599 lines
29 KiB
TeX
599 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-5-incursion}{%
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\chapter{Incursion}\label{chapter-5-incursion}}
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\epigraph{``The Heavens pick the victor, my friends, but the Hells detail
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the aftermath. How else can it be explained that when a battle is won we
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most commend the general -- that is, the only man in the army that can
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be relied on not to have picked up a weapon?''}{Captain Thierry the Acerbic, addressing his company before the Battle
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of the Twelve Routs}
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It was tempting to just run out sword in hand to find out what was
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happening, but I resisted the urge. I'd learned the hard way that
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recklessness could have permanent costs -- like half someone's total
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supply of eyes, for example. I put up my hair in a loose ponytail and
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strapped on my armour, not without fumbling, and only after putting on a
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helmet did I finally limp out. Sword at my hip and deadwood staff in
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hand, I looked out into the night and found entire swaths to the south
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of my camp aflame. Had Sargon played me with the ransom payment? It
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shouldn't be. Hierophant had inspected the ingots personally and they
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were in a warded pit anyway. It made no sense either, considering I
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hadn't even given him back his prisoners yet. I'd kept them overnight as
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a precaution against foul play and he had to know I might hang them as
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an object lesson if he tried something.
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Sargon Sahelian hadn't struck me as the kind of man who pissed away
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either gold or lives.
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I made my way to the tent closest to mine, where Adjutant had placed a
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station of his adjunct secretariat, but there were no phalanges there. I
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found a line of regulars hurrying south through the dirt avenue passing
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by my tent, however, and wasted no time approaching the lieutenant in
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charge. A young Taghreb, no older than twenty and rosy -cheeked.
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``Your Majesty,'' he breathed out, before snapping into a more
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professional salute.
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``Lieutenant,'' I said. ``What's happening? I'm not hearing the alarm
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wards.''
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``Our wards are down, ma'am,'' he replied. ``All of them. And we're
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under attack by giants.''
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Our wards were \emph{down}? I felt a shiver of unease. Not even the Dead
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King had managed that so easily. The mention of giants, though, had me
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skeptical. I seriously doubted the Gigantes had anything to do with
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this. Ogres, though, I'd be willing to believe. I had less than a tenth
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of ogres left in the entire Army of Callow -- our campaigns had not been
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kind, and none lost were ever replaced -- but the Dread Empire would not
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be so limited. That would mean a Legion raid, which did nothing to
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settle my discomfort. I'd learned enough at the feet of the Legions of
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Terror to know how brutally skilled they were at what they did.
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``What did they hit?'' I asked.
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``I don't know, Your Majesty,'' the lieutenant admitted. ``My orders are
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just to head at the southern rally point with my line and await further
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orders.''
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I smothered my irritation. It wasn't his fault I wasn't aware of what
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was going on and taking it out on the kid would help no one.
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``Let's go then, lieutenant,'' I evenly said. ``There's no time to
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waste.''
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I pulled at Night -- and how crisply it came now that dusk had passed,
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almost as easily as before the Ruination -- and killed the pain in my
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bad leg so I would be able to keep up with the brisk pace of the
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legionaries. We passed through a sparsely manned checkpoint, but there
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was no way the sergeant in charge would know more than the lieutenant I
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was with so I pushed on. At the second checkpoint, I found Adjutant
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waiting for me. He was armed and armoured, with an axe in his dead hand
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and a broad shield in his steel one.
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``Catherine,'' he gravelled. ``Apologies, by the time my phalanges
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reached your tent you'd already left.''
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I waved it away and didn't bother to ask how he'd known where I would
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go. There were lines between us where there once had been none, but he
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was still my Adjutant.
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``What's happening?'' I bluntly asked.
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``The Legions of Terror are hitting us,'' Hakram gravelled. ``Less than
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a hundred, nearly all ogres. They gated out of Twilight a foot away from
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the outer palisade and smashed through, then used some sort of artefact
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that fried our wards. Hierophant and Akua are working on getting them up
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again.''
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``Fuck,'' I eloquently said. ``Do we know what they're after?''
