459 lines
22 KiB
TeX
459 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-so-we-shot-him}{%
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\section{Interlude: So We Shot Him}\label{interlude-so-we-shot-him}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``One hundred and twenty one: it can be wise to make a truce with
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a villain to deal with greater threat. Never forget, however, that fear
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does not make someone trustworthy. Merely afraid.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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Captain Elvera could not have drawn her sword even if there was a need,
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for oaths still bound her and so uncertainty was staying her hand. It
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had been a very fine line she'd walked these last few weeks, one finer
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than she was truly comfortable with. Elvera had sworn not to make war on
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the Black Queen nor her allies for the span of three months, and that
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span had not yet ended, though Lady Aquiline had made use of her
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regardless. The letter of the oath had been observed: the prisoners
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released under oath had never left the reserve or bared blade. Elvera
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herself did not formally hold command, for that might be impugning her
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word, though her `advice' was obeyed so faithfully this was mere
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pretence. The old woman would not pretend the spirit of the oath had not
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been broken, regardless, or that service of her lady excused the act.
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Even if the Black Queen had likely expected no better of them, it did
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not lessen the shame of being so feckless. Yet when duty and honour
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pulled different ways, which one was to be heeded? Elvera had no answer,
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and her lady was understanding, so here she was straddling a charade
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instead of declaring for either.
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``Those are the Spears of Stygia, we have confirmed it,'' Captain Onaedo
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grimaced. ``Ashen Gods, just when the night was turning around.''
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Onaedo, second only to her in years of service to Tartessos, held
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command of the host in the absence of Lady Aquiline -- who was, at the
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moment, still having her wounds seen to. Along with Razin Tanja, who
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she'd insisted would be healed at her side. That'd raised more than a
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few eyebrows, and likely would again in days to come. If they survived
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that long, Elvera thought. Which given the way reputable armies had
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taken to appearing out of thin air at their rear was seeming less
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certain by the moment.
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``And they are facing the Procerans,'' Elvera slowly said.
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The League of Free Cities had struck\ldots{} oddly. Perhaps in part to
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obscure its numbers, which were still very much in doubt, but their
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array was unusual. The Spears of Stygia, perhaps the finest infantry
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that region had to offer, had appeared and formed up for advance at the
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back of Lady Aquiline's command. Not facing the Alavan heavy infantry of
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Lord Malave to the north, which might be understandable if a swift rout
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was what was meant to achieved. Yet it was a hardened army of twenty
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thousand Procerans, an army who'd already fought that same slave-phalanx
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in the past, that they'd formed up in front of. There'd been much easier
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meat to prey on, if the Stygians had wished: the famously
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lightly-armoured warriors of Vaccei, or perhaps the hodgepodge mixture
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of fantassins and levies that was the northern Proceran contingent.
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Elvera had seen to it that even while moving to encircle the Black
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Queen's camp her lady's army had not overextended, so theirs was not a
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weak position to assault. Why, of all places, had the Spears of Stygia
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been put in front of the largest knot of veteran Proceran soldiery on
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the field? A rider approached, breaking up her musings, and conferred
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quietly with Captain Onaedo. She glanced at him, brow raised.
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``The Black Queen's surrender seems to be holding,'' he told her.
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The Grand Alliance would have folded like parchment if it hadn't, Elvera
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grimly admitted to herself. Even now, in the distance, she could see the
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buckling lines of her lady's host when it was fighting on a single front
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-- two would have ended them in an hour. The Stygian phalanx was pushing
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through the Procerans inch by inch, unflinchingly, and with few losses.
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On the left flank the Bellerophans were being hacked into by eager
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Tartessos captains, though the enemy's formations were so dense it was
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like wrestling with a boulder. Elvera would have spared a moment to be
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impressed by the way conscripts with only spears and old armour were
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holding up so well in front of proper warriors if the Bellerophan
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stubbornness wasn't in the course of losing her this battle. Delosi
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forces held the other flank, facing Malagan warbands, and though the
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scribes themselves were nothing to worry of the mercenaries they'd hired
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had stiffer spines and sharper blades. The Malagan captains were only
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barely holding on, and if they broke it would turn into a massacre. The
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Procerans at the centre would be encircled and choked by the Stygian
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phalanx while Elvera's left flank remained stuck and unable to help.
