579 lines
30 KiB
TeX
579 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-55-queens-pawn}{%
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\section{Chapter 55: Queen's Pawn}\label{chapter-55-queens-pawn}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Let there be no talk of mercy after the ram has touched the
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gate.''}
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-- Queen Elizabeth Alban of Callow
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\end{quote}
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Of all the gifts the Sisters had given me, the peculiar sense I had for
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the coming of dawn and dusk remained one of the most useful. It would be
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a little under a bell before sundown, in Creation. Not so here, of
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course, for the Twilight Ways knew no such change. The timing of this
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undertaking had been chosen very precisely, as it was no longer a few
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warbands hitting our dug-in positions that we'd be facing: we were about
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to come out swinging in front of a field army of the Kingdom of the
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Dead, the Hidden Horror's host forewarned and prepared for our coming.
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It was going to be an ugly fight, before we got our defences up.
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Spread out on the green and sloping hills of the Twilight Ways, the
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warriors mustered to take the van in the coming battle were tightening
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their ranks as the gate-mages finished the last few syllables of their
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spells. Masego's formula was the one being used, universally so even if
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it wasn't necessarily the best formula possible for each mage. It was
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however, the one formula that more than seven in ten of the sufficiently
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powerful mages of the Grand Alliance were able to use. Numbers had a
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strength of their own, especially when it came to war. \emph{The pharos
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devices wouldn't work anywhere as well with disparate formulas, anyway},
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I idly thought. Not that we'd be using our only one tonight, if I had my
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way.
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The evening air grew thick with sorcery and silence spread as the mages
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each finished their incantation and shaped their sorcery before
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withholding the last syllable -- a guttural sound in the mage tongue
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that echoed of something like \emph{krakh.} It would only be spoken when
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I gave my command, painted the night sky with my signal to begin the
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crossing. Mounted on Zombie and perched atop a hill I held good vantage,
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and so allowed myself to sweep the assembled forces with my gaze one
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last time. It was an unfamiliar sight. Our strength had been mustered
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not in the shape of an army ready for battle, but according to the new
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rules that warfare through the Ways demanded.
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Standing in bands among the hills, near the gates-to-be, the painted
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warriors of Malaga and Tartessos were waiting to serve as the tip of the
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spear. Led by Blood and backed by four Named -- Vagrant Spear,
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Headhunter, Sage and Silent Guardian -- they would seize the grounds we
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needed as our first wave. If they got through in the time they'd been
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given, anyway. Behind them the Second Army stood in good order, ranks of
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red painted shield and polished helms glinting in the twilight. General
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Hune's hulking silhouette towered above the ranks, a siege tower made
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woman. I'd lead the first rank personally, when we sallied out.
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The holding action would be ours.
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To the left and right of the Second Army our horse was milling about,
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one wing led by Grandmaster Talbot and the other by Princess Beatrice. A
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few mages with them ensured we'd have some measure of flexibility in the
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coming engagement, though only within limits. Our fantassin companies,
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under the consolidated command of Captain Reinald, were waiting behind
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the Second and intermixed with Volignac infantry. It was the Third
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that'd serve as our reserve: I was counting on Abigail of Summerholm's
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knack for calculated risks. She'd commit if and when it was needed, but
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not a moment before. At the back of everyone else stood the drow, a sea
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of sigils that was not so much a reserve as another force entirely.
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Their time would come, but they would not share this battle with us. It
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would have been too much of a waste.
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``Into the breach, dearest?'' Akua Sahelian idly asked.
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I glanced at her. No dress tonight, no silks or velour. The shade had
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taken the appearance of a daughter of Wolof gone to war, beautiful
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lamellar plate in red and gold beneath a curved helmet and an aventail
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of mail that could be fastened with a piece shaped like a black swan. I
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was in no mood for banter, tonight, and did not pretend otherwise.
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``Find your mages and waste no time,'' I said. ``Your hands will decide
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how much the butcher's due tonight.''
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``Then luck in battle, my heart,'' Akua smiled.
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``Luck's for the other side,'' I replied. ``We make due with plans.''
