705 lines
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705 lines
35 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-kingdom}{%
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\section{Interlude: Kingdom}\label{interlude-kingdom}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Fifty-seven: the greatest of powers is not an enchanted sword or
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cataclysmic spell, it is simply to be in the right place at precisely
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the right time.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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The Black Queen's own favourite trick had been turned against the Fourth
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Army, and the results were a bloody ruin.
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At least two thousand dead in less time than it took to boil a cup of
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water, that much again in wounded and even worse: siege engines, as well
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as the sappers who manned and built them, had been pulped by the great
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sheets of waters that had fell like a wave of stone from the Heavens.
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The Dead King's sorceries had been aimed foremost at the positions above
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the rebuilt gates of Hainaut, the siege platforms Sapper-General Pickler
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had ordered built before the enemy came, and there was not a soul left
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alive there. The results of that were immediately disastrous, for though
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the Fourth Army was hastening to reinforce the lost grounds the enemy
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had not missed the opening: beorns were already there and emptying their
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bellyfuls of soldiers, as great snakes of dead flesh bit into the wet
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stone and opened their maws to make themselves into siege ladders.
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Worse, a pair of wyrms had landed atop the siege platforms and was
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terrorizing the attempted reinforcements. They monstrous dragons of
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flesh and bones, magnificent examples of what the greatest necromancer
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to ever live could achieve at the peak of his skill, were shrugging off
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Light and sorcery alike. It would take concentrated volleys of either to
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drive them back, and the Fourth was still on the backfoot: with so many
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officers dead, it was struggling to move priests and mages where they
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needed to be. It was a miracle, General Zola Osei thought, that the
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Fourth Army hadn't outright routed. Nearly every other army on Calernia
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would have, after seeing nearly half its number killed or wounded in so
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short a span. But the soldiers, first hardened on the grounds of Arcadia
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and then against the horrors of the Folly, held.
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For now, at least. How long would that last? General Zola Osei of the
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Second Army of Callow let the urge to wince pass through her, refusing
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to indulge, for it would not do to show weakness to her staff when
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disaster loomed so tall. She set down the Baalite eye, choosing her
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words carefully as her staff tribune and senior mage awaited her
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opinion.
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``If we do not immediately reinforce, the gate is lost,'' General Zola
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said.
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``If fully commit, we risk losing the gate anyway and being swept away
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entirely in its wake,'' Staff Tribune Adnan frankly said. ``I would
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argue in favour of ordering the Fourth to retreat while we fortify the
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entrance to the city and prepare for battle there.''
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``Should the Dead King hold the gate, the city's wards are at risk of
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collapsing entirely,'' Senior Mage Jendayi replied, shaking her head.
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``I won't pretend that it will not be bloody to take back the gate, but
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even on purely tactical grounds it is the superior decision.''
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They were disagreeing, Zola considered, because they were starting from
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entirely different premises even if neither had stated as much: Adnan
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considered this battle lost, and was now looking to mitigate, while
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Jendayi still believed victory achievable and so was willing to spend
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lives to reach that end. General Zola herself was not yet certain which
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way she leaned, though she was aware a decision needed to be made
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urgently. Already she had sent her two senior legates to prepare the
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grounds behind the city gates in case of a breach but now she either
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needed to send companies into the stairs leading up to the siege
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platforms, which the dead were certain to turn into a meat grinder of
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brutal proportions, or send messengers to the Fourth before it
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overcommitted. And the truth was that, even beyond tactical
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considerations, Zola was not certain if the Second had the stomach for
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the kind of fight taking the gates back would mean. Not since Maillac's
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Boot.
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The general had always admired the Black Queen's almost alchemical knack
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for transmuting battles into loyalty, but the Boot had left scars in the
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Second. Losing General Hune had been a blow, even for Zola herself, but
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the casualties taken that day\ldots{} Many still had nightmares of the
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hordes that never ceased coming, of the things crawling out of the much
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and in those dreams the gates into Twilight always closed too early. If
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Her Majesty had been there with them, perhaps, but now? The rumours had
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spread. The Black Queen was wounded, unconscious, and now her armies
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were wavering. Catherine Foundling had never been defeated on the field,
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but that legend did not apply to the Army of Callow when it stood
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without her. \emph{If I don't give the order to take back the gate},
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General Zola thought with cold clarity, \emph{then I have declared this
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battle a defeat. It will not be possible to win, afterwards.}
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Before she could speak, however, she caught sight of strange movement
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atop the gates. An eddy in the flow of the dead. Zola's grandmother had
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been a Mosa, and though the blood had since thinned she could still
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perceive motion uncannily well even in the dark. She pressed the Baalite
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eye against her face again, the enchantment lending her better sight
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through the dark, and started in surprise.
