678 lines
30 KiB
TeX
678 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-69-book-draw}{%
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\section{Chapter 69: Book Draw}\label{chapter-69-book-draw}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Courage is not a virtue, is it a bridle forced onto fear.''}
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-- Stygian saying
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\end{quote}
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It was an almost comical sight until the blood sprayed. Hune was at
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least twelve feet tall, and even unarmoured she was massive -- the
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Varlet would not have been able to reach her throat without leaping if
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the ogre hadn't leaned down to strike it. But she had, and the serrated
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dagger opened her throat before I could do more than draw on Night.
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``\emph{No},'' I hissed.
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I struck out furiously, a jet black spit of darkness tossed out in a
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heartbeat, but the Varlet's grey cloak swirled as it slipped behind a
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stumbling Hune smoothly and used her mass for cover. I had to disperse
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my own attack, already moving deeper in, but my general screamed
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hoarsely as the blade bit into her again from behind. Fuck, one poison I
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might have been able to slow but \emph{two}? Past subtlety, I wove hooks
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into the tent's ceiling and ripped the whole thing down on where I
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believed the Varlet to be. Success, at least for a heartbeat -- a shape
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swallowed up by the canvas and wooden frame struggled to get out, even
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as Hune fell to her knees. The ogre rasped out a breath, her limbs
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trembling.
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The slit throat would kill her even if the poison didn't, so I began
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weaving Night into the surrounding flesh to halt the bleeding. Just a
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time-buying measure, but it was a start. General Hune turned burning
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eyes towards the shape cutting its way out of the canvas, and in a
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croaking voice forced out a few words in a tongue I did not know. She
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choked on blood after that, but whatever it was she'd said it\ldots{}
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reverberated. I felt a shiver of power -- not Light, not Night, but
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something\ldots{} older. Deeper. Like cool and dark water from a lake so
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deep its bottom had never known the light of day. Even as the Varlet's
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blade finally cut its way through the canvas the Revenant was brutally
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\emph{smashed} into the ground by some invisible force.
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Bones cracked and the dagger was shattered, but in the moment that
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followed Hune's face paled.
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``Stop that,'' I snarled. ``It'll kill you before I can-``
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Not one to waste time, I laid a hand on her exposed wrist as even when
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she was on her knees her neck was too high for me to reach. I pushed
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Night into her veins, looking for the poisons, and within a breath I'd
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found it. Clenching my teeth, I steadied my stance and grasped the
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substance tight -- I'd have to rip it out, if she was to live. Instead,
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the moment Night touched the poison the substance erupted. It turned
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into some sort of virulent acid, and I withdrew my power with a
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sympathetic scream of pain as I felt the poison hollow her out from the
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inside. I opened my eyes in time to see the tall ogre spasm violently,
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once, and her eyes roll up to show the whites. Like a great tree, she
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toppled forward.
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General Hune was dead before she hit the ground.
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The Varlet, though smashed, was snapping tits limbs back into place and
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crawling out of the pile of canvas. Snarling, I formed a ball of
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blackflame large as a horse and smashed it down onto the Revenant. It
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would keep, at least for a bit. Instead it was my general I limped
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towards, feeling sick in my stomach. I'd killed her, trying to meddle
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with that poison. If I'd held my hand, a healer in sorcery or Light
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might have attended to her instead and\ldots{} \emph{Damn me}, I
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silently swore. \emph{Damn this}. The closest I'd ever come to what I
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was considering was Warlock seeing to Nauk, and that'd gone wrong in
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distressing ways. But it was my hand that'd killed Hune Egelsdottir, in
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the end, and that meant I owed. I drew deep of Night, deeper than was
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wise with a battle still to be fought, and knelt to lay my hand against
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the side of the fallen ogre's neck. The last wisps of life were already
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fading, but the soul would not be far.
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``Rise again,'' I murmured, the power singing in my blood.
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It coursed through the large body, muscles twitching, and rose to snatch
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the soul. I held it, for a moment, and that was enough to draw
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\emph{attention}. Something unspeakably larger than I found my threads
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settling around the soul of Hune, and its disapproval was as a physical
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law. I remembered, dimly, once seeing the ogre kneeling before a bowl on
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a Callowan field. She'd spoken prayers, and the bowl had emptied. I
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withdrew the Night, the backlash still shaking my bones, and bowed my
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head in acknowledgement. My interference here was neither needed nor
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welcome, for wherever it might be that Hune Egelsdottir was headed she
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was in favour.
