480 lines
23 KiB
TeX
480 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-trust-is-the-wager}{%
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\section{Interlude: Trust Is The
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Wager}\label{interlude-trust-is-the-wager}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``War itself has no worth, as it is a temporary state. War ends,
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and therefore its fundamental purpose is to shape what comes after it.
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It then follows that a war fought without the ambition of a planned
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peace is inherently a mistake.''}
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-- Extract from the treatise ``On Rule'', author unknown (widely
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believed to be Prince Bastien of Arans)
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\end{quote}
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Yannu Marave had been taught, as a boy, to make a spectacle of honour
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duels. There were some who might have called such a teaching
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\emph{arrogant}, a presumption of superiority in all matters of steel,
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but those people were not of the Valiant Champion's Blood. The Lord of
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Alava had followed those ways as a young man, let the crowds roar with
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thrill and fear as he made sport of warriors. He had done this while
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master of the field from the first stroke to the last, and taken much
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too long to understand the sickness and cruelty of the act. Yet a duel
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fought for honour, for decision, could not be a dull affair. The
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resolution must be striking, the victory evident, lest other warriors
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wonder if their own blade would have served the cause better. And so
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Yannu Marave had left behind the ways of the champion, of a duellist,
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and instead learned the arts of killing. As his forbears had mad study
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of the slaying of armies and beast, he had learned to take apart men of
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all stripes. Warriors in plate or leather, hunters and Lanterns and even
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the strange-stepping slayers of the Brocelian's outskirts. All these,
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and binders as well. He had learned to kill these, kill them quick and
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clean and without a fuss.
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And so he'd opened the throat of Akil Tanja within eighteen heartbeats
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of their duel beginning, flicking his hooked blade free of blood and
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sheathing it in the same smooth gesture.
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Even as the corpse of the Lord of Malaga finished tumbling backwards and
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life left the man's eyes, Yannu of the Champion's Blood had calmly asked
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of his fellow lords and ladies of Levant if any other wished to contest
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the decision to attack again after nightfall. From the corner of his eye
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he'd seen Aquiline Osega's hand dip towards her own blade, her Slayer's
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Blood boiling at the thought of the match that could be had there, but
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the young woman mastered herself. The Lady of Tartessos was a dangerous
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woman, for her age, and would only become more so with the passing of
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years. She bore watching. The Lord of Malaga's son and heir, Razin Tanja
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of the Grim Binder's Blood, was not so patient. His sword ripped free of
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the scabbard, cutting through the silence that'd followed Yannu's
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question.
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``By smoke and dust, I vow enmity between us,'' the boy rasped out, his
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voice cadenced with old words. ``'til steel has sung and shield
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splintered, let there be no truce nor breaking of bread by our hands. On
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the blood of my father, I swear the last abjuration: by my hand the
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earth will spit you out from your grave, denied rest in barrow and
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shade.''
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Razin Tanja's face was still streaked with the iron and red of his
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line's facepaint, and though tall and well-formed the boy was in no
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state to fight the duel to the death he's just forced. He'd taken a
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wound today, Yannu noted, which had torn muscle near his shoulder. The
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healing done had been later and lackluster. Still, a murmur of solemn
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respect shivered through the assembled captains and Blood of the war
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council. Though Razin Tanja was said to have blundered and overstepped
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at Sarcella, that he would be so unflinching in swearing revenge over
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the same man who'd flogged him was garnering respect. From his own
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captains most of all, Yannu thought, and that was for the best. Razin
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Tanja could not formally become Lord of Malaga until his foremost kin
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gathered to acclaim him before Gods and men: respect and prestige would
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be his only true claims to command of the war captains of Malaga.
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``So be it,'' Yannu replied, dipping his head. ``When your wound is
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fully healed, I will meet you on duel-grounds.''
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``Why wait?'' Lady Aquiline mildly said, eyeing the two of them
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smilingly. ``Send for Proceran priests and have it done and over with.
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Let us settle all our affairs before battle is given.''
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The Lord of Alava met her gaze with clear displeasure. So clever she'd
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cut herself, that one, and too eager to see her last remaining rival to
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command of the other Dominion force dead on the ground.
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``Shut your fucking mouth, girl,'' Lady Itima of Vaccei said, tone
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conversational.
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Aquiline Osena's stare turned poisonous, when she faced the woman who'd
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had her two younger brothers killed. Itima was an old hand, and of the
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Bandit's Blood, so she was unimpressed by the sight and spat to the side
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in disdain.
