577 lines
28 KiB
TeX
577 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-concert}{%
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\section{Interlude: Concert}\label{interlude-concert}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A problem that cannot be solved by brute strength can still be
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destroyed by it.''}
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-- Dread Empress Massacre
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\end{quote}
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The Duke of Unrelenting Landslide struck like a mountain made hammer,
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his stride shaking the earth and his war cry echoing as if sung through
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a gorge.
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Hakram Deadhand stood before him in his burnt plate, armed only with a
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shield and a long axe, and breathed in deep of the cool air of this
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place. Fear, fear did not come. It should have, for his foe was a
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godling in the flesh while he was nothing but old steel and arrogance,
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but all that Adjutant felt was a quickening of the blood. A stirring.
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His enemy roared out a challenge, but the orc did not answer: the time
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for taunt and boast was past. Instead the Adjutant breathed in deep, and
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even as the Duke of Faerie brought down his morningstar he moved. A step
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to the side, as the mace shattered stone, and with keen eyes he darted
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forth. Axe high he struck, but the great fae batted his blow aside with
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his bare hand and laughed.
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The morningstar swept across and Adjutant was not swift enough to leap
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over the blow, his shield taking it head on as he stood his ground. The
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whisper of the word was with him, and it had been but a casual stroke,
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and still he was sent flying a dozen feet back as his shield bent.
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Hakram barrelled into a horse, toppling it, and rolled away as the
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morningstar came down and splashed the mount's entrails over rock. Twice
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now he'd escaped death narrowly, and yet where was the fear? No, instead
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a strange and wistful joy had come over him. Like he had come home,
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after a long journey, or found an old place once beloved. His voice
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escaped his throat, neither challenge nor scream, instead softly and
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almost sadly singing in the Kharsum of his youth.
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``I sing of spring, come winter deep
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I sing of a dream beyond sleep.''
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Adjutant stepped to the side, the lilting and bittersweet pace of
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\emph{The Old Raider} guiding his feet. Down the morningstar went, the
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Duke roaring in implacable anger, but Hakram was not there.
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``The world was fair, when I was young,'' he sang.
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The wind screamed, the morningstar sweeping, but Adjutant had begin
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moving before it. Under he went, knees creaking, and rose to his feet as
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the Duke turned to him in surprise.
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``My grip was strong, my fang was long,'' the orc sang.
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The proud creature did not shy away when he approached, pitting its own
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strength against the curve of Adjutant's axe, but this time when the
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Duke slapped away the blow Hakram flicked his blade with Name-strength
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and the fae screamed. Its hand was bloody, and a finger fell onto broken
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sone.
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``And never,'' Hakram of the Howling Wolves sang, ``did my axe falter.''
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---
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The Archer sped up the stairs, steps soft as the breeze as her aspect
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warmed her bones like noonday sun: she could \textbf{Stride} to the end
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of the world, never faltering nor lost, so long as it shone within her.
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She'd already strung her longbow, felt the enchanted wood tighten
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against her finger as she pricked her ear for the sounds of fighting
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above. There were five beats to the song, three and two at odds, and the
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fae were on the side with the numbers. A woman let out a hoarse scream
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of pain -- the Blessed Artificer, Archer guessed -- and so made it clear
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that the fae were on the \emph{winning} side as well. She must hurry,
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she thought, reaching for the quiver at her side. Her fingers brushed
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through the touch of magic that would keep dust and water away from the
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wood, thumb sifting through the fletching until it found strix feathers
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and extracting that particular arrow. Black alder wood for the shaft,
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two centuries old so that the taste for shade and quiet would seep into
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the ambient magic, and an arrowhead of steel forged by a blacksmith born
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mute. It was a lurker's arrow, a slayer's arrow.
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The strix feathers were simply a fancy of Archer's: the great
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flesh-eating owls of Waning Woods, after all, preferred to hunt by
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moonless night.
