387 lines
20 KiB
TeX
387 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{winter-iii}{%
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\section{Winter III}\label{winter-iii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Good Gods, man, you can't simply fire arrows at them. You have
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to let them finish the monologue first, otherwise it's simply
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unsporting.''}
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-- Aldred Alban of Callow, the Prince Errant
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\end{quote}
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The White Knight did not enjoy fighting beasts.
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It was not something particular to Hanno's Name, his study of his
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predecessors had made that much evident. Those of his titular forbears
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born to Callow, in particular, had often taken such fights as their
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specialty. There was sense to it, as traditionally rivalry with the
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Black Knights of Praes belonged to Shining Princes or Princesses. Many a
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flying fortress or ritually spawned monster had died to the blade of a
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White Knight, even as the Legions of Terror were scattered by radiant
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royalty. Yet west of the Whitecaps, White Knights had long been known as
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first and foremost killers of villains. In time of crusade they rose to
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higher prominence still, but that was rarer affair and in the greater
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scheme of things one late to the history of Calernia. Indeed, most of
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the White Knight memories Hanno had recalled centred around strife
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against agents of Below. Hanno himself considered his aspects and
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training to have suited him to a great variety of works, but most deeply
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so to fighting Named. His dislike came not from a difficulty in fight
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beasts, even so.
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But, he reflected even as he smashed a table's foot and let the momentum
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flip it up as a manner of greatshield -- just in time for torrent of
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greasy liquid to splash against it and start eating through with noxious
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fumes -- more that whenever he found himself doing so collateral damage
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became inevitable. The more removed from the plans fate had for them a
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hero acted, the more stiff and resisting Creation became. Hanno kicked
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down the warping table before it could get in his way, glancing up in
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time to see the Dead King's monstrous winged vanguard further tearing
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through the roof. The greasy liquid it had spewed was likely poisonous
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as well as acidic, but that was not the most inconvenient aspect. The
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Dead King was fond of using such creations as transports for lesser
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dead, and this one was no exception: even as the greasy wetness ate at
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the floor, the dozen fleshy abominations that'd been vomited out with
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the liquid began to shape themselves into legged creatures with wet
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squelches. Most people would have been struck with deep fear and disgust
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as such a sight, but this hall was filled with veterans of the war
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against Keter.
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They'd all seen worse, and like as not those sights still haunted
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dreams. So instead before five heartbeats had passed every royal in the
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hall had a blade in hand, Princess Rozala Malanza called out for a
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shield wall and the retinues formed up with finely-honed discipline.
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There was a reason that even in the heart of Cleves, behind tall walls
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and sturdy gates and thousands of guards, every single person here had
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worn armour. The Enemy's reach was long, clever and ever-changing. They
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had all been taught that lesson the hard way.
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``Archers, ready a volley,'' Princess Rozala said, tone even.
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Even before the arrows flew Hanno knew they would have little effect,
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the following beats proved him right. Steel pierced into the shifting
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flesh, but there was no blood to spill nor organs to break and so the
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projectiles had little practical purpose.
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``Your Graces,'' the White Knight said, ``I would invite you to withdraw
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to the Low Keep.''
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Which was close, and halfway underground. The remains of a fortress that
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predated Alamans presence this far north, he'd been given to understand,
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and one very stoutly built. The beast would not find that structure as
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easy to rip into. Pride and fear warred within the royalty he'd
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addressed, for though they liked not the notion of retreating they were
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not unaware that from this hall they could do nothing. With siege
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engines from the city, yes, and by bringing every priest in the city to
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bear against this great monster. But arrows shot from here would not
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even merit attention, and their lives were likely to be why the beast
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had come to this hall at all. It was the Princes of Cleves within who
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the war was most decisively fought, and it was pride that won.
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``Lord White, we will not abandon you to face that creature alone,''
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Prince Gaspard thundered back. ``I yet rule this city and-''
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With a groan the ceiling the great hall came off entirely, the roar of
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the beast above them all drowning out the words of the Prince of Cleves.
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When it passed, Hanno spoke again.
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``Withdraw, Your Grace,'' the White Knight simply said. ``And do not
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worry of my fighting alone.''
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Providence punctuated his sentence by a massive streak of lightning
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screaming down from cloudy skies, Antigone's working ripping straight
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through the back of the beast and all the way out its belly. More of the
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poisonous liquid spilled out, and animated corpses with it. A heartbeat
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later, falling from the sky in the wake of the blinding light, an
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armoured silhouette wielding a great trident landed on the beast's back.
