as prone to preening as the colourful azure and
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crimson kingfisher that was the banner of the House of Goethal. The
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juxtaposition of the two was disconcerting, made more so by the fact
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that the man was barely twenty and boyish in looks besides.
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``I do not see how, Prince Frederic,'' Otto said. ``For one, this
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appears to be a dragon.''
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The long stretch of mountain passes, valleys and narrow ridges popularly
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known as Twilight's Pass had several choke points, the jagged pits of
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Volsaga being the latest they had been forced to defend. Volsaga
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Fortress itself, raised on a narrow strip between two sharp cliffs, had
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held for a fortnight as the dead massed their hosts under cover of
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constant, grinding assaults. It might have held for another fortnight,
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Prince Otto thought, if not for the Dead King unleashing the skeletal
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horror he'd just referred to. The gargantuan dragonlike thing had torn
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through the outer walls, ignoring like arrows and stone like they were
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summer rain, and scattered the defenders as the lesser dead poured in.
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Now it was curled around a low peak that loomed above the path into the
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fortress, forbidding attempt to claw it back from the dead.
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``'twas a dragon, perhaps,'' Prince Frederic mused. ``It is now quite
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dead, one assumes.''
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``We pulled back in time,'' Otto grunted, ignoring the other man's
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words. ``We'll save maybe half the companies we'd committed to the
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fortress. That is still a heavy loss. It will be a fighting retreat
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until Graueletter, too, and that abomination is bound to pursue.''
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``The dwarven ballistae seemed to have only irritated it, alas,'' the
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Prince of Brus conceded. ``Though given the weather in this parts, it is
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a miracle the things work at all.''
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``How, then,'' Prince Otto patiently said, ``has our situation improved
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since morn?''
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``I would think that obvious, Reitzenberg,'' Prince Frederic said, and
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elegantly flicked his wrist upwards.
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The Lycaonese prince glance upwards, and saw little more than the sky.
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There were none of the corpse-drakes, at least, which he supposed was a
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small mercy. Both archers and slingers were beginning run out of
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projectiles, and it would be days before the next supply convoy.
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``I see nothing,'' Otto admitted.
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``The sun has finally deigned to arrive, my friend,'' Prince Frederic
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cheerfully said. ``We will, at least, perish slightly thawed.''
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A convulsive chuckle tore free of Otto's throat before he could help
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himself. It'd been a dark jest, but then Lycaonese humour was not
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renowned for its lightness. The Prince of Brus took a moment to push
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back his long curls, then glanced curiously to their side. The Farewell
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Stones were a striking sight, Otto would admit. The steles of granite
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carved straight from the stone went on for most of a mile along the
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mountain path, most of them with a large iron peg hammered through. Some
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were empty, others rusting, but in every last one a farewell in iron had
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once been made. It was not a monument the way southerners would know it,
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but to his people it held great meaning.
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``I'll confess never to have heard of this shrine,'' the Prince of Brus
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said. ``May I ask what it stands for? It does not seem dedicated to the
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Heavens, at least in no way I understand.''
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``It is not,'' Otto replied. ``My people call them the Farewell Stones,
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and they are no hymn to Above. They are\ldots{} a vow, I suppose. Oft
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renewed, never fulfilled.''
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``A Lycaonese custom, then,'' Frederic Goethal said, eyes curious.
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``This place, Volsaga,'' Otto slowly explained. ``It is halfway through
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Twilight's Pass, and the easiest path through it. Armies have marched
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here since before the days of the Iron Kings, when we were tribes held
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together only by fear of the dark.''
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The Alamans prince listened attentively, his face twisting with
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fascination.
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``When we come through here, to march against the Plague or the Dead,''
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Prince Otto said. ``We make a farewell in the stone. Before going to
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war, we leave it as an oath.''
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``The spikes of iron,'' Prince Frederic murmured, glancing at the long
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stretch of them. ``There must be hundreds, and the rust\ldots{} Some of
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them are mere traces, now.''
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``We have done this,'' Otto Reitzenberg said, ``for many hundred years.
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Every time knowing it might be the last. That this war could be the one
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that breaks us and lets the Enemy devour us all.''
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``But there is always a fresh farewell,'' the other man said, tone
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thoughtful.