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``They split into two forces,'' Adjutant said. ``The one lighting the
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fires is going straight for our supplies and Juniper's mustering men to
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drive them out. The other force -- smaller, we think -- is headed
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west.''
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My eyes narrowed. West had Sargon's soldiers and the rest of the warded
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pits we'd dug. Was this a rescue operation? That made little sense. The
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High Lord of Wolof had already paid their ransom and they'd be handed
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over come morning. Something didn't fit, and that made the second force
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the odd hand. The one to watch out for.
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``That's the one we'll intercept,'' I decided. ``Where's Archer?''
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``She's-''
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``Disappointed you didn't hear her coming, is what she is,'' Indrani
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drawled.
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My hand was halfway to my sword when I recognize her voice, and my
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muscles stayed tense until she'd moved out from the tent she'd used as
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cover for her approach. There was some alarm as legionaries began to
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notice her, but it didn't last long. She was a known quantity for my
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soldiers.
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``That's what we have you for,'' I retorted. ``Vivienne, Huntress, the
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kids?''
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``Vivienne is with Juniper,'' Hakram said.
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``Alexis went to guard Cocky,'' Indrani said. ``I'm not sure for the
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kids.''
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For a moment I almost sent Adjutant to look for them -- he had the right
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aspect to Find the needle in the haystack -- but I held back. He might
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see it as him being sent away from the fight, one which would be hard
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enough \emph{without} shedding off a third of our Named before we
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started.
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``Send one of yours to Vivienne,'' I ordered Hakram. ``I want them kept
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from getting into too much trouble.''
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Entirely out of trouble was sadly more than could be reasonably asked
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for, given that they were Named. Hakram nodded and saw to it, even as I
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checked my gear one last time. I made a note to have a bag of goblin
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munitions prepared for me and kept in my tent. Now that Scribe's scheme
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had paid off and we'd essentially bought out High Lady Wither's stocks
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of munitions -- with the blessing of the Matrons, who saw it as
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weakening her military strength even if our grain helped her maintain
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control in the short term -- I could afford to start using them again.
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The moment Adjutant was back we headed out together, moving fast. Since
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our wards were down and we had an idea of where our enemies were headed,
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we took a shortcut through the Ways to try to intercept. We sidled
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through instead of using a gate, since Indrani found us a path in
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moments, and it allowed us to skip over all the barricades, checkpoints
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and mustering soldiers.
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The advantage of fighting people as tall as ogres was that, given the
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average height of tents in our camp, we could easily see them from a
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distance. Within moments of leaving Twilight I had my eyes on maybe
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twenty towering silhouettes, all decked in pitch-black plate engraved
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with runes and wielding massive flanged maces. Those were \emph{not}
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Legion heavies, not any kind I'd ever seen.
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``Archer, go around,'' I said, already pulling at the Night. ``Begin on
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my signal.''
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``Gotcha,'' she said, pulling down her hood.
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She slipped into the shadows, swift-footed even as she began to string
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her bow.
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``Adjutant,'' I said, shaping the Night, ``I want you to bait them. Take
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the front and draw them in.''
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``Warlord,'' Hakram replied, flashing his fangs happily.
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I finished the last touch on the `eye' of Night I'd made and threw it up
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in the air. A shadow on black, it remained unseen to our foes even as I
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closed my physical eye and made myself see through that one. It didn't
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tell me much more about the enemy force itself, but it \emph{did} give
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me a bird's eye view of them moving around the camp. \emph{They're not
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headed towards the prisoners}, I realized. They'd walked right past an
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avenue that led to their pit, and I doubted it was because of the two
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lines of regulars manning the palisade around the prison pit. They were
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after something else and moving like they knew they layout. Which they
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would, of course, since the Army of Callow pretty much used the Legion
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layout with a few modifications. It sunk in a moment later.
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The ransom. It was further east in a guarded pit as well, and the group
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-- twenty-one ogres and two humans, I counted -- would soon get to an
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avenue that'd lead them straight there. But why the Hells would Malicia
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care about the gold? The empress still collected taxes from most of
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Praes, she was positively rolling around in coin she couldn't spend for
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lack of friendly neighbours. I set the question aside for now, as I had
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more urgent cats to skin. I checked Adjutant was on the right path to
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reach the enemy, which he was, and then prepared to disperse the eye.