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And as she melted into the shadows, I raised my staff and pulled at the
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Night as I unleashed a great spurt of power. The bright light that
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bloomed in the sky exploded in silent streaks of colour, and with that
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unmissable sight the battle began. Mages finished their incantations,
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magic held back at last unleashed: the Twilight Ways shivered and
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seventy-two different gates into Creation opened. Most weren't even
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large enough for two people, with a mere twenty of proper size to let
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carts and engines through, but that was why we were sending the
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Levantines out first. They were quick on their feet and used to fighting
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without formations.
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Clamour in Levantine tongues went up, war cries filling the air as the
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warriors boldly went forth through the gates. \emph{Honour to the
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Blood}, they clamoured. \emph{Honour to Levant, honour in strife.} I'd
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found a thick shield and a knack for ducking more useful than honour, as
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a rule, but I would not deny their ways when they lit a fire in their
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bellies. I kept my eyes on the bands filing through, counting down as
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the warriors passed. The Enemy was slow, tonight, or we got lucky: it
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was thirty one heartbeats before Keter gave its answer. More than half
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the gates -- but not the large ones, thank the Gods -- flickered,
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shredding whatever flesh and metal had been going through in a red
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spray.
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So that was to be the first beat of our dance tonight, huh. \emph{Thirty
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one heartbeats.} The Dead King's mages were getting sloppy, if it'd
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taken them this long to disturb our gates with their counter-rituals.
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Banners were raised by the gates and drums brought to the fore, so that
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through their beating the rhythm could be kept. For thirty beats
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Levantines continued to cross, then halted. The gates rippled again,
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taking the leg of some screaming young warrior who'd been foolhardy
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enough to try the odds. It wouldn't be the last time today it happened.
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The bleeding man was dragged through and the crossings resumed.
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For now I was not needed. The first hour belonged to the Dominion of
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Levant, tasked to clear the grounds in front of us so that when the
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Second Army began its crossing we had room enough to set down wards and
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protections undisturbed. Depending on what the enemy had waiting on the
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other side, that hour would either be a pleasant moonlit walk or a
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bloody horror of screams. The lagging counter-rituals gave me hope for
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the former, but hope would not serve me well in a battle with Keter. I'd
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learned that the hard way. Time dragged forward as the warriors passed
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through the gates in a trickle -- hundreds, then thousands -- but I
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watched in silence. My escort dared not disturb me. It was only when I
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sensed the time nearing that I headed out, spurring Zombie forward. An
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escort of twenty knights form the Order of the Broken Bells behind me, I
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headed towards the Second Army at a brisk trot.
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Soldiers under half a hundred different banners cheered sparsely as I
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went by, for even though few of them were mine I was known as a good
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woman to have on your side when the steel came out. Though later I would
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fight on the front, for now I went to Hune. Looking down at me, the ogre
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have a brisk salute.
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``First reports?'' I asked.
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``The enemy was already mobilized,'' General Hune said. ``We'll be doing
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it the hard way: ghoul packs were already afoot so it was contested from
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the start. Keter has pulled in every patrol in a radius of miles to slow
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us down. We're looking at thousands, not hundreds.''
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My lips thinned. I'd known that Keter would be expecting us to pop out
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soon, but not anticipated large enemy forces this far out: our beachhead
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was at least ten miles away from Lauzon's Hollow!
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``If it were an easy war, we would already have won it,'' I said.
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``Watch your back, general.''
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``Good hunting, Your Majesty,'' Hune replied.
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Dismounting Zombie and handing her reins over to my knightly escort, I
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went to stand with the front rank of the Second. The company was under
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the command of a Captain Bolah, a dark-skinned veteran who'd once served
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in the Legions, but it was her young Callowan lieutenant -- Alfred of
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Ankou, he eagerly introduced himself as -- who stood closest to me.
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Before long the two Named that were to serve as my retinue for the fight
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made their appearance, having been lingering nearby but away from my
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troops.
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``I don't believe we've ever shared a battle before,'' Roland noted,
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coming to stand at my left.
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He'd prudently added a helmet to the mail and longcoat he refused to set
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aside.
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``Not on the same side, at least,'' I aknowledged.
