586 lines
29 KiB
TeX
586 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-67-isolani}{%
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\section{Chapter 67: Isolani}\label{chapter-67-isolani}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Kill a man and they will call you a murderer. Kill a hundred and
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it is a massacre, slaughter a thousand and it will be war. But kill a
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hundred thousand, a million? That carnage is the sole province of gods.
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Ancient Keter revealed this truth for all to see: apotheosis is simply
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bloodshed beyond mortal ken.''}
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-- Kayode Owusu, Warlock under Dread Emperors Vindictive I and Nihilis
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\end{quote}
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I slept through the beginning of the Battle of Maillac's Boot.
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Adjutant's prediction of the first enemy skirmishers arriving by Early
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Bell proved to be somewhat optimistic, as the first skulkers were caught
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half past Midnight Bell instead. Ghouls out front instead of skeletons,
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a sure sign that something with brains was planning out the offensive --
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they were significantly better at keeping out of sight. Pickler's wall
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on the peninsula was done and the palisade raised to the south but the
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fort guarding the northern shore had not yet been finished and so it was
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there that the ghouls tried to slip in. They got caught by goblin
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legionaries, fangs and claws proving no match for knives and crossbows
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when they came attached to a pair of eyes that could see in the dark.
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It was only the first of the enemy's probes at our defences under cover
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of night, which my commanders had well known. Watches were doubled and
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magelights brought out as lone ghouls turned into packs swimming through
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the muck and skeletons began to march at the bottom of the swamp. An
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assault on the palisade was handily thrown back, though worryingly
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enough the ghouls had been more interested in clawing at the wood than
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climbing up to assault my soldiers. The Boot itself was only tried more
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cautiously, ghoul packs revealing themselves several times in the
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distance in an attempt to bait out fire from our engines.
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Pickler's boys had better discipline than that, thankfully, so despite
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their efforts the enemy were kept in the dark about our range and the
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nature of our engines. One of Hune's legates, who went by the name of
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Paltry, had been in command at the time and he'd requested the Order of
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Broken Bells to send patrols along the shoreline just in case. They
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found no enemies, however, and the dead bade their time with only a few
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more minor attacks under cover of dark. The first genuine assault came
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halfway past Early Bell, and even if I'd not already been breaking my
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fast while reading reports the ruckus of it would have woken me.
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I hastily scarfed down the rest of my eggs -- weren't as good now that
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Hakram wasn't the one cooking them, no one else got the seasoning quite
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right -- and snatched up my staff before limping out in to the cold
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morning light, running into the secretary from the phalanges that
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Adjutant had sent to speak to me. An assault on the palisade, the young
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woman told me, by skeleton mages and ghouls.
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``Reinforcements were already being sent in when I left,'' she said,
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tucking back a curl of dark hair just a little too long to be allowed
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under Army regulations.
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The adjunct secretariat weren't part of the Army of Callow, though, I
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reminded myself. They were Hakram's and no one else's, though he'd often
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drawn on my armies for recruitment.
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``The assault will have been driven back by the time we can arrive, Your
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Majesty,'' she continued, ``so the Lord Adjutant suggests that you
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finish your breakfast instead of-``
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``I left a mug of tea in there,'' I mused, ``have it brought to the
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palisade, would you?''
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I tore open a gate into Twilight and stepped through, the warmer breeze
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of that journeyer's realm a pleasant change from the clime of Hainaut.
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While limping my way there would have taken me too long and there was no
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denying it, I had a shortcut at hand. Wasn't hard to make it there, the
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starlit compass guiding my steps, and I limped out of a portal to the
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sight of a dozen crossbows and twice as many swords pointed at me. I
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smiled approvingly at the sight, eyes scanning our surroundings for a
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threat.
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``At ease,'' I said.
