499 lines
24 KiB
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499 lines
24 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-8-introduction}{%
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\chapter{Introduction}\label{chapter-8-introduction}}
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\epigraph{``Note: orc buoyancy is limited. Avoid fighting the damnable
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rebels near shoddily-built dams in the future.''}{Extract from the journal of Dread Emperor Malignant II}
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They called Summerholm the Gate of the East.
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Should the Legions manage to bypass the Blessed Isle -- as they had a
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handful of times in the past -- it was the only walled city between the
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Empire and the heartlands of Callow. It was the one city the Praesi
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\emph{had} to take, since it commanded the only bridge across the
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Hwaerte River. As far as I knew, the Wastelanders had only managed to
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conquer it twice: once during the Conquest and once over seven hundred
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years ago, under Dread Empress Triumphant. While my teacher had managed
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to reduce its walls through clever use of goblin engineering, Triumphant
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had simply made them obsolete by sailing her flying fortress right over
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them. I could see why she would have gone to such an extreme, now that I
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was in sight of those very fortifications. The side of the city we were
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facing was the least fortified, but even here the walls ran two
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concentric circles of stark granite over fifty feet tall. Crenelated
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bastions ran the length of them, most showing the silhouette of a siege
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engine, and even as close to sundown as we were there were soldiers
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manning them. \emph{Legionaries instead of the Royal Guard, though. Not
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that they're any less well-trained -- the opposite, if anything.}
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``They look like they're expecting an army any moment,'' I commented as
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I guided Zombie towards Black with a tug of the reins.
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His own horse was also a necromantic construct, I was sure of it --
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there was a certain\ldots{} smell to that kind of power that I was
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beginning to pick up on -- but it was hard to tell what it actually
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looked like under all the steel it was covered in. With all the weight
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that meant I was pretty sure his mount could double as a battering ram
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in a pinch, though that would do to the horse under it did not bear
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imagining.
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``Summerholm has always been the keystone to warding off invasions,'' he
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replied. ``It continues to serve that purpose, if under a different
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banner.''
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I snorted. ``And who'd be doing the invading, exactly?''
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For better or worse, the Empire's hold on Callow was unchallenged.
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There'd been no major uprising since the Conquest, and with Procer
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embroiled in that particularly nasty civil war of theirs they'd had
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other things on their mind. That left the Free Cities to the south,
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who'd only ever managed to stop attacking each other when they were
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being invaded, and the fanatically isolationist elves to the north
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hiding in their forest.
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``There's always someone plotting nefarious designs around here,'' Black
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replied drily. ``It's something of an occupational hazard.''
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I rolled my eyes. I had a feeling there was more to it than that but my
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teacher declined to elaborate any further on the subject though, so I
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elected to let the matter go. I'd bring it up again when I'd acquired a
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better education on all things Praesi, of course, but until then there
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was no real point to it. Besides, we'd gotten close enough tot he city
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that I could see the Legion camps sprawled all around it. The official
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roster of soldiers for a legion was four thousand fighting men, I
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dredged up from my most recent readings, though the \emph{Praecepta
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Militaria} had stated there were usually about as many camp followers,
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merchants and servants trailing in their wake. It would have been
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impossible for a city the size of Summerholm to lodge two legions
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comfortably, so a pair of semi-permanents camps had been established
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outside the walls.
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``Weeping Heavens,'' I muttered, ``It's like a second city.''
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However many civilians the Sixth and Ninth legions had started out
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followed by, the number had swelled out of control since. The central
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areas where legionaries slept were cleanly outlined according to
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regulations, overlooked by earthen walls and watchtowers, but around
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them small towns had sprouted into existence. Dingy huts made of wood
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and baked clay from the river banks made up up some of it, but there
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were twice as many pitched tents of all colours. Some avenues large
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enough for troops to go through had been established, but the rest of it
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was a messy labyrinth of small lanes. We were maybe an hour away from
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sundown but the place was teeming with activity, from the small courts
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were merchants were selling their wares in improvised market stands to
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the clumps of families making their evening meals in massive iron
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cooking pots. There was even a man trying to guide a herd of goats into
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a pen, though one of the does kept getting away to bleat plaintively at
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a very amused legionary.
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``Summerholm is where Praesi and Callowans mingle the most,'' Black
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spoke as our party started down the slope towards the camps. ``All trade
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goes through it, so it's fast becoming one of the richest cities in the
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Empire.''
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``And there haven't been any tensions?'' I asked. ``I heard the siege
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got pretty rough, towards the end.''
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Summerholm hadn't been sacked, not exactly -- Legion regulations stated
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that rapists were hanged and looters lost a hand if caught with stolen
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property -- but the final assault on the walls had been costly enough
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that no one on the Empire's side had been particularly inclined to mercy
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when the surrender had been given.