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The Beastmaster, on my right was not inclined to idle talk. His eyes
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stayed on the banners near the gates.
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``Time will run out soon,'' Lysander grunted.
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I nodded in agreement. It was unfortunate, but it didn't look like the
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Dominion would be able to get all their warriors across in the time we'd
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allotted for it. Before long trumpets sounded, signifying the warriors
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of Levant were to move to the sides and clear the gates, which
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got\ldots{} contentious. None of that proud lot wanted to be denied the
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opportunity to battle because they'd been a little too slow, and some
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gates had to be forcefully cleared of Levantines trying to force their
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way in. Behind us the Second Army raised its banners, horns were sounded
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and the advance began.
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Unlike the Dominion forces, my Army of Callow had standard company sizes
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and officers ensuring order so instead of a mess of warbands it was
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neatly filed lines matched to gate sizes that approached specific gates.
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My own company, Captain Bolah's, was bound for one of the larger gates
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-- part of the reason I'd picked it -- and before long we were standing
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in front of the transparent veil, the mage maintaining it standing to
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the side with closed eyes and two assistants. On the other flank the
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drummer kept pace, while a Proceran held the banner telling us the
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number of the gate and a young woman by his side shouted at us hurry.
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A heartbeat later we were through and the cool evening air of the
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Hainaut lowlands washed over my face. \emph{Shit}, I immediately
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thought, even as Beastmaster contorted and a veritable flock of birds
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erupted from his furs to fly above. I could now see why the Dominion had
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found it hard to get people through, and it wasn't just inferior
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discipline. The gates has all been opened along the same axis, though
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the line itself was wavy from imprecisions, and near the left side of
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that axis bands of Dominion were being hard-pressed by a surprisingly
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large number ghouls. There just hadn't been much room for more people to
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pour through, even when there'd been time.
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Streaks of Light told me the Lanterns were in the thick of it, as was
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their wont, but their tricks weren't the ones I'd been looking for.
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``Beastmaster,'' I said, limping forward as the legionaries advanced
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behind me. ``Where's the Vagrant Spear?''
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She should be handling that flank along with the Headhunter, but I saw
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no sign of her. The other villain's steps slowed a heartbeat as he saw
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through the eyes of one the birds in flight, then he pointed to the
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left.
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``There,'' he said. ``Pulling one of your lordlings out of trouble,
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looks like. Osena. Wounded. I see blood.''
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I swallowed a curse. Already? No, that was unfair. Likely the dead had
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gone specifically after her, knowing her death would brutalize Dominion
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morale. The issue was that there would only be Lanterns near and that
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lot couldn't heal. The Forsworn Healer was on his way, but he was with
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the third wave of Named near the \emph{back} of the Second Army.
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``Roland,'' I tightly said. ``Go patch her up.''
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``On it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer nodded.
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He was gone in a moment, stride near a run as his long coat swirled
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behind him. Gods, if only I could have a dozen more of him.
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``With me, Beastmaster,'' I said. ``And I want a warning when the first
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tide gets close.''
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``I see it approaching already,'' the man murmured. ``Hurry, Black
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Queen.''
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A quick look behind me told me all of Captain Bolah's company had
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crossed and it was now in good order, waiting for my instructions even
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as another company began to emerge behind it.
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``With me,'' I yelled. ``We'll set the boundary.''
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I got a roar back. Good, they'd need the spirit before this was over.
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Much as I would have liked to head to the left flank and stabilize our
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lines there, I had other duties. Besides, we had a contingency that
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should take care of it before long. A messenger should have gone through
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the dedicated gate by now. A hundred legionaries in tight formation
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behind me, I limped to the front. The Dominion had formed up into three
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large clumps of warriors after crossing-- shield walls that'd suffered
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under ghoul assaults, most likely -- with the two more or less to the
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right having held well and only the one to the left having gotten mauled
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by the dead.
