732 lines
36 KiB
TeX
732 lines
36 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-blood}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Blood}\label{interlude-blood}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-blood}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Blood}
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\epigraph{``Honour is neither reputation nor law. It cannot be borrowed or
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bought, bent or bargained with, for it comes from a place that is beyond
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deception. Fidelity to virtue belongs only to yourself and the Gods, and
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needs no other witness.''}{Extract from the book `Reflections' by Farah Isbili, second Holy
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Seljun of Levant}
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The roar shook the sky, trembling through the starlit dark and down the
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bones of all who heard it. Razin Tanja of the Grim Binder's Blood, Lord
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of Malaga, grit his teeth.
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``Binders to the bastion,'' he shouted over the noise. ``That is where
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the beorns will strike first.''
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He met the gazes of the last of the practitioners that had come north
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with his father, feeling a pang of pain at the absences he saw in their
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ranks. Razin had never loved the binders, envious of the talent he had
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been born without, but he'd grown on the same grounds as them. Most he'd
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known by name, and a few of the younger he'd gone on skirmishes with.
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Few were left, and fewer with every battle.
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``Do not try to destroy them,'' he reminded his mages. ``Sweep them off
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the walls as quickly as possible, that is all.''
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Destruction was better left to the Lanterns or warriors trained in the
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use of pitch and flame, Razin and his captains had learned. The binders
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were weaker in traditional offensive spellcraft than Callowan and
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Proceran mages, but their blood-bound spirits were able to physically
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push back Keter's monsters in ways that other sorcerers could only dream
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of.
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``We will return victorious, lord, or take the short path home,'' Ganiya
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Hundred-Ghost, eldest of the remaining binders, solemnly promised.
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Razin sharply nodded.
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``Honour to Levant,'' he said.
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``Honour to the Blood,'' Ganiya fervently replied.
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They were gone within moments, fleet-footed on the stone as they sped
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towards the bastion where the first of the enemy dead would reach the
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top of the walls. Razin's sworn sword kept close around him, and the
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Lantern that had taken oath to protect him for the battle as well, as he
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went to the edge of the eastern rampart and looked over. The dead were
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coming in waves, he thought, eyes narrowing as the moonlight revealed
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the abominations of bone scaling sheer cliffs. The skeletons were many
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but also slow and they would not reach the wall for a long time. It was
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the monsters scaling the cliff that would draw first blood, the massive
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bear-like abomination called beorns that were clawing their way up.
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Inside their bellies they held companies of lesser dead which they
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vomited before rampaging, and for that reason it was the great bastion
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to Razin's north they would target.
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They'd want flat grounds and room to spew out their soldiers, to create
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a beachhead atop the walls. Keter usually preferred taking ground than
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lives, early in fight, knowing it could afford the losses to get into a
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superior position before the fighting became heavy. It also meant that
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Razin Tanja had been entirely aware, even if many of his captains had
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not been, that the warriors he had sent to guard the bastion were not
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being rewarded with hours by fires in a place where the wind did not
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bite too deep. The warriors in the bastion were going to die. Perhaps
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not all of them, but most. The Lord of Malaga had made his decision with
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that knowledge in the back of his head, whispering. And of the three
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captains regularly commanded warriors in the bastion, he had chosen one
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who was of his great supporters and two who were not. His loyal captain
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he had sent to obscure his intention, should men think on this later,
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and now that decision was like ash in his mouth for it was that man who
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now held the bastion. This, he suspected, would follow him in his dreams
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for months to come.
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It had been easier, back when Razin still believed war to be a glorious
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thing.
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A game of daring and cleverness that the sharp stakes only further
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gilded. That was the way it was, in the old stories, with the victors
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returning home covered in loot and honour and the defeated slunk away to
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lick their wounds until a chance to even the score came. Warriors died
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but they died in honour, proving their worth, and the deeds done in war
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made them immortal -- perhaps not worthy of the distinction of being
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added to the Rolls, but kept alive past the end of flesh through stories
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and songs. Razin had believed in this, he'd begun to realize, much like
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a man dying of thirst would believe that beyond the hill lay a river.
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Razin Tanja of the Grim Binder's Blood had not a speck of the sorcery
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that had made his line famous: war had been the only way he was ever
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going to be able to distinguish himself, make up for the lack he'd been
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born with.
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And so Razin had embraced the ways of blood and steel, devoted himself
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wholeheartedly. He'd practiced with the blade until his palms bled and
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bones ached, he'd learned to move captains with words and sung the
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praises of the honourable ways of the Dominion of Levant. Of their
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inherent savage virtue, born of stripping away all the pretty lies and
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false righteousness the nations around Levant coated their own ways in.