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``Rebuilding the city accrued some good will,'' Black murmured. ``And
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leaving eight thousand men and women in the prime of their life as
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garrison means that mixed race marriages were an inevitability.''
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He paused for a moment.
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``You're not wrong, however. Summerholm is the pulse of Callowan
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sentiment towards the occupation: any rebellion with a chance of success
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will have its seeds planted here. Our agents have been keeping a close
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eye on things.''
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\emph{Our agents.} I'd avoided questioning Black on where he was
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learning all these things he wasn't supposed to know so far, but since
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he was bringing up the subject\ldots{}
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``The Eyes of the Empire,'' I said. ``That's what your spies are called,
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aren't they?''
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They were famous among Callowans, a shadowy threat to match the very
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visible one posed by the Legions. Everybody had a story about how one of
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their cousins or a friend of a friend had been snatched in the dark of
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night by the ruthless men and women who bore the lidless eye tattoo. I
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was pretty sure I'd seen one in the Nest, once. Well, either that or a
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man with a deplorable fondness for hooded cloaks. Black's lips stretched
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into a sardonic smile.
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``Ah, the Eyes,'' he mused. ``One of Scribe's better ideas, that.''
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I frowned. ``What's that supposed to mean?''
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``I have a great deal of spies in Callow, true,'' he acknowledged. ``So
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do Malicia and quite a few of the High Lords. But I assure you none of
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them go around hiding their face or bearing an incriminating mark.''
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``But there \emph{are} people like that going around,'' I pointed out.
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``If they're not yours, whose are they?''
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``Oh, they're mine,'' Black replied. ``But they're not meant to actually
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gather information.''
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I closed my eyes and rubbed the bridge of my nose. The way the man
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thought gave me headaches, but there was a twisted sort of sense in what
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he was saying.
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``So while everyone is paying attention to the shady people looming in
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the corners\ldots{}''
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``No one thinks twice about the waitress serving drinks just close
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enough to eavesdrop,'' he finished amusedly. ``Every resistance movement
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in Callow worth the name checks prospective members for the eye before
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letting them in. Letting them catch a few `attempted infiltrators' every
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year lets us slip in agents when we really need them.''
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My teacher was kind of a bastard, I reflected, but I couldn't deny that
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he was a \emph{clever} bastard.
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``And nobody's ever seen through that?'' I asked.
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``Once you give people what they expect to see,'' he shrugged, ``they
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rarely bother to dig any deeper.''
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I grunted, chewing over that particular tidbit in silence. He'd offered
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it almost off-handedly, but it seemed to be the way he approached a lot
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of things -- playing on the assumptions of his enemies, making them
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think they had it right while preparing the knife in the back.
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Everything surrounding Names had a pattern to it, almost formulaic steps
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that every child learned from the cradle through stories of heroes and
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villains: people who adhered to those steps, whether consciously or not,
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became predictable in a way. It was something I could use to my own
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advantage, if I paid attention closely enough. Putting the thoughts
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aside, I returned to more immediate matters.
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``So your agents in Summerholm,'' I probed, ``have they mentioned
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anything interesting?''
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I already knew I'd have a welcoming committee waiting for me in the
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city: the three bundles of pressure in the back of my mind felt too
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close to be anywhere else. The fourth bundle, the weird one, was still a
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little ways off. It got stronger every day, though, which I took to mean
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it was headed in our direction. Black had avoided telling me too much
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about what awaited me in Summerholm, so far, but I had no idea whether
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that was because he was a cryptic jackass by nature or because there
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would be\ldots{}. consequences if he did. Still, stumbling blind into
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the situation blind was a decent way to head for an early grave: I'd be
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much more comfortable going in with an edge, any edge. The dark-haired
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man graced me with a steady look.
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``There are two major resistance movements in the city, at the moment,''
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he finally said. ``The Sons of Streges -- disaffected veterans, mostly
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-- and a splinter group of the former Thieves' Guild. My agents in both
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of them have stopped reporting.''
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The tone was flat, a stark contrast to the way he usually seemed to take
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everything half-seriously.
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``You think they got caught,'' I said.
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``They are either dead or held captive,'' he stated. ``There are ways
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through which they would have contacted the network, otherwise.''
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I frowned. If a single agent had been caught it could have been a simple
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blunder on the person's part, but every single one of them?
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``Magic?'' I questioned. ``Truth spells are rare, but they're not
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exactly unheard of.''
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He shook his head. ``There is no such thing as a reliable truth spell,''
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he informed me. ``At best they can increase the odds of catching someone
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in a lie -- and given how esoteric that branch of magic is, very few
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mages ever bother to study them. There are, as far as I am aware, none
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who have in Callow.''
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It went unsaid that his awareness was as far and wide as it was feasible
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for someone with the resources he had at his disposal to manage.