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I'd aimed to come out at ground level, since there might be fighting on
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the palisade walkway, but there was no sight of the dead there. Wasn't
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hard to hazard a guess as to why, given that the Grey Pilgrim was up
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there and healing a captain whose eyes and cheek looked like it had
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quite literally been bitten off. I left him to that for the moment,
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instead looking for an officer among the crowd just now beginning to put
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away their weapons. There was a sergeant, stout orc lad with dark green
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skin and the kind of vivid scar across his nose that his people highly
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prized as display of strength.
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``Sergeant, your name?'' I asked.
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``Alvar, ma'am,'' the lieutenant hastily replied, throwing in a formal
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salute.
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His example was followed by the rest of the line, as if they were only
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now remembering they were in front of a queen.
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``Sergeant Alvar, report,'' I ordered.
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``At least two hundred ghouls and a tenth of mages, ma'am,'' the orc
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said. ``Ghouls came out first, to draw fire from our mages and
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crossbows, then the skeletons popped out to lob fireballs and rot curses
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at the palisade. The Grey Pilgrim popped up to smash them, though, took
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barely a moment.''
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My eyes narrowed. Had Keter narrowed in on here being the weak point of
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my defences, then? Ten mages wasn't a large amount, in the greater
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scheme of things, but the generals of the Kingdom of the Dead were not
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usually prone to tossing their like into the grinder without purpose.
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Mages were a lot harder for the Dead King to get his hands on than
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footmen, and in some ways they formed the backbone of his armies.
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``How'd the palisade hold up?'' I asked.
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``Our sappers say the wardstones dulled the curses but the fireballs
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scorched the wood some,'' Sergeant Alvar said. ``If this place weren't
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so wet the wood might have caught fire.''
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``Lucky us I picked this miserable hole to fight in, then,'' I drily
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said. ``We've got swamp water enough to drown the work of a hundred
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mages.''
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``Wouldn't mind fighting on a sunny Free Cities beach one of these days,
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ma'am,'' a soldier called out. ``Just saying.''
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``You and me both, soldier,'' I snorted. ``But if the Enemy was smart
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enough to head there, wouldn't it be smart enough to avoid fighting us
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in the first place?''
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That got a few appreciative laughs along with blades on shields. Bravado
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was always a hit with my rank a file, and it wasn't like they'd not
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earned the right to brag. What other army of our age could boast
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campaigns to match those of my Army of Callow? I clapped Sergeant
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Alvar's shoulder and sent the soldiers back to their duty, as from the
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corner of my eye I saw that Tariq was done healing my captain. Good,
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hadn't wanted to get in the way of that. If the man could get treatment
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from the finest living wielder of Light instead of one of our own
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priests, far be it from me to spoil that. Fine healers as the priests of
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the House Insurgent were, they weren't the Peregrine.
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It wasn't a long walk, even hobbling, and I wasted no time. When the
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freshly-healed captain began to head my way I shook my head, having
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already gotten as much of a report as I needed to. Tariq didn't even
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look like he was out of breath, ever spry for his lengthening age. I
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broke the silence first.
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``My thanks for healing my people,'' I acknowledged.
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``Would that I could do more,'' the Pilgrim said.
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In most people I would have called it a courtesy, a formula, but when it
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came to the old man I suspected it was entirely sincere.
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``The tide's pulling in,'' I said. ``Our foe took the bait.''
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``So I've heard,'' Tariq murmured. ``Scourges, too?''
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``Drake and Mantle,'' I said. ``But there'll be more Revenants.''
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There always were.
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``More of the Scourges as well,'' the old man said. ``A third to round
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them out, that is the Enemy's way. Varlet or the Archmage.''
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Right, heroes insisted on calling Tumult the `Archmage', as if that
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description didn't also fit quite a few of our own finest practitioners.
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I'd grant them that the Revenant in question had an uncannily broad
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arsenal of sorcery to call on, but his particular fondness for
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large-scale workings that caused chaos in the ranks meant my own
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people's name for him seem more apt in my eyes.
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``I'd say we've seen no sign of Varlet,'' I sighed, ``but that's rather
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the point with that one, isn't it?''
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The Thief of Star had been like Vivienne back in the day, befitting the
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common root of their Name: unnaturally skilled in stealth and
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infiltration, but not all that difficult to deal with in an open fight.