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``General?'' her staff tribune worriedly asked.
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``Mad,'' Zola Osei softly said. ``Utterly mad.''
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Goblins, it was goblins. At least a cohort's worth of them, maybe more,
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but it was not a battle they had come from. Zola saw as they climbed
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atop the great necromantic constructs -- the beorns and the snakes and
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even one of the wyrms -- as lesser dead clumsily tried to pursue. Nimble
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and utterly fearless the sappers, for those bags they bore could not be
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mistaken, spread out and every heartbeat a few more of them died from
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being shaken off monsters or caught by undead. And still they went,
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until a horn was sounded and like candles in the darks the monsters lit
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up. One after the other, matches struck and devices triggered as jets of
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green flames burst and Keter's great beasts screamed.
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Robber's Marauders were not a legend without reason.
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``We go forward,'' General Zola Osei said, throat tightening. ``The
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Second will take back the gate.''
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The Army of Callow had not yet bent the knee to even odds overwhelming.
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It would not break that custom on her watch.
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---
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Like most great catastrophes, Adjutant thought, it had not been neatly
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done. The Grey Basin -- le Bassin Gris, to the locals -- had occupied
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maybe a fourth of surface of the plateau on which the city of Hainaut
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had been built, an uneven oval that began south where it ended on a
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waterfall over the edge and went up the middle of the capital until it
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ended at the beginning of the great district facing the city gates. The
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basin had been a major boon to the city, for both sanitation and
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drinking water purposes, and it'd been kept full by both underground
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aquifers in the rock below and regular rainfall. It was also, as of a
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half hour ago, entirely \emph{gone}.
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It had been expected that the undead would dig under the city, for it
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was one of Keter's favourite tactics and one of the few weaknesses of
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the city-fortress, and the Firstborn had been the natural answer to such
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an assault. They too were familiar with fighting underground, Night was
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well suited to such skirmishes and unlike humans they could see
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perfectly in the dark. And as far as Hakram could tell, when the dead
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had finally dug their way up into the city the fight had gone
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overwhelmingly in the favour of the drow. On all fronts they'd either
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held or outright beaten back the dead, in some cases even
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counterattacking deep below where the dead were massing for their
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offensive. And then it had all gone horribly wrong, somehow.
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Sve Noc had been caught in a trap, of which the nature and purpose was
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still unclear, and it seemed that to free themselves from it the Crows
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had made sacrifices. Swaths of dzulu had suddenly fallen unconscious,
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and even Mighty had seen their powers suddenly falter. Worse, the angry
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throes of the goddesses had shattered the bottom of the Grey Basin and
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the water had poured into the tunnels dug by Keter. They too had broken,
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in some places too fragile, and it had begun a disastrous chain of
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collapses that'd essentially hollowed out the heart of the city. Now
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where the Grey Basin had once stood there was a sheer drop of a at least
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a hundred feet instead, with massive rubble and the corpses of both drow
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and broken undead strewn everywhere.
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``Hard to tell how many died,'' Secretary Amelia said. ``The Firstborn
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are shit at coordinating with other forces, they never told us how many
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they sent down into the tunnels.''
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``Concentrate on finding the Losara,'' Hakram said, leaning on his
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crutches. ``They are most likely to have numbers for us.''
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``The curves of the cliff seems to curve inwards,'' Secretary Prattler
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noted, crouching at the edge with an interested look. ``Dangerous. The
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plateau's structure became unstable.''
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``And the tunnels?'' Hakram asked.
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``They didn't go anywhere,'' Prattler, once a lieutenant in the sappers,
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replied. ``If the dead climb the side of the drop, they'll be able to
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access them and enter the city by other paths than the edge. We need to
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close them as soon as possible.''
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``Send word to the sappers,'' Adjutant ordered. ``Save for the situation
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at the gates, this is the highest priority.''
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``Won't be many left of us, but I'll see what I can do,'' Secretary
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Prattler saluted.
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The reports from his phalanges were increasingly staggered, but the flow
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had not yet been impeded. The difficulty at the moment was keeping the
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Alliance high command informed, and Vivienne in particular.
