Chapter 2: Bad Company
I tighten my cloak, doing whatever I can to keep the spring rain out of my clothes. It doesn’t help, and only the fact that my men are watching keeps me from shivering. Madaléin holds her arms out cruciform, spinning around.
“Escanni rain smells so different than Wesdamerian rain,” she says, smiling up at the sky. “Why is that, do you think, Rogier?”
I look behind me at the mostly miserable men and women marching down the ancient roads. The cobblestones are long overgrown and disused, but it’s better than open country. The wagon train stretches for miles, all the way back to Cantercourse where we started this morning. Before the heavens opened up. The hope was to ford the Aldainé River near Upcreek by week’s end.
“Because there’s no ocean breeze,” I say. “It’s all farmlands. Or was, at least.”
“It’s nice,” she says. “Couldn’t have picked a better day to start on the road!”
One of my lieutenants bitterly side-eyes Madaléin, but says nothing.
Madaléin hops back on her soaked mare. It snorts indignantly. “So, you promised me a story.”
“Did I?” I ask.
“Mais bien sûr!” she says happily. “I was promised an exciting and dramatic backstory for your mad quest.”
“Would rather not,” I say. “I’m not good at stories. Facts and logistics are more to my taste.”
“Didn’t ask, don’t care. I wanna hear it. And if there’s not dragons, buxom tavern wenches, and gratuitous violence in it, I’m going to start singing travel tunes.”
The lieutenant gives me a pleading look.
I sigh. “Alright, Freckles. How much do you know about the Silver Families?”
Our approximate route into Inner Castanor. Over the river and through the woods.
[Adventurer nations may “migrate” like this, moving their main source of power. A good tactic is to move towards richer provinces, which will become part of your country when you stop being murder-hobos]
Madaléin gives me a tired look. “I’m not some hick, Rogier. Everyone knows about them. Big, powerful families that married elven heroes after they helped humanity defeat Black Castanor and the Sorcerer-King. Right after the elves first arrived in Cannor.”
And then quickly adds, “Also, penchant for magical power!”
I grunt. “The Silmuna line comes from a union of the elf Munas Moonsinger and the Queen of Dameria, Auci Damerid. Our symbol is—”
She raises a finger with a sarcastic finger, up to point at one of the company’s banners. “Too far back. Get to the interesting part.”
“Right,” I say, sighing. “I’m just not sure where to begin. You should know enough of it. You’re Wesdamerian after all.”
“I am,” she says, almost warily now. Then, defensively: “My family wasn’t part of the Lilac Wars, not like that. Dad was loyal to Lorent and the Rose Party. Some of my brothers fought for your father. It was messy. And here I am with you, Rogier. The war left a lot of fields barren. Plenty of work for a girl on the road with a party of adventurers, cleaning out bandits, deserters, and monsters.”
The war between Moon and Rose left scars across Cannor. There’s still the rare assassin who comes after me from this.
[Fantasy pan-European War of the Roses that ended just before the game starts]
I tug the reins of my horse, urging him to move a little faster. “Then you know everything you need to know, Freckles. I’m not going to walk you through a war that only ended three years ago and butchered my entire family.”
“Except for
her, right?” she asks, keeping pace with me. “Who was she?”
My hands tighten. “Eilís the Blue. My little sister.”
Madaléin gives me a moment to collect my thoughts.
“She was
obsessed with blue,” I say. “She’d throw a fit if she had to wear any other color. And she loved her silken scarf. We were little more than kids the last time I saw her. I remember our father coming home, covered in blood. Grandfather was dead, dad had been betrayed, and he came home looking frantically for us to make sure we were safe. He found us out in the garden. Eilís was reading a book about butterflies. She—” I almost laugh, remembering every detail of that stupid day. “She was
defacing it. Finding any drawings that said the bugs were supposed to be blue, and scribble-coloring their wings in.
“She held the book up to me, smiling proudly, saying she had ‘corrected’ the book and now everything was right with the world. And…”
I look to the side. My eyes eventually go to our banners of the Damerian moon. “Then father found us and wrapped us in his arms. I remember my sister screaming. Not because he was injured or wounded from battle. But because he got
red on her blue drawings.”
