513 lines
24 KiB
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513 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-west-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: West II}\label{interlude-west-ii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-west-ii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: West II}
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\epigraph{``The easy wars are the ones where one side's right and the
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other's wrong. The terrible ones are where they're both right, because
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once they know that there's no wrong they'll flinch away from.''}{Aretha the Raven, Nicaean general}
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They were losing the war one victory at a time, Hanno thought.
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There'd not been a defeat in Hainaut since the great battle that'd
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destroyed the principality, and still its defenders were losing the
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land. Hanno among them. Undaunted by a string of defeats in the fields,
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the Dead King had begun attacking with renewed vigour and it was
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working. The trouble was that while Hanno's army had been crushing the
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dead wherever they met, it could only be in one place. It could not both
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prevent the dead from reopening the tunnels at Malmedit and prevent them
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from breaking through at Juvelun, it could not both fight the army
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coming from Luciennerie out west and relive General Abigail from the
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latest siege at Lauzon's Hollow.
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Hanno's army was spent and exhausted, ever victorious and ever smaller.
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And even worse was that they were no longer truly an effective shield.
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The Dead King had begun ignoring the defences in Hainaut and sending
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large flying constructs -- named Pelicans, for their head resembled
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those of the birds -- over the walls to disgorge warbands in Arans and
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Brabant, where they wreaked havoc before being slain. The Pelicans
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themselves avoided fighting, however, and though Antigone had brought
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down several with storms and lighting more kept coming. General Abigail
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believed that soon Keter would begin landing mages the same way to
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create disrupting forces by slaying and raising villages.
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The Fox's instincts were sharp enough that Hanno was not inclined to
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doubt them.
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From what he heard, it was much the same to the west. Princess Rozala
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and her Named had pulled off a miracle just south of Peroulet but the
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defence line there had still failed for a time and it'd been costly to
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restore it. To the northwest, the Kingfisher Prince had smashed through
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every army on his way south to Brus while a sea of undeath nipped at his
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heels. Then to win his home some respite Frederic Goethal had turned
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back with half a dozen Named and his retinue to destroy a Crab, getting
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severely wounded. He would have gotten himself dead instead, had Otto
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Redcrown not ridden to his rescue and led their retreat through an
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avalanche. The love ballad about it was highly popular in camp.
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Yet for all that the singing did the souls of soldiers good, it did not
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change the truth of things: the defences south of Cleves were teetering
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on the brink of collapse and those north of Brus would not hold when the
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tide came. Everywhere the war was being lost, and as was always the way
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when doom crept close men looked for someone to blame. The Army of
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Callow was the least harmful, simply insisting that if the Black Queen
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were there the dead would already be routed, but others were not so
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measured. The First Prince was cursed for weakness, Amadis Milenan men
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lost at the Battle of the Camps that might now turn the tide and the
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League of Free Cities for having made it all worse.
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It was worse between Procerans. Lycaonese blamed feckless southerners,
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having lost half their princes and all their homes defending strangers
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they held in contempt, while Alamans cursed the Lycaonese for having
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drained their lands of men to defend the indefensible and Arlesites for
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being miserly in helping with the defence of the realm. As for the
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Arlesites, more and more they questioned their very presence in these
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parts. Why should they stand against nightmares when their own homes
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were yet untouched? Should they all die and leave their homeland
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undefended for when the storm came? Desertions would have been common if
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there was anywhere safer to flee to. Hanno had kept the army from coming
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anywhere near Neustal, knowing he'd lose hundreds to Julienne's Highway
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overnight should he approach the fortress.
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Hanno had been giving hope where he could, though not always in manners
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comfortable to him. Too many called him Lord White, and some of the
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rumours from further south\ldots{} He had pushed down the discomfort, it
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was a small price to pay for keeping the armies from despair. The
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Lycaonese captains he had supported when the northerners had almost
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split over returning to their homelands had begun to look to him for
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orders, like the Brabantine levies, and even fantassins now sought his
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commands instead of Princess Beatrice Volignac's -- she whose very lands
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they were fighting in. There was a time where Hanno would have taken a
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step back, after realizing he now led what was effectively the second
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largest military force left in Procer, but no more.
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The Truce and Terms had been forged under an understanding: he and
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Catherine would see to the affairs of Named while Cordelia Hasenbach saw
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to the affairs of state. It was never to be a perfect arrangement, not
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when Catherine Foundling was also an influential ruler in her own right,
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but there had been a balance. All contribute, all held up their part.
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Only now the First Prince no longer did. Reinforcements were no longer
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coming, the flow of soldiers and supplies tapering off. Salia was not
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holding up its part of the bargain, the promise that mortal law could
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see the war prosecuted without need for Named to step in. So what reason
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was there for Hanno to step back?