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Out of the seventeen thousand Dominion warriors maybe ten thousand had
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gotten through in the half hour they'd had, a testament to their
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light-footedness given the situation. There couldn't have been more than
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three thousand ghouls and maybe half that in skeletons out here right
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now, all spread out, but up close ghouls were bloody and hard to kill
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even. We'd be winning this fight, for sure, but it would cost us
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precious time and keep us from seizing the territory we wanted before
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the first tide hit. I grit my teeth, in a black mood, and led my company
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three hundred feet out before calling a halt.
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``Here,'' I shouted. ``Form up.''
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Maybe twenty feet ahead of us the Tanja forces were cleaning up the last
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of their undead. Among the ranks I glimpsed the Sage and the Silent
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Guardian, whose assigned flank this was. On the other left side four
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large gates opened and our first surprise of the night came out at a
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gallop: Grandmaster Talbot led out the Order and some Dominion light
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horse in wedges, smoothly coming around to hit the ghouls that'd been
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chewing up the Osena in the back. Long lances skewered the creatures and
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Levantines butchered them after they were pinned, leaving the Order free
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to peel off the engagement quickly and with few casualties.
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They retreated the Twilight Ways without wasting time, as the last thing
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we wanted was to risk them out here for too long. Cavalry was not easily
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replaced, and the Dead King was always hungry to steal it for his own
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armies. With the pressure taken off of them, the Levantines on the left
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flank pushed forward at last. I worried my lip, eyes on the moving
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soldiers. Using my location as the yardstick the Second Army had begun
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taking position in a broad hollow square, but the left third of that
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square was noticeably lagging behind the rest. It wouldn't be ready in
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time, would it?
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``Beastmaster?'' I asked.
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``You'll start seeing them in a moment,'' he replied. ``And hearing them
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not long after.''
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``Fuck,'' I snarled. ``They'll hit us long before the cabals are in
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position.''
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Much less the wards, whose raising would be further delayed. Akua was
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good, and I'd glimpsed her crossing through with mages and wardstones,
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but she couldn't conjure up a stable array out of thin air. She needed
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room that she just wouldn't have. Beastmaster's warning proved true
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moments later: in the distance I saw what I might have taken as a swarm
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of insects, were it not too far out for their size to be reasonable.
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Birds, they were birds. Not buzzards, which were specially-crafted dead,
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but just any bird the Dead King had been able to get his hands on. His
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forces slaughtered and poisoned all wildlife wherever they went so that
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they could use this very tactic: throwing massive flocks and herds of
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them at us as skirmishers.
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Like a tidal wave filling the sky, they came.
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``I'll handle it myself,'' I finally said.
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There went one of the two large workings I'd be able to throw around in
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daylight.
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Striding forward with more anger to my stride than I'd care to admit, I
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left behind my legionaries after a curt gesture signifying they
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shouldn't follow. Beastmaster kept pace with me, looking oddly at ease
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in the middle of mayhem. The warriors from Malaga had been thorough
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about putting down the dead, but sloppy with clean up: with my staff I
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shoved aside a painted warrior before the back of her knee could be
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stabbed by a crawling half-broken skeleton, my boot going through its
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skull with a wet crunch. I ignored whatever she said to me in Ceseo and
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kept limping ahead. The Levantines split for me, almost respectfully.
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By the time I got to the front, stepping away from my armies with no one
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but Beastmaster at my side, the tide of undead birds was closer. Close
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enough no one could miss them, close enough that the beat of their wings
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and their ceaseless \emph{screeching} hit our ears like a drumbeat. One
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coming ever closer as dead things filled the horizon. The birds would
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only be the first tide, I knew. They were just the quickest to make
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their way to our lines. Behind us I felt the Dominion warriors shrink.
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I'd seen some of those same people leap into a siege tower on fire
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without batting an eye, face Revenants with gleeful whoops, but this
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breed of horror always hit them hard: what honour could there be in
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being shredded by dead birds?
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Neshamah had made of study of us, of what got into our heads and put
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lead in our legs.
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``You have means to deal with them?'' the Beastmaster asked.
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``Sure,'' I replied with a hard smile, ``it's called \emph{force}.''
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To my surprise, that startled a laugh out of the usually humorless man.
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``Don't let me get into your way then, Black Queen,'' Lysander said.