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``Yannu, confirm that little bore from Tartessos in command of her army
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and let's get this over with,'' the Lady of Vaccei said, glancing at
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him. ``The longer she talks the more I feel the urge to make another cup
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out of an Osena skull.''
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``Remain civil, Itima,'' he chided her.
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``There is no civility north of Tartessos,'' Lady Aquiline angrily said.
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``Only poison and-''
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``Fewer of your siblings than there used to be, eh?'' the older woman
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grinned.
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``\emph{Enough},'' Razin Tanja hissed.
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The two women turned to him with barely veiled surprise.
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``My father lies dead on the ground, his corpse not even cold,'' the boy
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said. ``And you bicker over old feuds? I will wait until the end of this
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strife to exact my due from the Maraves yet you cannot even curb your
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viper tongues for an hour? Shame on both your lines.''
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``Not yet lord,'' Lady Itima drawled, ``and already making enemies.
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Truly Akil's boy, though with half the sense and none of the-''
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``I name Aquiline Osena war leader of the southern host,'' Yannu calmly
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interrupted. ``Do any contest this?''
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``Agreed,'' Razin Tanja rasped.
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``Agreed,'' Lady Aquiline coolly said.
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There was a pause.
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``Agreed,'' Itima Ifriqui conceded, reluctance purely for show.
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They put it to the captains, afterwards, but with the Blood having
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spoken the matter was good as settled. Even the Malagans kept to the
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word of their young heir without qualms when enemies were there to see,
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though Yannu knew better to think Razin would not have to make private
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bargains with the most powerful to keep them following his orders.
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``Then we are bound with common purpose of war,'' the Lord of Alava
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said. ``Let none stray until our enemy is broken.''
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Already the sun was beginning to set, he thought. It would be a long
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night before their armies would be ready to strike at the Black Queen's
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host, for soldiers were in need of healing and rest. Yet the time would
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come, and for the first time in many years an army of the Dominion of
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Levant would march out with the Peregrine among its number.
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---
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``The savages are cutting each other up,'' Prince Arnaud of Cantal said
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with open disdain. ``I believe one of their great lords was freshly
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butchered and even now is being set to flame.''
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This small pavilion of hers, Princess Rozala thought, was near filled to
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the brim with royalty. She would have preferred to cut out near everyone
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here of the council being held, but with the situation what it was that
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would have been more trouble than it was worth.
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``I have spoken with Lord Marave,'' the Princess of Aequitan evenly
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said. ``There was disagreement over strategy, and it was settled by an
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honour duel ending in death. Lord Akil Tanja was slain, and his heir
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Razin has taken lead of the captains of Malaga. He has been placed under
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command of Lady Osena, who is well-learned in the ways of war.''
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``They're Levantines,'' Princess Bertille of Lange drily said. ``How
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\emph{learned} can they possibly be at anything?''
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The ripple of laughter that went through the tent at the quip was enough
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to begin scraping at the bones of Rozala's patience, which boded ill for
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the rest of this council. She was disappointed to note that the
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slightest trace of a smile had quirked Louis' lips. It should not be
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held against him, she ultimately decided. Prince Louis Rohanon was a
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clever and decent man, but he'd still been raised Alamans. His ancestors
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had not fought a hard war to take Levant, unlike hers, or an even more
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brutal one to keep it. Rozala glanced at Princess Bertille and found the
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older woman watching her, an assessing look on her face. She was
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pushing, the Arlesite princess thought, to see how far she could go
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without being called to order. The temptation was there to immediately
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put her in her place -- it would be as simple as ordering the other
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princess to take a walk, dismissing her before all the others -- but
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Rozala knew this was not the hour for it. Bertille of Lange was useful
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to her, and would remain so for a long time. Best to only bare the knife
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when there was something to hold over her head.
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``We will of course defer to your judgement in this matter, Princess
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Bertille,'' Princess Sophie of Lyonis calmly said. ``As is only natural,
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given your distinguished military record and extensive knowledge of the
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Dominion.''
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The Princess of Lange reddened and Rozala Malanza had to smother a
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smile. Both at the harshness of the reply -- Bertille had no military
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achievements to her name, and was not known as a great scholar -- and
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the fact that Princess Sophie's continued open dislike for her fellow
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royalty kept pushing them ever further into Rozala's camp. Cordelia
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Hasenbach had picked her watcher for skill at arms and loyalty, not
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diplomacy. A mistake of some scale, as it turned out, for protracted
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campaign had tired the patience of everyone and tempers were beginning
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to flare more and more frequently.
