603 lines
32 KiB
TeX
603 lines
32 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-12-contest}{%
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\chapter{Contest}\label{chapter-12-contest}}
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\epigraph{``The enemy's come to die on this field, my friends, for an awful
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prince and terrible pay. We, on the other hand, have come to die on this
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field for a terrible prince and awful pay. That the Heavens are on our
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side ought to be evident.''}{Captain Thierry the Acerbic, addressing his company before the
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infamously bloody Battle of Motte-aux-Foins}
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Anticipation hung in the air like smoke.
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The sigil of the Seventh General, Vesena Spear-Biter, was painted on
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thousands of stretches of dark cloth hanging from arms and armour and
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even hair: two jagged, monstrous fangs tearing at what looked like a
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thunderbolt of iron. Red and white set on black, it was eye-catching and
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when the breeze blew through the outskirts of Serolen a sea of pale
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teeth biting into iron stirred with it. These were not the drow from the
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Outer Rings I'd once fought, the dregs of the dreg-empire. No, the
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Vesena came armoured in iron and obsidian, bearing polished cuirasses
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and helmets shaped like angled bat wings. Tough \emph{tezkuze} leather,
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those massive hard-skinned blind lizards who could eat even Mighty
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should they prove reckless, had been fashioned into trousers and
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long-sleeved vests touched by tinkling bracelets and sculpted greaves of
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stone or dull iron. There was an order to this host of the Firstborn,
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unlike in most of their kind, for in the days of the old Empire Ever
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Dark the Mighty Vesena Spear-Biter had been known as the `Relentless
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General Whose Victories Flow Like A River'.
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The Vesena were not so much a sigil as they were the last field army of
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the ancient Empire Ever Dark, kept standing through the ages by sheer
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dint of the Spear-Biter's brutal murder of all rivals and naysayers.
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Time had taken its toll, and warriors now stood where once soldiers had,
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but there was no closer among the Firstborn to a professional army than
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the Vesena Sigil. It had occupied the whole of the city of Great Noglof,
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before leaving with the Exodus, and made the entire city into a bustling
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army camp -- kept going by the plunder in Night and gifts and food that
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was brought back by the fighting drow of the sigil after every campaign.
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Even now, a discerning eye could make out what had been the components
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of a field army simply from the way the warriors were equipped.
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First came long stretches of skirmishers, bearing hard bucklers of iron
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painted with their sigil while long barbed javelins hung from their
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backs and short blades were kept at their hips. Dzulu, most of them, but
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the Vesena were one of the rare sigils that \emph{taught} Secrets to
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their own and so they all shared a deadly blackflame trick that allowed
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them to have quite the sting to them.Behind them came hunters, those
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that would have been infantry regulars in olden days. These stood in
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companies of nine times nine each led by the least of the Mighty, an
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ispe, and were armed as I had only ever seen the Watch be armed: though
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they bore long swords of Night-forged steel on the flanks, they also
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held horn bows. Short, stout and curved these little wonders were no
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match for a good Deoraithe longbow but they fired at surprising range --
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regular arrows would be next to useless against the dead, of course, so
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the Vesena had adapted by infusing obsidian arrowheads with Night in a
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way that made them burst on impact.
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At heart of the army stood the finest warriors of the Vesena, three
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thousand hulking towering shapes whose shells of iron-joined obsidian
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left no opening at all from head to toe. The Ebonclad were a cabal of
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their own within the Vesena, each and everyone a jawor that drew on
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Night to breathe and see through the sealed armour and wield their large
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stone-and-steel maces. As another exotic addition, the Vesena Sigil also
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boasted no less than ten of the hulking things called \emph{zanikzen},
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the famed annihilation-engines that Mighty Ysengral had gone to war nine
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times to steal only to be driven back every time. House-sized and made
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entirely of bone and onyx, they looked like two-wheeled carts holding up
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the fused bones of a hundred ancient drow whose wretched half-seen
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silhouettes ended up pointing their hands towards the horizon and
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forming a gaping maw filled with spear-like spikes of onyx. As field
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siege engines I deemed to be to be inferior to what the Empire and
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Callow used, but they'd been murderously proficient at defending
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tunnels.