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A snort was my only answer. As if. I took another few limping steps
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forward, loosening my shoulders under the cuirass and taking a good look
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at the advancing tide. Hadn't rained in a while, had it? I knelt down,
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leaning my staff, and traced the ground with a few fingers. Dry. I
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hoisted myself back up with a grunt.
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``You never taught me a prayer for this,'' I said in Crepuscular. ``An
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invocation. I imagine there isn't one.''
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I smiled at doom coming on darkened wings.
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``Shall we make one together?''
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On my shoulders I felt sharp talons dig into the skin, almost enough to
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draw blood. I had their attention and, closing my eyes, I breathed out
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and sunk into the Night. I pulled it deep into me until it was writhing
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in my veins like serpents of smoke.
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``I have come a long way, through winding paths,'' I murmured, and
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cocked my head to the side to better hear them.
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It was neither a murmur nor the beat of wings, and somehow both.
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``Yet behold,'' I said, Andronike's cool disregard given voice, ``this
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barren realm, this crown of ruin!''
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And her sister was not far behind, leaning close to hisper into my ear
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-- every syllable a caw, a greedy call of carrion.
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``Let me match horror with horror, might with might,'' I said, Komena's
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poisonous pride made verdict. ``And know no master in this.''
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The Night roiled, the sea boiling out of me in dusky vapour, and I
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almost smiled. They had left me the honour of the last touch.
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``So let the sun weep and the Crows have their due,'' I spoke in a
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rasping laugh. ``For in the end, all will be Night.''
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I felt the Sisters smile against the sides of my neck. This one, they
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whispered, would be known as mine. \emph{Catherine's Tears}. Above the
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tide of carrion birds the sky howled with gales as the Night left me,
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leaving me buckling down to my knees and hollowed out. My vision swam,
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but not so much I did not see my work: the power forming into a great
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sun of black flames, pulsing and screeching almost as loud as the
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undead. And the tide moved to split around it, but it wouldn't be
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enough. I pushed myself up with my staff, and raised a trembling hand.
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I snapped a finger and all the Hells went loose.
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The black sun blew up in a wave of heat, long streaks of dark flame
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lashing out and carving streaks of ash through the undead. Like black
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comets seething strokes shot out, burning as they went and smashing into
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the plains below with enough might to have the ground shivering even
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where I stood. Droplets of black fire fell like rain, igniting the
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carrion dead, and I watched with a cold smile as entire swaths of the
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enemy burned. Soon the smell of burning bone and flesh would come to us
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with the wind, but for now I turned around and began my limp back to my
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lines. The Beastmaster's followed, face gone blank.
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A sky-shaking roar came as the Dominion and the Second Army gave their
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approval to my work, but no smile touched my face. I'd dug deeper than
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I'd planned to -- my legs still shook and my arms felt numb -- so I
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could not guarantee I'd be able to pull something on the same scale
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again. Not anytime soon, anyway.
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It'd not been enough to blot out the birds, but it'd slow them down. The
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undead things had scattered every which way, so they'd take time to
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regroup, and I could generously be said to have at most destroyed half
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of the lot. It'd be long enough for the Dominion left to have put itself
|
|
in position, hopefully, because otherwise there was going to be an awful
|
|
lot of blood on the floor and soon. My face grew grimmer as I got closer
|
|
to our formations and saw we were still behind. The Second Army wasn't
|
|
entirely on the field yet, and that meant we'd be understrength when it
|
|
came to priests -- the kind that could make shields, anyways.
|
|
|
|
While I could have gone to the command node of the Second, all I'd do
|
|
there was get in Hune's way. She already knew the damned plan, she'd
|
|
helped make it. Getting too close to Akua's work would be a risk as
|
|
well, since I was pretty much a moving mass of Night even when not
|
|
actively using it, so the frontline was the best place for me. The
|
|
Second Army had moved into cohorts, with furrows behind them, and as I
|
|
got back to Captain Bolah's company the first trumpets sounded. The
|
|
Dominion moved down the furrows to stand behind the Army of Callow
|
|
formations, with some relief I fancied.