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Irritatingly, the situation with the Firstborn remained unclear. The
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nature of the consequences of what had happened save for a fourth of the
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plateau shattering were still to be determined. Night had weakened,
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observably, but was that it? Answers came when his picket informed him
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that Masego and the Pilgrim had strolled out of the dark, that overly
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ambitious creature Ivah with them. Hierophant looked invigorated, the
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Pilgrim wearied, and neither wasted time on niceties as the `Lord of
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Silent Steps' stood in the distance and seemingly entranced.
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``The Dead King laid a trap for Sve Noc in a cavern below the city,''
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Hierophant said. ``And through the sister he captured, he attempted to
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siphon the Night.''
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Hakram's jaw tightened. That would have been too disastrous for words.
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``Did he succeed?''
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Hierophant shook his head.
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``I was invited to use one of my aspects onto the Night through one of
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the sisters,'' Masego said. ``What Trimegistus seized, I ruined.''
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``Along with most of the Night itself,'' the Peregrine quietly added.
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``The Crows hid away a portion of their power in a mortal receptable
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beforehand, but most of the Night itself was unmade.''
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``It was a measured action,'' Hierophant calmly said. ``It will have hit
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dzulu the worst, as they had reserves of Night but none of the
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protections of the Mighty. Nisi will have gone entirely unharmed.''
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``And Mighty?'' Hakram asked, licking his chops.
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``Weakened,'' the Pilgrim said. ``Significantly so.''
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Then the Gloom that defended Serolen was likely gone as well, Adjutant
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thought. Dark news.
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``When will the Sisters return to the field?'' he asked.
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``That is why we are here,'' the Pilgrim admitted. ``You are, as always,
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the man who can find the needle in the haystack. The Sisters cannot
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reclaim their power, Hierophant tells me, until their imprisoned half is
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freed. Else we risk simply resuming the disaster on a smaller scale.''
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Hakram blinked.
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``One of them's still trapped?'' he flatly said.
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``Yes,'' Masego said. ``The ritual was quite comprehensive, though I
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expect it was primarily meant for a godhead shard and not the possession
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the net caught. It allowed the halves of Sve Noc to keep
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communicating.''
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``It is,'' the Grey Pilgrim said with grim face, ``still down there.''
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He pointed down below, into the field of soaked rubble, and for a moment
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Adjutant's mind went blank. Saving someone down there? Impossible. Not,
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he adjusted, merely impractical. Which meant\ldots{} mhm, perhaps he
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would be able to \textbf{Find} a solution after all.
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---
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``The Second Army has engaged at the gates,'' General Bagram grimly
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announced. ``It is gaining steadily, but there is no telling the outcome
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of the engagement.''
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``And your Fourth?'' Prince Klaus Papenheim asked.
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``We've stabilized the flanks and are focusing on evacuating the
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wounded,'' the orc replied. ``The situation is stable.''
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Vivienne let out a long breath and spoke the truth no one else seemed to
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want to.
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``It has been confirmed that the Grey Legion is approaching the gates,
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the defences of which are still in enemy hands,'' she flatly said. ``I
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am the least seasoned military leader at this table, but it seems to me
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that those gates are about to be smashed open.''
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Just a few soldiers of the Grey Legion, hulking masses of moving steel
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that they were, were enough to serve as a battering ram. The entire
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frontline of that silent army hitting the seven gates as once would be
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worse by an order of magnitude.
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``We can still hold,'' General Bagram insisted. ``So long as the walls
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do not fall, the enemy can be bottlenecked in that district.''
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``The east holds,'' Captain Nabila said. ``No beachheads remain and we
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have mastery of both rampart and bastions.''
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Proud as Vivienne was of the Army of Callow, she had to admit that in
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the battle for Hainaut the Dominion that had distinguished itself.
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Almost half the western rampart, held by Alamans troops, had collapsed
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after being struck by Scourges until Catherine had led the Woe -- and
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Akua Sahelian -- to slay one and drive away the other. Unfortunately,
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the reinforcements led by Princess Beatrice had never materialized as
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instead they'd run into enemies in the streets of the city. They'd won
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that clash decisively, at the price of the Princess of Hainaut being
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wounded, and at the moment it was Prince Arsene of Bayeux that was
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theoretically the commander of that flank.