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The Varlet, as we called that grey-cloaked thing, had clearly been more
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on the assassin end of the sneaky Named scale. It would have been a
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fucking headache to deal with even if it \emph{didn't} drench everything
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it used in particularly lethal poisons. At least we shouldn't be dealing
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with the Hawk anytime soon. After she'd handily lost an archer's duel
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against Indrani the Dead King had sent her out east instead, to be
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Rozala Malanza's headache instead of mine.
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``They will come for you, Queen Catherine,'' Tariq quietly said. ``You
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have become one of the keystones of the Grand Alliance, since the Peace
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of Salia. Your death would damage it deeply.''
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``They always come,'' I shrugged. ``I yet draw breath anyway, and I'll
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not tremble at the shadow of dead Named.''
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``I meant no offence,'' the Pilgrim said, ``only that wherever you make
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your stand, foes will be drawn.''
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``I planned with that in mind,'' I assured him. ``Which brings me to a
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request.''
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``I'm listening, Black Queen, though I make no promises,'' the old man
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said, faintly smiling.
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I somehow got the impression he was having a laugh at my expense, though
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I couldn't quite pinpoint how.
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``I want you to stay here, during the battle,'' I said. ``I know you
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like to wander and that the real blow might just fall elsewhere in our
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defences, but your presence would anchor this flank.''
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``In matters of war, I am at your disposal,'' Tariq frankly said. ``I
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have never led armies, while your skill in such endeavours is
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well-known.''
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I nodded my thanks, but before I could speak I caught movement from the
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corner of my eye. \emph{Ah}, I thought. \emph{Timing's about right I
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suppose}. A dark-haired young woman hastily made her way up the ramp,
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the skeletal hand she wore as a pin revealing her rank among the
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phalanges, and with a relieved expression pressed a steaming mug of
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herbal tea into my hands.
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``Just in time,'' I smiled as she bowed. ``Thank you.''
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The Grey Pilgrim cast me a look that did not know whether it wanted to
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be impressed or disbelieving.
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``Always one step ahead, Tariq,'' I lied, and sipped at my tea.
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---
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The dead had begun massing in significant numbers halfway past Morning
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Bell.
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Skirmishes had kept happening along our defence lines -- mostly the Boot
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and the palisade so far -- even as I sat in on a meeting of the Second
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Army's general staff, letting the well-oiled machinery that General Hune
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had turned them into go through the necessary motions. The Second was my
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force that'd stayed closest to the original mould of the Legions of
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Terror, both because of Hune's personal leanings and because a lot of
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its high officers \emph{were} originally from the Legions of Terror. And
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not the Fifteenth, which had come up with me, but those legions that'd
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joined me after the Folly. The rank and file were much like that of
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other hosts in my service, a backbone of legionaries bolstered by larger
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numbers of Callowan recruits, but the culture among the officers here
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was still very much that of the Legions. It was at once familiar and
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discomforting, like seeing an old friend in a nephew's face.
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Indrani helped me put my armour on, something that still felt
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half-wrong. I'd likely never return two wearing full plate, much as I
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occasionally wished I could, but I'd managed to strike a balance between
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protection on compromise. Over an aketon I kept to a cuirass and upper
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vambraces, with a long tasset and a pair of good greaves. An open-face
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barbute with slightly gilding evoking a crown over my brow finished the
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set, without even a gorget to link the breastplate and the helm. Any
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more weight than what I wore and my limp would start becoming a
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hindrance. The Mantle of Woe closed over my shoulders, hood down and
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with an affectionate kiss on the side of the neck Archer left me to my
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duties while departing for hers.
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A bare hour before Morning Bell, under bleary morning light, the dead
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began their advance. I'd drifted towards the miraculous wall built by my
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sappers on the shores of the Boot so that I might have a better look at
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the enemy's offensive, and the walkway there did not disappoint.