|
|
|
|
The winged undead were already beginning to gather in great swarms. As
|
|
soon as the Dominion was behind them, the Second Army's standards were
|
|
raised and horns sounded: the lines closed and shields went up, a solid
|
|
wall of steel becoming the frontline as mage cabals got into position.
|
|
Ahead of us, the tide had entirely formed anew. It was closer now, and
|
|
the cacophony of screeches was once more deafening. \emph{Four hundred
|
|
feet}, I thought, watching. \emph{Three hundred feet}. Around me
|
|
legionaries shifted uneasily.
|
|
|
|
``Steady,'' I called out. ``Trust in your officers. We're ready for
|
|
them.''
|
|
|
|
That got a few shouts back, and swords were hammered against shields.
|
|
\emph{Two hundred feet.} The shrill screeches washed over us like a
|
|
physical wave. Screams erupted behind us, not of fear or dismay but
|
|
battle cries as the House Insurgent slashed out with Light.
|
|
\emph{Callow}, some simply shouted. Cries of \emph{For the Kingdom} or
|
|
\emph{Gods Unforgiving} with them, and even a few \emph{Only to the
|
|
Just}. Like a volley of arrows javelins of Light went flying, prayers to
|
|
Above brightening the air. \emph{One hundred feet.} One, two, three
|
|
volley followed and then at fifty feet, when the noise was like a
|
|
rolling thunder in our faces, transparent panes of sorcery bloomed in
|
|
front of us. Like a sorcerous tortoise formation, the rectangular angled
|
|
shields came down as armour and muted the cacophony.
|
|
|
|
It was not airtight. Some birds went through, and with a tired hand I
|
|
drew my sword to hack at a rotting blue jay as its talons clawed
|
|
pointlessly at my cuirass, but those few were a pittance compared to the
|
|
angry tide hammering at the magical defence. In some places the shields
|
|
flickered or outright broke under the pressure, but we had mage reserves
|
|
and the House Insurgent had been tasked with purging breaches.
|
|
|
|
Captain Bolah's company was untroubled, so I clapped her young
|
|
lieutenant's shoulder and called for Beastmaster to follow me. We would
|
|
be most useful plugging breaches for now. The Second Army finished
|
|
ferrying across its numbers early, but still too late: by then the
|
|
second tide had struck. Insects, come on smaller wings. Flies and
|
|
hornets, until larger things like beetles and stingers and butterflies
|
|
came up. Unlike the birds, they were capable of digging under the rim of
|
|
the shields and going up. Twice I torched a stretch when swarms became
|
|
large enough they devoured soldiers alive, Roland coming back to my side
|
|
for the grim business after having healed Aquiline Osena.
|
|
|
|
Sappers came forward and burned the insects out with torches and pitch,
|
|
but it wasn't enough. We had to pull mages from shielding to defend
|
|
against the insects, and it shrank our defences. More panes began
|
|
failing when our intricate patterns began losing strength, dozens of
|
|
soldiers dying to every breach before the House Insurgents and the
|
|
Lanterns, come to reinforce them, could purge the invaders. The third
|
|
tide hit just as the first Procerans began crossing through, and to my
|
|
relief Juniper -- Hune, I caught myself, it was not the Hellhound in the
|
|
deeps with me this time -- had called for priests to cross first.
|
|
|
|
When vermin and wild animals began to hammer at the shields and wriggle
|
|
under them, less numerous than birds or insects but much stronger, we
|
|
finally got to dismiss entire sections of the defence and remake them
|
|
anew in pale yellow Light. It burned the dead when they touched them,
|
|
though not as much as more concentrated amounts would have. We focused
|
|
our defenses anew, breaches becoming rarer as the work became more
|
|
distributed, and in some places our people even began to lower panels to
|
|
bait the dead into dedly Light volleys.
|
|
|
|
``It's turning in our favour,'' Roland told me, panting and
|
|
sweat-soaked.
|
|
|
|
``For now,'' I grunted back. ``Still an hour and half before sundown''
|
|
|
|
``They'll pull away before that,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``They have
|
|
to.''