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Until the centre collapsed as well, anyway, and it was swept through as
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well.
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``We won't be winning this battle,'' Captain Elvera bluntly said. ``All
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we can do is hold and hope for Lord Marave to beat back the rest of the
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League.''
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``What would you advise, then?'' Captain Onaeodo asked.
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``I'd throw everything we have in reserve at our right flank,'' she
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said. ``And pray it'll hold long enough.''
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It wasn't an order, oath forbade it, but it was treated like one.
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---
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``I expect,'' Yannu Marave calmly said, ``that you come bearing a
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threat.''
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Had they been dealing with a lesser villain, Tariq thought, then the
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Lord of Alava would have been correct. If there'd ever been a time for
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the armies of the East to turn on the Grand Alliance, it was now.
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Debacle was unfolding down south, while a mere mile outside this tent a
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hard battle was being fought. Helike's army had swept out of Arcadia
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like a tide, hammering at the right flank unexpectedly, and even as Lord
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Yannu redeployed to meet the threat two more blows had come in quick
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succession: the soldiers of Penthes smashing into the left flank while
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those of Nicae poured out in the centre. The first half hour had been
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one sided butchery, for the Alliance's army had been taken utterly by
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surprise, but now that it'd had time to form up a brutal stalemate of
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shield walls had formed. Yet all it would take was for the Army of
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Callow to resume firing its siege engines at the army, and the battle
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would be over. Odds were that Catherin Foundling would never again get
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advantage so heavy and undeniable over the hosts of the Grand Alliance,
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and if she were a fool then she would have instructed her followers to
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take advantage of it. The Grey Pilgrim saw no such thing within Vivienne
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Dartwick, and that brought forth just as much fear as it did relief.
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``Queen Catherine offered the surrender in good faith,'' the young woman
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replied just as calmly. ``It stands, regardless of circumstance. I have
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come to discuss terms of ransoming.''
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Tariq almost laughed at the audacity of that. Lady Dartwick had ridden
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into her enemy's camp with nothing but a cursory escort, unarmed, and
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sat herself at the table across one of the most powerful men in the west
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without batting an eye. Like she did not doubt for a moment that she
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belonged there, though the Pilgrim's eye told him she was not without
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doubts. They were not, however, woven into every part of her as they had
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been the previous year. Instead now there was a pulsing sentiment that
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split the difference of ambition and yearning, and it had nestled deep
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at the heart Vivienne Dartwick. The dark-haired woman, Tariq thought,
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had quite clearly lost her Bestowal. She was the Thief no longer, both
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his eyes and the whispers of the Ophanim had so ascertained. And yet, in
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the bargain of that loss, she had gained something altogether more
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dangerous: belief.
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\emph{Am I}, the Pilgrim thought\emph{, looking at your successor,
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Catherine Foundling?}
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``Ransoming,'' Lord Marave said, tone flat. ``You wish to have some of
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your forces released?''
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``I have come to bargain,'' Lady Vivienne pleasantly smiled, ``for the
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ransoming of every force that surrendered to the Peregrine.''
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Whispers, sharp and urgent. Not because of the woman's words, for those
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were no surprise, but for something unfolding. There was, the Ophanim
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conveyed, to be another great breach between Creation and Arcadia. Soon,
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and it would be calamitous in some way. The Peregrine closed his eyes,
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feeling out the miracle he had woven over the sky. It was on the edge of
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passing, though it would be a natural death: Creation's true dawn was
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about to begin, and it would chase away his own conceited mimicry.
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``That is not an offer mine to accept,'' Yannu Marave said. ``But the
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terms must be interesting, for what you offer to be worth so many
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soldiers.''
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``The aid of said soldiers,'' Vivienne Dartwick replied. ``Against the
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League of Free Cities.''
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Left to it, Tariq thought, they would keep fencing for some time.
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Careful and wary both, even as death bloomed out on the fields. Not
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without reason, but the situation was on the edge of taking a grim turn.
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The Tyrant of Helike might have been called here by the Black Queen's
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ploy, but he suspected even she did not truly understand what she'd
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unleashed. She'd let the fox into the henhouse, as reckless as ever.