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Wherever the water was low and mud shallow, skeletons in arms could be
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glimpsed marching through the mire. Where the bottom was deeper
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sometimes all that could be seen was the tip of spears and helms,
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dragged forward against the muck. The attack came in three prongs, I saw
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the advance continued. The largest of the forces was coming for the
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Boot, straight at us, but another was headed south towards the palisade.
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The third looked ready to skim the `sole' of the Boot so it could dip
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down into the shallows between the peninsula and the northern shoreline,
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which had me grimacing. Our fort there was finished but I'd been hoping
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the roundabout route to there would convince the enemy to focus their
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efforts on the better-defended Boot instead. The enemy general was not
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unskilled, then. Still, I saw no reason to leave my position at the
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moment. With the Pilgrim bolstering the palisade and the Blessed
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Artificer at the fort, or flanks should be solidly anchored for now. It
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was only when the opposition got serious about cracking our defences
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that the real trouble would start.
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``Ma'am, it looks like the enemy's in range of our mages.''
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I glanced at the captain addressing me, a young woman by the name of
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Jules Farrier -- no relation to the man who'd once been the commander of
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my Gallowborne, I'd asked -- and cocked an eyebrow.
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``It's your command, captain,'' I said. ``I'm only here to keep an eye
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on things. The order's yours to give.''
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``Yes ma'am,'' she stiffly replied.
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I left her to it, eyes still on the dead approaching through the swamp.
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Captain Farrier had been right, now that the skeletons were reaching
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swamplands where the depth left their upper body visible it was time for
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the fireballs to begin. All along the baked brick wall that Pickler had
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raised, incantations rose and fire bloomed. It was a work of art, the
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fireball formula that the War College taught. Masego liked to rag on in,
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but he was coming at it from the wrong direction. He saw one spell being
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used for a variety of purposes improperly when he knew a spare formula
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more apt to each purpose, but then he was the Warlock's son. The former
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Apprentice. Even among highborn mages, nine tenths would not get an
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education to equal his. The Legion formula was, on the other hand,
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simple enough that every mage in the service could learn it yet flexible
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enough that it could be adapted to dozens of different situations.
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Fighting skeletons, fire itself was only of limited use. Scorching bone
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and armour accomplished little.
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Yet the formula could be tinkered with so that the fireball grew dense,
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the impact more powerful, and \emph{that} made a dent into the Bones.
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Like a wave of fire the spells went out, smashing into the skeletons and
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splashing into the scum water with hissing vapour. The enemy's advance
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staggered, but we had too few mages and there were too many enemies:
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they could not be stopped like this, only slowed. It was still enough to
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set up a good killing field for our siege engines, our copperstone
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ballistas beginning measured fire into clumps of skeletons. Given how
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many undead we'd be facing before day's end, we couldn't afford to just
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shoot at every shadow.
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It would have been easy to see the casualties mount on the enemy side
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without them even getting close enough to swing at our walls and take it
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as the herald of overwhelming victory. I knew better. For one, it was
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telling that even in such small numbers -- there couldn't be more than
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three thousand divided between the three offensive -- we couldn't
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outright dam the tide. More and more skeletons were slipping through our
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fire with every heartbeat, coming ever closer to the walls. But beyond
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that I knew well that in war there were precious few absolute
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advantages, mostly comparative ones. Our advantage here and now, the
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walls and the terrain and the preparations, they weren't something to
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sneer at.
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But they were needed to make up for the overwhelming numbers and
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tirelessness of our enemy in the first place, to make this battle more
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than a ceremonious suicide, so those initial beats of the battle when
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our advantages came into play and the enemy's hadn't weren't to be
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counted on. This was going to get ugly when the bolts ran out, when the
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magics fizzled and my people were exhausted from hours of hard fighting.
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Anything before that was just our attempt to inflict enough damage on
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the enemy we got to survive the hard part. By either luck or fate, the
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first skeleton to make it to the bottom of our wall started scaling it
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not even a foot to my left. Liming to the edge of the rampart, I pointed
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my staff downwards and offered a rueful smile.
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``Bad luck,'' I told it, and let loose with Night.