|
|
|
|
He might be right, I thought. The Dead King had to know we had Firstborn
|
|
with us, and on weak undead like this roving packs of Mighty would be
|
|
pure butchery. But the assault from the hordes wasn't slacking and that
|
|
boded ill.~He had at least one last nasty trick left for us, and I could
|
|
hazard a good guess at what it might be.
|
|
|
|
``Send for our sword,'' I told Roland. ``I expect we're about to have an
|
|
unpleasant turn.''
|
|
|
|
It didn't make me a prophet to predict hard times when fighting Keter,
|
|
but I felt a sliver of dark satisfaction anyway when the hammer blow did
|
|
come. With so much magic and Light out in the air, it'd been damned
|
|
impossible for even Named to smell it when a force had approached us
|
|
under the Dead King's favourite hiding enchantments: we didn't realize a
|
|
thing until a wave of skeletons broke through a weaker section of the
|
|
shields and hit the Army of Callow's shield wall. The swarms poured in
|
|
with them, a potential catastrophe, but Hune responded as swiftly and
|
|
ruthlessly as she'd been taught in the War College.
|
|
|
|
The entire beachhead was purged in a wave of fire and Light, including
|
|
at least half a company of our own soldiers. We would have lost a lot
|
|
more, I told myself, if the gap had spread.
|
|
|
|
I'd not intervened yet because I didn't believe that was the last blow,
|
|
and once more I was proved right: an entire section of our defences
|
|
shattered a heartbeat later as half a dozen vultures with Revenants on
|
|
their backs broke through the `ceiling'. I wasn't close to enough to
|
|
help much, to my irritation: I only got off a few shots of flame from a
|
|
distance, and by the time Zombie came to my side the Revenants were
|
|
already on the ground. I'd had a band of five waiting for this, our
|
|
sword. Archer and the Silver Huntress were among them, but while they
|
|
went through the vultures like butter the Revenants were another story.
|
|
|
|
They didn't stay and fight the Named, they just \emph{killed}.
|
|
|
|
The dead Named butchered their way through the Levantines and my
|
|
soldiers, each heading out towards a different part of the shielding
|
|
even as masses of birds poured through the gaping hole they'd made in
|
|
the ceiling. The sorcery and Light that shot up in answer wasn't enough,
|
|
like someone trying to stop a river with a spear stroke. I almost
|
|
reached for Night again, I was recovered enough to do \emph{something},
|
|
but breathed out in relief when massive spinning blades of Light erupted
|
|
just above our troops and began shooting upwards.
|
|
|
|
The Blessed Artificer had come through the gate, arriving with the third
|
|
wave of Named.
|
|
|
|
Enough dead had flown through already that dozens more soldiers died
|
|
before the carrion could be destroyed, and we did not catch a single
|
|
fucking Revenant as they fought their way out -- and, even worse, opened
|
|
breaches as they did. Fuck, and we'd barely learned anything about what
|
|
they could do too. I secured two breaches with my escorts as the
|
|
shielded ceiling was painstakingly restored, and a moment later Creation
|
|
shivered. I grinned tiredly: Akua had finally anchored the wards, thank
|
|
the Gods. Unlike the first few times the Dead King wouldn't do us the
|
|
favour of grinding his expendables to dust on our defences, so to the
|
|
ragged cheering of the army the swarms went still and then began to
|
|
retreat.
|
|
|
|
Half an hour left until sundown.
|
|
|
|
Still on Zombie's back, my face was grim as I looked around us. Though
|
|
the battle had gone well, better than we'd expected even -- there'd been
|
|
no need to commit the Procerans or even the Third to very risky flanking
|
|
actions -- we'd still lost more than a thousand, at a glance. At least
|
|
half over that in wounded too, though the priests would see to that
|
|
some. As night began to fall and the hard work of building the camp into
|
|
a defensive position was undertaken under torchlight and magelights, I
|
|
found myself approached by a silent ring of thin silhouettes with
|
|
painted faces. The sigil-holders of the Firstborn bowed when I turned to
|
|
them, and I offered a hard smile.
|
|
|
|
``Prepare your sigils,'' I said. ``We raid, Mighty.''
|
|
|
|
The answering smiles were fearsomethings, for these were a fearsome lot.
|
|
|
|
It was our turn, now.
|