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The man was not here, however, having instead sent his niece Lady
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Marceline to speak for him.
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``The Brabant levies broke and ran,'' Lady Marcelline frankly said,
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``but we've contained the breach to a single bastion. Captain-General
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Catalina survived the attentions of the Archmage and she's leading the
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local effort while my uncle oversees the norther stretch of the
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rampart.''
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``Anyone would have buckled, hit by that kind of magic,'' General Bagram
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said with rough sympathy. ``But can the mercenaries clear the enemy's
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foothold? If they'd don't, this all falls apart.''
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``Perhaps if Chosen were to lend their strength the matter could be
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settled more easily,'' Lady Marceline leadingly said, turning her eyes
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towards Vivienne.
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It rather amused the heiress that even though she had not held a Name in
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years, by simple virtue of having once been the Thief people believed
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she still had influence over Named. As if even Catherine -- Vivienne's
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heart clenched, but Indrani had \emph{promised} she would survive --
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Catherine, with all her strength, did not struggle to keep their kind in
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even a semblance of order. The privileged information that Vivienne
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Dartwick did hold in regard to their kind was not a consequence of her
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thieving past at all, but of Hakram Deadhand being fiercely meticulous
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even when calamity was at the gate.
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It was not sorcery but regular messengers, which admittedly some might
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argue were harder to arrange in a city besieged.
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``They've had heavy casualties,'' Vivienne said. ``On the Silver
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Huntress survived out of her band after they were caught in that ambush,
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and only barely. It might be possible to request the Headhunter and the
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Rogue Sorcerer lend a hand, but they have been highly mobile so
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mustering them may take time.''
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It'd been a slaughter, according to the report she'd gotten. A
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well-crafted ambush by what had appeared to be a half a dozen Revenants
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in a narrow street had taken a lethal turn when the Prince of Bones had
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torn through a wall and pulped the Young Slayer's head with a single
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blow. A black-feathered arrow had taken the Summoner in the throat
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almost simultaneously, and the rest had been overwhelmed. The Grey
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Pilgrim and Masego had arrived in time to save the Silver Huntress'
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life, but both the Silent Guardian and the Rapacious Troubadour had been
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lost.
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All that with nothing to show for it, aside from a few destroyed lesser
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Revenants. The Prince of Bones had managed to retreat into Arcadia under
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fire by both the Peregrine and the Hierophant, indifferent to even their
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harshest attacks, while the Hawk had been long gone by the time those
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two arrived. The gate the Prince of Bones had used had been found and
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closed by the pair, but it was expected by everyone in this room that
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the Scourge would be back to lead his Grey Legion when it breached the
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city. Lady Marceline made a moue at Vivienne's answer, displeased.
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``Perhaps the band of the Barrow Sword instead?'' she asked. ``The
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Blessed Artificer alone-''
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``The survivors of that band are already tasked, by order of the
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Adjutant himself,'' Vivienne mildly said.
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The mildness was not one that invited further argument, and with
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ill-grace Lady Marceline accepted the help on offer instead of the one
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she'd wished for. Vivienne sent out the messenger promptly, even as
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argument resumed as to whether or not the battle for Hainaut could still
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be salvaged. There was some optimism that it still could, so long as the
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drow managed to rally and help the Lycaonese keep walls of the pit
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created by the collapse of the Bassin Gris from being climbed by the
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dead. For now the sheer quantity of rubble and water was making it
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effectively impassable, but it would not last forever.
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``The Neustrians could reinforce,'' Lady Marceline said, ``at the moment
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they are not-''
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It was like an itch, Vivienne thought. Or perhaps simply the slightest
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of pressures, tickling like a feather. Not the first trick of the sort
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she had learned, back when she was the Thief, but the first she had been
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\emph{taught}. That was almost nostalgic, in a terribly dangerous kind
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of way. Vivienne Dartwick kept her breathing steady, concentrating as
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the talk of the commanders washed over her, and listened to nothing save
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the sound of her own breath. In, out. In, out. There, the itch again.
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The\ldots{} weight. She had not been wrong. Idly, the heiress-designate
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to Callow pushed back her chair seemingly to make room for her legs as
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she reached for a carafe of water. Leaning covered one of her arms from
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sight, gave her free hand, and a heartbeat later she was moving.
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The knife flew, perfectly thrown, and would have caught the hooded
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figure in the throat if it'd not been parried by a serrated dagger.