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---
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It was mostly luck that I was in the fort when the attack hit.
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The fighting at the walls had remained steady but the peril was not
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great: between the concentration of mages and the rotations of fresh
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soldiers, we were keeping the dead at bay handily. I'd gotten a report
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that it'd been trickier at the palisade, but between a company of
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heavies being brought out and the Grey Pilgrim intervening they'd kept
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it under control. The assault from the shallows had been comparatively
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easier, the numbers of the attackers having been thinned by fire from
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the Boot before they got there. It was the sole front where I'd never
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gone, though, so I'd elected to have a look. More for morale purposes
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than because the fight needed me, but morale would count for quite a bit
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in the coming hours.
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The fort itself was of classical Legion layout, square with a forward
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palisade and a bastion deeper in. Gates on four sides so that
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legionaries could quickly deploy and in our case two smaller barricades
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had been added on the sides so that scorpions could be raised on heights
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and pointed at the shallows. There was some fighting on the shores when
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I stepped out of a gate within the fort, but nothing all that
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threatening -- the dead were just keeping up the pressure by tossing
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corpses at our shield wall defending the shore. The Blessed Artificer
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had stepped in to bring down a great lighting strike of Light at enemy
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mages, but not involved herself since. I could only approve, given the
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finite nature of what she could contribute to a fight, and told her as
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much.
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``It seems callous not to use all that I can,'' Adanna of Smyrna
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admitted. ``There have been deaths, and some of these I might have
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prevented.''
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My opinion of her character went up a notch.
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``They know the risks of their trade,'' I replied, not hiding my pride.
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``They're Army of Callow, they understand sometimes you have to bleed
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early to win the fight.''
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The dark-skinned heroine looked unconvinced, but not even her remarkable
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amount of gall would allow her to argue with a queen about her own
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soldiers.
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``If you sa-``
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Her answer was interrupted by crashes and shouts coming from the
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shoreline, both out heads whipping about. I couldn't see it all from
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where I stood, even with the front gates open, but I could see that some
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sort of large snake construct had just emerged from the shallows and was
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now unhinging its jaw.
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``Later,'' I cut in, already limping forward.
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Legionaries parted for me as I made my way out of the fort, even when
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they were hurrying out as reinforcements, and I hastened to take a
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better look. I cursed in Kharsum. A new kind of construct, by the looks
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of it: much smaller than the great snakes used in the sieges of
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Twilight's Pass, but built along the same lines. More a carrier of
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troops and battering ram than anything else, but no less dangerous for
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it. Half a dozen had hit the beaches simultaneously and were now pouring
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out skeletons into the gaps of my shield wall. \emph{These were made for
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the swamps of Hainaut}, I thought. An answer to both the difficulties of
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the terrain and our growing advantage at range. We hadn't been the only
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ones to prepare for this campaign.
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``Hazaak,'' the Blessed Artificer snarled, raising a short copper spear.
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She'd caught up to me without my even noticing. Not to be outdone, I
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drew deep on Night even as Light bloomed around the short spear. Where
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the Artificer struck with burning might, a great crackling spear of
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roiling Light falling on one of the snakes, I instead took a more
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measured approach: shadows slithered along the ground and suddenly
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thrust up, threading through the open maws of three of the constructs
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and forcefully snapping them shut.
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``Priests, on the three bound,'' I calmly said, pitching my voice so
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it'd be heard.
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The House Insurgent dutifully obeyed, Light begin to tear at the
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wiggling great snakes in sharp spears even as Adanna reached for another
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of her instruments. I began to shape a great ball of blackflame so ram
|
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down the maw of one of the remaining snakes when I caught sight of
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flicker of movement to my left. Instinct had me redirecting my fire
|
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there and I caught the Revenant in the stomach, scorching its thin frame
|
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as it stumbled on the ground. It looked like any other Bone, little more
|
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than a corpse in ancient armour, but none of those would have withstood
|
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the quantity of blackflame I'd just tossed at it.
|
|
|
|
``Revenant,'' I noted. ``Won't be the only one.''
|
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Already I was weaving a follow-up, threads binding the legs of the down
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Revenant together as I prepared a larger mass of blackflame above its
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body -- which exploded, a curse tearing through them.