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Her boots touched the second story moments later, arrow loosely nocked
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as she slipped in the shadow of tall pillars. The foes were righting on
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the footbridge that tied the hanging spire of crystal to the sides of
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the Belfry, though the fae wove in and out as was their way. Roland and
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the Artificer stood on one side, the black-skinned woman bleeding from a
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long cut across her chest and the Rogue looking like he was so deep in
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an aspect migraine he could barely see. Against them: a child of straw,
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an antlered huntress and what could only be a traitor. The Exalted Poet,
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Archer recalled. Caster, but in a tricky way and not entirely vulnerable
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up close. Very much human, however. The Archer carefully chose her
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vantage even as sorcery and Light, past trying to win, desperately tried
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to keep the two from dying against the three. She would only strike in
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complete surprise once, and so the shot must be made to count.
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Angling herself so that the pillar would hide her from the side but she
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had a good view of the enemy's side, Archer breathed out. In the beat
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that followed, she fluidly drew the arrow past her ear and loosed in a
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single gesture. The lurker's arrow flew without making a sound or
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drawing the eye in any way, a wisp passing behind a flying tuft of straw
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from one fae being cleaved in two but inevitably, unerringly finding its
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target. Steel tore right through the Exalted Poet's throat, avoiding the
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spine but shredding the vocal cords. The man began choking on his own
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blood but Archer was already moving, slipping from shadow to shadow as
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her enemies fell into disarray.
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\emph{One}, the Archer counted
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---
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His insides were aching, the roughness of continued \textbf{Use} having
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taken him past raw and into bleeding. Worse, Roland was beginning to
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lack precision: he could not longer properly seize artefacts or sorcery,
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sometimes fumbling and losing a precious few moments before finally
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succeeding. It was the sort of time a man in his position -- in over his
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head -- simply could not afford to lose if he was to keep avoiding an
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unfortunate end.
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``No wall, no gate, no mighty keep.''
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The Exalted Poet's rasping voice called out another spurt of what a
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generous man might call poetry -- a far cry from the fine verses of
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Candide Farstride or those of the princess-poetess Luna Trastanes, what
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was being inflicted on Roland's ears -- and the Rogue Sorcerer answered
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with the quickest thing he had at hand, a sizzling Liessen Chisel that
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spurted out form his sleeve. The Callowan spell was a ward-breaker by
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design, but it kicked like a horse and it would have shut up the Poet if
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it'd hit. If. The Lord of Plentiful Harvest leapt into the path, and
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thought the chisel split him in two it was straw and not blood that went
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flying: just another false body.
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``Will turn away slumber's cr-''
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An arrowhead bloomed in the Exalted Poet's throat, stealing his breath
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in a red gasp, and Roland de Beaumarais felt a startled, nervous giggle
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leave his throat.
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``Rogue, what was that?'' the Blessed Artificer asked.
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Both fae scattered before she was done speaking, faces startled at the
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sudden bloodletting.
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``The tune turns about, my friend,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said, grin
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tugging at his lips.
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The tightening of the Helikean bronze burr into the flesh of his flank
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warned him that power was being directed at his back and Roland threw
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himself down, scrabbling for a sharp enough blade that he'd be able to
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make some damage. That unexpectedly lethal jet of acid from the Dominion
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hedge mage, or perhaps hellflame confiscated from one of the Eyes?
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Golden power shivered above him, biting into the railing and sending
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shards of white-hot metal and stone flying every which way. His coat
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took most of it, three layers of impact-negation enchantment blown
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through in the blink of an eye, but it couldn't cover everything. He
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swallowed a scream when a piece of shrapnel shredded through his cheek
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and the corner of his lip, his aspect stumbling into the use of another
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power.
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``Bite,'' the Rogue Sorcerer shouted.
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Ice erupted with a shrill cry, singing of death.
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---
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``The days were long in summer sun,'' Hakram sang.
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There was Adjutant, and there was all that went on around him. In the
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coolness of his mind, he found himself able to follow both without
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trouble.