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Below, for all its horrors, always paid back its dues in full.
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I set aside the torrent of emotions that wold only distract me, eyes
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returning to the Varlet at the exact moment that the grey-cloaked thing
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emerged from my black flames. It was an artefact, that cloak, which
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seemed to have a bit of resistance to everything but brute force. The
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hood was up but in the shadow of it I still glimpsed calm red eyes and
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an ornate half-mask of jet and silver. There was an air of elegance to
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it, and to the Varlet's demeanour as well: it moved like a courtier, if
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a very deadly one. Unfortunately for the Revenant, I was also entirely
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out of patience with its existence. It produce a long curved knife,
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though its stance implied it was about to run for it. Not that it
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mattered.
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``There'll be none of that,'' I coldly said.
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In my hand a golden chalice filled with red sand appeared as I drew out
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an artefact from the Night. I tipped over the sand and the red was
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caught in the breeze, to seemingly no effect. The Varlet stepped back,
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just as the first red gain touched the blackflame.
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``\textbf{Surge}.''
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The black fire roared out, exploding in a column that rose high in the
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sky and swallowing up the Varlet whole. It'd been a warrior's aspect,
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meant to strength a body or a blade temporarily, but the property of
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strengthening had been rather broad in nature. It'd been the better of
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the artefacts I got out of the Revenants slain at Second Lauzon, though
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it was still relatively weak. Still, feeding a stolen aspect into one of
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the most dangerous uses of Night saw me get my due: the aspect that'd
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maintained a bubble of silence containing us ended, and I suddenly heard
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the bustled of hundreds of soldiers converging towards us. I paid them
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little attention, slowly limping forward.
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The Varlet struggled against the flames, trying to slip out, but I made
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them follow. Leaving my sword sheathed, I idly spun my staff and used
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the motion to guide the black flame into a tightly-packed sphere that
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caught the Revenant and lifted it from the ground. I grit my teeth,
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feeding more power into a working I was finding increasingly difficult
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to control -- the aspect had made the fire wilder somehow, more willful
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as much as more powerful. A heartbeat later the sphere was\ldots{}
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snuffed out, suddenly, as the power of an aspect flared and gutted out.
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The cloak fluttered down, but when I threw a javelin of Night at it I
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saw it was empty.
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The Varlet landed in front of me, and I finally got a good look at it.
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Though the corpse was severely burned, there were still a few dark
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tresses of hair and the remains of an elegant doublet in the scorched
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ruin I had made of this one. It struck out with yet another knife --
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straight and thin, a stiletto this time -- but I caught its wrist with
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my free hand. It was stronger, but what did that matter? Before it could
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power through and sink the blade into a junction of my armour near the
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belly, I left my staff to stand and plunged my free hand into his chest.
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The Revenant twitched, freezing, as I went looking for an aspect to rip
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out. Three left, I felt.
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One that was like an ever-shifting fang, another like utter stillness
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and the last\ldots{} a hundred eyes, never blinking? I snatched the
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fang, hand withdrawing to find my fingers clutching a long wyvern's fang
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so thoroughly covered with overlapping runes that there was no trace
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left of the original untouched paleness. \textbf{Harm}, I grasped in the
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same moment I stole it. So long as something drew breath, this aspect
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would birth something capable of killing it. Endless possibilities
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flickered through my mind but the Varlet was already drawing back so I
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simply picked one close to the surface. The fang went back into the
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Revenant's body with a wet squelch.
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It screamed, its ability to impose stillness gone as the poison coating
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the fang destroyed yet another aspect.
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The Revenant flailed at me, which forced me to draw back, and tossed a
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knife so I ducked in a way that painfully pulled at my bad leg. By the
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time my gaze went back up, the Varlet was nowhere in sight. Fuck. If I'd
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been able to choose the aspect I harmed it would have been the eyes,
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they were the obvious pick of the stealth one, but it'd not been that
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discriminating a weapon. I smacked the butt of my staff against the
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ground, Night shivering out as I looked for a trace of the Scourge, but
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I found nothing. I almost snarled, my anger flaring hot. Another loss,
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another one I'd known for years gone and what did I have to show for it?
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I forced myself to breathe out, suddenly aware of the hundreds of
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soldiers looking at me.