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There was no point in even trying to find Archer, I knew that from
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experience.
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Then the night lit up with a flash of sorcery as streaks of flame hit
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one of the lead ogres, scarring the black plate, and I caught sight of
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two small humans getting in the way of the enemy.
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``\emph{Fuck},'' I cursed.
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The kids were there and getting in over their heads. These weren't Bones
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or a handful of necromantic monsters, they were a well-armed Legion
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strike team. I broke into a run without hesitation, knowing that if I
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lingered for too long they might be dead by the time I arrived. So much
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for springing an ambush. Calling on Night, I formed a rough wedge of
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power in front of me and ran straight through the tents in my way. It
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was a quick approach but not a subtle one, as was made clear when one of
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the ogres grabbed a javelin the size of a small tree and threw it my
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way.
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I twisted the Night into a different working, catching the weapon in
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flight and turning it around before tossing it back. A miss, I saw, but
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hopefully it'd discourage a repeat. I formed another wedge and
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immediately another ogre threw a javelin at me. I cursed, resorting to
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the same trick and this time scoring a glancing blow against an ogre's
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breastplate. They weren't trying to kill me, I grasped, they were
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slowing me down. The bastards weren't even intending to fight us, were
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they? They'd just do what they'd come for and then retreat.
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Gods but I hated fighting against well-trained soldiers.
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Thankfully, I could fall back onto the sage lessons of my childhood: if
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the other guy had a better plan, you just had to sock them in the face
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real hard until they forgot it. I abandoned the idea of the relatively
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harmless wedge and instead of drew deep on the Night, waves of heat
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emanating from me as I formed a massive ball of blackflame and tossed it
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in a straight line in front of me. It burned through tents and
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barricades, clearing me a straight path and smashing into one of the
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ogres. Even as I ran, my brow knotted when the flames cleared and I saw
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my working hadn't actually broken the ogre's plate. It'd blackened it
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further, half-melted it, but the fire had only gone through the armour's
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visor. It was still enough to have the soldier screaming and clawing at
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his face.
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Archer put an arrow between the hands and straight into the skull a
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moment later, dropping the ogre.
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I unsheathed my sword as I crossed the last of the distance separating
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me from the melee, the flash of flames flickering at the edge of my
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sight and bathing the silhouette of the closest ogre in light. The great
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flanged mace rose, and Night or not there would be no \emph{parrying}
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that. I struck out with my staff, black flames boiling out of the top as
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I aimed for the visor again, but I was forced to abandon the working
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when another ogre used drove a javelin like a spear into my flank. I
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hastily backpedalled out of range, almost eating the mace blow from the
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first as I did. Redirecting the black flame into striking the side of
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the mace's head got me out of it, but the ground shook as the flanged
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head tore into the earth besides me. Worse yet, more and more of the
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ogres were converging on me.
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A few I could handle, but ten? That was going to get tricky.
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Then Adjutant came out swinging from their left flank a heartbeat later,
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proving once more that splendid timing was written into his very Role.
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The surprise earned me a moment to shape Nigh,t in between ducking away
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from a wild mace swing, and I threw up another eye so that I could see
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through it and grasp the lay of the entire melee. It was only the
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beginning. Power coursed richly through my veins even as I saw one of
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the ogres draw back his arm to throw a javelin, but I grit my teeth and
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kept weaving my miracle. My eye in the sky stayed focused on my enemy's
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arm, spellbound. \emph{Almost there}, I thought, watching as the
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plate-covered arm flexed and the tree-sized javelin went flying. I
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breathed in and out, listening to the instincts trained into my body by
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years of war.
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A half-step to the side, the movement precise enough I felt the steel
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head of the javelin brush against my side, but I'd done it. I was
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finished.
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``Bang,'' I grinned, staff coming down against the floor in a strike.