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The Duke of Unrelenting Landslide stamped his foot against the stone,
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the air shivering of the power as a rippled went through the ground as
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if a pond had been struck. Hakram swiftly circled to the side, waiting
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until he had come near one of the remaining lancers and the fae struck
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out at him by sword to measuredly leap up. The lancer's blade rasped
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against his plate, burnt by fires mightier than any of those burning
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here today, and Hakram dropped his axe to catch the fae by the wrist and
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toss him to the side, right onto the downwards arc of the morningstar
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come to pulp him. He landed in a crouch, blood flecked all over him, and
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snatched up his axe.
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Light flashed, the Blade of Mercy screaming as his greatsword shattered
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the spear of the Countess of Still Amber, drawing from the fae a scream
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of rage as he swept her down from her horse with pure strength. The
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Vagrant Spear whooped madly as she leapt sideways, smashing a bare foot
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into one of the distorted pale fae's face and an elbow into the others'
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neck. The three of them stumbled to the ground in a pile, even as one of
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the lancers made to run through the now-prone heroine only for a tight
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circle of red sorcery to form around his neck and choke him with his own
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momentum, buying just enough time for the Mirror Knight to lightly dance
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away from the Prince of Fallen Leavens and casually split the head from
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the body in a single stroke.
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``Even sorrow sweet, in battles won,'' Hakram sang.
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The Duchess of Red Sunset burned with power, grown incandescent, and the
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Adjutant could not touch her. None of them could. Tough she was weaker
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in power than the prince himself, in some ways the nature of that power
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was harder to deal with. Now it was only a matter of time until she
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unleashed the fires, and those might turn the tide. Her attention needed
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to be drawn, focused. The orc retreated towards her, stoking the Duke's
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anger even further as he found himself denied his foe.
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``Coward,'' the Duke of Unrelenting Landslide screamed
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The insult passed over him like water on a duck's back. The Duchess saw
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him coming, not blinded by her own works, and even as behind him the
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Duke roared and smashed into the melee like an angry bull she struck at
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him. A whip of flame lashed out from behind the blinding incandescence,
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unnaturally twisting over his raised shield and sweeping down to seize
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his hand. But the whip found only bone there, crafted by a Warlock of
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which there had been few equals, and there was no pain to loosen his
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grip. Hakram Deadhand lunged forward and struck at the fae within
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burning light, only to be driven back. It did not matter, for he'd heard
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her snarl in anger at his insolence. These were predictable creatures,
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once their nature was grasped.
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The whip withdrew.
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``And never did my hand linger,'' Hakram sang.
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The fires of a setting sun swallowed him whole, but Adjutant had
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followed the rhythm: quick as the Duchess was, she was not so quick that
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his soul did not first echo with the will to \textbf{Stand}.
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---
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The huntress had come to hunt her, Archer saw with blade-sharp
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amusement.
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She was a tall one, that fae, painted red and white with antlers tearing
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out of the sides of her head and a long spear of bone in her hand.
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Light-footed, almost reluctant to use her wings, and now striding across
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the stone floors of the Belfry in search of the archer who'd fired at
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her ally from behind. Ear to ear and eye to eye, Archer knew, the fae's
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senses were likely better than hers. In a game of shadows, at first
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glance it might seem like the huntress had the advantage. Of course,
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that perception relied on one assumption: that, when she heard the
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string of the bow being pulled, the fae could move faster than Archer
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could loose. The Named's fingers went drifting through her quiver once
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more, finding the arrow she sought by the soft touch of the bellhawk
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feather fletching. Prodigiously loud birds, bellhawks, known to use
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their cry to startle animals into leaving their hiding places.
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The purpose of the matched arrow was a little different, but not
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dissimilar in essence.
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Crouched atop the stacks, overlooking the huntress from the distance,
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the Archer drew and loosed before a single breath's span could pass. The
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antlered fae's head swivelled, but before she could finish finding the
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arrow from the whistling sound the enchantment carved into the birch
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shaft was awakened by the touch of wind and a deafening cry erupted. The
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huntress winced in pain, her unnaturally sharpened senses coming back to
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haunt her, and that delay cost her. While the fae narrowly managed to
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recover in time to catch the small glint of light on steel and swat
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aside the arrow, the second one -- tipped in cold iron, a precaution
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she'd originally taken in case the Wild Hunt grew rebellious -- that
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Archer had drawn and fired under the cover of the first found her thigh
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and struck true. The trick had been in the angle, aimed just so that the
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fae's peripheral vision would miss the second shot until it was too
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late. Even if the fae were magic made flesh, as Masego insisted, so long
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as they used human shape they shared the limitations of human eyes.