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The ranks parted for an officer, a tall dark-skinned woman in her
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forties with a fleshy face and eyes of a tinge that bordered on amber.
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She wore her armour like the veteran that she was, and I gave her a
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jerky nod as she approached.
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``Legate Zola,'' I said, keeping my voice calm.
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``Your Majesty,'' Legate Zola Osei replied, her lightly accented voice
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pleasant to the ear. ``You have avenged our loss.''
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My eyes went to the unmoving form of Hune, toppled down unceremoniously.
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We'd never been friends, she and I, and I'd not been blind to the fact
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that she'd only stayed with me because the ogres wanted someone
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well-placed in the camp of every possible winner of the conflicts in the
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east. But she had been with me for a long time, since the start almost,
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and that\ldots{} mattered. How many of those were left, these days? With
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every battle, there were few less.
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``No,'' I grimly replied, ``I haven't. But by the day's end, perhaps we
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will have given her a fitting pyre.''
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The legate saluted, fist over heart, and to my surprise more than a few
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of the soldiers around us did the same. My voice must have carried
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further than I'd expected.
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``You have seniority among the Second Army's legates, if I recall
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correctly,'' I said.
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``I do,'' Legate Zola quietly replied.
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I closed my eyes, breathed out and centred myself. Grief, however
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complex its nature, could wait until tomorrow.
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``Then you have command, General Zola,'' I said, opening my eyes.
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``Confirm your replacement legate quickly, and have the announcement
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sent to all the appropriate officers.''
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There was no argument. I looked around, and for one dreadful heartbeat I
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recognized no faces. Some were young, some were old, and they came from
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places that spanned half of Calernia's length, but there was not one
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among them that I knew. \emph{I lead an army of strangers}, I thought.
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And no amount of salutes or cheering could obscure that bitter truth. I
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mastered the spasm of unease, forcing myself to move so it would not
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show as much on my face. My eyes drifted down and I caught sight of the
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Varlet's grey cloak, laying abandoned on the ground.
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``Someone take that and throw it into a warded chest,'' I ordered.
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It was sooty and rumpled up, but no broken. If Hierophant found no trap
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woven into its fabric, I might gift it to Indrani so that at least one
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smile came out of this fucking horror of a day. I limped away, feeling
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like screaming. Breathe in, breathe out.
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There was still a battle to win.
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---
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When they came for us again, it was without holding back. There were no
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tactics to speak of, no elegant manoeuvres and clever traps. On the
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other side of the murk stood over forty thousand of the walking dead,
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while the bloodied remains of my ten thousand stood behind walls and
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palisades like rocks awaiting the tide. And to the sound of rippling
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drums, a deep rumble that had my soldiers shivering even when they stood
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behind wards protecting them from the fear-inducing sorcery, the enemy
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began its advance.
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I awaited them on the wall, cold-eyed and patient.
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Through scum water and mud, endless ranks of skeletons marched in silent
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ranks as magic rippled in the distance, Keteran rituals birthing columns
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of billowing black smoke that rose into the sky like pillars trying to
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support the very heavens. The deafening screeches and buzzing of swarms
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filled the stagnant air, clouds of insects so thick they seemed solid
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shifting around cacophonous flocks of dead birds. Vermin scuttled
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through the swamps, rats and other crawling things, a tide that swum and
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skittered around the footsteps of steel-clad dead. Hulking shapes
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stirred out of the water, snakes long as streets and crocodiles large as
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houses, each bearing in their belly more of the hungry dead. Ghouls
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prowled the host in howling packs, passing below great skeletons bearing
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large ladders of black iron, and among it all a single great banner flew
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from an iron mast taller than the tallest of trees: ten silver stars set
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on a deep purple, perfectly circling a pale crown. It looked like the
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Dead King had deemed this battle worth the flying of his banner.
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It was, I would not deny, a fearsome sight. An army like this would have
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been a terrible foe even with twice our numbers, well-rested and behind
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walls of stone. Instead the legionaries of the Second Army stood on
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baked mud and wood, clutched their weapons as they looked at the ripples
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in the water that the dead's approach was enough to cause. The cacophony
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of screeches and buzzing filled the air even as the smoke began to
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obscure the sky, the great pillars forming a ceiling above us. The
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noonday sun fell into shade, and as the hideous drums of Keter sounded
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the shivers settled into the bones of my men. This was not a battle that
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a reasonable woman would ask them to win. They were tired and few and a
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very long way from home.