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And in the very middle of the army, seated atop a writhing living throne
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made of once-Mighty foes stripped of Night so thoroughly they became
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nisi, Mighty Vesena the Spear-Biter waited. Though it would have been as
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ravaged by age as Rumena in appearance, being its senior, the long
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stripe scars going down its face made it impossible to tell what it
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might once have looked like. It wore an armoured cuirass of obsidian
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over flowing pale cloth, needles of bone woven into its pale long hair
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to keep it in an elaborate bun. It claimed for only a weapon a
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long-handled axe -- so long as to be half as tall as they -- whose head
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was steel so deeply imbued with Night it flickered around it like smoke.
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Around it an honour guard of rylleh stood, clad in bright colours, but
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the lesser Mighty had been spread among the host as commanders of dzulu.
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The Sisters had once told me that most titles among the Mighty had once
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been military ranks in the Empire Ever Dark, for the soldiers had been
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among the first to thrive in the nights after the end of the Twilight
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Sages, and the Vesena in a way kept closest that that old truth.
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There were twenty thousand, all in all: but a fifth of the might of the
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Vesena Sigil, but its sharpest fangs were all bared here, spread amongst
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the trees. Facing them was only deep darkness and the mists of the
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Gloom. Open grounds for six hundred feet after the end of the forest,
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which struck me as having been the Dead King's picked battlefield: the
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dead fared poorly in the woods. Against, drow, anyway.
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``They haven't even dug ditches,'' I frowned. ``Sloppy. Ysengral would
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have done better.''
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Mighty Ysengral, the Cradle of Steel, had distinguished themselves to my
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eye as the finest of the Firstborn generals even if they were towards
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the lower end of the Ten Generals when it came to raw power. Considering
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it was debatable where Rumena would rank second or third among them,
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though, that was still nothing to sneer at.
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``Ysengral was defending the Wilting March from another breakthrough,''
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Komena said, and I almost shivered.
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Standing to my left, eyes silver-blue and form little more than
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flickering shadow, the image of what had once been a mortal woman was
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sharing the sights with me. Before I took my eye off her, every time I
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glimpsed a long-fanged skull beneath the shadows that was always gone if
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I tried to find it. There was a twang of something like iron and blood
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to her voice, something I could not help but taste against the roof of
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my mouth. Komena wore armour, and a sword at her hip. She was the
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Youngest Night.
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``We did not foresee the Hidden Horror until it was edging into the
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Gloom,'' Andronike said, her voice coming from my right.
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Her eyes, too, burned pale blue. But over her face flickered the shape
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of the iron mask she had once worn as one of the Twilight Sages, and the
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thick billowing cloak she had decked herself in almost seemed like
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dark-feathered wings whenever she moved. There were strings twined among
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her fingers, which she ever twined. The affect to her words was subtler,
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like a drink thought harmless until your tongue was felt to be numb. She
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was the Oldest Night.
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``You didn't get time to dig in,'' I put together. ``Vesena was the
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closest?''
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``Kurosiv,'' Komena replied, shaking her head. ``But its horde was
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spread out. Vesena was ready for war.''
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``He's able to slip past your scouts with entire armies now,'' I
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whispered.
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Shit. If they could only tell that the Dead King was attacking when he
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was beginning to breach the Gloom, then that gave them what -- half a
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day to mobilize at most? They'd either have to permanently garrison a
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significant portion of their forces to defend all the southern stretches
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of Serolen, which would cripple their ability raid into Keter's
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territory, or start breaking through whatever means he used to obscure
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the movements of his armies on this front. I would have pursued the
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matter in conversation, but was robbed of the opportunity: the battle
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was beginning. It started with a sound like the whistle of a falling
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arrow, though utterly deafening. Then flashes of blinding light scythed
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through the mist in five places, like a titan's raking claws, and for a
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moment the passage between Keter and Serolen was forced open by the
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sorceries of the Dead King. In that heartbeat, long ladders of steel
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with spiked ends fell through the open space and buried deep in the
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ground, the runes carved on the glowing bright. Like a steel road, one
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meant to keep the gap open.