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He would not hide behind a broken bargain when his duty was clear.
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And so he had spoken with Antigone, who had spoken in turn with the only
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father she remembered. Which led him to a cool morning, standing with
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only her at his side as in the distance the sun rose and a brisk wind
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twisted around them. In the distance smoke rose in curtains, Keter's
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armies ever making a hundred fresh devilries to unleash, but here on the
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hills the only thing to mar the green grass was soft dew. Greenery and
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water shivered both as the Witch of the Woods finished the last of her
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spell, clouds high above dispersing as if they'd been swatted through. A
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weight settled on the world, dew turning to mist as the grass began to
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twist and grow.
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In the rising mists stood a giant out of the old stories. Bronze-skinned
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like others of his kind, but none of the Gigantes would ever dare to
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claim kinship with Kreios Maker-of-Riddles. It would have been absurd,
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in their eyes, as a fly claiming kinship to a hawk. The Titanomachy kept
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to no king, but that was only because it kept to something simpler: a
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god. There had been many, once, but now only one still lived. Crippled,
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left a shadow of himself. And yet Hanno knew without a doubt that even
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the spell-shadow now staring down at him could snuff his existence out
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with a thought. The ancient Titans, the founders of the Titanomachy, had
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done a great many arrogant things.
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Calling themselves gods had not been one of them.
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``Antigone.''
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The voice was fond, thick with affection. Hanno's comrade shifted, head
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dipping down and to the side to show both love and reverence. What had
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led Antigone to be raised by the Titan he did not know, much less what
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had convinced the ancient creature to teach her of the powers of the
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Gigantes, but their closeness had been evident from the first time he'd
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seen them. The Riddle-Maker had no such fondness for him, however, and
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the gaze was not so kind when turned to Hanno.
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``White Knight.''
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``Lord Titan,'' Hanno replied, simply dipping his head.
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Reverence but not love. Insincerity in the language of the Gigantes was
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seen as highly offensive. Worse than an insult, which at least was
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clearly conveyed.
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``I am told you would make a request.''
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He straightened.
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``I would,'' Hanno said. ``This war, Lord Kreios, is one we are
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losing.''
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``So it is.''
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The indifference was plain to hear. The Riddle-Maker did not involve
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himself much in the affairs of his own descendants, much less these of
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humans. To that pale and patient gaze, they were like mayflies: come and
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gone in a moment. What did petty wars matter to the last of the Titans?
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``It will not be like the others,'' Hanno said. ``The Intercessor has
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meddled. Should it be lost, there will be consequences.''
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The Titan's gaze was cold.
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``To you.''
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``You are wrong, Lord,'' Hanno replied. ``If this were a crusade,
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perhaps, but this war is not that. The east came as well, and now the
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south rises. The world stirs. \emph{This war will not be like the
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others}.''
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Consideration.
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``The Young King no longer withholds strength.''
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A concession.
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``Your request?''
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Hanno breathed in. Many a time he had thought of what he might say, of
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what words might sway an entity that had known more years he had known
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breaths. A hundred speeches he had crafted and discarded, only to admit
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the truth to himself: there were no words that would do it. Convince the
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Riddle-Maker should he not wish to be convinced. All he could do was ask
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and hope.
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``\emph{Fight},'' Hanno of Arwad said, and the word rang of power.
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``Stand with Calernia, with life and hope. Stand with us and fight.''
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Silence.
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``All things pass,'' Kreios Maker-of-Riddles said. ``You and he alike.
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Fate cannot be gainsaid or turned back: what must be will be.''
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``Apathy?'' Hanno replied. ``Is that your answer, last of the Titans? Is
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that the wisdom your many years have to offer us?''
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He glared, defiant.
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``I see no wisdom in this,'' he said. ``Only weariness, and what worth
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is that? Who in this world is not weary, Riddle-Maker?''
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``There is no word in any tongue your mind can comprehend,'' the Titan
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said, ``that would touch a sliver of what true weariness is. How could
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you? You grope at a speck of dust in the face of eternity and call it an
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\emph{end}. You are not even a beginning, child. You are the dust of
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dust.''
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``Then what holds you back?'' Hanno challenged. ``If none of it matters,
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if we are but dust, what stays your hand?''
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The dark-skinned man raised his chin, glaring up at the shape in the
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mist.
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``Retreat from the world all you like, it does not retreat from you,''
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Hanno said. ``It will knock at your door, Maker-of-Riddles. It may be
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that you would weather our destruction, but would the Titanomachy?''
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``All things pass,'' the Riddle-Maker simply said.