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Prince Klaus, who'd been about to get his throat slit, was the first to
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draw his sword. General Bagram was but a heartbeat behind, and even as
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Lady Marceline backed away so she'd have room to draw her rapier Captain
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Nabila palmed a throwing axe. Vivienne, though, had already leapt atop
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the table with a fresh knife in hand. The Revenant flickered, as if made
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of heat mirage, and for a moment her eyes stung but she focused through
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the pain and flicked a second knife. It was parried, but the flickering
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ceased.
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``Varlet,'' the Iron Prince hissed, striking hard.
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The Revenant turned the blow aside, punching the old man in the stomach
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hard enough it emptied his lungs, but Bagram hacked at its shoulder and
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it was forced to step back. The orc's blade bit into the Prince of
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Hannoven's shoulder but only shallowly, and Vivienne reached for the
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back of her belt where she kept a pouch even as she finished crossing
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the table. Captain Nabila's throwing axe was swatted aside and General
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Bagram's charge ended badly, the Varlet sweeping his legs and tossing
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him at the table. Vivienne's fingers closed around a handful even as she
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leapt, the table flipping below her as Bagram stumbled into it, and she
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watched as the Iron Prince's swing was not only parried but riposted
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with a vicious cut that ripped across his face.
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And the Varlet turned to her, even as she flew through the air, but
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Vivienne Dartwick smiled unpleasantly and threw a handful of golden dust
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into her face.
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The Scourge hastily retreated but it caught her anyway, the Revenant
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screaming as the Concocter-made compound burned at the dead flesh and
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glowed brightly. Let her try to disappear with \emph{that}. Vivienne
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tumbled into the animated corpse, the two of them landing in a sprawl,
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and as she slid out a third knife the other tried to slice open her
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throat. She caught the wrist in time with her free hand, struggling to
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keep the blade from going into flesh, but she was losing in strength and
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she had to abandon her knife to help with her second hand. She was
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losing anyway. Fortunately, the Iron Prince then kicked the Varlet in
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the head.
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She fell to the side and Vivienne snatched up her knife, stabbing into
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her foe's wrist even as the Revenant tried to punch through the back of
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Klaus Papenheim's knee. She nailed the dead flesh, preventing the blow,
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and by then Captain Nabila had joined the fray with a war axe. Vivienne
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backed way so they'd have freer hand, getting back to her feet as
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General Bagram brushed past her to lend his sword to the cause of
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|
keeping the Revenant from rising. Lady Marceline, though armed, was
|
|
staying far away from the foe. Vivienne threw her a scornful glance,
|
|
passing the fallen table to snatch first a magelight globe from the wall
|
|
and then a candle from a candlestick. She deftly turned back just in
|
|
time to see Bagram rip through a wrist and then hold down the limb.
|
|
|
|
``Keep her from moving,'' Vivienne ordered.
|
|
|
|
``She-'' Captain Nadila began.
|
|
|
|
``Do it,'' the Iron Prince grunted, hacking at the hood.
|
|
|
|
They managed, barely, and even then Vivienne had to dodge a kick as she
|
|
approached.
|
|
|
|
``You will-'' the Varlet began, but the words were interrupted by
|
|
someone shoving magelight in her mouth.
|
|
|
|
``I could sneak better than that at eighteen,'' Vivienne Dartwick
|
|
scathingly said, pressing the candle's open flame against the magelight
|
|
globe. ``You ought to be \emph{embarrassed}.''
|
|
|
|
And after five heartbeats exposed to fire, exactly as Masego had shown
|
|
her it would, the Jaquinite magelight exploded with a loud \emph{pop}.
|
|
The tongues of flame exploded outwards, incinerating the Revenant from
|
|
the inside as a jet shot out from her mouth and Vivienne avoided it by
|
|
reclining her head to the right. The heat licked at her face, but she
|
|
did not close her eyes. The Revenant, head mostly consumed save for
|
|
charred bones, stopped moving.
|
|
|
|
``Decapitate it to be sure,'' Vivienne said, drawing back.
|
|
|
|
Captain Nabila did, rather eagerly, and the corpse fell listlessly.
|
|
Feeling the eyes of everyone in the room on her, Vivienne cocked an
|
|
eyebrow. Had they believed her harmless because these days she wore
|
|
dresses instead of leather? She was able to fit more knives in a gown
|
|
than she'd even been able to in trousers. \emph{I spent my fighting
|
|
years as one of the Woe}, Vivienne thought, matching their gazes.