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``Second through sixth,'' Mighty Vesena said, voice ringing out.
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``Wail.''
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The Crows and I were standing by its side and so we'd seen its eyes had
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not blinked, not even when the light had been at its brightest. Five of
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the massive \emph{zanikzen} lit up, thousands of glyphs in Crepuscular
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craved into the bones unveiled, and as crews attended to the large
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engines I saw heat waft of the surface and half the body of a nisi too
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close to the maw turn to ash. Heat shimmered between the onyx spikes,
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near-invisible lances of impossibly hot air shooting out and lashing out
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at the ladders in a lazy, low arc. The needles went abruptly still
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afterwards, forcing out a strange sound like a hundred inhuman wails.
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The first to get hit dented, and its front melted like summer snow, but
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the dead had moved quick enough to contest three of the remaining four.
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Ghouls who'd moved forward like lightning threw themselves in the way,
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embracing annihilation to curb the blow, and though one of the lances
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tore through and broke a ladder's end in a spray of earth the other two
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held. The dead had three beachheads. Further down the line, another five
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bursts of light signaled that Keter was broadening its offensive.
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``Two by breach,'' Mighty Vesena ordered.
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Even as the drow annihilation-engines began hammering at the fresh
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beachheads, the Vesena Sigil began its advance without needing to be
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told.
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``They're impressively disciplined, for a sigil,'' I admitted, eyes
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remaining on the battle.
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``Vesena made of the old western army regulation a set of holy rites,''
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Komena told me, sounding fond. ``All who break them are said to have
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broken faith with the sigil and are free to be slain.''
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I'd gathered that Vesena Spear-Biter was a darling of hers, which didn't
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surprise me all that much. Komena did tend to favour the old warhorses
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who'd survived the collapse of the Empire Ever Dark.
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The ever-relentless dead had wasted no time getting through their
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protection for the three ladders that'd landed: shield-soldiers the size
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of ogres in heavy plate, protecting in a ring the more vulnerable mages
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putting up translucent shields of sorcery preventing repeating fire from
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the engines from getting through. With the second wave, if Keter's usual
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northern doctrine held, would come another circle of corpse-mages to
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attempt to raise rough but swiftly functional wards that'd make it hard
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work dislodging the dead from that position. The Firstborn were well
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aware of that, of course. Even as the first rank of a shield wall formed
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beyond the beachheads the drow skirmishers finished closing in the
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distance. Javelins flew whistling, the drow never breaking stride or
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slowing as they threw, the barbed ends hitting the shields of the dead
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with dull thumps before exploding in black flames of Night.
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The shield walls broke, shattered like overripe fruits as the the first
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line of skirmishers unsheathed swords and wading into close combat. The
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lines behind disrupted the gathering dead with further throws, enabling
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the nimble drow to slip through the gaps in the defences of the dead.
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Mighty Vesena had been, I gathered, one of the few Firstborn generals to
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win victories against the dwarves during the war that broke the Empire
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Ever Dark. It had typically won those victories by hitting the
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heavy-armoured but slow-moving dwarven armies with crippling blows while
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they were in movement, never allowing them to deploy the siege engines
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and harsh sorceries that'd shattered so many drow armies. Traces of that
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mindset could still be seen here I decided as I watched the drow
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skirmishers of what the expanding assault of the Dead King had made the
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right wing slink their way deeper behind the lines of Keter.