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Then he'd watched Careful Yannu kill his father in an honour duel, and
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it was like scales had been ripped off of his eyes.
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``My lord,'' one of his men quietly said, shaking him out of his
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thoughts. ``We must move. We have stayed in the same place for too long,
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Revenants might come for your head.''
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Razin gave the horrors below one last look, hand resting against the
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pommel of his sword. They'd be here before too long.
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``We will do our part,'' the Lord of Malaga murmured. ``On my honour.''
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---
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The vulture had broken itself forcing its way through the wards that
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protected the skies above Hainaut, but it had gone through.
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Though it was in freefall, the necromantic abomination no longer
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animated, it had still served the Dead King's purpose with success: on
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the creature's back, Tariq glimpsed the shape of a Revenant huddling
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close. It had infiltrated the city, and when it reached the ground would
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no doubt begin to wreak havoc. The Grey Pilgrim watched the vulture drop
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like a stone for a heartbeat, then lengthened his stride. The Enemy
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would not have risked one of the Scourges so carelessly, but there were
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no Revenants that were not dangerous. Even one whose Bestowal had been
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weak whilst they lived would still be able to cause a great deal of
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chaos and death, if left unchecked.
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Tariq let the pull of chance guide his path through the city, passing by
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the orderly ranks of Callowan companies heading for the gates and bands
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of haphazard fantassins being exhorted to move quicker by their
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officers. Few saw him, for he did not care to be seen. The old man's
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face tightened as the Ophanim whispered in his ear, warning him that he
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would not arrive in time. He'd been close to where the vulture and
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Revenant were to fall, but not quite close enough. He was two blocks
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away when the large shape smashed into a house with a thunderous crash,
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though not so far that he could not discern that the Revenant had nimbly
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leapt away before the impact. So where had it gone?
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``Rooftops, do you think?'' he asked his old friends.
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The Ophanim murmured their agreement.
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``The furtive sort always take to the rooftops,'' Tariq complained. ``It
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is unkind. My knees aren't what they used to be.''
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A passage through the Ways would allow him to close the distance, but
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also reveal his presence -- most Revenants could sense the touch of
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Twilight on Creation. He would have to move the old-fashioned way. Tariq
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went through the house that had been smashed, using the ruin as a path
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to the roof, and before long he was on rough tiles and cocking a white
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eyebrow at his surroundings. He'd found the cloaked silhouette almost
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instantly, skittering atop another roof as it was, but not only had it
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yet to notice him it was also\ldots{} a streak of fire coming from down
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in the street interrupted his thoughts, and promptly solved the mystery
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of why the Revenant had been paying closer attention to the streets
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below than its immediate surroundings.
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The Revenant ducked under the flame, proving it had kept exceptional
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reflexes even in death.
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The mage that'd tossed a spell at the cloaked Revenant cursed loudly in
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High Tyrian, warning the two warriors by her side that they were going
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to have a fight. Tariq moved silently across rooftops as the Revenant
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hesitated for a moment then leapt down, moving in a streak of speed. Not
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so swift that one of the two warriors -- boys, he now discerned -- did
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not move between it and the mage with a raised shield, forcing it back
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with a measured swing of his sword. The other boy darted forward as the
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Revenant drew back. A straight-edge sword was swung out, but the dead
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Bestowed revealed a blade of its own in a glimmer of moonlight on metal
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and caught it.
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``\textbf{Incise},'' the Page disdainfully said, adjusting his blow and
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shattering the Revenant's sword.
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It had not been simple strength, Tariq caught, but instead precision.
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With the point of his blade, the Page had struck at the weakest point of
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the sword wielded by the undead and struck it with all his might. An
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adjustment done in a fraction of a moment, too. Impressive, for one his
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age. But he was still green. Having moved behind the Revenant, hidden by
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the shadow of a tall chimney, the Pilgrim watched as the Revenant
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abandoned the blade and simply slugged the young Proceran in the face
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with inhuman strength. The Page rocked back, and when a knife flicked
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out in the Revenant's other hand came close to getting his throat cut --
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the Squire, stepped in once more, taking the blow on his shield and
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forcing back the Revenant.
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The Apprentice, with a triumphant cry, landed a spell on the cloaked
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figure's side: a streak of blue flame ate up the entire cloak in second,
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forcing the Revenant to throw it away even as the Squire closed distance
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and battered him down with strikes of his shield. Though it was a brutal
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and inelegant method, Tariq noted that it succeeded at putting the
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Revenant on the ground and keeping it there.