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``I'm having a hard time believing every single one of your spies
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screwed up at the same time,'' I told him.
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``So am I,'' he said quietly. ``Which means we may have a hero on our
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hands.''
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Well, \emph{fuck}. ``That's bad, right?'' I asked. ``Because it sounds
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bad. I thought you caught these types before they ever got in a position
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to do stuff like this?''
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``Once in a while, one slips the net,'' Black admitted. ``Normally they
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out themselves shortly after by taking a stand for justice in some
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backwater village, but this one has made no ripples at all.'' He
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frowned. ``Or, more likely, made them somewhere they went unnoticed.''
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I grimaced. ``Careful or lucky?''
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``I've found the more dangerous heroes are a little of both,'' the
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Knight replied. ``The infestation is still limited to a single Role, I
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believe -- if they'd assembled a whole party it would have been noticed
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-- so we're dealing with a very specific type of hero.''
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``That already sounds more manageable,'' I said. I didn't know if I had
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it in me to stab a Bard, honestly. The were always charmingly
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ineffective in the stories, it would have been like kicking a puppy.
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``So, some lone wolf kind of deal?''
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``A gritty avenging type, I'd wager,'' Black replied. ``They crop up
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with unfortunate regularity.''
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So, three strangers who wanted my head on a pike, Role shenanigans and a
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hero on the loose. Evidently, my first visit of Summerholm was shaping
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up to be a memorable one. I let silence fall down and our party headed
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for the camps, riding off the main road into the countryside.
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People came to greet us before we got into the camp proper.
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A dozen legionaries in heavy plate were escorting a orc woman going
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without a helmet. On foot, all of them -- the Legions didn't really have
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cavalry to speak of, except for the Thirteenth. Captain pulled up at my
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side and I shot her a quizzical glance.
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``Istrid,'' she simply gravelled as the legionaries got closer.
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Black dismounted and I followed suit after a heartbeat, standing a back
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as my teacher strode towards General Istrid. The general's skin was
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almost more brown than green, I noticed: she looked like she'd been
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carved out of rough old leather, though that was common enough in the
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older orcs. There was a wide scar on her cheek that pulled at her eye,
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fixing her face in a mocking rictus that looked impressively firece on
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someone in full legion gear. She was one of taller greenskins I'd seen,
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though not quite as broad-shouldered as most orcs her size would be:
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still, she towered at least two feet above me. \emph{And above Black
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too}, I noted with amusement.
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``Warlord,'' she growled in Kharsum, offering up her arm the same way
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Lieutenant Abase had shown me a few days back. The word she'd used
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wasn't the one I'd read in the books I'd been given, but the
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pronunciations was fairly similar -- I suppose it might have changed
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since the manuscript had been written, or she could have been using a
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slightly different dialect. Black clasped her arm without hesitation.
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``Istrid,'' he greeted her in the same language, tone fond. ``Couldn't
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wait for us to make it to your tent?''
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``I got bored,'' she replied unashamedly. ``You took your sweet time
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coming.''
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``There was a situation Laure that needed seeing to,'' the Knight spoke
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mildly.
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The orc officer barked out a harsh laugh. ``Heard about that. Finally
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hanged the fucker, huh? Been a long time coming.''
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\emph{Ha!} I was already feeling rather better disposed towards General
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Istrid -- anyone who wanted to see Mazus swinging from a noose couldn't
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be all bad.
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``Good things come to those who wait,'' Black told her.
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``Now you're sounding like Sacker,'' Istrid growled. ``You two will be
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the death of me. Never mind that -- Captain, that you hanging around in
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the back?''
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The woman in question patted my shoulder and moved to join them, leaving
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me to stand with the ever-silent Blackguards and Scribe. Black's band of
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bodyguards was no longer as silent as it had once been around me, but
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they'd reverted to silent statues as soon as we'd come in sight of
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Summerholm. I glance towards Scribe who had, I saw, also dismounted. She
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was standing closest to me, and since it didn't seem like my presence
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would be noticed any time soon I ambled in her direction.
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``They seem pretty friendly,'' I said.
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She wasn't a very talkative woman, Scribe. The most I'd ever heard her
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say was that handful of sentences the first time we'd met, and since
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then she'd always seemed so busy I'd hesitated to try and strike up a
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conversation. No parchments in her hands now, though, and it wasn't like
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I had anything better to do.
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``They've known each other for a long time,'' she replied, to my
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surprise. ``Istrid's clan was the second to side with Black, when he was
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still the Squire.''
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Huh. That certainly explained why they were still catching up like old
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friends sharing drinks instead of heading to the general's tent.
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``Known her for long too, then?'' I asked.