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Their objective here was clear: hitting the dead mages putting up
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shields before a second wave could set up wards, then prying away the
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Dead King's breaches from him one after another. It was a much more
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aggressive defence than Ysengral was prone to waging, or even the other
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general I was most familiar with: Radosa. The Hushing Dread actually
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preferred letting the greater strength of the dead past the Gloom before
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striking at the weakened defences of the breaches, picking off the
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enemies at its leisure within the forest. Its battles lasted twice as
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long as everyone else's, but then it also counted about a third of the
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casualties most the time.
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``He's fought Vesena before,'' I grimaced. ``And no one else uses the
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blackflame skirmishers. If you use the same tricks against the Hidden
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Horror too many times\ldots{}''
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In the distance another set of blinding lights shone. And again. And
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again. \emph{You're going to run out of skirmishers before he runs out
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of cabals capable of making those, Vesena}, I grimaced. And I would give
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the Spear-Biter its due, the first three breaches the Dead King had
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forced through were swept back. The skirmishers were just a little too
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slow, a flow of reinforcing armoured Binds pulling them down and
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slaughtering them to the last, but, a second wave of longsword bearing
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warriors carved their way to the mages before the second wave could put
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up wards, helped through by the focused arrow-fire of their brethren.
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They slipped into shadow and danced around the bone-giants, artists at
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their work, but what was three beachheads when another ten had just
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dropped in the span it took to clear them? The right flank had gone
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quiet, but the wailing of the \emph{zanikzen} was the herald of strife
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spreading to the left and the centre. The Vesena redeployed with
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impressive swiftness, as a well-oiled machine, but this time when the
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skirmishers hit the first wave of beachheads they found they were
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expected.
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Through the black flames leapt out slender, almost insect-like
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silhouettes.
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``Hexenghouls,'' I whispered.
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Shit, Neshamah really wasn't pulling punches here. Those nasty little
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things weren't like most ghouls: swift and passingly intelligent in a
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way that allowed them serve as both harassers and a sort of replacement
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for the Dead King's general lack of cavalry. No, these were almost as
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smart as people. Hexenghouls, named by the Lycaonese, were good at two
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thing only: killing, and disrupting magic by their mere presence. They
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had hardened bronze rods instead of bones, enchanted in a way that
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Masego told me destabilized the structure of spell formulas when they
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got close enough. Those vicious beasts were the reason Lycaonese mages
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were relatively rare while as a people they had much reason to keep
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magical bloodlines going. Every year, scaling through passes and
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mountains, those monsters made it into the lowlands and went
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\emph{hunting}. Tonight, deployed in numbers I'd rarely before seen,
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they went through the skirmishers like a sickle through wheat. The few
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dzulu who were quick enough to call on Night found they couldn't focus
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it properly and were massacred within moments.
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Night was not sorcery, but evidently the Dead King had been adjusting
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what he ordered carved onto those bronze rods.
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The second wave of longswords drove them back, even if they destroyed
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but a handful, but by the time the hexenghouls retreated behind them
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stood a heavy shield wall of skeletons. Too heavy to punch through in
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time: valiantly the warriors threw themselves against it, but Neshamah's
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second wave of mages came through. Wards came up and then, with a
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position finally secure, the dead began unleashing their real
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offensives. Beorns tumbled through, carelessly stamping through the
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skeletons, and spat out the corpses they held within them in the middle
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of drow ranks. Dzulu could do nothing against the likes of those, much
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less the even more heavily armoured `tusks'. Those were a recent
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addition to Keter's arsenal, rarely seen on my front: catapult-sized
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necromantic constructs shaped rather like boards, unlike many of the
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Hidden Horror's creations they held within then no lesser dead. They
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were instead filled with \emph{rocks,} and in front of them jagged tusks
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of steel were meant to make them into moving battering rams designed to
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crack open shield walls.
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Going against drow foot? They trampled straight through those lines like
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they weren't even there.
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``Now,'' I murmured, ``for the tug-of-war.''