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``Come \emph{on}, Gaetan,'' the Squire hissed. ``I don't have anything
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that can-''
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``\textbf{Incise},'' the Page panted out angrily, severing the
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Revenant's head.
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Sharpness and precision, Tariq decided. That was the nature of the
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aspect. The Ophanim murmured what their own sight revealed, which had
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him cocking an eyebrow. `Incise', it seemed, would be significantly
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stronger when dealing wounds than killing blows. There was a sense of
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frivolity to it, of defiance. The Page's nose was bloody, and he would
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likely get a black eye out of this if he wasn't healed. The Pilgrim,
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after a moment, decided not to reveal himself. A black eye was always a
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good lesson, for a young Bestowed, and he would not rob them of the
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pleasure of their victory by revealing he'd watched over them as they
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won it. He had, after all, been entirely unneeded here.
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Providence pulled at Tariq's feet and he slipped away in the dark,
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feeling a call towards the east. The old man's lips tightened. That was
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the wall, he knew, that was held by his countrymen.
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The Grey Pilgrim took back to the streets, fleet of foot and clad in
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dusk.
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---
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He turned aside the skeleton's sword with his buckler, letting it
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scrabble against the hide-covered wood, and placed his strike: the blade
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ripped into the bone of the neck, severing the spine after two wild
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hacks. The skeleton collapsed, necromancy unmade, and Razin Tanja
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breathed out. He did not have long to rest, as a flicker of movement to
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the side had him ducking to avoid a well-thrown javelin that bit into
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the shield of the sworn sword to his right.
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``Forward,'' the Lord of Malaga shouted, ``forward for Levant!''
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A roar answered as the last of the dead the beorns had spat out were
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driven back from the bastion by a tightening shield wall, those that
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weren't smashed instead pushed off the edge so that might be broken by
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the fall. It was a small, petty victory but the warriors had won it and
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they shouted themselves hoarse afterwards. Razin raised his blade,
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claiming his own share of the acclaim, but then praised Captain Alezon
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-- who'd held the bastion until reinforcements could arrive, and died
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holding to that duty. Razin had liked the man, counted him almost as a
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friend. And he had sent him here to die. Sometimes he wondered if he was
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truly better than what he wanted to replace, but when he did the searing
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clarity of that night after the Graveyard came back to him.
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How clear it had been, in that moment, that the Blood were no longer
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what they had been meant to be. How much difference was there really,
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between the red-handed sons and daughters of the Blood and the rapacious
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princes their sacred ancestors had risen in rebellion to drive out? With
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the Procerans gone the blades had not been sheathed. They'd just turned
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them on each other instead. Like dogs in a too-small kennel, snapping
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and snarling. It must end, Razin had realized, or they would ruin their
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homes and the Dominion with it. Yet for all that he had tried to embrace
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this truth, the practice of it had been\ldots{} difficult. Dreams were
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always prettier before they were dragged to the ground, where all the
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mud of practicalities sullied them.
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Razin Tanja had not become Lord of Malaga -- the first ever elected away
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from ancient Tanja grounds, through a trick of procedure -- without
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incurring debts and troubles, which now both had to be settled. There
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were captains in his service who would not hear of straying from the old
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ways, of making pacts of peace and ending raids when they returned home,
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and he could not yet afford to lose their support. His humiliating
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defeat had Sarcella, even if dealt by the hand of the Black Queen
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herself, remained a scar on his reputation. And though some here and at
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home had well received the announcement of his betrothal to Aquiline
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Osena, others were openly dubious.
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Tartessos and Malaga had long fought over wealthy territories laying
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between them, he had been reminded, what was now to be of them? What of
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the deaths come of the last wars, must they go forever unavenged? There
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was no honour in these surrenders, warriors grumbled.
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Aquiline had admitted to him in private that some of her captains had
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been mutinous over the notion as well, in no small part because as long
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as she had been unwed her hand in marriage had been considered the
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greatest prize that a captain in the service of the Osena might hope to
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win. Worse, the most ardent supporters of their union tended to be
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captains who backed the marriage because it would secure the southern
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border of the Osena and allow them to send their full might to war
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against the Ifriqui of Vaccei, their old enemies of the Brigand's Blood.
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Sometimes it felt like every step forward they took was followed by two
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steps back. Yet Razin knew nothing but rain came from throwing curses at
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the sky, and so he used what he had at hand: the war. It was ugly work,
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but Razin and Aquiline traded blood for hope.