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The Myrmidon was in good form today, Hanno noted. The White Knight took
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a measured step forward, sword rising as he watched the fleshy creatures
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take what seemed to be their war-shape: a tall, bent humanoid silhouette
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with strangely gleaming claws on the `hands' and feet. Thin, he saw, and
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so suspected they'd be agile as well as blindly quick. Assassins, these,
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not warriors. The Dead King sought fresh crowns added to his tally. The
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arrows earlier shot into them were on the ground, now, like they'd been
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spit out by the shifting bodies.
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``Well?'' Hanno politely asked them. ``Shall we proceed?''
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In ghostly silence the creatures moved, and he moved to meet them.
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Behind him he finally heard the Procerans withdrawing as he had
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requested, shield wall tightening to block the back of the hall. It
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would not be enough, not against ritual-made killers like this. Of the
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dozen foes, a mere four were heading towards him, falling forward on
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four legs and they ran like terrible hounds. The rest made to scatter
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around him, moving so swiftly they found no difficulty in treading
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tables and walls like they were the ground. Breathing out, the White
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Knight let Light flood his veins. Control, patience, and timing. This he
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had learned from his defeats, that with skill little was needed to
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accomplish much. Light glinting on the edge of his sword, Hanno took a
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single step forward and a sudden extension of his arm had the tip of his
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blade piercing the leading abomination's belly. His Name's power pulsed
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and then the creature was burning away like a leaf lit aflame, for the
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necromancy that moved it was no proof to disturbance by Light.
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With a step to the side his stance shifted, and he took a second through
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the knee. It shed its own limb, flesh boiling as it surrendered a limb
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before the burn of Light could swallow it all, but the backswing carved
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it through the torso. Hanno smoothly finished his pivot, facing the
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opposite of where he'd begun, and with a step towards there thrust
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through the back of a third creature. He tamped down on the power he'd
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slid along his sword, adjusting it to what he gauged to be strictly
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necessary to the effect. He did not know how long this battle would
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last, and power wasted was power he might lack when wielding it might
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have saved lives. The last of the four that'd come towards him opened a
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mouth where there should have been a stomach and spat out a mouthful of
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foul black liquid at him. A flicker of Light down to his back leg, using
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that to push himself forward at speed -- a favourite trick of the
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Flawless Fencer, which he has carefully learned to reproduce without
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drawing on her memories -- the angle he craned his torso forward at
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carefully measured so the gob would pass over his shoulder. Hanno's
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blade carved right through, the Light on the edge of it making the
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process closer to a warm knife through butter than steel through flesh.
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The remaining eight had passed him, as he'd anticipated. Four on each
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side, all heading towards the still-open door at the back of the hall
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the princes and princesses had retreated through.
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Numbers needed to be brought down, lest at least one succeed at
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squeezing through.
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``\textbf{Ride},'' the White Knight said.
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He'd been refining his use of the aspect for months now, ever since the
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battle at the Red Flower Vales. Hanno leapt forward even as he spoke,
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Light roiling violently beneath him and forming into a horse already at
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a gallop -- the trick had been learning to make it come from his legs,
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so that he would already be astride the horse and not need additional
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movement. The lance of Light formed around his free hand and in the
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blink of an eye he'd crossed the hall on horseback, the tip of the lance
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tearing through an abomination crawling up against the wall and breaking
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as it killed it. That part of the sequence still frustrated him, for the
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ephemeral had made it impossible to make the weapon more durable even if
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he'd since figured out how to make it other armaments than a lance.
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Dismissing the aspect, he did not allow it to simply disperse as he once
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had: the Light he claimed, for it was own, drew it back to him and then
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precisely released it.
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Grey Pilgrims used prayers and hymns, when drawing on Shine to similar
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purpose, though Tariq was skilled enough to sometimes dispense with
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this. The Peregrine still lived however, so it had been by digging
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through a dozen past Pilgrim lives, three Preachers Militant of Atalante
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and an ancient Sage of the West that Hanno had crafted a method that was
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manipulation of extant Light without spoken word, though at the expense
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of delicate control. The broken mount of Light pulsed, once, and split
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into three thick javelins that flew out. They tore through tables and
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glasses and seats as they went, unerringly finding and tearing into the
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other three abominations on his side. A heartbeat later, all that
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remained was cinder. The last four abominations, swift-footed and still
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silent, reached the Proceran shield wall a heartbeat later. Bodies
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rising above the rim of the shields, flesh swallowing the swung swords
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without harm, two of the creatures leaned over the shields and quickly
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punctured the heads of the Proceran soldiers before them. Another simply
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ignored the soldiery by continuing to run against the wall as it went
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around them, and the last impossibly leapt above the soldiers and
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straight to the gates.
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It flew back a moment later, missing half its body, and the Valiant
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Champion entered the fray.