“What happened then?” Madaléin asks softly.
“Dad was alive, but he brought the war home,” I say, shaking my head. “Eilís was sent to Castellyr, where we’re going, to be the queen’s lady-in-waiting, and hopefully marry the prince. Secure their help against the Rose Party.”
“And then the Dookanson happened,” she says, staring down into her lap.
I nod. “And when the blood had pooled, the fires turning to ash, I was alive, and everyone was dead. And I came here to find my baby sister. Maybe build a new home for the people of Dameria.”
Little to do when we stop to rest, but to train and drill. I learn some tricks from Freckles.
Madaléin rubs her cheek, as if idly trying to wipe away her freckles. “And what will you do when you find her?”
I reach my hand back. Madaléin eyes me, instinctively reaching for her sword. She looks around, and with some amusement I watch that
tenseness of soldiers ready for battle spreading forth.
My hand comes back from a saddlebag holding a leatherbound book. “I’m going to let my baby sister finish
correcting her book on butterflies,” I say, and my smile is all teeth.
Silvervord, where Lake Silvermere flows into the Silverainé river, was once a thriving center of trade.
[The White Walls are a unique terrain feature surrounding Inner Castanor. Having my capital here basically makes me invincible due to the fort defense bonus. The Guild Hall helps speed up your ability to reform into a real country. Expensive, but always build it first.]
Madaléin looks up at the massive walls of white stone, stretching from the lake in the south and vanishing north into the horizon. They’re not what they once were. Once, these massive walls were pristine and covered an entire region, the heartland of ancient Castanor.
“Beyond these walls lies what remains of Castellyr,” I say.
Elbowing me, Madaléin laughs. “You say it like we’ve never been beyond the walls. The Battle of Castonath wasn’t
that long ago.”
I look over the assembling warcamp. Centuries of war and neglect have turned the once imposing walls into little more than stone pillars, overgrown with vines, blasted open, destroyed by rain and weather and time itself. Silvervord’s section is more intact than some, and we can build up against them to fortify our warcamp, which has been growing even as we’ve been on the move.
“I know,” I say. “You learned so many new swears since then.”
Madaléin winks. “You can bet Corin’s used bathwater on that.”
I stare.
“Alright, not my best blasphemy,” she admits sheepishly. “Give me some time. I’ll get back to you with a really nasty one!”
“Just help settle the camp,” I tell her. “I’m going to set up foraging parties.”
We’ve cleared enough that we’ve made a name for ourselves outside of those who fought beside Corin.
Follow the Silverainé River down and you meet up with the Alen, which flows through the Kingdom of Gawed, before ending in the Dameshead Sea. Right into the heart of Anbennar.
It takes some time. But from all the riches and loot we’ve acquired fighting orcs, goblins, and other miscellaneous bugbears, we’ve acquired enough worth trading. While we won’t be here for long, sending traders downriver provides more tasks for the Company and returns us a tidy profit.
We came to Escann as liberators. We stay as homesteaders.
[One of the unique “government reform” mechanics adventure nations in Escann get as you move towards becoming a real nation]
Across the lands we’ve purged of orcs, you can find men settling down to farm, but still waving the Damerian moon. They’re not deserters, of course. Everyone with me is a volunteer.
But more and more are turning swords to plowshares. Like the slaves we rescued from Taranton, they pledge their loyalty to the Sons of Dameria as if we’re a nation. Often enough, our adventurers are the closest the land has to any semblance of law and order.
It almost feels like we’re slowly building a new home, as we march by and purge evil.
It also gives us deeper supply networks. Damerian farmers settling in Escann may now ship out grain at fair market value.
Doesn’t mean the Company doesn’t have to forage. And when we’re back in camp, resting, I refuse to sit still. I train and drill and practice.
Who. The fuck. Was that?
I stand up, brushing my men off. At first I look around for Madaléin, wondering if she’s put on a wig or something.
But no, she’s not here. The men I was training with look as confused as me.