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The captains that would never bend were granted the honour of leading
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vanguards, men and women more farsighted raised to replace them. With
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steel and deeds they bound warriors to them, by oaths and debts and the
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hard companionship of those sharing battle, and inch by inch they had
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gained ground. Lady Itima Ifriqui of Vaccei would be an enemy so long as
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she lived, but she was old and her heir Moro amenable to a peace.
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Careful Yannu loomed tall over them all, undefeated in honour duels, but
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for all that the older man was accruing honours like speaking for Levant
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at the Arsenal, he had no allies beyond his own kin. And though they
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were all wary of the Holy Seljun, beyond Wazim Isbili lay a greater
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power still. The Peregrine smiled upon their efforts, his approval as
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the blessing of the pilgrim's star.
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And still it was damned ugly work, trying to move Levant. It cost too
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much blood, and Razin almost missed the days when the scales had been
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over his eyes and he'd still believed there had been glory in sending
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men to die.
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``Prepare yourselves,'' Razin said. ``It will be a long night, and there
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are many victories yet to claim.''
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Already he could see a beorn attacking positions to the south of the
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bastion, aiming perhaps not to take the wall but instead to spew out its
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load of soldiers in the city itself, and he could only hope that
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Aquiline would send the Lanterns there on time. His binders were resting
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and the priests from Procer had yet to arrive, save for the healers that
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were already preparing beds for the wounded in the nearby barracks. As
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for himself, he would stay here until the next batches of pitch arrived
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at least. Longer than that would be risking -- a man in shoddy hide
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armour, barefoot and armed with a great sword, landed in a roll among
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the warriors nearest to the edge.
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``Good evening,'' the Drake grinned.
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---
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The Barrow Sword squinted.
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``That's not the Pale Knight,'' he finally said.
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``Your wisdom is peerless,'' the Vagrant Spear solemnly replied.
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Ishaq rolled his eyes. Sidonia was not entirely unpleasant, for one of
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the Blood, but she seemed to believe it her oathsworn duty to needle him
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at every opportunity.
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``It's just the Drake,'' the Berserker said. ``We can take him.''
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Of that Ishaq was not so certain, but he would not outright disagree.
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The three of them were strong in close quarters, and not without talents
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that would allow them to stem the tide of that Scourge's healing. More
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than that, the last two members of his band of five had teeth beyond
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what mere blades could bring to bear.
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``Um,'' the Harrowed Witch hesitantly said. ``Shouldn't we\ldots{} do
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something? He's killing soldiers.''
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The Drake had wasted no time in beginning to cut up anyone that moved
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around him, it was true. With that greatsword of his he smashed through
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shields and blades alike, slaughtering with ease even as warriors kept
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trying to close around him on all sides so he'd not have room to swing
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the large blade. Useless, when the Scourge was probably capable of
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shattering a shield with a kick anyway. It was like ants trying to
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wrestle a lizard.
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``We are meant to handle the Axeman,'' the Blessed Artificer regretfully
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said. ``If we spend ourselves against another, there will be a gap in
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the defences.''
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``He's a Scourge,'' Sidonia grunted. ``Killing him is still a win. We
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should strike.''
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The Berserker nodded in fervent agreement. Sentiment was in favour,
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Ishaq decided, but should he give the order? Much as he disliked to
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admit it, he probably couldn't afford to let the lordling ruling Malaga
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get himself killed. It would deal a hard blow to the morale of the Tanja
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warriors, and the Black Queen would have Ishaq's hide for it. On the
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other hand, letting Tanja warriors die would win him favour with the
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Grave Binder -- who the Binder's Blood despised -- and even if he
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intervened there was no guarantee that the young man would honour him
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for it. Blood only ever felt the need to owe debts to Blood, like honour
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was a drink only they could partake of. \emph{It'd be bad tactics to do
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nothing}, Ishaq finally decided.
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``We strike,'' the Barrow Sword said. ``As was planned.''
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He half-expected the Artificer to argue with him, but though she looked
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displeased she refrained. Perhaps she was sensing her opinion was not
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share by most. No challenge was offered, though, so Ishaq rose from his
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crouch and took the lead. Sidonia was quicker on the run, but also a lot
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more fragile. The ancient armour of bronze around him moved without a
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sound, smooth as if oiled from enchantments older than he dared to
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imagine, and the Barrow Sword unsheathed Pinon. The ancient blade
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hummed, tasting of the death in the air, and without a word Ishaq leapt
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from the rooftop to the edge of the rampart. From the corner of his eye
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he saw a warrior thrown in the air, missing an arm as she screamed in
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pain. The Drake was merciless.