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\emph{Two}, the Archer counted.
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The huntress screamed as the touch of cold iron spread through her veins
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like poison, ripping out the arrow only too late. It would not kill her,
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but she was slowed now. Weakened. And when the antlered fae looked atop
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the stacks, ready to unleash her wrath, she found only shadows there.
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Archer was gone, had been since the heartbeat that followed the second
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loosing. She did not need to stay to know whether her arrows had struck
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true.
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It was with something like wariness that the huntress now eyed the open
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space before her.
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---
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The Rogue Sorcerer could feel it in the air, like a scent in the wind:
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the tide, it was turning.
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The Lord of Plentiful Harvest snarled in anger, having been just a beat
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of the song too slow to escape the sudden blooming of the ice. His foot
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was frozen up to the knee, and with his childlike body even given his
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physical strength he was having a hard time finding the right angle to
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rip himself free. Roland was still panting even as he rose, he wouldn't
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make it in time, but he was not fighting alone. Adanna of Smyrna,
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bloodied but unbowed, turned a dark glare unto the fae they had each
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killed a dozen times only to see straw fly instead of blood. She was
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nearing exhaustion as well, sweat beading her brow and staining her
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clothes, but it was with a steady hand that she raised up a simple
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bundle of four twigs and crushed it in her grip. Four bolts of Light
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screamed to life, grasped tight and reflecting on her spectacles.
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``Four,'' the Blessed Artificer said, ``will be plenty enough for you.''
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\emph{Not bad}, Roland, mused even as Adanna's hand came down and the
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Light thundered. It was well-known among Chosen that speaking the right
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phrase or challenge could nudge the odds of a blow landing in your
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favour, and this seemed like it might just pass muster. The Lord of
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Plentiful Harvest had already lost an arm to Adanna earlier, and today
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she was to be his bane for the four streaks Light melded together into a
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single great spear that tore through his chest, burning its way through
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flesh and bone and whatever deceit lay at the heart of fae. The Rogue
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Sorcerer, sensing that the end of this was to come soon one way or
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another, touched a finger to one of the runes in his pocket. The bottom
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of the Slow Regret, that despicable piece of Stygian work, slapped
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against his palm and he withdrew the small clay statue depicting a
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crane.
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``You \emph{insects},'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest snarled, body
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visibly boiling in the wake of his wound. ``I will see you annihilated
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for this.''
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He'd begun shedding strands of straw form the sides of the gaping hole
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the Artificer had burned, and with a shudder he contracted onto himself:
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becoming significantly smaller, yet whole again. \emph{Have we been
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destroying true pieces of him this entire time?} Regardless Roland
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touched his bloody cheek and rubbed some of the redness against the side
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of the statue, watching it sink into the clay without a trace, then
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grimaced. They part that came after was not one he enjoyed.
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The Rogue Sorcerer produced a knife, the same he'd used to bleed dry the
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Count of Green Apples, and with a ragged war cry ran towards the fae.
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---
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The flames of a dying sun seared him, scorched him, devoured him whole.
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Hakram Deadhand should have been made ash, dust scattered on the wind,
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but he stood unbowed in the face of the wrath of the Duchess of Red
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Sunset. Like a statue made of conceit, he refused the fae's verdict and
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his aspect came smooth and deep at the call. It too, disapproved of the
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utter arrogance of that creature in believing her will was enough to end
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him. He bowed his neck to one woman only, and she had sent him out today
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to win. The fires waned, as all fires had and ever would, and when the
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last ember died the Adjutant stood still. Unmoved.
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``I bore a crown once, of iron hewn,'' Hakram sang, and struck.
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Through the blinding light still at the heart of the fae, Adjutant saw
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the recoil of dismay. His axe's edge cut through a whip of flame, a
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pretty trick but poor in defence, and found flesh beneath. The Duchess
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cried out in pain and he hammered her down on the ground, teeth bared.