|
|
\emph{Does even a single one of you grasp what that actually means?} She
|
|
picked up one of the knives she'd thrown, carefully placing it back
|
|
against the hidden strap.
|
|
|
|
``General Bagram, I leave this in your hands,'' she said. ``I'll be
|
|
heading out.''
|
|
|
|
The orc slowly nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Where to, my lady?'' Bagram asked.
|
|
|
|
``Where the hammer will fall,'' Vivienne replied. ``The gates.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Amusingly enough, the Barrow Sword was the only member of his band who
|
|
turned out to be useless to the purposes for which it had been sent for.
|
|
|
|
Ishaq took it in good humour, proving to be in a rather amenable mood
|
|
overall. His successes before members of the Blood, his usual foes, had
|
|
put him in a fine mood. Hakram spent little time speaking with the man,
|
|
instead guiding the efforts of the rest of the band. No one was inclined
|
|
to climb down, especially now that dead from the plains below had begin
|
|
to crawl all over the rubble, but the Harrowed Witch was the solution to
|
|
that: the bound soul of her brother, which she could sometimes force to
|
|
obey her commands, had been sent instead. With the help of Hakram's own
|
|
aspect the place where General Rumena was buried had been found, which
|
|
had been when the Vagrant Spear moved out.
|
|
|
|
Passing through Twilight, as she was a fair hand at sidling, she emerged
|
|
even as the Blessed Artificer began raining down Light on the dead in a
|
|
hail of javelins. Striking with Light and the power of her Name she'd
|
|
quickly pierced through the mass of stone, allowing a haggard Mighty
|
|
Rumena to stumble out. The first stumble was an appearance by the Hawk,
|
|
who from her high perch atop a vulture let loose an arrow. Aimed at
|
|
Mighty Rumena, Hakram discerned, but it was not to be. Another arrow hit
|
|
it mid-trajectory, Archer having finally found trace of her prey, and
|
|
before a second could be loosed both the drow and the Vagrant Spear
|
|
disappeared into Twilight.
|
|
|
|
The Firstborn could see to themselves, then. He had done what he could.
|
|
An opinion seemingly shared by Masego and the Grey Pilgrim, who had
|
|
lingered talking to each other quietly but were not clearly intent on
|
|
leaving. Hierophant absent-mindedly bade his goodbyes, mentioning he was
|
|
headed towards the gates, but the Peregrine stayed for a longer
|
|
conversation.
|
|
|
|
``The Firstborn situation seems as settled as it can be,'' Adjutant
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``We but tied a bandage over a gaping wound, but it is better than
|
|
nothing,'' the Peregrine quietly replied. ``I am simply glad that we
|
|
were able to free Sve Noc.''
|
|
|
|
The tired-look old man, Hakram considered, had been fully prepared to
|
|
kill the two goddesses rather than let them fall in the hands of the
|
|
Dead King. Soberingly, he seemed to believe he would have been capable
|
|
of the act.
|
|
|
|
``Losing the Firstborn entirely might have lost us the battle,'' Hakram
|
|
warily agreed.
|
|
|
|
There was a long pause as the old man studied him, those rheumy blue
|
|
eyes piercing in ways that were beyond simple sight.
|
|
|
|
``The Ophanim believe the battle is lost regardless,'' the Grey Pilgrim
|
|
murmured.
|
|
|
|
The orc's pulsed quickened.
|
|
|
|
``And do they care to share their reasons why?'' Adjutant calmly asked.
|
|
|
|
The situation was not favourable, to his knowledge, but it was not yet
|
|
disastrous. The walls largely held, and though the gates were threatened
|
|
they were yet to fall. In the longer view the great pit that had
|
|
replaced the Grey Basin was a liability, but salvaged sigils and the
|
|
still-fresh Lycaonese should be able to hold them. The battle had
|
|
certainly grown more arduous, but it seemed to early to write if off.
|
|
|
|
``There is a Crab,'' Tariq Fleetfoot said. ``It nears. They can feel it
|
|
approaching.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram froze. The massive necromantic creatures were as moving small
|
|
cities that the Dead King used to keep the armaments of his armies in
|
|
fighting fit. They were a massive resource investment, and so jealously
|
|
guarded that few had even been seen, but one had been seen earlier in
|
|
this campaign. The Rogue Sorcerer, when scouting Lauzon's Hollow, had
|
|
believed he'd glimpsed the spells keeping one invisible to the naked
|
|
eye. And though it was not the purpose of that construct, given its
|
|
sheer size it would represent not so much a siege tower as a siege
|
|
\emph{fortress}.