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As he began to push his way through the throng of warriors he heard the
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Spear and the Berserker land behind him, Zoe snarling at the Malagans to
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get out of her way. Beyond the ring of shields he glimpsed binder-magic
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at work, creatures of dirt and ash trying to drive back the Scourge, but
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it was a bad match. The Drake was both strong and difficult to kill, the
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spirits did little but rip up flesh that healed within a heartbeat and
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they were failing at pushing him over the edge. Now, though, he was
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here. Steps measured as he advanced the Barrow Sword breathed deep of
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the evening air. Ah, opportunity. Was there ever anything that tasted
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sweeter? A spirit-wyvern was cut in half, the blade that did it biting
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shallow of the stone beneath them, and the Drake slunk out. Grinning
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wildly, his hide armour already tatters, the Revenant glance at Ishaq
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curiously.
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``Villain?'' he asked.
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It must be the beard, Ishaq decided. Surely he did not look \emph{that}
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villainous?
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``You wound me, friend,'' the Barrow Sword smiled, tapping his ancient
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blade against his heart.
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Pinon hummed at the touch, thirsty beast that she was.
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``That's the plan,'' the Drake agreed, darting forward.
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Ishaq raised his sword, but the speed had been enough that the Revenant
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might have startled him into an unwise parry if this hadn't been what he
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was after in the first place.
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|
|
|
``\emph{Honour to the Blood},'' the Vagrant Spear gleefully howled,
|
|
smashing into the Drake's side.
|
|
|
|
Light roiled and screamed as she severed an arm, but the Revenant only
|
|
laughed -- abandoning is greatsword, he caught his own limb and threw it
|
|
at her face as a fresh one grew anew. Ishaq, though was not intending to
|
|
just stay and watch. Sidonia was forced back by a wild swing of the
|
|
greatsword, retreating smoothly with both hands on her spear, and before
|
|
the backswing could return Ishaq closed the distance. The Revenant
|
|
struck at his armour but the ancient bronze mail took it without
|
|
flinching, and the mistake allowed him to get a good cut of his own in:
|
|
across the face, through one eye and the mouth. The Drake was unmoved
|
|
but Ishaq stayed in close, elbowing the wrist trying to get the
|
|
greatsword around him and hammering forehead to forehead to drive the
|
|
Revenant back.
|
|
|
|
Which he did, eyes wild as he put fingers to his already-healing wound.
|
|
|
|
``That sword's not Dominion work,'' the Drake coldly said.
|
|
|
|
Pinon sang, devouring the last bits of soul it'd managed to pull away
|
|
from the Dead King's bindings.
|
|
|
|
``There are all sorts of treasures in barrows, if one has the nerve to
|
|
take them up,'' Ishaq smiled.
|
|
|
|
Not that he would have been able to put his sword down now, even should
|
|
he wish to.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' the Drake said, ``it'll make this a little interesting, at
|
|
least.''
|
|
|
|
The Malagan warriors had withdraw, wisely, though more likely it was
|
|
because to their eyes the affair looked closed enough to an honour duel.
|
|
Those were not interfered with without incurring great shame, and did
|
|
Ishaq's entire homeland not just \emph{quake} at the very shadow of
|
|
shame? Like hound on a leash, only so enamoured of the prison they sang
|
|
its praises in song. He glanced at Sidonia, who nodded back, and as one
|
|
they struck. The Drake howled in laughter, and the dance began anew. The
|
|
Scourge was fast and strong, nimbler with that monstrous sword than he
|
|
had any right to be, but they were neither of them unskilled. The
|
|
Vagrant Spear feigned a low bit only to snake a hit at the throat,
|
|
forcing the Drake to bat it away, and without batting an eye Ishaq
|
|
slashed at the undead's back.
|
|
|
|
The flesh grew back. The soul did not, and Pinon sang with glee. It
|
|
liked taking from souls already claimed best, preferring Binds and
|
|
Revenants to the living.
|
|
|
|
Ishaq withdrew, though not quite quickly enough for his face to be
|
|
spared the edge of the returning greatsword. A thick cut across the
|
|
cheek, dripping blood against the edge of his mouth. He swallow a lick,
|
|
smiling, and saw fury bloom in the Scourge's eyes. It did not like
|
|
losing parts of itself, no matter how small they might be.
|
|
|
|
``That'll be enough, children,'' the Drake said. ``I'm being told to
|
|
stop playing.''
|
|
|
|
And behind him, as if summoned, the hulking shape of a beorn climbed
|
|
over the ledge and looked down at them through a gaping maw, roaring
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
``You have a bear,'' the Barrow Sword, conceded. ``But we have
|
|
\emph{her}.''