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Hune Egelsdottir was dead and the army she'd led for years was still
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reeling from the loss.
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As always, Keter's blade had struck true. I looked at them, and now
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behind grim faces I glimpsed the first seeds of defeat. Not yet
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sprouted, but there nonetheless. Their general was dead, and though the
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way of the Legions and the Army after them was to that every officer
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could be smoothly replaced there was still something missing at the
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heart of the Second Army. Hune had led these soldiers from the moment
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there'd been a banner for them to fight under, and that was not a
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shallow bond. If I wanted them to win today, the fire gutting out in
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their bellies had to be lit anew. I sunk deep in the Night and called it
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close to me, let it swim through my veins and thread into my voice so
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that whatever I spoke would carry to every ear.
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Limping, tired, I climbed up to the edge of the rampart and turned to
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face my men.
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``I am told,'' I said, and before the third word was finished not soul
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in the army spoke, ``that there has only ever been one legion in the
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long history of Praes that ever dared to take the cognomen now borne by
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the First Legion: \emph{Invicta}.''
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I smiled meeting the eyes of the soldiers around me.
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``Undefeated, it means,'' I told them. ``It was a heady boast to make
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even when it was conferred in the shadow of the surrender at Laure -- a
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feat the Tower only ever achieved twice, over many years of striving.''
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And not striving gently.
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``Yet that's always the way that it's been: the deed is done, the laurel
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bestowed,'' I said. ``We do not give out a steel avenue before the
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victory has been won. Even in our bragging, we remain humble.''
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I laughed in contempt, and at the sound I saw a subtle current go
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through my men.
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``Today is not such a day.''
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Then went still, and the weight of so many eyes turned on me was almost
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crushing.
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``I already know who you are,'' I said. ``I know it because I knew
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\emph{you}, back when you were a mere two thousand -- half of you
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snatched from gallows, the rest having never reddened your blade.''
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The Fifteenth had tasted of war before it was even fully grown, hadn't
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it? Our roster had still been half empty when we first knew battle.
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``All over the world,'' I said, ``wise lords and clever princesses
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dismissed the thought of you. A bastard legion, they said. A stillborn
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mistake. And then you won at Three Hills.''
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I let silence set in for a moment.
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``Luck, they argued,'' I idly said, then paused. ``So you won at
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Marchford.''
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A battle that'd seemed apocalyptic, long before I'd known the true
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meaning of the word.
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``Again and again they sneered,'' I said, ``and always through the blood
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and mud you rose. Dormer. Liesse -- twice! -- and even the green fields
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of Summer. You broke the back of a dozen princes at the Camps, then
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humbled the other half at the Graveyard.''
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And the First Army had, in time, laid down its arms and left the fronts.
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Not so with the Second: under Hune they had neither withdrawn nor
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flinched no matter what came calling.
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``I have never set an expectation that the Second Army did not
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surpass,'' I told them, meaning every word, ``not across a dozen ruinous
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fields of war. In all things, in all strife, your excellence has
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prevailed.''
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My gaze swept the soldiers assembled before me, that tapestry that made
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up the east of the Whitecaps -- orc, goblin, Praesi and Callowan -- and
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I honestly could not bear to lie to them. To embellish with some
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patriotic turn of phrase, to speak of the good of mankind. Not when they
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had already given so much, and asked so little in return.
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``And the truth is,'' I quietly said, ``I have asked of you more than a
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queen has the right to ask.''
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I gestured towards the swamplands behind us, towards the encroaching
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nightmare.
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``This day, this place, are beyond the duty of your oaths,'' I admitted.
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``You stand halfway across the world, surrounded by death and smoke on
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all sides, after having already won too many wars under my banner. You
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have already paid for peace in blood, and yet here you are again: down
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in the mud, standing alone as horror comes.''
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My fingers clenched around my staff.
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``So I the cognomen I grant you now is not for victory this day,'' I
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said, ``for have you not already won me victories enough? I name you
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\emph{Excellens}, in the old Miezan, to acknowledge what you already
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are: surpassing excellence, a neck that was never made to bend.''
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Indifference would have had a bite, here, but that was not what I saw in
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them. It was\ldots{} hesitation. Uncertainty as to the nature of the
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gift they had been handed, what it meant.