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Otto nodded, pleased her understood.
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``When the farewells reach the end of the steles,'' the Prince of Bremen
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said, ``those at the beginning have faded. So it has been, so it will
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be.''
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Otto turned to his sworn swords and curtly gestured. They came forward
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with a large fold of leather and opened it before the two royals. Inside
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was a large peg of iron, and another of his soldiers offered a
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steel-tipped hammer to accompany it. The Alamans prince smiled in
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understanding, eyes sweeping to the stele closest to them. Empty, save
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for some last traces of rust deep inside.
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``You are to add your own farewell, I take it,'' Prince Frederic said.
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``We,'' Otto Redcrown said.
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The other man studied him closely.
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``How many Alamans have given farewell here, Otto Reitzenberg?'' he
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quietly asked.
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``After today,'' Otto said, ``there will be one.''
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The Prince of Brus paled, as if slapped.
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``There is no need to-'' he began, then bit his lip and when he resumed
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speaking his voice was hoarse. ``There should be no reward for this,
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Prince Otto. Not for simply joining the battle when you've all had to
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bid farewell to these passes for centuries.''
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The Prince of Bremen shook his head, for after all the other royal did
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not understand him. Did not understand this.
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``We are not better,'' Otto said. ``We too have murdered and schemed,
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Frederic Goethal. We have warred on our own and on southerners for greed
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or lust for power. There is naught in our bones that sets us apart from
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the stuff of other men.''
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The last of the House of Reitzenberg straightened his back and took the
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iron peg he was being offered.
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``It is the choice that matters,'' Prince Otto Redcrown said. ``Of
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marching through the pass. Of leaving shelter behind so that you may
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shelter others.''
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The hammer was pressed into the hands of the Prince of Brus by a gruffly
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insistent armsman, and the fair-haired Alamans finally took it. There
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was no disapproval in the eyes of the soldiers sworn to Bremen, as
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Prince Frederic prepared to hammer in the peg that Otto was holding in
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place. There would be none from the soldiers of Hannoven, either, or
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Rhenia and Neustria. Why would there be? When the call had sounded, when
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the Dead had crossed the lakes, only one prince had come north. The name
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of Frederic Goethal would be remembered in these lands so long as
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Lycaonese held them. The hammer came down, claiming three strokes before
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iron nestled deep into rock. Otto clapped the shoulder of the other
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prince, after.
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``We retreat to Graueletter,'' the Prince of Bremen gruffly said.
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``No,'' Prince Frederic quietly replied. ``No, not quite yet. You
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northerners are not the only ones with their pride.''
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The flaxen-haired man whistled sharply and there was a cheer from the
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slope below, as the two thousand horsemen that were his persona retinue
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raised their banners. The Prince of Brus sent for his horse and deftly
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mounted the saddle, claiming a long lance from his page.
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``The fortress is lost, Prince Frederic,'' Otto told the man.
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``That may be,'' the man smiled, ``but you were not wrong, in saying the
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beast will pursue us during the retreat. Many will die, should it not be
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slain.''
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``Charging the path is a fool's errand,'' Prince Otto bluntly said. ``It
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will kill you all.''
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``So we will do no such thing, my friend,'' Prince Frederic replied.
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``See the low peak where it looms, and the slope above it.''
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The Prince of Bremen flicked a look, only to confirm what he already
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knew.
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``It is sheer enough to be called a cliff and not a slope,'' he said.
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``We shall be most careful not to tumble, then,'' Frederic Goethal
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grinned, looking for all the world like an impish boy. ``Worry not,
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Reitzenberg. We will return victorious, should we return at all.''
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``It is folly,'' Otto said.
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``I am a Goethal of Brus, my friend,'' the prince said. ``\emph{I Dare}
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are the words of my blood, and to them I will keep. Prepare the retreat.
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We guests must meanwhile earn our keep.''
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The Prince of Brus rode away to join his retinue, and Otto stood on the
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heights above them spellbound. They were a colourful lot, these Alamans
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horsemen, a riot of silks in red and blue trailing behind their polished
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scale like fairy wings in the kingfisher's colours. Pages saw to their
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riders, and to the cheers of the soldiers offered up thin glasses of
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what Otto thought might be crystal. Pure crystal, exquisitely shaped and
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filled with red wine. Prince Frederic took up his own and led his mount
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to the fore of the retinue before raising his glass.