|
|
|
|
He jutted a thumb behind him, where the Berserker was slowly advancing.
|
|
Her body was jerking wildly, eyes turned bloodshot and hair looking like
|
|
it'd been shot through with thorns. Muscles grew, and as her face turned
|
|
monstrous the Berserker hacked out a breath.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Rage},'' she snarled.
|
|
|
|
The beorn swatted at her, but she caught the paw with the flat of her
|
|
blade. Both wavered, for a moment, before she smashed the great limb
|
|
into the floor with a triumphant howl. The Drake looked a little
|
|
unnerved, and Ishaq frankly couldn't blame him. Zoe wasn't particularly
|
|
able to tell friends from foe in that state and shaking her out of it
|
|
tended to be\ldots{} difficult.
|
|
|
|
``I always get the worst assignment,'' the Drake sighed. ``Would it kill
|
|
that prick in his fancy armour to take the vanguard, one of these
|
|
days?''
|
|
|
|
``I sympathize,'' Ishaq smiled. ``Please, friend, allow me to relieve
|
|
you of your burdens.''
|
|
|
|
The Barrow Sword moved, and the Vagrant Spear with him.
|
|
|
|
The dance resumed.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a good fight, Sidonia thought as she pricked the Drake's neck and
|
|
send Light howling into his body.
|
|
|
|
Though bones snapped and flesh burned, the Revenant swatted at her and
|
|
she was forced to withdraw a few steps until the Barrow Sword commanded
|
|
their foe's attention. It was a fight worthy of being added to the
|
|
Rolls, even though Ishaq was one Below's and so sundered from honour.
|
|
The Berserker was ripping into the beorn that'd come up over the ledge,
|
|
now with her bare hands since she had used her sword to nail shut the
|
|
beast's maw, which left the two of them room to handle the Drake
|
|
properly. The abomination was still far from death, but then they had
|
|
yet to reveal their own killing strokes. The Scourges always had
|
|
surprises, and so their opponents must have some as well.
|
|
|
|
They went another round with death, this time Ishaq taking the lead. The
|
|
Drake was wary of the Barrow Sword's blade, which though grave-goods and
|
|
so proscribed seemed particularly suited to slaying Revenants. Ishaq
|
|
went forward aggressively as Sidonia circled around the back, baiting
|
|
the Drake into a warning swing, and immediately the Vagrant Spear
|
|
struck. Three quick steps and extending her body like the spear she
|
|
wielded, the tip of her steel finding the back of the Revenant's head --
|
|
only he danced to the side, sword flicking back to bat away her spear
|
|
before he caught Ishaq by the edge of his mail even as the Barrow Sword
|
|
carved into his flank.
|
|
|
|
``That's all we'll get,'' the Drake said. ``Get on with it.''
|
|
|
|
With a heave, he threw the Barrow Sword upwards into the sky and turned
|
|
to Sidonia with a hard grin. Half a heartbeat later a black-feathered
|
|
arrow sprouted in Ishaq's throat as he still rose in the air. And as if
|
|
a veil had been torn down, an undead drake was revealed. Batting its
|
|
wings half a hundred feet away from the bastion, above the height of the
|
|
fight. Atop the creature stood a single archer. \emph{The Hawk}, Sidonia
|
|
thought, and felt a glimmer of fear. She had no time for more, as the
|
|
Drake was on her and he was not an opponent she could afford to be
|
|
distracted against. Still, Zoe must be warned as much as she could be in
|
|
the throes of her rage.
|
|
|
|
``The Hawk is here, Berserker,'' Sidonia shouted. ``Watch-''
|
|
|
|
An arrow sprouted in the villainess forehead even as she threw the beorn
|
|
off the wall, staggering her for a moment. \emph{Ashen Gods}, the
|
|
Vagrant Spear thought. Mere moments and already two of her band were
|
|
dead. Only, instead of collapsing the Berserker screamed in utter fury
|
|
before ripping off one of the crenels and tossing the large stone at the
|
|
drake.
|
|
|
|
``Impressive,'' the Drake complimented even as he struck.
|
|
|
|
Sidonia let the worries sink away into nothing. She would not survive
|
|
this, if she let the world command her attention. Eyes on the enemy's
|
|
blade, she nimbly withdrew two steps and smiled. Yes, this was better.