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``I quibble not over this honour,'' I said, ``because it is your due. A
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settling of accounts. I would have been ashamed to keep it back any
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longer.''
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But now that I had ended the matter, ceased using it as a bludgeon to
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get them to fight, I could talk to them without the\ldots{} pretence.
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The insincerity.
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``And freed of this, without right or call, I ask you once more,'' I
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said. ``Fight, and win.''
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My voice rose.
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``Even though the day is dark and the enemy is great, even though all
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the world would call it folly to even try, I still ask you,'' I said.
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``\emph{Fight, and win}.''
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What I saw in their faces then, I did not have a name for. It was not
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pride, but it was not far from it. It was not bitterness, but it was not
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far from it. Maybe it was a little of both, over the years grown
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together like ivy and oak: inseparable.
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``I can give you the word, you know, but it was never mine,'' I told
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them. ``It was always yours, and in the end the only people who can
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decide what it means will be you. Now, for good or ill, is the moment
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where that decision will be made.''
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In the distance, behind me, I felt the ground tremble under the drums of
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Keter. Silence and a sea of faces beheld me.
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``So what,'' I softly asked, ``will it be?''
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The silence stayed. I breathed out, slowly. It had been all I had to
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give, save for strength of arms, and that they already had of me. I
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watched them, and my eye caught sight of a pair of tall orcs. Heavies,
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in dirtied armour. I'd seen them before, I thought, when fighting on the
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shore. One of them met my eyes, dark to brown, and struck his sword
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against his shield. It rang out, somehow piercing the cacophony of
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horror marching against us. It sounded, I thought, like a plea. The
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answer came further down the line, from another face I recognized -- a
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Taghreb soldier I'd once joked with on the march, who had promised his
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wife a house in Keter. The sword went against the shield, ringing out
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again. It was a fair-haired girl, after, the Liessen looks writ strong
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in her face.
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And the sound rose, one sword at a time.
|
|
|
|
With it the answer to my question came. \emph{Fight,} the Second Army
|
|
said. \emph{Fight,} the Second Army screamed. \emph{Fight}, the Second
|
|
Army thundered, until the very air shook with it.
|
|
|
|
``Once more,'' I quietly said, as the clamour washed over me and drove
|
|
back even Keter's screeching for a heartbeat. ``Once more.''
|
|
|
|
And I would ask again, I knew that just as they did. And perhaps that on
|
|
day they would refuse me at last. But today, they would fight.
|
|
|
|
With the song of ballistas unleashing death, it began.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was all screams and blood and steel. After a while, I could barely
|
|
tell the difference between one fight and another. I stood ankle-high in
|
|
mud, sword in hand and hoarsely shouting as a tide of vermin and ghouls
|
|
crawled through the muck and toppled the tight ranks of a shield wall.
|
|
|
|
``Hold,'' I shouted, staff scattering black flame among the mass.
|
|
``\emph{Hold}.''
|
|
|
|
They held and they died, unflinching, until the Blessed Artificer
|
|
scoured herself raw unleashing a cage of Light that bought us a
|
|
reprieve. The cloudy sky -- black smoke had swallowed it all up like a
|
|
hungry maw -- lit up in the distance with red, a warning of danger, and
|
|
I ripped myself clear of the muck to limp away.
|
|
|
|
Gate.
|
|
|
|
The palisade exploded in a shower of shards, wards shattered as
|
|
skeletons poured through the gap and our mages desperately struggles to
|
|
bind fresh wardstones. I charged into the stream of dead, a line of
|
|
heavies following me as we desperately scrabbled with steel and Night to
|
|
plug the breach long enough for the Pilgrim's light to incinerate the
|
|
lizard abomination climbing the wall and a volley of fireballs to buy us
|
|
just long enough for the sappers to bring down logs in the way.
|
|
|
|
``Half a cadence,'' I exhorted. ``That's all we need to buy them.''
|
|
|
|
My sword bit into flesh, a ghouls drawing back with an ugly shriek, but
|
|
a javelin went through the eye of the sergeant to my left and two more
|
|
were butchered by blades after skeletons entangled them. Through the
|
|
hole in our wards, a deafening swarm of insects began to pour through. I
|
|
screamed, tossing a ball of blackflame into them, and Tariq deftly leapt
|
|
atop a falling log. Light poured out of him in waves as he broke the
|
|
dead beyond the breach and our wards came back on, cutting off the
|
|
swarm.