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``Ladies and gentlemen -- to Procer, and Her Most Serene Highness,'' he
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toasted.
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As one, the soldiers toasted and drank. Not the full glass, the
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Lycaonese saw, but a mere sip of it.
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``To our hosts.''
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The Alamans drank.
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``To the kingfisher, may we never shame it,'' Prince Frederic said.
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A cheer followed, and another sip. The Prince of Brus' horse arched
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impatiently, though even one-handed the man reined it in effortlessly.
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He laughed, loud and bright.
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``To doom, and glorious death,'' he bellowed.
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Madmen that they were, every single one of the Alamans flung their
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glasses against the ground. Crystal shattered, red wine spilled like
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blood, and behind Prince Frederic Goethal the riders followed. A fortune
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had been broken on stone in a moment of pique. Otto Redcrown watched as
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they rode up the mountain paths, disappearing in a crown of mists and
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stone. There was nothing he could do but arrange the retreat and wait,
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ordering bowmen companies forward to cover the retreat of the last
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soldiers escaping the fortress. The dragon of bones stirred at the
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sight, though it did not yet deign to intervene. There was still
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fighting taking place in the fortress courtyards behind it as the dead
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overwhelmed the last of the trapped defenders, and it lazily watched
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until nothing but the dead remained. Mere moments after, two thousand
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Alamans crested over the mountain path overlooking the abomination's
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perch.
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Otto's fingers tightened as he saw them slow as they reached the edge of
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the slope, that steeply inclined bare rock precipitously tumbling down
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towards the skeletal horror that still remained perched over the path.
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The kingfisher banner rose glittering under the sun, blue and red and
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glittering gold, and two thousand lances were lowered as the cavalry
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thundered down the slope. To doom and glorious death Prince Frederic had
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summoned them, and the Alamans joined him laughing and singing their
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summer songs as they charged, silks trailing behind them like ephemeral
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wings. The beast only saw them too late, and like a pack of bright-clad
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wolves they tore at it. Tore at it and died. Leathery wings were ripped,
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but their beating still shattered horsemen and horses alike. Claws tore
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through armour and lace just as easily, maw crushed men and mount in a
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single screaming snap. But the madmen did not flinch or flee or
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withdraw. With hungry tenacity they carved up the abomination, 'til
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limbs had been rent and bones broken.
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Until the Prince of Brus himself shattered the skull with a hammer, and
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the eldritch lights in the monster's eyeholes were snuffed out. The man
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raised it high above his head and the cheer from the army was deafening,
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defiant. A sliver of light brought to a dark day. Of the two thousand
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horsemen that sallied out, six hundred returned.
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Easily thrice that many soldiers might have been lost in the retreat, if
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they had not gone.
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---
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There was going to be a snowstorm tonight.
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Captain Bernhardt had learned to tell the signs: wind grew restless, and
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colder, but you could still taste the heaviness in the air. It'd be a
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rough watch for whoever served after dusk, even more so for the
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rationing he'd had to place on braziers. Charcoal and stones were
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running low, and the promised supplies from Bremen had never arrived. In
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the captains' private opinion, it was a toss-up whether it was the
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Enemy's warbands who were responsible or the ugly truth that there were
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only so many supplies to go around and half a dozen forces that needed
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them more than his own. Not that the territory Bernhardt had been
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ordered to hold was without importance: Hocheben Heights sloped down
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from the southern peaks of the Kaltwend, a broad plateau that stretched
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all the way to the rocky shores of Lake Pavin. It was a lock on the hard
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spit of land that stood between the Grave and the tributary river to
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Lake Pavin, heights overlooking lowlands now crawling with the dead and
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damned. There were only a few paths up the sheer cliffs, though, and
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he'd ordered them collapsed the moment he took command. The dead had
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only half-heartedly tried the climb a dozen times since, and been duly
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driven back. He could understand why commanders might send the wood and
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grain to Twilight's Pass or the Rhenian Gates instead, where every hour
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saw a fresh swarm of horrors unleashed.
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It didn't make the nights any warmer for his soldiers, though.