|
|
Her and the foe, nothing else. If death came through arrow, let it. She
|
|
would end her life in honour. Breathing out, she circled again as the
|
|
Revenant studied her. He feigned with a brusque step forward but she did
|
|
not bite, choosing her angle. Right behind the shoulder there was a
|
|
point where the Scourge could not even parry, the arm simply did not
|
|
bend right. If she could get him to move\ldots{} She rushed forward,
|
|
earning a swing, and slid under the horizontal strike.
|
|
|
|
She rolled around the kick that followed, coming up in a crouch with the
|
|
point of her spear upwards. At precisely the right angle Sidonia rose,
|
|
and to the strike she added the secret Creation had bestowed upon her:
|
|
that so long as you struck with the soul instead of the hand, there was
|
|
nothing you could not \textbf{Pierce}. The blade of her spear slid
|
|
through the armpit, shearing through flesh and muscle and bone as blood
|
|
sprayed and she bisected the Drake. Her spearhead emerged through the
|
|
other armpit and she ripped it free as she stepped back, blood flecking
|
|
her face paint. Only, she realized with dim horror, just enough had
|
|
healed by the time she withdrew the spear that strings of skin had kept
|
|
the severed parts together.
|
|
|
|
``Good blow,'' the Drake praised. ``My turn.''
|
|
|
|
The angle was wrong. She knew it even as she struck at the swing coming
|
|
at her, trying to change how it would strike. Instead the spearhead
|
|
scraped along the side of the greatsword, changing nothing, and with a
|
|
swallowed scream she felt her enemy's edge cut halfway through her arm
|
|
and outright through the shaft of her spear. The Drake snorted, socking
|
|
her in the stomach and letting her stumble to the ground.
|
|
|
|
``The Tanja lord, Hawk,'' the Scourge called out. ``I'm not in the mood
|
|
for pursuit, get him now.''
|
|
|
|
And from the corner of her eye, Sidonia saw the arrow fly. Finding a
|
|
path through the press of bodies and shields with impossible accuracy,
|
|
as if eager to snatch out the life of the Lord of Malaga. And it made it
|
|
but an inch away from the Tanja's throat, before the sour-faced spectre
|
|
of a young man became visible and unhinged his jaw to swallow it whole.
|
|
The Harrowed Witch, Sidonia realized with dim relief. She rolled to her
|
|
feet, bleeding but unbowed, and breathed out. She still had two aspects
|
|
to use. Only the Drake seemed disinclined to allow her to use them,
|
|
already on her and swinging. Barren Mercy, Sidonia thought. She would
|
|
have to cushion the blow and she raised her hand\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
The point of the Barrow Sword's eerie blade punched through the Drake's
|
|
belly, Ishaq looking bloodless but very much alive.
|
|
|
|
``Gods but I \emph{hate} dying,'' the Barrow Sword hissed. ``Do you have
|
|
any idea how many souls that sets me back?''
|
|
|
|
Well, Sidonia thought, rising to her feet with the two halves of her
|
|
spear. Perhaps today's deeds would not have to be added to the Rolls by
|
|
another's hand, after all.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Razin had known this fear before.
|
|
|
|
During the battle he had not yet known would be called the Princes'
|
|
Graveyard, witnessing the Firstborn unleashed under cover of the dark.
|
|
The way death had just\ldots{} ensued, and they'd all been powerless to
|
|
stop it for those few Bestowed with the privilege of doing otherwise by
|
|
the Ashen Gods. It had stuck in his throat then, that fear, and it did
|
|
now even as his life was saved from some Revenant's murderous whim by
|
|
the whim of some clever Bestowed using a ghost. And he knew, he did,
|
|
that the intelligent decision made was to \emph{leave}. To stay behind a
|
|
shield wall and retreat out of sight, where the archer could not easily
|
|
pursue beyond the city wards. And yet instead, Razin Tanja felt his jaw
|
|
clench\emph{. Is this the sum of us}? \emph{We die in droves while the
|
|
demigods settle the score,} \emph{little more than an afterthought for
|
|
either side.}
|
|
|
|
No, he thought. Enough.
|
|
|
|
``Warriors of Malaga,'' he shouted, ``\emph{shield wall}.''
|
|
|
|
They would not be ghosts before death even bothered to find them,
|
|
spectators to the end of times. If they were to stand here tonight, it
|
|
would be sword in hand. A shiver of surprise went through the warriors,
|
|
of hesitation, but in the end he was the Lord of Malaga and this was
|
|
war. The shields went up, sword rose.
|
|
|
|
``Binders, on my word,'' Razin said. ``Knock that drake out of our
|
|
fucking sky.''
|
|
|
|
An arrow streaked towards him again, but the apparition swallowed it
|
|
once more. Who did it belong to, he wondered? He would have to find out.