|
|
|
|
``Masego and yourself are both capable of destroying constructs of that
|
|
scale,'' Hakram finally said.
|
|
|
|
And perhaps the Blessed Artificer as well, or Catherine were she awake,
|
|
but there were not certainties with either.
|
|
|
|
``A monster, yes,'' the Pilgrim sadly smiled, ``but a city, with wards
|
|
and protections as this Crab will have? No.~Already the Ophanim tell me
|
|
their influence is being restricted by some working of the Enemy's. The
|
|
battle is lost, Adjutant.''
|
|
|
|
His bone hand clenched.
|
|
|
|
``You want us to begin a retreat,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``That I leave to military minds,'' the Peregrine said. ``But I say
|
|
this: we cannot leave a twilight gate in the hands of the Dead King.''
|
|
|
|
``We can't afford to lose this battle either,'' Adjutant growled. ``If
|
|
we do, Hainaut collapses. Perhaps all of Procer with it.''
|
|
|
|
And if Procer fell, the rest of Calernia would not be far behind.
|
|
|
|
``There is a way,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``It would be ruinous, but
|
|
there is a way.''
|
|
|
|
Adjutant's brows knotted.
|
|
|
|
``What is it you want of me, Peregrine?''
|
|
|
|
``We need to wake up Catherine Foundling,'' the Pilgrim said. ``And for
|
|
that I require your help.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
They had taken the gates, inch by inch.
|
|
|
|
General Zola had watched as the army already bloodied at Maillac's Boot
|
|
bloodied itself anew taking the same wide stairs that Callowan sappers
|
|
had built but days earlier, tight ranks of legionaries heaving and
|
|
screaming and they drove back the howling dead. Nothing was held back.
|
|
Sharpers were thrown freely, shredding the enemy's tightly packed
|
|
hordes, and fireballs struck in volleys as spears of Light tore into the
|
|
side of massive monsters. And the Second Army, living up to the
|
|
excellence for which the Black Queen had honoured it, bled and won. The
|
|
bodies fell, until all that was left was green flames and corpses no
|
|
longer moving. Zola gave her orders, connecting her lines with the
|
|
Fourth Army's and evacuating the wounded through the twilight gate.
|
|
There were no longer mages to spare to send them back into the fight, as
|
|
too few healers.
|
|
|
|
Then the gates broke.
|
|
|
|
The Grey Legion strode through the wreckage, ranks and ranks of silent
|
|
steel bearing thick shields and great weapons. Light barely bit into
|
|
them, sorcery was useless, but munitions made a dent. Goblinfire most of
|
|
all, though the dead simply made some of the legionaries lie over the
|
|
flames so they would not spread and walked on. Through traps and pits,
|
|
through caltrops and spikes, lumbering but indifferent. And when the
|
|
Grey Legion reached the barricades, the lines wavered. Thousands of
|
|
pounds of stone and wood were shattered in moments, and then great
|
|
swords and hammers scythed through the frontline of the Second, but
|
|
still the Second Army \emph{held}. Zola Osei rode up and down the line,
|
|
sending heavies into the gaps and ordering concentrated fire from the
|
|
priests. Ineffective as they were, they still fared better than swords.
|
|
|
|
It tightened her stomach, watching orcs and humans and goblins pile
|
|
themselves on the steel-clad dead to topple them and die and drove to
|
|
destroy even a single one. Spells and Light came down in volleys from
|
|
the ramparts and even the burning gatehouse, lines from the Fourth
|
|
having dared to venture there, but it was not enough. The Grey Legion
|
|
was pushing them back, slowly but surely. Blood and guts flowed down the
|
|
street until the pavestones were so slick her men tripped on the
|
|
entrails of their comrades, until smoke and ash stung their eyes to
|
|
weeping and munitions slowly began to run out. A barricade collapsed
|
|
entirely, a street routed, the shield wall collapse and then as if by a
|
|
spell the breach was closed.
|
|
|
|
The Mirror Knight had come.