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With a slew of fresh casualties, Night and necromancy came out. Even as
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the officers-Mighty destroyed the war-constructs or died trying, the
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mage cadres of Keter competed with drow as to whether corpses would get
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up as undead or be emptied of Night first. The undead drow could not use
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Night, but they \emph{would} explode with what they'd held when their
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corpses were shattered. It wreaked havoc on the attempt to keep a battle
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line going to have your own dead blow up on you when you drove them
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back. Not that there was much of a battle line: at best it could be said
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that there was a line where the Vesena and the dead met. And where half
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a hundred Firstborn must have died with every passing beat. Behind it
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was an ugly chaos of Mighty and war-constructs tangling in duels that
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paid no heed to the warriors around them. For all that Vesena
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Spear-Biter had mimicked the ways of the old armies of the Empire Ever
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Dark, it was only that: a mimicry. The Mighty were not true officers,
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they were chieftains who ceased paying mind to their own companies the
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moment there was a great foe for them to fight.
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``Using the Mighty as construct-killers instead of officers works
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better,'' I noted, brow creasing at the sight. ``If the Spear-Biter sent
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packs of pravnat and jawor after the beorns and the tusks they could be
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put down much quicker. Instead they keep running into isolated ispe and
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pravnat and overwhelming them.''
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Vesena's strategy being a success had depended on breaking through the
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initial defence of the breaches and shutting them down before casualties
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could mount, but that'd failed. Now the attempt by its sigil to push
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through the dead was turning into the sort of meat grinder that could
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utterly destroy an army if a general got stubborn. With the centre and
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the left wing taking such a beating, the Vesena were forced to thin
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their right flank to reinforce the lines that'd been devastated by
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constructs. And even then, the remaining skirmishers were now pointless
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going around through the woods in a far-flung circle that might allow
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them to eventually flank the left wing of the dead but practically
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speaking would just take them out of the battle for the rest of its
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span. Mistake, that. They'd have been more useful kept anchoring the
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thinning right flank in my opinion.
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``The Vesena are inflicting great losses on the dead,'' Andronike
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replied.
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``Sure,'' I dismissed. ``Those officer-Mighty are pure slaughter against
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Keter's Bones and Binds. No denying that.''
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It was hard to, when all it took was for even an ispe, the lowest of the
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Mighty, to reach the shield wall of the dead to contemptuously crack it
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open.
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``And I don't mean to dismiss what's being achieved here,'' I continued.
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``At this point Mighty Vesena had lost what, three or four thousand?''
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``Closer to four,'' Komena told me.
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``And it's cost the Dead King more than three score of his finest
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war-constructs, on top of at least thrice that in foot,'' I said. ``The
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problem here is that while Vesena's sigil is killing the enemy, it's not
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doing it in a way that wins the battle.''
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I pointed at the worst of the slaughter, where the lines were going back
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and forth.
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``They've been gaining and losing the same thirty feet since the battle
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started in earnest,'' I pointed out. ``Maybe this battle can be won, at
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this exchange rate of lives for undead, but it'd be pissing away the war
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to keep fighting it this way. Packs of Mighty striking together allows
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for decisive blows in a way spreading them out cannot.''
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``General Rumena said much the same,'' Andronike said. ``Though it did
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mention that Vesena's methods would function significantly better when
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on the offensive instead.''
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I narrowed my eyes. Yeah, I could maybe see that. As an offensive army
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they'd be smashing through whatever forces the Dead King could put in
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their way, which tended to be light on war-constructs, and if they ran
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into a few of those then the same rylleh that'd yet to move so much as
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an inch would be able to handle them.
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``Might be,'' I muttered.