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Hanno scornfully laughed.
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``It may be that you are worse than the elves,'' he said. ``Even they,
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in the face of oblivion, can muster more than a \emph{shrug}.''
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That, at last, earned a reaction.
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``If you knew the truth of your insult, you would swallow your tongue,''
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the Titan said. ``What the Dawning King schemes is abomination.
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Parcelling godhead into children, forcing a spring rightfully denied.''
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``And this shines kindness on you?'' Hanno coldly said. ``What a prize
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to claim, that your apathy is less a curse on Calernia than
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abomination.''
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``Your fight means nothing,'' the Titan said.
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``He's right,'' Antigone said.
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Silence. Surprise.
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``Antigone?''
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``We don't deserve saving,'' the Witch of the Woods said. ``It's still
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true, what you told me when I was a child: we are petty creatures,
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humans. Most of us are not worth the saving.''
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The last of the Titans watched the woman he had raised, wearing her face
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of painted clay, and said nothing.
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``But it's not about us,'' Antigone said. ``It's about you.''
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She moved her head to the side, titled it back. Grief, question.
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``You stand at the crossroads again,'' Antigone said. ``Do you want to
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be the seven or the one?''
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Hanno's eyes narrowed. He had known that pattern to be older than most
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suspected, but whatever ancient lore she was speaking of was beyond even
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the reach of Recall. The Riddle-Maker's pale eyes stayed on the woman
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he'd raised, silence stretching, and suddenly the pressure vanished. The
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mist dispersed and the wind began to blow again. The spell-shadow of
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Kreios was gone.
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``Will he come?'' Hanno asked.
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Antigone's shoulders were tense. \emph{I don't know}, she signed. Hanno
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of Arwad ruefully smiled, looking up at the sky. This morning the answer
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had been a no, he thought.
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It was a small step forward, but still a step.
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---
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It was Lyonis that had done it, Cordelia decided.
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On the great map at the heart of the Vogue Archive, the grey of death
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had spread. Bremen and Neustria were both lost to the dead and already
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the norther border of Brus was being tested. Once the generals of the
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Dead King had found paths through the swamps, once the thousands of
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Lycaonese slain were armed and assembled into battalions, the push into
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Brus would begin and the death knell of Procer would ring. And yet those
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news had not resonated strongly, down south -- only Lycaonese
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principalities had fallen and Cordelia's homeland was barely considered
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part of the Principate in some parts.
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It was when the dead had smashed through the last few strongholds in
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Cleves and toppled the hastily raised defences in northern Lyonis that
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the panic had begun to spread. Princess Rozala had done the impossible
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-- won three battles in three days with the same army across a breadth
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of sixty miles -- and broken the enemy offensive before restoring the
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defences, but some had still slipped through. For the first time since
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the war had begun, bands of undead had made into Lyonis. One had even
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made it as far south as the border of Salia before being ridden down.
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Despite Cordelia's best efforts to maintain the calm, planting rumours
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it'd been bandits instead, panic had spread like a disease in every
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direction. The people of the Principate were being confronted with the
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fallibility of the realm they'd been under all their lives, the thought
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finally occurring that this wasn't simply another crisis: Procer would
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be annihilated if it lost and it was undeniably losing the war.
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Riots had been only to be expected. In Salia at least Cordelia had been
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able to put down largely without blood using the alchemical compound the
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Concocter had sold the Assembly the recipe to. Elsewhere the rioting had
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been put down violently if it had been put down at all. Entire swaths of
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Iserre were now in revolt against both Cordelia and their own prince
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while the ports of eastern Creusens had seized grain barges meant for
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further north before beginning to turn away all ships. That was not the
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worst of it, of course. This very morning her spymaster Louis de
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Sartrons had brought news of a smaller but more personal grief.
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Princess Francesca, her friend and ally of almost a decade, was dead.
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Her palace had been swarmed by a mob of rioters and disaffected
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soldiers, who'd dragged the sixty-four years old princess into the
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streets and splattered her head with a rock before displaying her on a
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pole. It had happened, Cordelia was told, because Francesca had refused
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to consider what her distant cousin and successor proclaimed within the
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hour: Tenerife was seceding from the Principate of Procer. Envoys were
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being sent, Louis had told her, to Empress Basilia of Aenia and the
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League of Free Cities. Tenerife was leaving a sinking boat in favour of
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the protection that might be offered by a rising one.
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The principality of Orense had followed suit within the week, deposing
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its distant prince still fighting under Princess Rozala and installing
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his youngest daughter in his stead, a thirteen-year-old girl who signed
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whatever the rebel leaders put in front of her to avoid having her
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throat cut and her ten-year-old brother shoved into the seat instead.