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``The Dominion \emph{is} worrying me, all jests aside,'' Prince Rodrigo
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of Orense spoke up. ``They seem most unstable, Princess Malanza. Lord
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Marave's scheme to attack the enemy camp was a failure, yet we are now
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expected to heed his plans once more?''
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Rozala inclined her head in acknowledgement of his words, not in the
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least troubled by the question. After all, they'd arranged before the
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council for him to ask it.
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``He spent only Dominion soldiery, if you'll recall,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan said. ``Not ours. And this is not merely his own design -- the
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Grey Pilgrim is at his side, preparing to fight the enemy we cannot.''
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Even an oblique mention of the Black Queen was enough to chase any trace
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of mirth out of the tent. There were some here who'd not been at the
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Battle of the Camps, who'd not seen the crowned warlord of Callow split
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the clouds and drown men like flies or make sport of entire bands of
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heroes. There were some here who'd whispered behind closed doors that
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Prince Amadis Milenan and his armies had simply been cocksure and caught
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by surprise, and in the wake of that sloppiness tried to weave wild
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tales to avoid the blame. No one whispered such things anymore, Rozala
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thought. Not since half the people in this room had seen that spit of a
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girl tear out of the sky in a ripple of darkness only to nonchalantly
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set herself in the way of an army thousands strong without ever baring a
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weapon. Without raising her voice, or doing anything but smoking her
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eerie bone pipe and giving calm warning. Princess Rozala still thought
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of that afternoon, sometimes, of the death she's seen in the other
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woman's smile. It still had her shivering. The Black Queen was mad, but
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hers was a madness that had broken every army in her path. The Princess
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of Aequitan would not test her again without great care and many
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preparations.
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``It's still a fool's notion, this night attack,'' Princess Leonor of
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Valencis opined. ``Chosen don't hold ground, Princess Rozala. They can't
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be relied on. When we take a swing at that palisade, the enemy will have
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goblins and drow waiting for us.''
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Arnaud pompously cleared his throat.
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``We don't know for certain if drow see in the night, Leonor,'' the
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Prince of Cantal chided, tone condescending. ``Let us not make
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unwarranted assumptions.''
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``They live underground, Arnaud,'' Prince Louis sighed. ``We can assume
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they see in the dark without it being unwarranted.''
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``They could have very fine hearing,'' Princess Bertille drawled. ``Or
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mayhaps like bats it is their cry that is their sight.''
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``Indeed, Bertille, indeed,'' Prince Arnaud enthusiastically agreed.
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``My point exact.''
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Sometimes Rozala wondered what it was like to be Arnaud Brogloise, the
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kind of person whose triumphant vanity would allow to take anything but
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the most obvious of mockeries as affirmation. It wasn't like the
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Princess of Lange had even bothered with much of a pretence.
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``The Chosen will be sent to match the Damned, Princess Leonor,''
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Princess Rozala said, dragging the conversation back to the earlier
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path. ``We will not be relying on them for the fighting. I assure you,
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we have accounted for the drow.''
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``That'd be why our priests have been in talks with the Lanterns for the
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last sennight, I take it,'' Princess Leonor replied, eyes narrowing.
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``You won't be saying more?''
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Rozala flicked a glance at Louis.
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``Lady Dartwick, the Black Queen's spymistress, has agents in our
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camps,'' the Prince of Creusens said. ``We've caught and hung ten of
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these `Jacks' already. As a result, it was decided that secrecy is to be
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paramount. If the enemy catches wind of our stratagems beforehand, I
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need not detail how much of a disaster this could become.''
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``But you are aware of the details, Prince Rohanon,'' Princess Leonor
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pressed. ``And consider the notion sound?''
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``I do,'' Louis replied without hesitation. ``Risky, but soundly planned
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and perhaps our only chance at winning this without tossing away fifty
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thousand foot taking that palisade.''
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``Gods be merciful, then,'' the Princess of Valencis sighed, ``and ward
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us from the reaching claws of Below.''
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``We will begin our advance two hours before dawn,'' Princess Rozala
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informed them. ``Camp fires are to be kept alight to mislead the enemy,
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and there will be no horns sounded for assembly. You will be all be
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tasked with seeing to your own soldiers, while I've appointed Prince
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Louis to command over the levies furnished by Her Serene Highness.''
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``Glorious command indeed, my prince of Creusens,'' Princess Bertille
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smirked.
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The Princess of Aequitan's eyes narrowed.