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The battle was going badly for the Vesena, even a fool could have seen
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it, but to the Spear-Biter it must seem like it could still be turned
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around. The \emph{zanikzen} had polished off every breach they could,
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leaving only the four whose wards had been raised, so they began
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pounding at the dead instead. Every burst of burning heat swatted down
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entire companies, and the crews prudently aimed them far behind the
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fighting so there'd be no risk of hitting their own. They wouldn't be
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able to handle that rate of fire for long, not without risking the
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engines blowing up, but then they'd didn't really need to. The superbly
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aimed hits slackened the pressure of the dead against the drow and,
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sensing an opening, Mighty Vesena sent in its finest. The Ebonclad
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advanced, flowing forward silently as if they were gliding over the
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ground. Signals went up in the sky, woven in Night, and a corridor was
|
|
opened for them to strike cleanly at the dead. The sight of it
|
|
was\ldots{} I let out a sharp breath, genuinely impressed. It was like
|
|
watching a hammer strike at an egg: clad in ebony armours sealed by
|
|
melted iron, the Ebonclad were untouchable to the dead. Their large war
|
|
maces, on the other hands, released waves of Night whenever they struck
|
|
and so pulped the dead straight through their armour.
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|
|
|
The tusks and beorns that'd not been handled were struck at in groups of
|
|
then, methodically and cleanly if with little regard to the collateral
|
|
damage against the dzulu. That armour did not seem to hinder them
|
|
sinking into pools of shadows, and they even seemed to have greater
|
|
control over the trick than most: they sometimes slunk up the beasts and
|
|
let only the upper half of their body emerge form the shadow, striking
|
|
at the necromantic constructs with impunity.
|
|
|
|
``Impressed?'' Komena asked.
|
|
|
|
``They're exceptional,'' I acknowledged. ``But Vesena just got played
|
|
the fool.''
|
|
|
|
It'd been baited into committing its finest troops before Keter slapped
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|
its last cards on the table.
|
|
|
|
``Oh?'' Andronike hummed.
|
|
|
|
This battle had already taken place, so they knew what had taken place
|
|
while I was left to guess. But while Akua might have pointed out to me
|
|
that the Dead King had grown to learn my tricks, the opposite was true
|
|
as well.
|
|
|
|
``We haven't seen Revenants yet,'' I said. ``When we do, I wager things
|
|
will swiftly proceed downhill.''
|
|
|
|
The Ebonclad smashed their way through the dead on two of the breaches
|
|
and began making serious assaults on two of the warded beachheads, but I
|
|
bade my time an counted up to seventeen before my cynicism was
|
|
`rewarded'.
|
|
|
|
Like great raking claws, five lights burned again where the battle had
|
|
begun. On the right flank that'd been so weakened reinforcing the
|
|
others.
|
|
|
|
``Vesena just lost this battle,'' I grimly said.
|
|
|
|
Though the \emph{zanikzen} were on the edge of breaking apart, they
|
|
still fired unflinching at the fresh breaches. Two per breach, as Mighty
|
|
Vesena had early ordered. Or so they attempted. Three of the
|
|
annihilation-engines went up in storms of ashen heat, killing the crews
|
|
instantly, and one aborted its shot. Still, every breach received a
|
|
direct shot just as the rune-inscribed ladders came down and one even
|
|
received two. That one broke. The other four held, protected by what
|
|
looked like swarms of ghouls nailed to the ends as a grisly shield. With
|
|
the army already too committed down the line, it would have been a
|
|
disaster to try to redeploy. So instead Mighty Vesena sent into the
|
|
breaches what few regulars it had left, and with them sent its hardest
|
|
hitters: it sent out rylleh. Unfortunately, the Dead King had picked his
|
|
timing exquisitely. Before the rylleh were halfway there, Revenants
|
|
strode out of the warded breaches and tore into the Ebonclad. Half of
|
|
the rylleh had to be recalled, which made a mess of things.
|
|
|
|
``So that's where the Stitcher went,'' I muttered.
|
|
|
|
A castle-sized abomination made from the bodies of half a dozen horrors
|
|
put together -- the scales and bones of a dragon, what looked like the
|
|
heads of at least three sea snakes, the heavy fur and leather of ratling
|
|
Ancient Ones -- was butchering its way through the Ebonclad, even
|
|
swatted down a rylleh that got too close. The Revenant was inside, and
|
|
damnably hard to put down. We hadn't seen her in a year, so I'd hoped
|
|
the Blade of Mercy had damaged her beyond use in their last tangle, but
|
|
it seemed not. Hanno was convinced she'd been a healer before the Hidden
|
|
Horror got his hands on her, which somehow made it all even more
|
|
horrifying. Even as I watched, Mighty Vesena tried to stabilize the
|
|
situation by firing its remaining annihilation-engines directly into the
|
|
Revenants, but that caught only one and killed a few hundred of the
|
|
Ebonclad in the exchange. Bad trade, the Seventh General was losing its
|
|
cool.