|
|
|
|
The threat had passed. I was needed elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
Gate.
|
|
|
|
Even burning, the snake allowed dead to charge up to the summit of the
|
|
wall. A massive undead crocodile's jaw ripped at the baked mud, bricks
|
|
flying every which way, but an arrow hit right between its eyes -- an
|
|
unraveller, too long to be a mortal archer's work -- and it dropped
|
|
lifelessly. I kicked the Bone back down the wall, letting it drop onto
|
|
another skeleton trying to climb out of the muck, and swept the bottom
|
|
of the bricks with blackflame.
|
|
|
|
``Priests concentrate on the ramp,'' I screamed. ``We need to keep them
|
|
below.''
|
|
|
|
Light came in streams, scything through the skeletons trying to claim a
|
|
beachhead atop the wall, and when a massive bird made of ghostly blue
|
|
sorcery struck at the burning snake construct the entire damned thing
|
|
collapsed as the magical construct exploded.
|
|
|
|
``Summoner, there you were,'' I laughed. ``\emph{Good man}. We sweep the
|
|
top, no holds barred.''
|
|
|
|
With power and steel we scattered the enemy, and the moment the crisis
|
|
was averted-
|
|
|
|
Gate.
|
|
|
|
``Keep them in the funnel,'' I screamed.
|
|
|
|
The hole in our wards at the centre of the camp was made to look like a
|
|
great black whirlwind, for it had filled with black smoke and screeching
|
|
birds. Our mages were fighting back the attack, some sort of devouring
|
|
spell, but birds were still slipping through. A pack of a dozen slipped
|
|
out of the roiling smoke, headed towards us, but hellfire lashed out in
|
|
a cloud of brimstone and Hierophant disappeared them with a slash of his
|
|
hand.
|
|
|
|
``It is the smoke,'' Masego shouted back over the din. ``It hides the
|
|
ward-breaking formula, prevents us from attacking it.''
|
|
|
|
``I have this,'' the Apprentice claimed, eyes hard as she incanted in a
|
|
resounding voice.
|
|
|
|
From her hands glimmering red light poured out, crossing into the black
|
|
whirlwind and becoming part of it. She kept up the spell, the red glow
|
|
lending a hellish tint to the Enemy's work but also revealing all the
|
|
secrets held within.
|
|
|
|
``Superb,'' Masego praised her with a grin, glass eyes glinting so
|
|
warmly it singed the edges of the eyecloth. ``And now that your work is
|
|
revealed, Trismegistus, all that awaits is \textbf{Ruin}.''
|
|
|
|
The aspect rippled out, tearing through a spell only he could see, and
|
|
suddenly the hole filled up. The birds were instantly incinerated, but
|
|
the smoke stayed -- I'd already seen men dying in agony after inhaling
|
|
it, so with a working of Night I sucked it all into a great ball and
|
|
passed it off to Masego.
|
|
|
|
``Do what you will with it,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Gate.
|
|
|
|
Iron ladders dug into the walls of the fort, skeletons swarming the top
|
|
of them, and even as my staff slammed into one's side and dropped it
|
|
below I saw one of the scorpion nests get overwhelmed -- goblins killed,
|
|
engines smashed. The Artificer had taken a wound driving back the Drake,
|
|
and I was getting tired: we were taking back the fort, but the
|
|
shore\ldots{} Three long calls of the horn sounded, and with disbelief I
|
|
heard the hooves of the Order of the Broken Bells as they
|
|
counter-charged the dead pouring out of the shallows.
|
|
|
|
``With me,'' I shouted, gesturing at the closest line. ``Those ladders
|
|
are ours.''
|
|
|
|
The dead fought hard to keep us away from the iron ladders, and one of
|
|
those great skeletons nearly mad me fall off the wall before Adanna
|
|
carved it in two, but between the two of us and the honest muscle of my
|
|
soldiers we trashed all four of the damned things. Below us the Order of
|
|
the Broken Bells withdrew as reinforcements for the mauled shield wall
|
|
on the beach began to pour out of the fort, but with the knights here
|
|
the danger had ebbed low.
|
|
|
|
Gate.
|
|
|
|
No, \emph{gates}.
|
|
|
|
I'd not been the one to open them this time. There must have been almost
|
|
a hundred, all large and stable even through Keteran counter-rituals.