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The fair-haired captain mused loosening the rationing for the duration
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of the snowfall as he tread the icy stones of Emil's Displeasure, the
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long stretch of fortifications jutting from the edge of the plateau. The
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watchtowers were few, for this high up they were hardly needed, but
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Prince Emil Papenheim had not been skinflint in seeing to the defence of
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Hocheben. Stone parapets with punctured arrow slits oversaw the drop,
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and further back thick oaken trap doors led to the dug-in sections
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Hannoven soldiers fondly called the \emph{Emilzorn}: tunnels leading to
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lower in the cliff side, through which ice-soaked trees and massive
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stones could be rolled down to fall at any force trying to climb up.
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Bernhardt had found the two hundred men and women left in Hocheben by
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the Iron Prince to be priceless, after coming to take command at the
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order of now-dead Prince Manfred Reiztenberg. His three thousand
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soldiers were mostly Neustrians, as was he, and they'd never had to
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fight for the heights in their lifetime. The old garrison knew the
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paths, knew the defences, and Bernhardt had made sure to make their own
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captain his second. You couldn't trust a Hannoven woman to crack a smile
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even at her own wedding, famously, but what Captain Elpeth lacked in
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humour she more than made up in ability to kill things.
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Bernhardt tightened his furs around his shoulders as he passed the third
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and last watchtower, slowing his steps by the brazier tucked away behind
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it. The three soldiers out on watch looked up guiltily as his arrival,
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well aware at least one of them should be up on the tower at the mercy
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of the evening wind.
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``Captain,'' the oldest among them began. ``We-''
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``Up,'' Bernhardt interrupted in a rasp. ``Now, and I will pretend I saw
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nothing. Don't let it happen again.''
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The older man saluted, the spear but clacking against the cold stone
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beneath, and Bernhardt watched him hurry back to his post. The other two
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might have looked abashed, he thought, though it was hard to tell with
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the padded cheeks of the helmets hiding away so much of their faces.
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``It will snow tonight,'' he told them. ``Keep a careful eye out. The
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Enemy does not shiver or sleep.''
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``We will, sir,'' the youngest solemnly said.
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Gods, he thought, she couldn't have been older than sixteen by the sound
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of her voice. The lock of red hair that'd slid out from under the rim of
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her helm was moving with the wind. No older than Bernhardt's own oldest
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daughter, which he'd seen off with the family coat of mail and his dead
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wife's sword. Seen off to march with Prince Manfred's host to hold
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Twilight's Pass against the Dead King, along with most the Neustrian
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volunteers. Fredda could be dead, for all he knew. Word from the
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fighting at the pass had been sparse, but what he'd heard had been
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enough to chill his blood.
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``I'll take you at your word, soldier,'' Bernhardt said, tone softening.
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It was a whim that drove him to stand at the battlements, to take a look
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over the edge into the howling winds. Far below bare trees and
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evergreens stood half-buried in snow, until a frozen river cut them off,
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and it was the sight of that river that raised his hackles. A large
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patch of ice was \emph{cracked}. He could see no dead moving below among
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the trees, and yet\ldots{}
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``Sound the horns,'' he ordered. ``All steel to the walls.''
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``Sir?'' the girl asked.
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``\emph{Now},'' he barked.
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It was instinct, he knew, but there was something wrong. Captain
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Bernhardt stepped back and went looking through the sparse supply cache
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at the watchtower's side, until he found what he was looking for: a long
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torch, ending in a tightly-tied cloth soaked with oil. He plunged it
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into the brazier, waiting until it caught fire before stepping back to
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the edge of the battlements. Atop the watchtower the call to arms
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sounded, sharp and echoing across the heights. Steadying his hand, the
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captain tossed the lit torch over the edge of the cliff. For five, ten
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heartbeats he thought he'd made a fool of himself and utter relief
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swelled. Then the torch hit something that wasn't there, and after a
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sound like a broken mirror a hulking shape flickered into sight.
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``Gods stand with us,'' he whispered.
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It was no simple dead, but instead a great abomination. A misshapen
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thing made of men's bones and stretched out leather, shaped as some
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long-clawed bear with an overripe belly scaling the cliff. It must have
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been almost two hundred feet tall and half as large. Empty eye sockets
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turned to look at him, and with a keening sound the abomination leapt
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up.