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I kept the eye for just a second, long enough to place the ten orbs I
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was capable of handling at one time. Night formed out of thin air in
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front of ten visored faces, looking like spinning orbs for half a
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heartbeat before they burst and air was sucked in. I'd first used the
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air explosion trick against demons at the Arsenal, but I'd improved it
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in the months since. This time, at the heart of the `orb' there was a
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seed of blackflame. The air getting sucked in pulled in the ten ogres,
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just in time for the blackflame to grow unstable and explode in their
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faces along with the sharp burst of air. The result was a brutal blow of
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physical strength and fire that dented the visors before delivering the
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blackflame through the opening. Most of the ten died instantly and those
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that didn't began to scream in pain.
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From the corner I saw Adjutant take a blow on his shield, aspect pulsing
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as he withstood the strength as if it were a breeze. He struck with
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perfect timing as the ogre withdrew, toppling his foe down into an
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already-trampled tent. He had that under control, I decided. I could
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push through to the kids.
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I ran past a slowly falling ogre, clutching at her broken and burning
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face, and as she struck the ground behind me like a small earthquake I
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found myself frowning. There had been two humans earlier, mages
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presumably, but I couldn't see them in the melee at the moment. Where --
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the only warning I got was the feeling of the air being moved, and I
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wasn't quite quick enough. My staff was struck as I got pushed away, the
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silhouette of an ogre coming into sight for a flickering second as I was
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blown of my feet and my staff went clattering in the distance.
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought, rolling away as I felt the air move again and
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the ground was hammered in front of me. One of the mages was using
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illusionary enchantments. I rose back to my feet lurching about,
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grasping a handful of Night and throwing it blindly ahead.
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It stuck, as I'd hoped, and a blotch of darkness appeared on what looked
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like the side of the mace trying to smash me to bits. It'd do. Slicing
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behind me with my blade, I opened a gate into the Ways and stepped
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through. I glimpsed greenery and felt gentle wind before crossing back
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into a warm Wasteland night, coming out on the side of the mace I'd
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tagged and spinning out chords of Night. I hooked them around the mace,
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forcing it and the ogre back into flickering visibility, and then
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wrapped the chords around the shoulders and helmet of the ogre. Hands
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tight on the bonds I twisted, Night obeying my will as the ogre
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struggled to keep the mace away from their helmeted head and I tightened
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the noose. I was cheating, of course. It wasn't strength I was using to
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tighten the chords but willpower, weaving Night, and the limits on my
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will were lesser than those on the soldiers' body.
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With a third twist of the wrist I tightened the chords into a vise and
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the side of the mace went through the helmet with a loud crunch. I
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wasn't sure how far it'd gone into the skull beneath it, but the ogre
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was out of the fight regardless. That freed me to go forward, where I
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saw Arthur Foundling being battered down with brutal efficiency by an
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ogre. His shield was already a crumpled ruin and one of his shoulders
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obviously broken. The Apprentice was shooting darts of fire and spears
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of lightning at the ogre, but all it did was slow them some. Not even a
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mark was left on the armour, which had me staring. Even enchanted plate
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would have marks after that, and my heartbeat quickened when I saw the
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ogre kick Squire in the stomach when Arthur tried to slide behind them.
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He'd been moving with Name quickness, unnaturally swift, but his
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opponent had begun moving the exact moment he did. No one was that fast
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without a Name, I knew, without leaning on that set of reflexes that
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came with a martial Role. From the corner of my eye I saw an arrow hit a
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man in the throat, the spell he'd been halfway through -- aimed at
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Adjutant's back -- dying with him, but I looked past the corpse and
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found that four ogres were covering the last mage's hasty retreat. I
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moved to the side, climbing over an ogre corpse to get a better vantage,
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and cursed. The pit where we'd left the ransom gold was now empty.
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They'd brought a caster that could use High Arcana and shoved all the
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ingots into a pocket dimension, the tricky fuckers.
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As if I'd allow that. I drew on Night.