I’m reminded of Corin, of all things. Who died and ascended. I rub my eyes, though. It’s not like I’m the most pious or devout man. I offer token gifts to Corin because it’s what so many in Escann expect.
“Ser?” one of the lieutenants I was training with, Trystan, asks. I’ve had trouble getting through his guard lately. “I don’t think I hit you that hard.”
I reach for my practice sword with a growl. “Back to it, soldier. Let’s finish this duel.”
And somehow, with only a few quick moves of foot and sword, I knock the man on his ass and win the duel.
Alright, red-headed ghost lady who may have actually been Corin. I’ll keep that in mind.
[Here we see the Regent’s Court Emulant system. If your leader is like your patron deity, you get bonuses! Extra military points are absolutely delicious. Thanks, Corin!]
You’d think a meeting with an aspect of the divine would be more profound, assuming it wasn‘t just a really weird head wound. But I feel fine after a long day of training and drilling. Really, the worst thing is that I actually explained it to someone.
And now we’ve got rumors that Corin herself favors me spreading among the ranks.
It’s more embarrassing than anything. I’m not nearly arrogant enough to proclaim myself the
“Chosen of the War Goddess, y’know, the one who was right here a couple years ago”. But I suppose I’ll take the giddy morale in my men and officers for what it’s worth.
My biggest priority is leading the men out to scout the area ahead before Madaléin gets word of this and finds a way to make up another verbal crime against Corin. I manage to go a few weeks of this before anything happens.
The Sword Covenant, a company of adventurers from Aldresia.
I lead a party downriver, up through Carlanhal. It’s a country of old mines outside the White Walls, without much in the way of orcs or other troubles. And almost bereft of supplies to forage.
Right as we think that’s it and are about to return to Silvervord, we hear orcish warhorns. Screams of distant battle. An explosion that has to be magefire.
I gather the horsemen around me and make for the noise.
We crest a ridge and find an orcish warband engaged in battle with armed and dismounted adventurers. I make the call and the horses slow into a gallop, lances out, making as if we’re actually going to charge directly into them.
The thunder of the hooves is enough to turn all attention to us. Caught between us and the soldiers, the orcs break and run, and we ride them down. They were a sizable warband, and now another horde of theirs is ground into the mud.
Pest control. Same shit, different day.
When we round back on the soldiers we’d helped, I find them well-armored, a mix of heavy infantry, archers, and a couple of obvious mages. Most of them are wearing the black-and-white colors of the Sword Covenant.
“You’ll forgive me for reckoning you boys could use a hand,” I call out, bringing my courser to a stop. “We’re the Sons of Dameria. You look to be Sword Covenant?”
One of the men, grinning widely and wearing chainmail, steps forwards. He looks me up and down and whistles. “I thought we might find
you here, Lord Silmuna.”
I side-eye the man. “Either you know me for good reason or ill.”
He laughs. “For good, I assure you. My name is Ser Laurens síl Place. We’ve met before during the Battle of Castonath.”
I blink. “
The Ser Laurens?”
“The very same battlemage who was part of Corin’s original party,” he says with a bow.
“Then, Ser Laurens, it’s good to meet you again. You’ll forgive me a poor memory of Castonath. They were bloody times,” I say, but feel the hair on the back of my neck stand as he laughs it away. “You said you were looking for me?”
Laurens shrugs. “I’ve been making my rounds in these parts with the Sword Covenant until a little birdie traveling down the Silverainé said you saw Corin not long ago.”
I grimace, doing my best to keep it from becoming a full-body cringe. “It’s complicated.”
Hands on hips, he says, “Well, Lord Rogier Silmuna, that’s good enough for me. Tell me, would you like to destroy some evil?”
He’s a little weird, but everyone who volunteered to come to Escann is in some ways a complete nutjob.
“I don’t like ’im, mon capitaine,” Madaléin says, chewing on a piece of sausage. She takes a drink of beer before offering me the mug, which I push away. She barely notices, just glaring daggers at Ser Laurens as he carouses with the troops. Some of them he’d brought, wearing the colors of his order, but most of them ours.
“Freckles, be nice,” I say.