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``Gloryful day,'' Rafaella cheerfully bellowed. ``Axe for all!''
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The Champion would be able to prevent the last three from going any
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further, Hanno knew, and the greater threat here was admittedly the
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beast above. Yet she was not so quick she would be able to put down the
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last three without more soldiers from the hall dying. Leaving her to the
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fighting now would mean the certainty of dead soldiers for purposes
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uncertain, and so he would have to trust Antigone and the Myrmidon to
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handle the situation a while longer.
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``Take the wall-crawler,'' the White Knight ordered.
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She did not answer, nor did she need to. They had fought at each other's
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side long enough that he trusted her implicit. The two who'd already
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kill soldiers had followed their assault by crouching down again and
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slithering through the now open ranks of soldiers, raking claws and
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spitting venom as they did. A flicker of Light down his back leg,
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knowledge of that trick courtesy of a woman long dead, and the White
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Knight was moving again. Boots whispering across the floor, he barreled
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through the soldiers in his way without so much a speck of the sinuous,
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unnatural fluidity of the foes he pursed. Better bruises than death, he
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believed. A flicker of movement caught his eye, the abomination closest
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having pressed all the way down against the ground as it tried to pass
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through and, striking out suddenly, he nailed it to the floor with a
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downward thrust. His instincts screamed and he ducked, a gleaming claw
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ripping through where he had been standing. Having missed its opening
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the creature tried to retreat, but only revealed its position in doing
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so.
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Tossing aside the young soldier in his way like he was made of feathers,
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the White Knight grunted in effort as he threw himself forward.
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Wreathing his gauntleted hand in Light, Hanno dug into the squirming
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abomination's torso and let the blinding touch of the Heavens sunder the
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sorcery animating it. Returning to his feet a heartbeat after, he rose
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to learn that the Valiant Champion had meanwhile, found another weakness
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to these creatures: repeated partition would cause them to collapse like
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the touch of the Light. Hanno offered his hand to the soldier he'd
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tackled down, helping the young man back up, and patted his shoulder.
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``Thank you, lord,'' the man said.
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``It is everyone's war,'' the White Knight calmly replied. ``We are in
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it together. Champion?''
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``Is me,'' Rafaella volunteered.
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``Best we get at that beast soon,'' Hanno said. ``The kind of sorcery
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the Witch would use to destroy it would destroy large swaths of the city
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as well.''
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And though the Valiant Champion did not much concern herself with
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details like this, or Antigone for that matter, Hanno was well aware
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that the treasuries of Procer were like leaking sieves these days. The
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Principate was beggaring itself simply trying to keep afloat, and the
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foremost city-stronghold of the Cleves front being half a smoking ruin
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would only quicken the trouble. Not to mention smoking ruins were hard
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to defend against assault, and the Dead were not yet expelled from
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Cleves.
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``Is dragon,'' Rafaella firmly told him.
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He flicked a long glance at the monster. It was massive and winged, this
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was true, and bearing great claws. Yet it did not seem capable of
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breathing fire, and its scales were not those of a lizard as those of
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dragons were. To his eye they were instead closer to the chitinous shine
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of an insect's carapace, and much too large to be a dragon's since every
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scale was no smaller than a heater shield. Likely they would be easier
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to break as well, though the flesh beneath could not truly be wounded
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like a dragon's would be. Undeath was limiting in some ways, but the
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Enemy was clever in employing its few advantages to great effect.
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``It has some distant similarities,'' Hanno said.
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``Is dragon,'' the Valiant Champion cheerfully said, ``and I going to
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slay it.''
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Ah. Well, that did explain the insistence. Heroes of the Dominion had a
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distinct taste for the kind of deeds that'd been the staple of heroics
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at the peak of the Age of Wonders, he'd noticed. Such customs had poorly
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aged, in a Calernia where there were so few dark or savage corners left.
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Yet he would not argue against the truth that Rafaella had a way of
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eagerly brutalizing monsters that would make even other heroes hesitate.
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In some ways, Hanno considered the Named of the Dominion to have best
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taken to the war against Keter. How long that would last, however, he
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was uncertain. For though Levant's sons and daughters were known for
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their bravery, they were not known for their stomach for long, gruelling
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wars. The old heroics took the shape of a splash of glory and an elegant
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exit, while the struggle against Keter instead promised to be a brutal,
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protracted grind.
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``We can debate that later,'' Hanno said. ``First we need to get to-''
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Through the open ceiling the beast's massive head came down, struck by
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an unseen force, and even as a deafening roar sounded and a gaping maw
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filled with great fangs opened to reveal advancing armoured undead, the
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White Knight reflected that on occasion providence could have a truly
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rotten sense of humour.