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The orc felt a strong grip squeeze around his ankle, the Repentant
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Magister's enchantment warning him he was now under glamour. Without
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missing a beat, Hakram stepped back and closed his eyes. \textbf{Find},
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he thought. \emph{Find me my foe.} The aspect pulsed within him and
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blindly he swung, letting Creation guide his hand. The blow glanced off
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the side of a spear of ivory, a pale-skinned fae coming into existence
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with a sound like a shattered mirror.
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``\textbf{Flicker},'' the Blade of Mercy yelled.
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In the heartbeat that followed he smashed into the pale fae's side, made
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entirely out of Light -- it was a simulacrum, Hakram understood only
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when after cutting through the spear and tackling the glowing Blade
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winked out. The orc took the opening, shield smashing the Duchess' face
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when she tried to rise before he knelt atop her, axe rising. The
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incandescence flared, tossing him away in a torrent of flame but it had
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been enough. Already coming down, one eye wide open and burning from the
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refusal to close, the Vagrant Spear rammed her spear through the fae's
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open mouth, screaming in triumph. Hakram landed on his feet, steel boots
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shooting sparks as he slid to a halt.
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``Earned riding,'' Hakram sang, ``under autumn moon.''
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As if spellbound, the head of every single fae swivelled towards him.
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Unexpected, the Adjutant thought, but he could work with this. He rolled
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his shoulder, loosening it before all the howling Hells came for him.
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``And never did my heart waver,'' Hakram Deadhand hummed.
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---
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Archer savoured the hesitation in the huntress' steps like fine wine,
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knowing it was the closest fae could come to true fear: the implicit
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recognition that there was something out there that could kill them, if
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it wanted to.
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It was time to bring this to an end. First she allowed her boots to drag
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against the floor, the fae near instantly turning towards the noise and
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tossing a spear of blood-red power at the pillar Archer had been hiding
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behind. Stone shards and dust blew everywhere, but she'd already been
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moving. One, two, three steps even as the bellhawk arrow she'd reached
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for was nocked and loosed. The huntress went wild, charging forward, and
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though she parried the arrow in question with her bare hand the Archer
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had already released that second pulsing tension within her. The
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\textbf{Flow} that went beyond what earthly hands could master, hers to
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borrow for the shortest of whiles. Sometimes she wondered if that was
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what it felt like, to be the Lady. When everything fit perfectly, and
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you could place yourself within the parts of the world exactly the way
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you wanted.
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There were twenty feet between the Archer and the huntress. Before one
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had been crossed, the second arrow was loosed: a slender thing of birch,
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that would have torn through the fae's left ankle were it not slapped
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aside by spear. Archer loosed the third arrow before the huntress was
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even done moving, and the cold iron tip tore through the fae's right
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shoulder. The enemy screamed in excruciating pain but strode forward.
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Seventeen feet left. The huntress had learned the trick, now, but it did
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not matter: Archer had killed things like here before. Much as the fae
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wanted to ignore the fourth arrow she could not, for it was of cold iron
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and headed right for her throat. She twisted around, ducking low as she
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moved -- fifteen feet -- but the fifth arrow ripped right through her
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left knee before the spear could adjust to the lowered height. The
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huntress stumbled but stubbornly carried on.
|
|
|
|
The sixth arrow was loosed low, at her midriff, and the fae's back
|
|
erupted with red wings. One bat of them was enough for the fae to drag
|
|
herself up, the shot passing under her as she forced her body straight
|
|
-- ten feet -- but the seventh tore through the left wing and her flight
|
|
swivelled downwards. The huntress hit the ground but struck at the stone
|
|
with the butt of her spear first, so that she would remain half-standing
|
|
and half-stumbling forward when her feet touched down. Eight feet. A
|
|
simple trajectory, and the spear was already occupied: the eighth arrow,
|
|
the last cold iron tip Archer carried, punched through the fae's ribcage
|
|
and into her heart. She stumbled forward a few steps, gasping, and
|
|
raised her spear in a last effort. The Archer felt the flow leave her,
|
|
the world become clumsy and blind once more, but even at her least she
|
|
could see the span of that death.