She looks offended. “I
am nice. I’m so sweet I give people sugar poisoning.” Madaléin points her sausage in Laurens’ direction before taking a sharp bite of it.
“He’sh jusht freaky,” she says, chewing and speaking at the same time. “Just some battlemage, member of Corin’s circle, shows up, is all buddy-buddy with the men, and wants to help us.”
“I’m not seeing the issue here.”
“He’s just—c’mon!” She gestured vaguely.
I give her a mild look.
“Too much magic?” she suggests.
“We have plenty of mages with us and you have no problem with them.”
She taps her cheekbone in thought. “He smells funny?”
“It’s Aldresian colognes,” I say. “Try again.”
“Would you believe me if I said it was woman’s intuition?” she asks, eyes narrow, like she’s grinding her teeth against some particularly uncomfortable fabric.
“Tell me one thing that’s womanly about you.”
“Shit. Got me there.” She finishes her dinner. When she looks up, she scrambles suddenly to her feet.
Ser Laurens approaches our campfire, all smiles. “I saw you gesturing in my direction. Which happens to be to your east. And I heard you were looking to go east.”
“How?” Madaléin asks quickly.
The man cocks an eyebrow. “I just asked, like, pretty much anyone here?”
To reach Bladebreaker, we’ll need to fight through Severed Ear and Bloodgorger.
“Well, if you’re looking to get to the Bladebreaker Clan,” Ser Laurens says, “I know just the route. And I know exactly how many men the orcish tribes have.”
Madaléin makes a face. “Did you just ask ‘like, pretty much every orc’ to learn that?”
Ser Laurens frowns. “Is she always like this?”
“Sometimes,” I say.
“That time of the month?” he asks with a snide little look.
Madaléin spits her water out, eyes wide. “Con de Corin, t’es tellement con!”
I hiss in through my teeth. “I’m with her this time, Ser Laurens. Let’s not stoop to this level. Don’t talk about Madaléin like that.”
Ser Laurens just stares at me, like he doesn’t know what he did wrong.
“Look,” I say, “you wanted to talk about Bladebreaker.”
He watches as Madaléin seethes in place. “Right. Well. Destroying evil. I know the routes to go and their numbers. And if you’re going that way, I’d like to help. All I ask is for a few of your Damerians to join my unit. We’re low on manpower.”
The orcs outnumber almost two to one, but I like those odds.
I allowed Laurens a token force of volunteers, and they act as our advanced scouting party mostly. Light cavalry who can dismount as needed.
Ser Laurens makes for a decidedly good vanguard.
“Seriously, Freckles,” I say as we march into Severed Ear territory, where Laurens claim they won’t be expecting anyone. “You’re acting rather…”
She frowns. “What are you, my dad?”
I shudder. “I really hope not. Raising you
would drive me to drink.”
The look in her eyes is horrible. “I mean, if it’ll take the stick out of your ass and help you drink, I can call you da—”
I shoot my hand up. “See, right there. This is the level of appropriate adventure humor.” I raise my hand higher. “This is you right now. And you only get like this when you’re—”
Cutting myself off, I sigh.
“Take a step back?” she hesitantly suggests.
I nod. “Agreed. For both of us.”
She tugs at her horse’s reins, sucking in her lips. “It’s weird, us fighting. Laurens is a bit of a creep, though, oui?”
Glancing to the side, I say, “He shares a name with my Wesdamerian cousin.”
“The traitorous side of your family?”
I nod. “So that’s an automatic point against him.”
Madaléin snorts. “You have weird standards.”
Before I can continue, one of Laurens’ riders crests a hill and approaches us with news. The orcish warband is camped nearby, and they know exactly how to strike them.
I share a look with Madaléin, and we organize our soldiers into formation before marching to ambush the orcs.
The orcs fight like Agrados himself. If not for Ser Laurens’ advice and his timely arrival on scene, I’m not sure we would have won.
[Orcish racial benefits and their religious ability to summon good generals makes them a bitch to fight. I am two military techs ahead of them, my four vs their two, and I outnumbered them, and it was still an even battle!]