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I heard Arthur Foundling scream as he was smashed into a barricade by a
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blow, and for a heartbeat I weighed the choice. The gold might keep a
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lot of my people alive, keep them fed and armed for the war on Keter,
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and the Squire was still a potential threat to Vivienne in the coming
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years. If I pursued the last mage instead now\ldots{} The thought was
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ugly, but ugly wasn't enough to stay my hand anymore. I needed better
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than that -- \emph{Name}, I thought, mind racing. He was in a fight of
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Named, one he'd stumbled into through heroic providence. That could be a
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potent tool, used right. Eye tearing away from the fleeing mage, I broke
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into a run. Ribbons of lightning struck at the back of the tall ogre
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with impotent fury, making the enchanted steel glow but little more as I
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shaped Night into thick tendrils.
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The looming ogre raised their mace as the Squire rolled to the side,
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grasping for his sword. He'd be too slow. The flanged mace came down and
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the boy's face paled but his fingers closed around the handle of his
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blade anyway. He'd die trying. Or not die at all, preferably. I struck
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out, tendrils of shadows layered over my arm like some sort of skeletal
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armature, and the strength of it was just enough to slap aside the mace
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before it could crush the boy's skull. I stood between the two of them,
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Night wafting off me like smoke as I prepared another trick, and cocked
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an eyebrow.
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``So Malicia's picked up a Named,'' I said. ``Which one are you, I
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wonder?''
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Our foe -- a woman, I glimpsed through the visor -- did not answer. She
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raised her mace again, drawing back to make space for a swing, but I
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clicked my tongue against the roof of my mouth.
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``Not Warlock,'' I mused, ``or you would have seen \emph{that} coming.''
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The Night-smoke I'd had trailing along the ground solidified around her
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feet as shackles, so when she finished the movement of striking the
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imbalance tripped her. I stepped to the side as she began to topple
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forward, tapping the side of my sword against Arthur's flank tell him he
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should follow suit. An arrow whistled, aimed straight at the gap in the
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plate between the neck and the helmet, but with unnatural deftness the
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massive mace swept up to bat the killing blow away just before the
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ogress hit the ground face first.
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``Martial, and not a transitional Name if you have control that fine,''
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I noted.
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I raised my sword, calling Night to it even as the ogre grunted with
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effort and burst through my shackles with brute strength. And yet I was
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not worried in the slightest. I knew, somehow I just \emph{knew}, that
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the timing would work out perfectly. I could see it as if it were
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written in the air, as if it were inevitable. As if some grinning devils
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down Below had put their coin on me and their fingers on the scale to
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match.
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I was following my Role, and so the tide of Creation was on my side.
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``None of that,'' I chided my foe, bringing my blade down on her back as
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she tried to raise.
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The Night struck out from the point of my sword like a needle,
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shattering the backplate, and then like cracks of ice my power went
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skittering in every direction and shattered the enchanted steel. The
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ogre was smashed back down into the ground. I heard bones break and
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froze in surprise. I'd not hit her that hard, not for a Named, and that
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was the moment if fell into place. My limbs grown strong with the touch
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of my growing Name, I moved forward and flipped over the gasping ogre.
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She did not resist, broken. I stripped off her helmet and a single look
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at those dark eyes was enough to confirm my suspicion: the power in
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there was fading. Not because I'd killed its wielder, but because I'd
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damaged the \emph{vessel} too badly.
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``Black Knight,'' I greeted. ``So what's the aspect you're using, I
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wonder -- something like Deputize, Mandate?''
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I wrinkled my nose.
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``No, you're clearly Legion,'' I said. ``You're using mostly ogres, too,
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so I'd guess you're Marshal Nim. `Commission', maybe?''
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It clearly wasn't her full strength she'd put in the body, else the kids
|
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would be dead twice over. The ogress hacked out a cough, dying, and I
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sighed. Wouldn't get anything out of her. I sheathed my sword, but
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halfway through the gesture the almost-corpse suddenly lunged. A single
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massive hand reached over my shoulder, grasping the Squire's throat
|
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behind me, and she began to \emph{squeeze} -- I felt horror swell, I
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wouldn't be quick enough with the Night I was reaching for -- she went
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still. It was not luck that did it, but the eerily silent arrow Archer
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had loosed that went through her eye. I roughly dragged Arthur away by
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the scruff of his neck as the body dropped, the boy moaning in pain. As
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well he should, he was basically a mass of bruises and bloody wounds. He
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sagged against the ground.