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``As planned I,'' the Valiant Champion smugly said.
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``Just as planned,'' he absent-mindedly corrected.
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``No, you just,'' Rafaella patiently said. ``I valiant. This not
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difficult, Hanno.''
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The White Knight opened his mouth to argue, then closed it. He'd known
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for some time that the Champion greatly enjoyed making sport of others,
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particularly those she considered friends, but to this day he was
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uncertain exactly how much of her attitude was a pretence. Besides, the
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dead were beginning to march out of the monster's gullet. Dripping in
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the greasy liquid that should by all rights eat right through them and
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their armaments, for the Dead King was nothing if not a thorough enemy.
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The two of them limbered wrists and shoulders as they began to advance
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towards the enemy.
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``I have idea,'' the Valiant Champion said.
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``You can't keep getting eaten by creatures to kill them from the
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inside,'' the White Knight sternly replied.
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Hanno honestly suspected that the acid in this one's stomach was the
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result of Dead King's rising irritation at how successful Rafaella had
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found that tactic to be. Not to mention Christophe, whose unrivalled
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ability to take punishment had seen Antigone adopting the tactic of
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forcefully cramming him down such monsters several times now. The way
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Dominion heroes kept referring to this as `Proceran stuffing' only added
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insult to injury for the Mirror Knight, though after soldiers had seen
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him walk out of the smoking remains of a thirty-feet tall undead ape
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creature without a scratch his reputation had reached new heights.
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``Is from Book of All Things,'' the Champion assured him.
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``I asked the Peregrine about these alleged differences of text in the
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Levant, did you know?'' he casually asked.
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``Oh no, enemy close,'' the Valiant Champion hurriedly said. ``Talk
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later.''
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She hastened forward, barreling into the first group of emerging undead
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with her shield and greataxe raised. Though the acidic grease was eating
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at the edge of her axe, it hardly mattered with undead. Shattering them
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was often more practical an approach anyway, and the sheer weight of
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what the Champion wielded paired with her strength ensured any blow
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would at least knock the foe down. The great winged beast tried to rise
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again from its prone position, screaming in anger, but whatever great
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working Antigone had used on it was keeping it pinned to the ground. He
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was pleased to see she'd listened to the talks he'd made all heroes in
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Cleves sit down for on the subject of fighting within fortresses and
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cities: pinning down great monsters instead of batting them around not
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only limited damage, it also allowed their own side to put their own
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advantage to work. With every moment more priests and mages from the
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garrison would be gathering, more siege weapons and soldiers with oil or
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pitch.
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Still, the Dead King had ensured that wherever this abomination landed
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its maw could serve as a beachhead. With Rafaella and himself facing the
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open maw serving as the gate, it then fell to them to hold the line
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while the rest of Cleves gathered the might to unmake this beast. Yet
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before Hanno could step forward and lend his blade to the toil of wiping
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out the remaining dead, an armoured shape leapt down into the group the
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Champion was swatting around. The Myrmidon wasted no movements in
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sweeping away the last few dead, her trident glinting with Light. She
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offered a muted salute with her weapon as he approached, quite
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unnecessary to the proceedings. Until the undead began to pour out in
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earnest, anyway. This band of a mere twenty seemed to have been a mere
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vanguard, by the lack of follow-up.
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``Myrmidon,'' Hanno greeted the heroine, and she nodded back. ``How
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fares the rest of the city?''
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``This is the sole beast,'' she told him. ``Other undead were spilled
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out when its belly was opened, but the Vagrant Spear and the Mirror
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Knight have them contained.''
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Only one beast? Though the White Knight suspected that creating such a
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construct must have been horrendously difficult and expensive, he had
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still expected it would be one among a flock or at least a pair. Perhaps
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the vanguard of a greater assault, for mighty as the creature was it was
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no match for the number of heroes currently in Cleves. The garrison of
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the city alone would have been enough to repel it, in his opinion,
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though significant casualties would be incurred. If this was plain to
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him, it ought to be the same to the Dead King. That had implications.
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``This is a distraction,'' Hanno said. ``Keter sent something after the
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royals while this drew our attention, as it sent ghouls after those in
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Hainaut.''
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``The Repentant Magister went to attend to them,'' the Myrmidon told
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him. ``Alone.''
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It should be enough to slow down whatever had been sent, but he must
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hurry.
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``Rafaella-'' he began.
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``- I stay on dragon,'' the Champion interrupted. ``Go.''
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He nodded his thanks, extending a similar courtesy to the Myrmidon, and
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set out as fast as his feet could carry him.
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It would end in the Low Keep, one way or another.
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