|
|
|
|
Nonchalantly, she stepped to the side of the huntress blow and waited
|
|
for the antlered fae to drop down with a plaintive scream of pain.
|
|
Unmoved, Archer took another two steps forward and nocked a mundane
|
|
arrow before turning. The blood-red power the huntress had gathered
|
|
above her head did not defend her from the shot the Archer loosed a
|
|
heartbeat after turning, punching through the back of the fae's skull.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
One of the Rogue Sorcerer's ribs shattered as the little fae slapped his
|
|
side, throwing him away like a ragdoll, and he screamed in pain. It
|
|
wouldn't be enough, damn him, damn this damned statue and the damned
|
|
sorcerer whose damned soul had thought it was a clever damned thing to
|
|
make. At least some sort of spell could have been woven in to numb the
|
|
pain but no, Stygian sorcerers were all bloody sadists. Exception made
|
|
for Nephele, of course, was a delight unless she had a few drinks in her
|
|
and reason to be displeased. Roland landed on the stone footbridge,
|
|
which was not great for his already bruised back, and tried to hack away
|
|
at the fae that'd flown over to him and was now dropping down. Sadly his
|
|
knifeplay had gone somewhat rusty of late, and the Lord of Plentiful
|
|
Harvest snapped the wrist holding the knife before landing on his ribs
|
|
and shattering another few. Gods, the pain.
|
|
|
|
``Duck,'' the Blessed Artificer screamed.
|
|
|
|
Sadly, between the excruciating amount of pain he was in and the fact
|
|
that the fae was standing atop his abdomen it had been fated that Roland
|
|
de Beaumarais was going nowhere. Which proved something of an issue when
|
|
a bolt of Light struck him and not the Lord of Plentiful Harvest, who
|
|
\emph{had} been in a position to heed Adanna's advice. With a breathless
|
|
scream of pain, the Rogue Sorcerer felt the power scythe through the
|
|
last two layers of protection on his shirt and sear his skin. Not
|
|
deeply, but he comforted himself with the knowledge that at least
|
|
properties would be maintained.
|
|
|
|
``Cower,'' the childlike fae ordered, tossing a disk of golden power at
|
|
the Blessed Artificer.
|
|
|
|
He then turned cruel eyes at the Rogue Sorcerer, freshly back on his
|
|
feet, who met him gallantly with a raised knife.
|
|
|
|
``Adanna,'' he called out. ``Still alive?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the Blessed Artificer panted back.
|
|
|
|
``Then prepare your sharpest blade,'' Roland de Beaumarais said. ``This
|
|
ends.''
|
|
|
|
``In this,'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest beatifically smiled, ``you
|
|
are correct. This ends, and it ends with you \emph{screaming}.''
|
|
|
|
The Rogue Sorcerer smiled, deeply relieved.
|
|
|
|
``Say what you will about Theodosian,'' Roland said, ``but the little
|
|
bastard would have seen it coming.''
|
|
|
|
On that scathing assessment his fingers closed around the clay statue
|
|
artefact still in his pocket, the Slow Regret. With a grunt he shattered
|
|
the clay with his grip and pointed a single finer at the childlike fae.
|
|
Before his foe could even blink a small thread of translucent sorcery
|
|
connected them, and Roland screamed once more as his ribs
|
|
\emph{unsnapped}. The Lord of Plentiful Harvest turned surprised, pained
|
|
eye on the Rogue Sorcerer, who grinned back mockingly. Roland's seared
|
|
skin healed, while the fae screamed as the burning touch of Light ate at
|
|
its chest.
|
|
|
|
``Artificer,'' he yelled. ``Now is-''
|
|
|
|
``Soon,'' Adanna yelled back, tone distracted.
|
|
|
|
The Rogue Sorcerer's ribs unshattered once more, as the last if the
|
|
wounds he'd taken since binding himself to the Slow Regret flowed
|
|
through, and the fae broke out of the enchantment with a yell of
|
|
triumph.