|
|
Thanks were in order.
|
|
|
|
``Forward, sons and daughters of Levant,'' Razin Tanja screamed.
|
|
|
|
``The Blessed Artificer requests that you unleash the binders right
|
|
before she acts, your lordship.''
|
|
|
|
Razin almost stabbed the woman who'd just addressed him in surprise, as
|
|
a heartbeat ago he would have been sure there was absolutely no one
|
|
standing next to him. Ashen Gods, how long had she been there?
|
|
|
|
``And when is that?'' the Lord of Malaga asked, steading his breath.
|
|
|
|
``In\ldots{}'' the young woman addressing him trailed off, cocking her
|
|
head to the side, ``seven heartbeats now.''
|
|
|
|
Cursing, Razin immediately ordered for the binders to strike even as his
|
|
shield wall advanced. Bound spirits flew out, gathering substance from
|
|
their surroundings as they did, and struck at the archer and the undead
|
|
drake in a storm. On the ground the Revenant was carving at the shield
|
|
wall, slicing through shields like butter, but with the Barrow Sword and
|
|
the Vagrant Spear striking at him he could not afford more than a few
|
|
idle blows and he was steadily losing ground. Now there was little but a
|
|
strip at the edge of the bastion left to fight over, and there the
|
|
monstrous Bestowed the other had brought was still raging. It snatched
|
|
the Revenant by the foot and started wildly smashing him around, the
|
|
other two Bestowed backing away carefully.
|
|
|
|
``Gods, let this work,'' the young witch by his side murmured.
|
|
|
|
The sky lit up with Light. Streak after streak gathered in a circle,
|
|
like ceiling made of spears, and every last one was angled down at the
|
|
storm his binders had made. The spirits, he now grasped, had not been
|
|
meant by his allies to kill the archer but to blind it.
|
|
|
|
Light shone until it blinded them all, and like a tide it fell.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Grey Pilgrim's steps stuttered.
|
|
|
|
It was, Tariq thought, almost like getting a glimpse of years to come.
|
|
The devastation visited unto the bastion seemed like a small thing,
|
|
compared to the cheers of his countrymen defending it. The sky was
|
|
filled with smoke and the Drake was still there, pinned to the ground by
|
|
sorcery and swords and the bruising grip of the Berserker, but it was
|
|
the living that had caught his eye. Razin Tanja, the young man that was
|
|
half the hope he saw for his home rising above itself, reluctantly but
|
|
honestly clasping arms with the Barrow Sword as he just had with the
|
|
Vagrant Spear. Warriors roaring in approval. It was a different world,
|
|
he thought. One he had not been born to.
|
|
|
|
He'd come here to take care of Levant, but Levant had taken care of
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
It was pride he now felt welling up in his belly, but grief as well.
|
|
There was still some aid he could lend, at least, and that much he would
|
|
offer. The Pilgrim made his way through the crowd, warriors respectfully
|
|
parting for him, and though offering smiles and nods where appropriate
|
|
his stride led directly to the Drake. The Berserker had just pulped his
|
|
stomach, but those eyes were wide open and aware. They also filled with
|
|
fear, when he approached, as they should.
|
|
|
|
``Drake,'' Tariq gently smiled.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' the Revenant hissed. ``Not you, I was so close I was-''
|
|
|
|
Light lashing out, the Grey Pilgrim pulled open a gate into Twilight
|
|
beneath the Scourge. He struggled, but there was no avoiding this while
|
|
bound. Screaming, convulsing, the Revenant fell into the gate and turned
|
|
to ash. And this time, when the tooth flew out towards the edge of the
|
|
rampart, Tariq was ready. He snatched it out of the air and the Ophanim
|
|
hissed with anger at the abomination, their will joining his as he wove
|
|
Light and tightened his grip. Dust flowed out from between his fingers,
|
|
slipping into the gate before he finally allowed it to close. The
|
|
Pilgrim opened his mouth to speak into the hushed silence that'd
|
|
followed, but it was a great roar that broke it instead.
|
|
|
|
The Berserker spasmed in pain, half a dozen arrows stuck in her body and
|
|
three through her forehead, but from the monstrous shape she'd turned
|
|
into she slowly turned back into a woman. The Ophanim whispered and
|
|
Tariq's hands tightened.
|
|
|
|
``Is there anything we can do?''
|
|
|
|
Silence. There was no. The Berserker's rage ended, leaving only a mortal
|
|
behind, and that mortal did not breathe. Only the wrath had kept her
|
|
alive.
|
|
|
|
Keter always had the last word.
|