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``Lord Yannu,'' the Pilgrim quietly asked. ``Can this battle be won
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without their assistance?''
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The other man's lips thinned.
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``If our last hand is played,'' he said.
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``It is, I think, about to be snapped over the Tyrant's knee,'' Tariq
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said.
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``Then it is not impossible, yet the path is narrow,'' the Lord of Alava
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said.
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``Then we have an accord, Vivienne Dartwick,'' the Pilgrim said.
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There was a flicker of surprise on her face, though she mastered it
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swiftly.
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``There is a mage among my escort,'' she said. ``If I might be allowed
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to send a signal?''
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``Do so,'' Tariq said. ``And hurry, for-''
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Creation shivered, to a sound like glass breaking had the glass been
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screamed by a hundred thousand voices. The Grey Pilgrim was on his feet
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in a heartbeat, leaving his words unfinished even as he raced out of the
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tent. The Ophanim's voices rose in a chorus of anger at the
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thoughtlessness of what had been done, and he could only agree. A breach
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fractured the plain between the armies fighting, shaped like a thick
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pane of glass shattered by blow -- spinning out in cracks. Through it
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fell thousands and thousands of horsemen, the very same he had sent into
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Arcadia. Lady Dartwick came to stand at his side, face gone pale.
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``Send your signal,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Before it is too late.''
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Cursing his weary bones, the Peregrine straightened his back. First he
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would need to enlist Laurence, but after that? There was a villain among
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the rain of soldiers that was being carried down by a swarm of
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gargoyles. The Rogue Sorcerer should be able to hold him until the two
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old hands arrived.
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Kairos Theodosian had been allowed to run rampant for too long, and an
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end brought to his scheming was long overdue.
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---
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It wasn't even much of a drop, Hakram thought, but then it hadn't needed
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to be.
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Ten, twelve feet the orc estimated. He'd seen horses jump half that
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without hurting themselves, though admittedly not horses in armour and
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bearing armoured riders. Still, he suspected it'd been the angle of it
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more than anything else: like the floor dropping off under and entire
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army. Their return to Creation had been accompanied by a horrifying
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song. Horses by the thousands screaming for their broken limbs, falling
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to the side and rolling over soldiers crushed by their weight. Horns and
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trumpets as the Procerans and Levantines who'd remained unharmed tried
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and failed to assert order, and all the while Kairos Theodosian laughed
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convulsively. \textbf{Rend}, the red-eyed boy had ordered Arcadia, and
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beneath the hooves of the west's cavalry the earth had been rent
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asunder. At least the Tyrant seemed half-dead for it, Adjutant thought.
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The orc had seen higher sorceries of this calibre before, but only once
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before an aspect destructive on such a scale: the Carrion Lord's own,
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when he had wrecked the doomsday fortress made from Liesse. Lord Black
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had been near killed by the overreach, however, where Kairos Theodosian
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remained conscious. Feverish, yes, exhausted and drenched in sweat. Yet
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still very much awake.
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``It appears,'' Adjutant said, ``that you've repelled the enemy.''
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The Tyrant did not reply, slumped and breathing laboriously. The villain
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was seated on his throne still, a gaudy thing bejewelled and set on a
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platform almost as luxurious. The platform itself had been carried down
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by a swarm of gargoyles, along with the wooden frame holding up Hakram
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himself. And more, too: Lord Kairos' personal guard had been held up by
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pairs of the constructs, slowing their fall by enough the descent did
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not wound them. It'd allowed Adjutant a read on the amount of gargoyles
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that existed in whole, which to his eyes was somewhere between three and
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five thousand -- mostly likely on the lower end of that span. It was
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still a colossal investment of resources to have made so many of the
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creatures, especially for a city-state, and should they ever be broken
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Hakram suspected it would be a crippling blow for the villain. Something
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to pass along, when he returned to Catherine. Lord Kairos did not reply
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to his comment, instead sending out further swarms of gargoyles with an
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anemic twitch of the arm. Adjutant's eyes narrowed. The thousand-strong
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retinue of Helikean soldiers was making a slaughter of the horsemen in
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disarray, methodically scything through the wounded and the frightened,
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but it was not them the constructs had gone after.