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``Thank you, Your Majesty,'' he got out. ``I owe you-''
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``Nothing,'' I cut in, tone sharper than I meant it to be.
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I refused to feel guilty. I was long past the luxury of clean choices,
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and just because today I'd chosen to keep him alive didn't meant that
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tomorrow would see me make the same decision. The boy looked like I'd
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slapped him and I sighed again.
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``Consider this a wake-up call,'' I said. ``This is what fighting with
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real Named and not Revenant puppets feels like. The Black Knight on the
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other side used a single aspect, not even in her real body, and she
|
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still nearly pulped you.''
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``You're not going to tell me it was foolish to fight?'' the boy asked.
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``It wasn't a foolish fight, you just fought foolishly,'' I corrected.
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``You likely saved a lot of soldiers' lives by stepping in, the part
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that needs work is the one where you almost died doing it. You won't be
|
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helping anyone when you're in a grave, maybe keep that in mind.''
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``Nothing we did got through her defences,'' Arthur admitted. ``Even at
|
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our best we were simply holding on.''
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And in that sentence, in the anger -- the unspoken urge to do better
|
|
next time, the certainty that there would be a next time -- I saw an
|
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opportunity. A tool. And I was enough of a monster to make use of it,
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even when I was using a boy barely more than a child.
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``So prepare yourself,'' I challenged. ``Train. Make tactics.''
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|
He was silent for a moment, exhausted and in pain, but eventually his
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blue eyes went steely. He nodded, brushing back a black lock stained
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with sweat and blood.
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|
``I won't lose, next time,'' Arthur Foundling swore.
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|
And with those words I'd invited, with the weight of them spoken by his
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lips, I knew I had made myself a sword. Because unless I was wrong, a
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Squire and a Black Knight had just fought. And the Squire had begun that
|
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fledgling, fragile pattern with a defeat.
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If I stoked those embers just right, that story would end with my
|
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enemy's blood on the floor.
|
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|
|
---
|
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|
In the wee hours of the morning, I sat with Vivienne and Juniper to go
|
|
over the butcher's bill. The good news was that, as far as dead bodies
|
|
went, our losses were light.
|
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|
``Ninety-three dead,'' the Hellhound said. ``Most of them regulars. We
|
|
can thin some cohorts to make up for it, we still have the numbers to
|
|
absorb that.''
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|
``And we inflicted eighty-two casualties ourselves,'' Vivienne noted.
|
|
``Considering it was a surprise attack fielding almost entirely ogres,
|
|
we made off decently in that regard.''
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|
I grunted in agreement. The attacked had escaped, but not without taking
|
|
losses equivalent to about eight out of ten.
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|
``We'll see if Masego can crack the enchantments on the armours,'' I
|
|
said. ``It's unlikely there will be enough of those to equip more than a
|
|
handful of elite units, but that would be troublesome enough on its
|
|
own.''
|
|
|
|
I got grimaces of agreement. Ogres were bloody difficult to kill, unless
|
|
you had either magic or munitions to deploy against them. It was a
|
|
clever decision for Marshal Nim to focus on stripping the sorcery option
|
|
from us, considering the Army of Callow had been in chronic munition
|
|
deficit for essentially its entire existence.
|
|
|
|
``Losses in supplies were not as grave as they could have been,''
|
|
Juniper continued. ``We changed the layout of the supply depots compared
|
|
to standard Legion camp templates-''
|
|
|
|
\emph{She} had, actually, making a point of it before we began marching,
|
|
but my marshal wasn't the boasting type.
|
|
|
|
``-so our current tallies have the losses mostly in dried meat and
|
|
grain, about a third of our total stock,'' she continued. ``If our
|
|
numbers stay roughly the same, Catherine, we're now down to roughly four
|
|
months of food.''