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``Spears at the ready,'' Captain Bernhardt ordered, hastily backing away
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from the edge.
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Two sets of bones claws closed around the battlements, grinding against
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the stone, as behind Bernhard the first reinforcing company spread out.
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Shafts of wood with tips of iron or steel dipped forward. The
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fair-haired Neustrian bared his sword, cursing himself for having left
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his shield at the barracks when setting out. The abomination's massive
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head came out, all leather and bone and blind malevolence. It opened its
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mouth, jaws unhinging, and with horror Bernhardt realized that the
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monster was not the whole of it: climbing relentlessly out of the dead
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thing's belly were sure-footed corpses, armed and armoured. It was a
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siege tower, he realized, the likes of which only the Dead King could
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possibly craft. And a precursor to all-out assault. They might hold
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here, he thought, but how many others like this were climbing up the
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cliff unseen? The captain found the eye of a soldier at the front of the
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spear wall.
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``You,'' he said. ``Go, and tell Captain Elpeth what you saw here. She
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has command.''
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The young man opened his mouth to protest, but Bernhardt would not argue
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and so ignored him.
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|
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|
``Volunteers,'' he called out. ``Ten of you, with me. Let us give Keter
|
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its fucking \emph{due}.''
|
|
|
|
In front of them the abomination was spewing out its dead progeny,
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|
corpse after corpse forming a foothold, but ten brave souls came to his
|
|
side. They used the old way, knowing full well what it meant. Three
|
|
large urns of pitch, three torches, the rest to serve as the arrow in
|
|
flight. The girl was one, that soldier with the errant red tuft.
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|
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|
``Go back, kid,'' he said. ``Let another old hand take your torch.''
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|
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|
Dark eyes met his.
|
|
|
|
``Hanne,'' she said, tone hard. ``My name is Hanne, and I am
|
|
\emph{Lycaonese}.''
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|
|
|
The rebuke was hard as the voice. No older than his own Fredda, the
|
|
captain thought. \emph{What kinds of fathers were we, to raise daughters
|
|
like these?} It was a bitter kind of pride, but pride nonetheless. Grip
|
|
tight around his sword, Bernhard nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Steady then, Hanne,'' he rasped. ``Remember that the flame is what
|
|
matters.''
|
|
|
|
She let out a shivering breath, nodding.
|
|
|
|
``Though mountains crack, and ice will thaw,'' Hanne said.
|
|
|
|
Bernhardt of Neustria let out a spout of laughter like a spasm and
|
|
nodded, taking the lead. Behind him the volunteers fell into formation
|
|
|
|
``Though mountains crack, and ice will thaw,'' he called out.
|
|
|
|
Spears cracked down against the stone, a defiant snap.
|
|
|
|
``Though walls will fall, to tooth and claw,'' the captain screamed,
|
|
voice rising.
|
|
|
|
Eleven against the assembling dead, and still they charged. Sword in
|
|
hand Bernhardt hacked at the bronze-clad corpse before him, elbowing the
|
|
dead aside and burying himself in their line. At his side the other
|
|
swords fought like the mad, pushing in and knowing there would be no
|
|
going back.
|
|
|
|
``Though stars will fade, and shadow spread,'' Bernhardt screamed, and
|
|
they screamed with him.
|
|
|
|
Three of the volunteers were dead already, taken by axe and spear, but
|
|
the dead had not expected so fierce an assault by so few and for a
|
|
heartbeat he stood before the beasts' open maw with no foe before him.
|
|
His sword he dropped, snatching a torch from one of his fallen instead
|
|
and the girl, Hanne, pushed at his side even as he took an axe in the
|
|
ribs. The gap in the enemy surprise had bought them was already closing.
|
|
|
|
``On the heights we stood, with iron red,'' she whispered, teeth
|
|
clenched.
|
|
|
|
Torches were touched to pitch -- one, two, three.
|
|
|
|
Into the beast they leapt, screaming defiance, and from the inside it
|
|
burned.
|
|
|
|
The Hocheben Heights held halfway to dawn, and the surviving garrison
|
|
retreated in good order.
|