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``As you've shown such spirit tonight, my princess of Lange, I expect
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you will have no trouble leading the tip of the wedge,'' Rozala calmly
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said.
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The other woman's smirk vanished.
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``There will be use for our horse then?'' she said.
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``We're sending everything we have,'' Princess Rozala grimly replied.
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``So is the Dominion. We'll win or lose on the knife's edge that splits
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night from dawn.''
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Dark tidings, that, but they were Proceran and so they still toasted to
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the madness before dispersing to their duties.
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---
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Juniper, fresh awoken and only half-dressed, did not bother to ask Aisha
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if she was serious. Her Staff Tribune would not jest about such a thing,
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or wake her without being entirely sure it was happening.
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``Their military intelligence shouldn't be this bad,'' the Marshal of
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Callow said.
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She wordlessly leaned back to allow Aisha to tie her aketon, letting the
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Taghreb's deft fingers handle the delicate clasps she could not reach.
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The touch was not distracting, but not enough that Juniper could not
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concentrate through it.
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``Catherine's readings of the Grey Pilgrim have been inaccurate
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before,'' Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara noted. ``It might be that
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these\ldots{} goddesses from the Everdark have obscured the truths of
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the drow from our opponents.''
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``If we're lucky that'll be the case,'' Juniper grunted.
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With the aketon properly on and no need for full armour quite yet,
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distance between them resumed and the Marshal of Callow's mind turned to
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safer avenues than the golden glow of her old friend's cheeks in the
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light of the torches.
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``If we're not lucky,'' the Hellhound continued, ``and that is to be our
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working assumption, they have a hard counter to the drow.''
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``We are not without cards of our own,'' Aisha reminded her.
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``It's still playing to the enemy's tempo,'' Juniper said. ``I don't
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like giving them what they want, Aisha, and that would be what we're
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doing.''
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``Should I order the Fourth Army and the assigned Legions to hold the
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palisades instead?'' she asked.
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The Hellhound breathed out, considering the lay of it. Would keeping the
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drow in reserve until the enemy had engaged better the situation? There
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was no way to tell, honestly. It'd be more prudent to bait out whatever
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plan the Grand Alliance had prepared early so that a defence could be
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mounted with it out in the open. Her warlord had made it clear that the
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tribes of the `Firstborn' were heavies in the league of a Court's field
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army, after night fell, but that kind of strength tended to be
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unreliable in Juniper's opinion. She put more trust in overlapping lanes
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of fire and steady shield walls than in powerful but disorganized
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hordes.
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``Keep them in reserve near the front,'' Juniper finally said. ``We'll
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let the drow take the first crack at the enemy. But Aisha?''
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Her Staff Tribune smoothly turned, eyebrow cocked.
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``Sound the full muster,'' the Marshal of Callow said. ``Everyone in
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gear. This is \emph{it}. I can feel it in my bones.''
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---
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Moro Ifriqui of the Brigand's Blood, heir to Vaccei, checked on the
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leather strap keeping his javelins from jostling around his back with
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every step. It needed tightening, and though it was awkward to paw at
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the strap while keeping pace with the other skirmishers he forced
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himself anyway. Better a small embarrassment now than a mistake that
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might cost him his life in the heat of battle. The Vaccei warriors
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around him slowed when they approached the edge of the enemy's range,
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where the spears of flame had been thrown at them from a great distance
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during the day. Knowing his role in this, Moro took the lead and bared
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the serrated sword that was sheathed at his hip.
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``Honour to Levant,'' he screamed. ``Honour to the Blood. Honour to
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Vaccei!''
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Screams repeated his words back at him, and twice more he repeated the
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ritual to fray the edges of fear and replace them with ardour instead.
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Only then did he scream for the advance, and the warriors marched into
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the field. Above them the Proceran priests wove miracles, globes of
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Light that cast down a glow over the stretch of plain leading to the
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palisade. Moro kept the beat of his warriors' march steady, knowing it
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was not yet time for the charge proper, and as he moved forward cast
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wary looks at the pit traps the day's fighting had revealed. Grimly, he
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thought to himself that without those being unearthed and the Proceran
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miracles lighting the way his charge would be little less than hurrying
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to honourable death. When the same massive sorcerous spears of flame
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that had been used during the day lit up the enemy camp, the heir to
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Vaccei felt a thrill of excitement and fear both running through his
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veins. Fear, for if he were to be touched by one of these his death
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would be instantaneous. Excitement, for there were no more spears now
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than there had been during the day and that meant\ldots{}
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Spread among the Vaccei warriors, the Lanterns laughingly called out
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their battle-hymns and jagged arcs of Light sprung upwards -- fifteen,
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seventeen of them scything through the darkness of the night. They
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impacted the enemy's sorcerous flames with a sound like claps of
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thunder, and though the miracles broke so did the enemy's magic. Moro
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laughed, the battle-joy lending his feet wings, and picked up the pace.