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Those were the open rebellions, but there were those more discreet.
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Cordelia's steadfast ally Prince Renato of Salamans had regretfully
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informed her he would no longer be able to send food and men north. If
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he did, he would lose this throne within the month. Prince Salazar of
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Valencis had done the same thing but less honestly, speaking instead of
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`unforeseen delays' in sending both. Cordelia's authority strengthened
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the further north one went, it could be said, but even there it was
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thinning. Orne, Cantal and Creusens now refused refugees at their
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borders no matter what was ordered. The only principalities that still
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obeyed Cordelia were those who felt the Dead King looming over them and
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even that rule was not ironclad.
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Panic was making men do foolish things. Prince Ariel of Arans, spooked
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by the growing incursions of the dead into his lands, was trying to
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approach Callow for protection again -- and willing to go under Laure
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for it, should that be the price. Cordelia was more amused than
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offended, knowing that neither Queen Catherine nor Princess Vivienne
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would be remotely interested and that Duchess Kegan, the regent in the
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capital, was of the opinion that everything east of the Parish should be
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left to burn. Worse than that was the talk in Brabant, where civil
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unrest had been placated only by the ruling princess abdicating and
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promising the offer the crown to the man the people saw as their
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salvation: Hanno of Arwad, the White Knight.
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Cordelia's agents had told her when the Brabant levies had begun to call
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the man `Lord White' but, now that the sentiment was spreading through
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their homeland, she was facing the very real prospect of \emph{Prince}
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White. The First Prince was not sure she had the votes to prevent
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confirmation of such a title by the Highest Assembly if the matter came
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before them. It was a sign of the times. Salia's authority was weakening
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and now a hundred petty kings were emerging from the cracks on a
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once-great realm. And yet what could she do? So very little, when it
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came down to it, but that was no excuse for inaction and apathy.
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Cordelia Hasenbach would not stand before the Heavens having known idle
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hands while the Principate of Procer burned down around her.
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And today she would be laying eyes on one of the ways she might yet stem
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the tide. The weapon had been moved out of Aisne, which was now too
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close to for her tastes, and brought to Salia itself. Outside the city
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proper, requiring an hour's ride there and back, but Cordelia would make
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the time to look at the angel's corpse with her own eyes regardless. The
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test done in Aisne had made it necessary: if the First Prince was to use
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such a weapon, she would first gaze upon it. It was the last of what was
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owed. The man she'd chosen to oversee the matter awaited her at the edge
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of the grounds, mounted as well, as Cordelia allowed herself a genuine
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smile: even in these circumstances, it was a pleasure to see Simon de
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Gorgeault again.
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``Your Most Serene Highness,'' the older man said.
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``Simon,'' she warmly replied.
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She had not forgotten his actions during Balthazar's attempted coup, or
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his loyal service since as her Lord Inquisitor. He'd put down the title
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to serve here instead, but it had taken little urging. They both knew
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that spending time curtailing the House of Light now be much like
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closing the blinds on a home aflame. Besides, she had needed someone she
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could trust to handle this. He led her through the small houses where
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the priests and soldiers lived and to the temple that had been chosen to
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host the corpse. Larger than such a temple out in the countryside should
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be, for it hosted the tomb of some distant Merovins, but not a structure
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of great beauty: it was all worn pale stone and tall angular ceilings.
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Once windows of tainted glass would have added some charm, but over the
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years some had been broken and replaced by simple green glass. Yet the
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temple was large enough and it was placed far from prying eyes, which
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was what had been required.
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``I would advise that you gather yourself before entering, Your
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Highness,'' Simon said after they dismounted. ``It is\ldots{} an
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experience.''
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Cordelia silently nodded, eyes going down to her palm. She could faintly
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feel the burn of laurels against it, a pale echo of the searing pain she
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had felt the night she caught the coin of the Sword of Judgement. Simon
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de Gorgeault led the way into the temple, guards closing the gates
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behind them, and silence washed over Cordelia. It was as if the air had
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turned to water, and though she gulped down breaths she found her heart
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going wild. Simon's cheeks were flushed but he seemed otherwise
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unaffected, perhaps from practice. Cordelia eventually gathered her
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bearings, smoothing down her dress and proceeding further into the
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temple.
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There must have been rooms and halls she walked through, but she could
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barely see any of them. The slipped through her mind as if it were oily
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fingers. All that the First Prince recalled was movement, and then she
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stood before it. The weapon. The ealamal. It felt like the bones of a
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grand creature, curving along the ceiling, but there was nothing natural
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in this: wings of burnished copper spread wide, touching\ldots{}
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something. A spine, Cordelia's mind insisted, but it was not of bone.
