Deep inside a clandestine stronghold sat the Dark Horse Felwinter and Citan, Warlord of the 32nd Sector of Old Russia. A polished obsidian table rested heavily between them.
âDidnât think youâd have the courage to come back here,â said the Warlord.
âSituational awareness. Not courage. I go where I can do the most good. Thank you for seeing me.â Felwinterâs voice sounded as hollow as his helmet. Citan wanted to knock it clean off the Iron Lordâs bony shoulders. He could do it with a single punch.
âAs I recall, you used to have a throne on that Light-forsaken peak, âtil you joined up with the wolves. Youâre the only Warlord I know who held an entire mountain.â
âFelwinter Peak.â
âNo one ever calls it that.â
âThe Iron Lords do. Though they did ask me to take that throne down.â
Citanâs laugh shook the room. âHow is losing territory ever a good thing for a Warlord?â Felwinter folded his hands atop the table. Underneath it, Citan made two fists, a crescent of Light flickering between them.
âJoin us and find out,â said the Iron Lord. âTurn your sector over to us. You can still patrol it, of course.â
Citanâs voice lowered. âOf course. You know Iâll refuse.â
âThen weâll put you down, and take your territory by force. Over and over again if we have to.â
âI invite you to my home after you abandon us, and you come to threaten me?â The Warlord stood, towering over Felwinter.
âTo broker peace.â Citan thought that even the voice behind the helmet didnât believe what it said. The floor shuddered as the Warlord upended the massive table with one hand. It smashed into the opposite wall, as tendrils of Void Light passed through it and coalesced into Felwinterâs leaping form.
Citan had seen this parlor trick before, and judged that he could hammer the Iron Lord out of the airâ
But Felwinterâs momentum continued into a knee-lift that smashed into Citanâs head as the larger man reared back to strike. The Warlord fell, the front of his helm shattering. Felwinter landed next to Citanâs prone body.
âLady Jolder taught me that. I canât say the Iron Lords havenât done me any favors,â the voice intoned.
âYou know weâll burn the world down before we let the Iron Lords rule it,â the larger man gasped, breathing out of his mouth, his face a bloody mess. The Void Light in Felwinterâs hand snappedâand so did the Warlordâs neck.
âRadegast is scattered. Perun is indecisive. Silimar wants to build a tower and hide. But theyâre going to change the world; no one can stop them,â Felwinter said quietly to the corpse. He parted his coat and drew a bronze shotgun. âWill it be for the better? I donât know. But they mean to end the fighting, so I donât have to sleep with my back to the wall every night, Light in my hand. And thatâs not nothing.â
He paused, as if waiting for something.
âNormally, this is where I ask you to reconsider. Tell you that you should come with me. See how powerful your Light can become. But I know you, Citan. What you do with the land you take, with its people. The other Lordsâespecially Saladinâmight let you walk away. Iâm not going to give them the chance.â
Citanâs Ghost sparked into view from above, bringing its eye to bear on its fallen charge. The Warlord emerged from a radiant column, a frenzied shout at his lips.
Felwinterâs shotgun cracked like thunderâonce for the Warlord, and again for his Ghost.