|
|
|
|
Even worse the rylleh who reached the fresh beachheads were not, to
|
|
their surprise and mine, greeted by swarms of ghouls or skeletons.
|
|
Awaiting them were dead mages and large pots of metal, heated and filled
|
|
with two things: necromantic sorcery and steel scraps. Like sharpers
|
|
they blew, the cursed metals ignoring most defenses that could be put up
|
|
by Night, and I winced when I saw not one but three rylleh go down. They
|
|
got up shortly, of course: rylleh were harder to kill than that, and
|
|
even if one had actually died that probably wouldn't have kept drow of
|
|
that tier out of the battle for long. But the corpse-mages were bearing
|
|
strange metal staffs, and though I could see no visible mark of sorcery
|
|
being employed the three rylleh that'd been struck down\ldots{} stayed
|
|
down.
|
|
|
|
``Weeping Heavens,'' I murmured. ``Has he found a way to shut down the
|
|
Night?''
|
|
|
|
``Not quite,'' Andronike said, voice grown cold. ``Those staffs were
|
|
made of an alloy of tin and antimony, and strangely enchanted -- they
|
|
did not disrupt Night, or end it, which we could have fought. They
|
|
directed it away from our warriors, down into the earth.''
|
|
|
|
And moments later, petty ghouls they would otherwise have been able to
|
|
slaughter by the hundreds began tearing into the downed rylleh. They
|
|
devoured their flesh so that they would never recover from that death.
|
|
Gods, I fucking hated fighting the Dead King. There was always another
|
|
nasty trick just waiting to be unveiled. Binds began pouring of the
|
|
breaches, forming up under arrow fire by the increasingly outnumbered
|
|
and outflanked Vesena. This was going to turn from a defeat into a
|
|
disaster, if something wasn't done soon, and I wasn't the only one to
|
|
see it.
|
|
|
|
The Seventh General, Vesena Spear-Biter, took the field personally.
|
|
|
|
I did not even seen them move until they were standing before the
|
|
Stitcher, long axe resting against the shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``Sa vrede?'' Mighty Vesena asked of the Revenant.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Are you worthy?} I shivered to hear my words spoken by one of the
|
|
ancient monsters of the Firstborn, taken as writ of faith. Whether in
|
|
fear or thrill -- or perhaps both -- I could not be certain. Vesena
|
|
received no answer, and as the stitched up necks and heads of sea snakes
|
|
struck out at it the Seventh General vanished into shadows and emerged
|
|
atop the monster. The axe came down, head biting into the dragon scales,
|
|
and inside the beast a sea of Night cut through. Split in two, the
|
|
Stitcher's monster poured our blood, guts and strange liquids of many
|
|
colours. Inside a dead young woman screamed and the corpses of the drow
|
|
began gathering to her, forming another shell, but Mighty Vesena landed
|
|
before the Revenant and stood knee-deep in guts and blood. Its shoulder
|
|
twitched, once, twice and then it proved why it had earned the sobriquet
|
|
of \emph{Spear-Biter}. I'd thought it a reference to mere spears, once,
|
|
but that was not the case. Vesena had once warred against an ancient
|
|
sigil-holder that'd unearthed and partially repaired one of the ancient
|
|
wonders of the Empire Ever Dark, a great tower of arcane-forged steel
|
|
that gathered lightning into itself and spewed it in a constant storm
|
|
around itself. The steel walls had been thirty feet deep, surrounded by
|
|
constant death, and the way the tower jutted out from a deep pit in the
|
|
Inner Ring had led Firstborn to call it the Spear.