Ser Laurens greets us as we mop the battlefield up. His outriders had been instrumental in breaking the orcs’ will to fight. “Not a bad show, then. Your boys have been very useful.”
Madaléin glances at me as if for approval. With hesitance I nod. “Right then,” she says, clearing her throat. “Ser Laurens, a good show out there. Now I want you to take your scouting force out and keep the orcs away. We’re going to spread out and try to stop them from regrouping.”
I say nothing.
Ser Laurens frowns, until he shrugs it away. It’s all smiles again. “That I can do. We’ll break the orcish bastards before the month’s over.”
He turns to leave, then pauses. “One last thing. The orcs are distracted because we’re not the only company in the area. You should try to work with them, milord.”
“Who?” I ask.
“Captain Lothane Bluetusk, of the Corintar. My scouts noticed his men in the hills. See? I am pretty useful.” He winks at Madaléin. “He’s a bit of a tightass, I think. Corin liked him more than I cared for. Couldn’t be arsed to stick around when he took over after Corin. Still, might be useful to meet with him.”
He gives an almost comical salute and gets back on his horse. “Be seein’ you. Kill a couple orcs just for me, why don’t you?”
Madaléin glares as he and his detachment ride off. “You see he’s a creep, right?”
I make a so-so gesture. “Let’s just meet this Lothane fellow in the flesh. Ensure there’s no problems on the campaign.”
Our forces spread out with Ser Laurens’ help. I take a detachment to ride towards where the Corintari are.
I’d heard stories of Lothane. I even saw him once, from a distance years ago. He fought side-by-side with Corin in her final fight against the Dookanson. I thought he looked big, a little dumb and oafish, like an oversized Gawedi.
The Corintar are a knightly order, or at least that’s their appearance. Heavily armed and armored men and matching cavalry. Made up of some of Corin’s Circle, her adventuring party, they took on her name as a sort of honorific. They even use her personal symbol as their banner.
Corintari soldiers greet Madaléin and myself as friends and comrades. We fought alongside Corin with them, after all.
He isn’t human. He isn’t human.
But I can’t help but stare as we sit down in Lothane’s war tent. He’s big, alright. A tall, well-built specimen of a man, with skin a greenish hue. Those piercing, entirely too-human eyes. In a monstrous sort of way, he’s almost handsome. But I can’t stop myself from glancing again and again at his tusks, smaller than a real orc.
He’s tied a little scrap of silk around his left tusk. The Sword Covenant prefers black and white, the Corintar love their bright reds, and the Sons of Dameria proudly wear Damerian blue. The same color as that little scrap of fabric. It’s like a calm blue dot in the sea of Corintari fire.
“Something on my face, Captain Silmuna?” he asks dryly, his voice deep and smooth.
“I…” I say, and fail. Feel a deep sense of unease in Lothane’s presence.
“You’re an orc!” Madaléin blurts. “Or, half-orc? Not human!”
Lothane’s eyes widen. His hand slaps against his face, feeling the cheekbones and the occasional scars before his fingers run along his tusk. “My gods, you’re right,” he says, voice full of horror. “All this time and nobody told me…”
He stands up so suddenly his chair falls over. “We must tell the men at once that the Grandmaster of their order had a human mother and orc father!”
“W-what?” Madaléin whispers, looking at me of all people.
Lothane snorts, picking his chair back up to sit. “I’m fucking with you. You think I’ve never seen a mirror in my life?” He holds a hand up. “Don’t—don’t answer that.”
“I mean,” I say, trying to get some control over the situation, “I was just going to make an off-color joke.”
“Mhm,” he grunts. “Heard ’em all, Captain. Hurt the first few times. Then I gouged out the eye and cut a couple fingers off the orc who kept makin’ ’em, and I’ve been pretty self-confident since then.”
Lothane smiles, an expression that altogether too human on a face that’s half-orcish, tusks and all. “So how can we help the Sons of Dameria?”
“We’re marching east,” I say, putting a hand on Madaléin so she stops looking so weirded out. It’s as much for her sake as it is mine. “Heading through Severed Ear to take down the Bladebreakers.”