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|
``Mantle,'' I snarled, eyes flitting about.
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|
|
I found her in the water, only the upper half of her armoured form above
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the mire. The dull, black plate steel plate set with emeralds and silver
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inscriptions couldn't be confused for anyone else, not the thick green
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cloak whose hood obscured the visor of her helm. Another snake went up
|
|
in a pillar of white flames, the Artificer striking without hesitation,
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|
but during my heartbeat of distraction the Revenant on the ground had
|
|
broken its bonds. With surprising fluidity it struck out at the heroine,
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shortsword arcing for her neck, but my hand was steady and my aim true
|
|
-- my own blade caught it in time, an inch from biting into Adanna's
|
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unprotected flesh.
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|
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Gods, would it kill the woman to wear some fucking armour?
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|
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|
``I will take the fallen priestess,'' the Blessed Artificer mildly said.
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``I take offence the use her powers have found.''
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|
``Be my guest,'' I grinned. ``I'll handle our little friend here.''
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|
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|
The Revenant withdrew its blade and took a step back, but it'd forgotten
|
|
this wasn't a duel and it was behind my godsdamned lines: two big orc
|
|
heavies smashed into its back with their greatshields, making it
|
|
stumble, and I took the opening. I struck high and in a heavy chop,
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|
which it caught with its blade and deftly slid so my momentum dragged me
|
|
into its guard, but before it could rotate its wrist and disarm me my
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|
deadwood staff smashed into the side of its head. Though beyond paid it
|
|
still stumbled, and with a grunt I drew back my blade to strike again --
|
|
weaving Night along the length. With a clean cut I sent its helmeted
|
|
head rolling, even as Adanna was wreathed with blinding light.
|
|
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|
I shielded my eyes with my hood, offering a grin to the two heavies
|
|
that'd come to help.
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|
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|
``This one counts as half-yours,'' I told them. ``Tell your lieutenant
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|
you're up for commendation.''
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|
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|
Both grinned back like big ugly green cats, returning enthusiastic calls
|
|
of \emph{Warlord}, but even as I bumped shoulders against them in a
|
|
friendly manner I was already taking in the few bits of fighting I'd
|
|
missed. Mantle had ripped up my working on the snakes, though I'd been
|
|
too distracted to noticed, but the fight with the Artificer wasn't going
|
|
well for her at all. She'd already been forced to pull out a globe of
|
|
smooth, mirror-like darkness I'd only ever seen her use when hard
|
|
pressed. Meanwhile, between the Artificer and the House Insurgent there
|
|
were only to great snakes left and the mages were focusing their efforts
|
|
on plugging the breaches so that the heavies could fill them. With a
|
|
triumphant cry Adanna crushed a glass baton in her fist and a rain of
|
|
Light spears fell on the globe of darkness, shattering it with a keening
|
|
scream. Under it there was no trace of Mantle, who must have legged it
|
|
when the attack began going south.
|
|
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|
I glanced at the Blessed Artificer appreciatively.
|
|
|
|
``You're definitely worth keeping around,'' I said. ``She's a tricky
|
|
opponent, for me.''
|
|
|
|
Adanna of Smyrna straightened proudly.
|
|
|
|
``It is my duty to-``
|
|
|
|
In the distance, to the south, a few gouts of red went up. Signal
|
|
spells, asking for reinforcements. \emph{Shit}, \emph{they must have hit
|
|
the palisade as well.}
|
|
|
|
``Later,'' I amusedly told the Artificer, opening a gate and stepping
|
|
through it.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The first thing I heard stepping out of the Twilight Ways had an
|
|
involuntary shiver going up my spine.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Shine},'' the Grey Pilgrim coldly said.