|
|
|
|
General Zola had heard the man called a fool by people high and low, but
|
|
in that moment she felt only awe. That sole silhouette, marred by smoke
|
|
and dust, smashed into the Grey Legion as if a cliff had decided to turn
|
|
back the tide. He shone brightly, glimmer of Light, and as he advanced
|
|
the enemy bent around him. Steel shells cracked, armoured dead went
|
|
flying and an army of one sent the darkness howling back. Zola shouted
|
|
herself hoarse organizing volleys to support him, sending in heavies to
|
|
hold the ground taken back. Gods, they could still win this. They could
|
|
still turn this around. Slowly, one at a time, the numbers of the Grey
|
|
Legion were dwindling. The Second Army would not bend before they did.
|
|
And forward the soldiers went, screaming their songs in defiance.
|
|
|
|
Then the Crab came, and the hope went out of them like a candle snuffed
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
Every gain made over hours of fighting gone, just like that. The
|
|
monster-fortress stood above the ramparts, ramps coming down with iron
|
|
hooks to disgorge undead atop the gate wherever the goblinfire had not
|
|
spread. The shape blotted out even the sky, a tall shadow belching out
|
|
acrid smoke the mage lines of the Fourth fled but not always quickly
|
|
enough. The spell volleys sputtered out, and below the Grey Legion
|
|
smashed into the ranks with fresh ferocity. The Mirror Knight was,
|
|
before too long, a sole island of resistance in a sea of steel. And he
|
|
fought on, but he could not win the war alone. Perhaps before Maillac's
|
|
Boot they would have been braver, Zola thought. Perhaps if the Black
|
|
Queen had stood with them, as she had through the last nightmare.
|
|
|
|
But Maillac had happened, and the Black Queen was not there. The Second
|
|
Army broke.
|
|
|
|
It was a retreat, at first. Almost controlled, soldiers edging away from
|
|
the enemy. But the panic spread like a stain on lace, and steps turned
|
|
into a run. And once a few had begun to run, thousands did. The Grey
|
|
Legion were terrifying even as part of a shield wall, who wanted to
|
|
fight them \emph{without} it? The streets and barricades clogged with
|
|
soldiers trying to flee, and in the wake of the Second breaking the
|
|
remains of the Fourth Army broke as well. The only saving grace was that
|
|
the Grey Legion were too slow to capitalize and that the streets were
|
|
too narrow for the rout to make it far. The same barricades meant to be
|
|
held against the dead instead bottlenecked fleeing soldiers, the blind
|
|
panicked stampede killing hundreds.
|
|
|
|
General Zola had ordered spells fired into the broken ranks to turn them
|
|
around, at first, but it changed nothing and she would not be party to
|
|
butchering her own soldiers like animals. She tried to organize two
|
|
fresh lines of defence but both buckled under the sheer mass of the
|
|
routing soldiers who were in no mood to listen to shouting officers.
|
|
There was, she bitterly realized, little she could actually do. She'd
|
|
lost control over her army. They might as well be utter strangers now,
|
|
for all the sway she had over them. Should she arrange for a more
|
|
orderly retreat? The battle was good as lost now, but perhaps she could
|
|
still salvage an army out of this. The sun shook out her out of her
|
|
thoughts, absurdly enough. The \emph{sun}, in the middle of the night.
|
|
|
|
And still there it was, hanging in the sky above them, red and burning
|
|
and casting golden light. A miracle, Zola thought, and remembered the
|
|
strange lights that burned under the eyecloth of the Hierophant. They
|
|
were, she thought, eerily similar to what now shone above her army.
|
|
Which slowed in its flight, confused and worried. And slowly, as General
|
|
Zola watched, something changed. One of the barricades being toppled
|
|
calmed, and when she sought the sight with a Baalite eye she found that
|
|
a banner had been raised. The Crown and Sword, the Black Queens own, but
|
|
it was not the Black Queen flying it. Lady Vivienne Dartwick, armed and
|
|
armoured and mounted as the Order of Broken Bells rode around her,
|
|
headed into the fray.
|
|
|
|
And wherever she went, under that burning sun that somehow had the Grey
|
|
Legion buckling, the terror turned to shame. And shame turned into
|
|
determination, soldiers streaming behind her.
|
|
|
|
The tide slowed.
|
|
|
|
The tide halted.
|
|
|
|
At last the tide turned around, and as the broken armies headed back
|
|
into the fight General Zola Osei thought that while Callow might only
|
|
have one queen this night it had gained a princess.
|