“Funny. We’re going northwest,” he says. “Taking out more of the Dookanson’s remnants in the Castonath area. Same tribes, it seems. We should work together.”
I blink in surprise. “My thoughts exactly. I expected negotiations or something.”
Lothane nods. “Please. I’m not about bullshit you. You fought alongside Corin. That’s good enough for me, Captain. We’re ready to move out and support you if you support us.”
As we fight alongside the Corintar, Ser Laurens continues his incredible streak of luck and precision. Suspiciously good.
Lothane proves a fine commander. Even Madaléin seems to come around to him. Between my soldiers, his knights, and Ser Lauren’s scouting, we break through any orcish warband before they’re even ready to fight, and it’s not long until we’re back in the ruins of Castonath.
Lower Castonath, at least. The orcs have started to make inroads here, which has upset some of the locals still living here.
It doesn’t take long to utterly shatter the orcish forces in Inner Castonor. Soon, the way is clear for us to march east and head into hills where Bladebreaker makes its home.
I remember the orcs putting up a harsher fight when the Dookanson led them.
“Tell me you drink, at least, eh?” Madaléin asks Lothane. Both Damerian and Corintari soldiers are intermingling after our mutual victory. We complement each other.
“I’ve never had a taste for it,” he says politely.
Madaléin groans hard. “Corin’s girl-dick, I’m
surrounded by the lamest men in the world.”
Lothane squints. “You… by her
what?”
I wave my hand. “It’s a thing she’s doing for some reason, trying to blaspheme the newest goddess and…” I go silent, remember how this half-orc was literally next to Corin as she died, and then named his entire knightly order after the woman.
If anyone believes Corin is a
god god, it would be him, her most faithful servant on Halann.
Instead, Lothane snorts. “That’s fucking hilarious. I—I’ve never thought to swear by her. How many you got? I want to steal them all.”
She thinks on it for a moment. “I’m building a sort of compendium of new and innovative ways to ensure I go to hell when I die. So far, I’ve only got a handful, buuuuut more to follow.”
“Rather disgusting, don’t you all think?” Ser Laurens says, pouring himself a bowl of stew. Some of the Castonath locals provided us with the meat, and it tastes weird and a little sinewy. The man’s smile is somehow upside-down, if that makes any sense. “After everything she did, we should honor her memory, and not make jokes,
Lothane.”
Lothane’s expression sours and he sits up a little straighter. “Go fuck yourself, Laurens,” he says, somehow formally. “Corin would be
delighted to know we’re swearing by her these days. Silmuna, Madaléin, you should have heard the jokes she used to tell in the party’s downtime.”
The Sword Brother sneers and takes his stew off to eat with his unit.
“I like your frank vulgarity, Lothane,” Madaléin says, tucking away loose strands of her hair. “And that you also don’t like that man. Hey, Rogier, can we keep Lothane? Maybe trade him for Laurens.”
Lothane eyes the girl. “I’m not the only one Laruens gives the heebie-jeebies to?” He grunts. “He was with the Corintar briefly. Was very good. But then I started asking how he did his work, and he decided to offer his services elsewhere.”
I lean forwards. “We have some of our men working with his unit,” I say. “We can probably just ask them. They might work with him, but they’re Damerians through and through.”
“Investigation and intrigue?” he asks, smiling. “Sign me up.”
What. The Fuck. What the fuck the fuck the fuck?!
We let the soldier go. And then it’s just Lothane, Madaléin, and myself in the tent. Our soldiers continue to celebrate their victory together.
“He
breaks their minds,” Lothane says. And unlike when we first met, this time his horror seems genuine. “I’m no friend to Dookan’s followers, but… Gods above!”
“I heard him too,” Madaléin adds. She looks at me. “What the hell do we
do, mon capitaine?”
Hunching forwards, one hand over my chin, I stare into nothing and think. Thinking of all the knowledge the orcs have. How hard it was to interrogate just one orc to learn of Eilís. If I let Laurens go wild with my blessing, what could we learn?
How easy would it be to devour the orc of every orc we met until we finally learned what happened to my sister? No more bullshitting. No more adventurers. Just the solid, brutal facts.