|
|
|
|
I shielded my eyes with the flat of by blade, but not quite quickly
|
|
enough the terrifyingly bright light I glimpsed did not blind me. I
|
|
cursed, head ringing and eyes burning, and almost stumbled into a
|
|
soldier. I must have come out near a formation. It was too long for
|
|
comfort before I could see again, but when I did what my restored vision
|
|
showed was a mixed bag. On one hand, there was a gaping hole in the
|
|
palisade about ten feet wide. Broken logs had been brought forward to
|
|
plug it, but the undead were trying to push through the opening and only
|
|
narrowly being held back by a hasty shield wall. On the other hand, the
|
|
smoking skeleton at Tariq's feet that was still holding a familiar
|
|
claymore could not be anything but the Drake.
|
|
|
|
It looked like getting a blast of the Peregrine's most powerful aspect
|
|
from up close was too much for even that monster's regeneration to take,
|
|
because while some specks of flesh were reappearing on the bones it was
|
|
nothing more than that.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' Tariq mildly greeted me. ``If you would handle the
|
|
breach, I am not yet finished with this one.''
|
|
|
|
``Hey, I'm not one to argue with a smoking corpse,'' I shrugged as I
|
|
began to gather Night. ``Do as you will.''
|
|
|
|
I was in no way inclined to keep to subtle means when dealing with an
|
|
outright breach, so this time I simply began to gather a few dozen great
|
|
balls of blackflame above the undead trying to mash through my shield
|
|
wall. Impatiently I struck at the ground with my staff, the balls
|
|
smashing downwards and exploding in great gouts of black fire.
|
|
Immediately the pressure slackened and my soldiers pushed the enemy
|
|
back, enough that sappers were able to bring out panels and began
|
|
repairing the breach. I tossed another great gout of fire at the dead to
|
|
push them back in the water long enough for the holes to be plugged,
|
|
then let the captains in charge to handle the rest. I glanced at Tariq,
|
|
who'd nailed the remains of the Drake to the ground with nails of Light
|
|
and was now opening a gate into the Twilight Ways beneath him. That
|
|
might actually do the trick, I mentally conceded. A sudden contortion
|
|
had the skeleton's skull snap upwards and something that glinted in the
|
|
light flew. A tooth?
|
|
|
|
I immediately wove Night to catch it, even as Tariq kicked the skeleton
|
|
into Twilight and the bones turned to dust, but someone else beat me to
|
|
it. One of my soldiers, a young man who grinned at his own swift
|
|
reflexes. He twitched, a heartbeat later.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{No},'' I snarled.
|
|
|
|
The soldier smirked at me and winked, then ran for it. I sent a javelin
|
|
of Night into the back of his knee, my soldiers crying out in dismay at
|
|
the sight of one of theirs getting shot in the back. But though the
|
|
soldiers stumbled the shredded flesh grew back in a heartbeat. The
|
|
Pilgrim's beam of Light incinerated armour and muscle alike, but it
|
|
wasn't enough. Still burning with pale flames as he deftly avoided the
|
|
Night harpoon I threw at his back, the reborn Drake threw himself over
|
|
the edge of the palisade and into the mass of undead. I went up the ramp
|
|
and took out my anger on the undead in a storm of black flames, but the
|
|
bastard was in the wind. Again. My fingers clenched around my staff
|
|
until the knuckles went white.
|
|
|
|
My soldiers gave me a wide berth, but Tariq was less wary of the dark
|
|
mood laid bare on my face.
|
|
|
|
``It's not the last of him we'll see today,'' the Grey Pilgrim simply
|
|
said. ``And we know the trick, now.''
|
|
|
|
I made myself breathe out, reaching for calm, and looked up at the sky.
|
|
The sun had risen higher than I'd expected, we must be close to Noon
|
|
Bell by now. Gods, barely noon and the fighting was likely to last until
|
|
dark. Above the Boot, streaks of yellow went up. \emph{Constructs
|
|
sighted}. I squared my shoulders.
|
|
|
|
``Next time,'' I agreed, and opened a gate.
|
|
|
|
As always, there was to be no rest for the wicked.
|