|
|
|
|
Night pouring out of it as it twitched, Mighty Vesena screamed in pain
|
|
and its mouth unhinged, revealing a bestial maw as large as the
|
|
sigil-holder itself had been. Bat-like wings tore out of its back, and
|
|
even as the Stitcher tried to form a grisly homunculus of drow corpses
|
|
roiling with Night the horrid creature Vesena had turned itself onto
|
|
unhinged its great jaw even further and revealed glinting fangs --
|
|
before biting straight through the corpses and Revenant, as it once had
|
|
through thirty feet of solid steel, and swallowed the Stitcher and a
|
|
bloody swath of her work whole.
|
|
|
|
Officers began calling for a retreat, heeding some unseen order, and the
|
|
Vesena obeyed in largely good order. Their sigil-holder continued to sow
|
|
destruction left and right, covering the retreat along with the
|
|
remaining rylleh, and I slowly breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``After?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``They pulled back and Kurosiv drowned the invaders in violence,
|
|
sweeping them back to the breaches, then broke the wards personally,''
|
|
Andronike said, her voice betraying little of her opinion of that
|
|
Mighty.
|
|
|
|
Mighty Kurosiv the All-Knowing, the Second General. It rarely bothered
|
|
with deeper tactics than throwing warriors at the enemy but given the
|
|
absurd amount of those within its sigil that tended to work regardless.
|
|
I found the way it benefited from the deaths of its own and so
|
|
encouraged them to be rather disgusting, and I suspected the Sisters
|
|
felt rather the same for different reasons: Kurosiv had found a way to
|
|
grow fat as a parasite nestled in the heart of the Night, exploiting the
|
|
system they had built as no one else had before or since. Rumena had
|
|
allegedly taken it as enough of a threat it'd exterminated its first
|
|
five sigils, earning the epithet of Tomb-maker in the process, but it
|
|
was telling that in the end it was not Kurosiv that'd settled in the
|
|
Outer Rings.
|
|
|
|
``Three other battles were fought that very same night, Queen of Lost
|
|
and Found,'' Komena said.
|
|
|
|
The images flickered quickly through my mind, almost a memory shared but
|
|
not quite.
|
|
|
|
Ysengral the Cradle of Steel, the Eighth General: a lipless grin and
|
|
tittering laughter hiding a mind like a steel trap. And traps did it
|
|
wield, mazes and madness and traps behind which stood soldiers in steel
|
|
and machine of war that worked on and fed of and spat out Night. Endless
|
|
bands of dead slipping through the Gloom, testing the defences day and
|
|
night.
|
|
|
|
Ishabog the Adversary, the Fourth General: ever-moving, ever-restless, a
|
|
spear and song on the lip and a glint in its eye. Only Mighty may have
|
|
the right to call themselves of the Ishabog, and mighty was their
|
|
calling: always one against ten, ten against a hundred, a hundred
|
|
against a thousand. Vicious creatures made of dead flesh hunting through
|
|
darkened woods in packs, hunted in turn.
|
|
|
|
Radhoste the Dreamer, the Sixth General: a bed of stone like a
|
|
sepulcher, carried by rigid in dread. Eyes closed but seeing, a mind
|
|
that spans miles and sifts through the sleeping and the dead. A hundred
|
|
battles fought with the Enemy like a fencer on the field, back and forth
|
|
ever going for the throat as a thousand die with every hour.
|
|
|
|
All happening, all being fought.
|
|
|
|
``Remind Cordelia Hasenbach that she will be fighting \emph{those}
|
|
battles as well, if she does not leash her lackeys,'' Komena hissed in
|
|
my ear.
|
|
|
|
And in the heartbeat that followed, they were gone. Dawn shyly peeked
|
|
through the flaps of my tent, and I eyed my shaking hands before
|
|
sighing.
|
|
|
|
So much for getting a good night's sleep before leaving.
|