|
|
|
|
``Now,'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest said, ``you-''
|
|
|
|
He paused, looking up, and Roland followed his gaze. Above them, the
|
|
crackling web of Light that had been preventing the fae from going up
|
|
was gone. Instead a hundred glinting swords of Light hung in the air,
|
|
while the Blessed Artificer grinned a devil's grin at them both.
|
|
|
|
``Boom,'' Roland helpfully said, flicking a finger at the fae.
|
|
|
|
The swords came down and the world went white.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
``Spring passed into summer song,'' Hakram sang.
|
|
|
|
His ankle was still being squeezed, a reminder that he was under glamour
|
|
and could not trust all that his eyes told him. Yet he saw much, in the
|
|
moment where the Court of Autumn tried to destroy him. The Maddened
|
|
Keeper, laying the lightest of touches on one of the pale fae -- it
|
|
melted from the inside in the beat that followed, in too much pain to
|
|
even scream. The Repentant Magister, throwing a bauble of silver at the
|
|
Countess of Still Amber that froze her in place just long enough for the
|
|
Blade of Mercy to cleave her in two. And Hakram saw, too, the wrath
|
|
headed his way: a cloud of rot and decay, from the Prince of Fallen
|
|
Leaves' hand, and single smooth pebble from the Duke of Unrelenting
|
|
Landslide. Adjutant knew the latter would carry with it the strength of
|
|
an entire avalanche and was likely to kill him on impact even if the
|
|
former did not.
|
|
|
|
The Mirror Knight, unflinching, stood between the orc and the onslaught.
|
|
Straight-backed, shield raised, the hero widened his stance.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Withstand},'' Christophe de Pavanie said.
|
|
|
|
And though death struck at the Mirror Knight, he looked upon it in
|
|
disdain and let it wash over him. It was an opening, Hakram thought as
|
|
the rot split around the Proceran. They would not see him coming, not
|
|
through that. The Adjutant did not embrace fury, for the Red Rage had
|
|
never been in his blood. He reached instead for the cold, for the frozen
|
|
bite, and let it flow through his veins. Strength filled his limbs, and
|
|
he knew the \textbf{Rampage} had begun.
|
|
|
|
``Then summer into fall, headlong,'' Hakram sang.
|
|
|
|
The rot ate at his flesh as he leapt through it, but in the throes of
|
|
his aspect that meant nothing. It was back, and he emerged from the
|
|
cloud with his axe raised high. The Duke of Unrelenting Landslide
|
|
blinked in surprise, but swung down the morningstar without hesitation.
|
|
A step to the side, as the stone broke. The morningstar swung, but
|
|
Adjutant had the measure of his foe now. And the swiftness to act on
|
|
that measure. He leapt over the swing, and with all his might smashed
|
|
his shield in the Duke's face. The fae rocked back, in pain, and took a
|
|
hand off the morningstar to blindly swipe. Adjutant began to duck the
|
|
moment he landed, smooth and measured, and his axe sliced through the
|
|
fae's heel. The Duke screamed out in pain, falling onto his knee, and
|
|
there the orc was waiting.
|
|
|
|
``And I know what waits after,'' Hakram Deadhand sang, axe smashing
|
|
through the Duke of Unrelenting Landslide's forehead.
|
|
|
|
Again and again he ripped free and swung, making a red mess of the fae's
|
|
head, until the giant toppled at his feet and he breathed out. He
|
|
chanced a look around him, finding that now only the Prince of Fallen
|
|
Leaves still stood and that the band of five was surrounding him. Yet
|
|
Hakram's ankle was still squeezed tight: a heartbeat later Sidonia
|
|
struck at the fae, only for the illusion to shatter, and the orc grasped
|
|
that there was worst yet ahead.
|
|
|
|
The prince was in the wind, and there was no one protecting the sword
|
|
meant to slay the Dead King. The last two lines of the old song came to
|
|
him, like a mournful warning.
|
|
|
|
\emph{I sing of spring, come winter deep}
|
|
|
|
\emph{I sing of a dream beyond sleep}
|