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Her eyes shied away from it and what she could glimpse seemed like stone
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sometimes, though impossibly small compared to the burning wings of
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copper, and yet at others it seemed like translucent spike of swirling
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colours. Her eyes watered from trying to look at it.
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``Only priests capable of wielding Light can look directly at it, Your
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Highness,'' Simon said.
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``The wings seem as though they might be simply copper, but the\ldots{}
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spine,'' Cordelia quietly said. ``That is not of Creation.''
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``You have not looked long as the wings, then,'' Simon said. ``That is
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for the best. I have known shallower seas.''
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Cordelia shivered.
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``But it worked, when used?'' she asked.
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``It is as an amplifier for Light, and something more too,'' Simon
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agreed. ``It carries something of the Choir of Judgement within itself
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and spreads it wherever it goes. It would incinerate undead and devils
|
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it touches, certainly, but beyond that the matter grows complicated.''
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``It did not kill anyone who could use Light,'' Cordelia said.
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``But it killed soldiers as well as the criminals, Your Highness,''
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Simon said. ``Not all of them, but many. Should a wave of such power
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pass over Procer, hundreds of thousands will almost certainly die.''
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|
Judgement was strict and not inclined to mercy when doling out
|
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punishment. The weapon, when used, seemed to mimic the harsh attentions
|
|
of that Choir. And people were only people, with all the frailties and
|
|
wickedness that implied. Should the weapon be used on a large scale,
|
|
many thousands would be slain. But not all of the Principate, Cordelia
|
|
thought. Many, too many, but not \emph{all}. And even should Catherine's
|
|
worst predictions come true and the Intercessor seek to influence such a
|
|
weapon -- which should not be possible, with Judgement silenced by the
|
|
Hierarch's spirit -- to spread over all of Calernia, it would not
|
|
represent annihilation. Some would survive. It would be a monstrous
|
|
order to give and a horrifying outcome, the First Prince would not
|
|
pretend otherwise.
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|
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|
It would still be preferable to letting the Dead King kill every living
|
|
thing on the continent.
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|
``Have it prepared for use,'' Cordelia rasped out.
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|
The former head of the Holy Society stiffened.
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|
``I have misgivings, Your Highness,'' Simon said. ``I understand your
|
|
instinct: it will take months of priests pouring Light to make of the
|
|
corpse something that would give the Dead King pause. Yet such power,
|
|
when gathered, has a way of demanding use.''
|
|
|
|
``In five months, the Principate will collapse,'' the First Prince of
|
|
Procer said.
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|
|
|
The older man paused.
|
|
|
|
``We have too many refugees, Simon, and not enough fields,'' she said.
|
|
``I have been staving off the end by buying every scrap of grain I can
|
|
borrow and beg, but the point of no return has come and gone. We have
|
|
too many refugees and not enough fields, we are no longer sustainable.''
|
|
|
|
``Can Keter not be toppled?'' the older man asked.
|
|
|
|
``Undead will be at the gates of Salia by the time our armies encamp
|
|
below the walls of the Crown of the Dead,'' Cordelia said. ``I expect by
|
|
then the south will have effectively seceded anyhow. I have ensured our
|
|
armies will have supplies to carry on that last strike, but I can do no
|
|
more than that.''
|
|
|
|
``Can the Chosen not turn the tide?'' Simon asked, almost plaintively.
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|
|
|
``The Chosen,'' Cordelia hissed, ``are the backbone of our defeat. How
|
|
much time did we spend wrestling them into order as again and again they
|
|
threatened the foundations of the alliances keeping us alive? The Damned
|
|
might be a pack of rapacious killers, but they never gave us half the
|
|
trouble the \emph{Chosen of the Heavens} did. The Red Axe, the Mirror
|
|
Knight, even the White Knight himself.''
|
|
|
|
She clenched her fists.
|
|
|
|
``I was promised that the Named would be seen to, but in this only the
|
|
Black Queen kept her word,'' Cordelia Hasenbach harshly said. ``The
|
|
White Knight failed utterly in this, and I will not now rely on him when
|
|
the fate of every living soul in Calernia rests in the balance.''
|
|
|
|
She stared down Simon of Gorgeault.
|
|
|
|
``Have it prepared for us,'' the First Prince repeated, and this time
|
|
the ring of an order was unmistakeable.
|
|
|
|
The laurels burned against her palm, but Cordelia did not flinch. She
|
|
would do what she must so keep the west in the war until the last
|
|
moment. And should it stumble, should it fail?
|
|
|
|
She would, again, do what she must.
|