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``Better than repelled,'' Kairos Theodosian rasped out.
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``\emph{Captured}.''
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Fascinated, Hakram peered at the swarms that were causing such a racket
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further down the shattered enemy column. There were seven of them,
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spiriting away seven prisoners. Seven crowned princes and princesses of
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Procer, he thought, snatched by the gargoyles in the midst of the
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howling chaos that'd been crashing down onto Creation.
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``And now-'' Lord Kairos began, but a wet cough tore out of his throat.
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The boy's lips, Hakram saw, were flecked with blood.
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``And now,'' the Tyrant croaked, ``dawn.''
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The orc looked up, in time to see the shining star that held back the
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night wane, and the truth of Creation replace it. The drow were struck
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down anew, before they could even properly stir.
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---
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Akua Sahelian watched dawn rise, a crow on one side and a well on the
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other.
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They had watched it all unfold from the highest point in the camp of the
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Army of Callow, the graceful dance that'd spanned a night and brought
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them to this very moment. The shade who'd once been the heiress to Wolof
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had been taught the arts of treachery since the cradle, and taken to
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them like few others, so perhaps she was the only person in all of
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Iserre who could suitably appreciate what Catherine had done. The
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seamless sequence, born of an understanding of her foes that had been
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like an astronomer's prediction of spheres in their orbit. Akua had
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glimpsed but a fraction of the preparations that arranging the stretch
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of a single night -- no, not even that, barely even a bell in duration
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-- had taken and so what she saw was not the luck of meddler but instead
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a net whose weaving had begun weeks ago, if not months.
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``O Goddess of Night,'' the shade said. ``You walk along her thoughts,
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do you not? How much of it did she truly anticipate?''
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``Enough,'' the Eldest Night said.
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Though the urge to press the matter burned on her tongue, she did not
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purse. Akua was not Catherine, to chastise and wheedle entities far
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beyond her ken with that fearlessness that was sister to folly. Even
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without moving a finger the shade could feel the towering weight of the
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goddess who had been born to the name of Andronike, the millennia of
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blood and screams she had woven into apotheosis. It felt like even just
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an irritated glance from the half of Sve Noc would be enough to make
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dust in the wind of Akua, for one's presence was mountain and the other
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feathers.
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``And now I am called on to do my part, leal servant that I am,'' the
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shade murmured.
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In the sky a streak of coloured light stretched, the signal from Lady
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Dartwick that surrender had been turned into effective -- if still
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temporary -- alliance.
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``No servant of mine,'' the goddess said. ``You wield, but do not make
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covenant.''
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``Alas, O Goddess, my heart has already been taken,'' Akua smiled.
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``This is humorous, for you imply romantic feeling when in truth
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referencing grievous bodily harm,'' Andronike said, tone smug. ``I have
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mastered your ways, shade.''
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``I am helpless before your guile, Sve Noc,'' she replied, tone the
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slightest hint of dry.
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The crow cawed in high-handed agreement.
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``There will be need of a word, to bring it forth,'' the goddess said.
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``Have you chosen?''
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``I have,'' Akua said, lips quirking. ``I believe she would approve.''
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``Then we begin,'' Andronike said.
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Her work was not as crude and unpolished as to require physical contact
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to be wielded: proximity and binding were sufficient. She who had once
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been the Diabolist allowed herself to sink into the sea of Night, the
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receptacle she had filled with the might of the Mighty night after
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night. Akua had known men and women, in Praes, who would have sold half
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the world to have such power at their fingertips. And it'd been
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entrusted to her almost as an \emph{afterthought}, like it was a chore
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instead of the kind of privilege children would murder their progenitors
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for without hesitation. No oath stayed her hand, now, and no chain held
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her so closely that with this in her grasp she could not sever it. She
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could turn on the woman who'd slain and bound her. She could even bring
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this entire beautiful house of cards tumbling down on her head simply by
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doing nothing. Instead, Akua Sahelian opened black-rimmed eyes and bared
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a smile like a blade of ivory.
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``Fall,'' she said.
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A torrent of darkness shot up in the sky, and from dawn wove an eclipse.
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---
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Princess Rozala Malanza woke disoriented, her leg throbbing with pain.