|
|
|
|
From six to four, huh. Four months for an army that could use the Ways
|
|
was a very different beast than for an army that couldn't, but this had
|
|
still been uncomfortably costly. A lot of food had gone up in flame
|
|
tonight.
|
|
|
|
``If you had to guess,'' I said, ``were they able to figure out what our
|
|
total amount of supplies would be?''
|
|
|
|
She flicked her fangs uneasily.
|
|
|
|
``It's likely,'' Juniper admitted. ``They might be slightly off, but the
|
|
quantities were roughly even between depots and there are only so many
|
|
places in a camp to put those.''
|
|
|
|
Which meant that by morning High Lord Sargon would know that we couldn't
|
|
afford to siege Wolof if we were going to do anything else this campaign
|
|
season. There just wasn't enough food in our possession to spend months
|
|
besieging him and then war elsewhere. In other words, our negotiating
|
|
position with him had just been dealt a severe blow.
|
|
|
|
``We'll hit Wolof tomorrow, then,'' I said. ``There's no more time to
|
|
waste. The moment the Concocter is done with the powder I'll set out.''
|
|
|
|
``It'd be for the best,'' Juniper agreed.
|
|
|
|
``Sargon's unlikely to ask for talks when he has the advantage, so in a
|
|
way this lends us an additional dose of discretion,'' Vivienne noted.
|
|
``Yet that brings me to the last of our outstanding issues: the
|
|
prisoners for Wolof.''
|
|
|
|
``They've been ransomed,'' I said, though my tone was neutral.
|
|
|
|
It wasn't a commitment so much as a statement. The High Lord of Wolof
|
|
had paid the gold I'd asked for, and promptly too.
|
|
|
|
``We don't have that ransom anymore,'' Juniper said, ``and it was taken
|
|
by his empress. That's on him too.''
|
|
|
|
It was, I wouldn't disagree with that.
|
|
|
|
``You want to keep them?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``That or hang them,'' Juniper bluntly said. ``We've been taken for a
|
|
ride, Catherine. Maybe a point needs to be made.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't think Sargon actually has anything to do with this,'' I
|
|
admitted. ``This has all the telltale marks of a Legion operation and he
|
|
would have no pull there. This seems like an attack by Marshal Nim on
|
|
our supplies that got a secondary objective tacked on.''
|
|
|
|
``Malicia \emph{would} gain from our going back on our word here,''
|
|
Vivienne said. ``It would make Praesi lords warier of striking bargains
|
|
with us.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed as I followed the threads.
|
|
|
|
``She wins if we give them over too,'' I spoke through gritted teeth.
|
|
``Rubies to piglets that ransom gold is going straight back to Sargon's
|
|
coffers, and very publicly. She'd be proving she can score victories
|
|
against us \emph{and} that she's still protecting her vassals.''
|
|
|
|
Hells, the way it neatly landed her a win no matter what we did had me
|
|
more convinced this was a Malicia ploy than anything else I'd heard
|
|
tonight. It was \emph{exactly} the kind of plot she liked use. I passed
|
|
a hand through my hair tiredly.
|
|
|
|
``We release them come dawn, as I promised,'' I finally said. ``I'd
|
|
rather let her flash her feathers than risk burning bridges we'll need
|
|
to cross when treaties are made.''
|
|
|
|
For all that I'd come here with an army, it wasn't conquest I was after.
|
|
And if I started letting Malicia bait me into hanging prisoners, she'd
|
|
keep doing that until Praesi considered me not worth negotiating with.
|
|
\emph{Or I'll have to let things ago after taking a hard stance the
|
|
first time and changing tacks will make me look witless.} Fucking
|
|
Malicia. She really was a devil to deal with, when she had a good
|
|
general to play off of. I could only imagine how much worse it would be
|
|
if she still had Black under her. Angry as I was at how we'd been had, I
|
|
mastered myself. Fine, she'd stuck a knife in us and it had stung. This
|
|
was the kind of game she most excelled at and we were in her own
|
|
backyard.
|
|
|
|
Tomorrow, we'd do things \emph{my} way.
|