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Behind him his warriors followed suit, the dauntless vanguard of the
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Dominion, and it was singing couplets from the Anthem of Smoke that the
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heir to Vaccei passed into the killing yard: the suspected outer range
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of the enemy siege engines. And it was true, for a mere two heartbeats
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later projectiles near invisible in the gloom began scything through the
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lines of his men. First the long darts and round stones of the
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ballistas, skewering flesh and shattering bones before a scream could
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even rip free of the throat.
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``Scatter,'' Moro yelled.
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Had they been the lumbering, heavily armoured armsmen of Alava his
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warriors would have broken and died. But they were the followers of the
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Brigand's blood, light-footed and fleet, ghosts in the dark and killers
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in the wet earth: the formation vanished in a heartbeat, becoming a
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loose mob of warriors charging forward at backbreaking pace. Moro
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laughed and veered wildly to the left, barely avoiding the geyser of
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snow and earth that was the introduction of the first enemy trebuchet. A
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woman behind him screamed when the large stone kept rolling and caught
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her, though the sickening crunch that followed told of a merciful quick
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death in the heartbeat that followed. The paints on his face running
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with sweat, Moro of the Brigand's Blood forced his aching limbs to
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quicken and with another shout urged his warriors onwards. Through the
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first hail, and the most vicious. The enemy scorpions fired their long
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javelins with deadly accuracy that only cursed goblins would be able to
|
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muster in the dark, snuffing out lives wherever the whim took them. But
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beyond that, the warrior saw, there was open field.
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At too odd an angle for the engines to be able to kill, too close to the
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palisade. In the glow of the Light globes he could glimpse the dry moat
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before the enemy's rampart, and with a proud shout he ripped one of the
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javelins clear of his back. It was time to have the enemy taste Vaccei's
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steel. Yet above the palisade, he saw, it was not legionaries that
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awaited but instead the grey-skinned devils his mother had told him were
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truly drow from the Everdark. Their gear was shoddy, he saw with a
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sneer, and would be no proof for a good javelin. Even better. One more
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step he took, and then a hand was laid on his shoulder from the front.
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|
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``Chno sve noc,'' a guttural voice said.
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Before the words were even fully spoken, his arm was gone up to the
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shoulder along with the javelin he'd been holding. Turned to dust,
|
|
already gone in the wind. Moro opened his mouth to scream as a cold
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silver-blue pair of eyes contemplated him. The drow, for Ashen Gods it
|
|
must be a drow, smiled and he saw a flash of obsidian before -- before
|
|
there was a spray of grayish blood all over him, and the creature fell
|
|
split in half.
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|
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|
``Look alive, boy,'' the Saint of Swords idly said, flicking the blood
|
|
off her blade. ``We're just-''
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|
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|
Moro did not see her move, but suddenly her sword was angled differently
|
|
and she was flying back, while a ringing sound like another blade had
|
|
hit her echoed. Not, he saw with dismay, not another blade. The grey
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|
palm of a drow's hand was extended where the Saint had stood, and slowly
|
|
the creature straightened its back. The abomination was ancient, Moro
|
|
realized, its skin horridly creased and its thick black veins visibly
|
|
ridged. It wore a strange tunic of obsidian rings, belted at the hip,
|
|
and its hair was snow-white and long.
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|
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|
``You again,'' the Saint of Swords snarled.
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|
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|
The drow glanced at Moro.
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|
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|
``Boring,'' it said in broken tradertalk. ``Boring south cattle, no
|
|
better Procer cattle. Run now.''
|
|
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|
In the distance the rest of the drow began a strange ululating prayer.
|
|
Rumenarumenarumena, they went, some sort of heretical hymn offered up to
|
|
the sky. As the ancient drow turned its attention to Saint of Swords,
|
|
Moro took the advice he'd been given.
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|
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|
He ran.
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|
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|
---
|
|
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|
Sitting on a stone, legs folded, the Grey Pilgrim watched the battle and
|
|
waited. For now, all was unfolding as he had foreseen.
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|
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|
So why, Tariq wondered, were the Ophanim murmuring so worriedly in his
|
|
ear?
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