“I know that look, mon capitaine,” Madaléin says warily. “You’re thinking of your sister.”
“Sister?” Lothane asks, thrown for a loop.
“I came to Escann to find my baby sister,” I say quietly. “It doesn’t matter here. I’m just…”
Lothane stands up sharply. “You’d actually
allow this if it helped you find your kith and kin?”
My hand tightens over my mouth. Words don’t come quickly, swallowed up in a sea of thought and possibility. But there’s a harsh look in Lothane’s eyes, and a nervous quirk in Freckles’ grimace. I look down at my own hand, the little scars and callouses from a lifetime of fighting.
Fighting for my family. For my little sister. For a future for my people.
I told myself I’d do anything to find her, permit any savagery. But now, as both of them look at me, I wonder how much I meant, and how much was just bluster I told myself just to stay sane and focused.
I drag my hand down my face and tighten my lips. “Bring Ser Laurens to me, Madaléin. We’ll deal with this in the flesh.”
“I’ll help,” Lothane says, voice terse. “This is a matter for all Escann.”
Once, I told myself I’d do anything to find my baby sister. No effort too much, no cost too prohibitive, no evil too great. I watched Corin die after watching my family die, and thought that I’d have to rebuild this new world from the graves and charnel pits.
I look now at Laurens, and see a man who isn’t all talk. Isn’t just bitter and angry. A man who
follows through on his grim promises.
I look at Lothane surrounded by his Corintar, baring his teeth and tusks in a snarl. I look at Madaléin, resting on her sword, still glancing at me for approval. And I wonder how far I’d really go to reunite my family. To be able to pretend, if just for a moment, that everything might be okay.
“How the fuck can you speak of Corin like that?” Lothane snarls. “You walked with her. You helped train her. But you
didn’t really know her. You weren’t next to her, powerless to help her as she died. Who do you think you fucking are, Laurens?”
Laurens grins. “I’m the only one who’s willing to really stop evil. By any means necessary. I know what I do is horrible, but you would rather my methods or let the orcs kill and murder and rape all they want, huh,
huh?”
Again, I find myself thinking of my baby sister. And looking between Lothane and Madaléin. I close my fingers into fists as they start to scream and yell. Until I have to take control between everything explodes.
I stand, reaching for my sword. “Ser Laurens síl Place,” I say. “You are a witch. How can we build a better tomorrow if the tools to build it make us tomorrow’s monsters?” It feels like I’m just saying it, though. The correct words even though I’m not sure I really mean.
The man laughs like he can see straight through me. “Oh that’s rich, Silmuna. You—”
Armored men burst into the tent, wearing Sword Covenant colors. His loyalists whom we dragged him away from earlier. They aim weapons at us, threatening spellcraft as they grab Laurens.
“Oh look, my escape is here,” Laurens says as it turns into a standoff. “I was wrong about you, Silmuna. You don’t have any big dreams or worthwhile ambitions. You’re just another petty bastard. Fine by me. You want to be nothing, so be it. I’ll keep
fighting evil in the only ways that count.”
He casts a spell, a blinding flash of light. By the time our senses are about us, Laurens and his Sword Brothers are riding out of Castonath.
Madaléin and Lothane try to give chase, but it’s too late.
Corintari and Damerian leaders meet up in the aftermath.
“He’s gone back to the Sword Covenant,” one of Lauren’s former soldiers says, staring at his feet.
Madaléin shakes her head. “We’re not just letting him go, right?”
Lothane regards me, arms folded, silent.
“No,” I say, as if it pains me. “If we don’t stop him, his methods will continue. They’re spread. Until people think it’s okay.”
And finally, the half-orc nods. His eyes are narrow. “Captain Silmuna, if you’re riding after Laurens, then come what may, the Corintar will ride with you. If you’re willing to fight evil, you are my brother.”
“I’ll gather the men,” Madaléin offers, and I nod, and my mouth feels dry.
Corin hasn’t even been dead a decade, and already those her followers are coming to blows.
“We ride west for Carlanhal in the morning,” I decide.
Away from Eilís.