|
|
The pharos device had been used, I realized, likely at Hu- General
|
|
Zola's order. Or maybe Adjutant's. Neither would have pulled the trigger
|
|
early, though. Gods, we must have fought for so long delaying any longer
|
|
would have exposed us to the risk of fighting the third wave as well.
|
|
Yet we were still hard-pressed by the enemy on all sides, I saw and
|
|
retreat would be\ldots{} costly. Maybe if they were coming at us
|
|
mindlessly, but they had enough Binds to keep them clever enough that
|
|
they'd do more than mindlessly rush the positions we'd prepared to
|
|
enable our retreat. I cursed. This was going to get\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
The low strum of a cithern went through all of us, as if played straight
|
|
into our ear. The dead, for a heartbeat, froze. They began to move
|
|
again, and did not cease even when the melody began in earnest. It was I
|
|
who froze, though when the singing began.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"Long have I walked the shore*
|
|
*Known ruin, drunk bitter wine*
|
|
*Brewed in dying light of yore*
|
|
*Before triumph did resign."*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
I had expected the Rapacious Troubadour to sign, but it was a woman's
|
|
voice. One I knew well. And it angered me, just a little, that Akua
|
|
Sahelian was apparently just as good at singing as she was at damn near
|
|
everything. It passed, though, as much because of the gentle sadness of
|
|
the song as what it was accomplishing. I could see it already, though
|
|
the detail might have been hard to pick out for some.
|
|
|
|
Not a single Bind was moving.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"In shaded Wolof I knew*
|
|
*Rest beneath the sycamore*
|
|
*Yet as the western wind blew*
|
|
*My heart cried out for more."*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The orders came down, by my hand and that of others. We would not waste
|
|
the opportunity: full retreat into the Twilight Ways began.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
"*Born grieving, I will die*
|
|
*Holding naught in my hand*
|
|
*So why not reach out and*
|
|
*Pluck stars from the sky?"*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
Stand by stand we began our retreat, funneling the dead into killing
|
|
zones as the House Insurgent unleashed Light and we drew back to one
|
|
holdfast after another. Already our supply train was passing through the
|
|
gates, we only needed to last a little longer\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"I have known kings, petty men*
|
|
*Of pettier kingdoms still*
|
|
*Clutching tight their stolen wen*
|
|
*Using them up to their fill*
|
|
|
|
*And the poets weep, when did*
|
|
*We become a people ruled?*
|
|
*The empire folly undid*
|
|
*Was raised by people subdued*
|
|
|
|
*Born grieving, I will die*
|
|
*Holding naught in my hand*
|
|
*So why not reach out and*
|
|
*Pluck the stars from the sky?"*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The shores were empty, the palisade and fort abandoned and what engines
|
|
had gone unsmashed being dragged through the gates. The Order would go
|
|
through next, leaving behind an ever-narrowing square of infantry.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"So let me dance with ghosts*,
|
|
*Beautiful, hungry devils*
|
|
*Let me face great hosts*
|
|
*In dark and bloody revels*
|
|
|
|
*I will tread the isle blesse*d
|
|
*I will burn the fields of red*
|
|
*And should arrant come the west*
|
|
*The river will be fed*
|
|
|
|
*Born grieving, I will die*
|
|
*Holding naught in my hand*
|
|
*So why not reach out and*
|
|
*Pluck the stars from the sky?"*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The fighting grew increasingly furious, the dead rushing at us in blind
|
|
waves as our last redoubts wavered. But they were almost done, we could
|
|
see the light in the horizon: the endless ranks of skeletons had ended,
|
|
ground into nothing by the unflinching valour of the Second Army. And we
|
|
retreated inch by inch, back to the gates as the Doom of Liesse sweetly
|
|
sang.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"I have shared a bed with doom*
|
|
*Danced with death as a lover*
|
|
*Long have I dreamt of my tomb,*
|
|
*And no dream lasts forever*
|
|
|
|
*But now that the night has come*
|
|
*I raise my hand to the sky*
|
|
*And one last time I succumb*
|
|
*To that old, beloved cry*
|
|
|
|
*Born grieving, I will die*
|
|
*Holding naught in my hand*
|
|
*So why not reach out and*
|
|
*Pluck the stars from the sky?"*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The last gate closed behind the last living soldier, and so ended the
|
|
Battle of Maillac's Boot.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
*"So why not reach out and*
|
|
*Pluck the stars from the sky?"*
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|