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She groaned and almost panicked when she realized she could not move her
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arms or legs -- she was bound by rope -- but mastered herself before she
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could scream. She would not give the Enemy the pleasure of her fear
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before it took her life and sent her back to\ldots{} No, this was not
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Cleves. It was Iserre, it was dark, and for reasons unknown she was
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hanging upside down from a rope.
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``Ah,'' a familiar voice gravelled. ``I thought the prince from Cantal
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would be first to wake, on account of the thicker skull.''
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``Deadhand?'' Rozala croaked, her mouth cottony and vision swimming.
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``You've captured me?''
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She forced herself to concentrate, and after squinting for a moment saw
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through the gloom.
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``Not exactly,'' the Adjutant ruefully replied, just as she realized the
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orc was hanging upside down a mere foot to the left.
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Gods, her throat was parched. Wiggling in her bindings, Rozala saw she
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was in hallowed company indeed: to her right was Prince Arnaud, and from
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there a procession of royalty continued. Every prince and princess of
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Procer in her host was strung up there in a neat row from a raised beam,
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like venison left to dry.
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``Who-'' she began, turning to the orc, but then she remembered.
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``Merciful Gods, the Tyrant. We were thousands and\ldots{}''
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``Shhhh,'' a young man called out. ``The gallery doesn't get to talk,
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Rosalie.''
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``Rozala,'' the Adjutant said.
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``Oh, who cares,'' the Tyrant of Helike dismissed. ``Proceran royals,
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eh? There's so many of them, why even bother? She can complain to
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Cordovan Hallenban if she feels insulted.''
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The Damned, she saw, hadn't even bothered to turn to address them. He
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was sprawled on a lumpy throne set atop a platform. Likely for some
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eldritch reason a goat was standing at his side, allowing herself to be
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petted while he fed her grass from his palm.
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``Cordelia Hasenbach,'' Princess Rozala coolly corrected. ``First Prince
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of Procer and Warden of the West.''
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Hasenbach was not and never would be bosom friend of hers, but she would
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not let the elected ruler of the Principate be mocked by a twisted
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little shit like Tyrant of Helike.
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``If Rosalie talks again, my lovelies, eat one of her eyes,'' Kairos
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Theodosian absent-mindedly ordered. ``You can choose which.''
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Rozala's blood ran cold when she saw a gargoyle's animalistic visage
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peer out over the edge of the beam from which she hand, chittering
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eagerly. There was a bleat from the goat and the Tyrant snorted.
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``No, not \emph{you},'' the boy said. ``You're a terrible horse.''
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Rozala eyed the Adjutant, wondering whether a whispered question was
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worth the risk of losing an eye, but the orc suddenly stiffened. A
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heartbeat later, there was a burst of light as a cut was made through
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thin air and in a gust of stormy wind three silhouettes emerged in front
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of the Tyrant's throne. Rozala knew them well, had fought at the side of
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most.
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``Tyrant,'' the Grey Pilgrim greeted the villain. ``This has gone on for
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long enough.''
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The Damned idly flipped the jeweled scepter in his hand, catching it by
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the handle.
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``Give me a moment,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, cocking his head to the
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side. ``I'm trying to think of an answer that involves a goat pun. Just
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kidding? No, that's sloppy. I hold myself to higher standards than
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that.''
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``It will be a mercy to put an end to you, lunatic,'' the Saint of
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Swords said.
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``I bet you didn't even make that one on purpose,'' the Damned laughed.
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``There's sorcery being used,'' the Rogue Sorcerer told the other two.
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``Still distant, but\ldots{}''
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``Cutting the head of the snake will serve, for a start,'' the Peregrine
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said.
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The old man raised his staff, and as the air thickened with the weight
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of Chosen preparing to battle a small sound ripped through the tension.
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It was, Rozala realized, a match being struck. Off the ornate helmet
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Prince Arnaud still wore even unconscious. Nonchalantly lighting her
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pipe, the Black Queen flicked the spent match down and offered up a
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sharp-toothed smile.
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``So,'' Catherine Foundling said, ``we've got about an hour before
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everybody here ends up enlisting in the Dead King's army the hard way.''
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She shrugged, and leaned against the Adjutant's tied form.
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``But hey, by all means don't let me interrupt.''
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