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I knew precious little about Scribe, except that she'd been around Black
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since before the Conquest. None of the stories I'd heard mentioned her
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except in passing, and it wasn't like she'd surrendered any information
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about herself since we'd met. I knew disappeared for a few hours
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everyday and came back with fresh new correspondence, but where and how
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she got the letters remained a mystery. The plain-faced woman shook her
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head. ``I came later.''
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\emph{Like squeezing blood out of a stone}, I thought. I shuffled
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awkwardly on my feet and tried to think of something to say, but was
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saved at the last moment by an outside interruption.
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``Catherine,'' Black called out. ``Introductions are in order.''
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I shot Scribe a mildly relieved look and headed for the cluster of old
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friends. General Istrid sized me up as I walked without even the
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pretence of subtlety and I straightened my spine out of habit. She
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wouldn't take a stick to my fingers every time I slouched to make sure I
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had proper posture the way the House matron had, but then again I had a
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feeling that making a bad impression on the commander of the Sixth
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Legion would have more dire consequences than throbbing knuckles.
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``Istrid,'' the Knight said, ``Meet Catherine Foundling.''
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The tall orc frowned, then turned to look at him. ``She looks like
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Wallerspawn,'' she said in Kharsum.
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I scowled, partly at her blatant dismissal and partly at the word she'd
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used -- Waller was a term orcs used to mean Deoraithe but it wasn't
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exactly a polite one. ``Half,'' I replied in the same tongue, painfully
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aware that my pronunciation was tetchy. ``That a problem?''
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That certainly got her attention. ``Well,'' she drawled, showing a row
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of sharp teeth, ``at least you're not shy. You sound Callowan, girl --
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where'd he dig you up?''
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``Laure,'' I replied. ``You end up meeting all sorts of interesting
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types, when stabbing people.''
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The general barked a laugh. ``Ain't that the truth. Well met, Catherine
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Foundling.''
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She offered her arm to clasp and I reciprocated, somehow managing to
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keep my nerves off of my face. The general seemed a lot taller now that
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I stood in front of her and that rictus on her face hadn't gone
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anywhere: she made for a rather intimidating sight, and the story of her
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staring down a charge of Callowan knights was still fresh in mind.
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\emph{Possibly she scowled at them and they decided they had better
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things to do somewhere on the other side of the Tyrian sea.} \emph{Gods
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know I kind of wish I did.}
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``Let's not make Sacker wait too long,'' Captain spoke up as I stepped
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back. ``Odds are she already has eyes on us.''
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``Sucker's bet,'' Istrid grunted before turning to address her
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legionaries. ``Stable the horses and find somewhere for the Warlord's
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retinue to stash their gear.''
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A chorus of salutes was her only reply and I handed off Zombie's reins
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to an olive-skinned woman with sergeant's stripes when prompted. General
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Istrid led the way to one of the avenues I'd glimpsed earlier, followed
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by Black and Captain -- I glanced back to see if Scribe was following
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us, but she'd disappeared into thin air when I wasn't looking.
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\emph{Wait, wouldn't have had to pass next to us to} g\emph{et into the
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camp?} A large hand settled on my shoulder, gently steering me forward.
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``She does that,'' Captain gravelled. ``It's part of her Role to stay in
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the background. She'll pop up again when she's needed.''
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How much of my not noticing Scribe had come from her being quiet and how
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much had come from the effects of her Role, I wondered? I muttered
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something that could pass as agreement and let the matter drop. Sundown
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was almost on us, and as a result activity in the wider camp had died
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down: the improvised markets were closing and people were trailing out
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of the camp and heading towards the gates of Summerholm.
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\emph{I suppose it makes sense that not all of them stay here after
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nightfall.} For another group getting through the crowds quickly might
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have been an issue, but everyone was giving us a wide berth. Nobody was
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quite so bold as to point fingers in our direction, but quite a few
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people seemed to recognize Black and Captain -- whispers bloomed in our
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wake wherever we went. The weight of the attention made me
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uncomfortable: the feeling of the three other potential Squires hadn't
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gotten any closer, but I had more than them to worry about now. There
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might very well be a hero somewhere in the masses, and if they were
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looking for a target I was painfully aware that I was the easiest one
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available. I was not, after all, so deluded as to think that half a Name
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and a week's worth of training with a sword and board would make me a
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match for a veteran of the Conquest like General Istrid. The grip on the
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short sword at her hip was well-worn, and she walked like someone who
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thought of their weapon like an extension of their limbs.
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We encountered two patrols as we delved deeper into the impromptu town,
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both of them stopping to salute as we passed by. More and more
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legionaries stood watch as we got closer to the actual Legion camp --
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well, one of them anyway. The standards spread out everywhere all bore
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the Sixth Legion's number in Miezan numerals, so it was pretty obvious
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this was theirs and not the Ninth's. By the time we made it to the large
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pavilion that apparently served as General Istrid's council room, night
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had fallen. Torches were already burning, though they were hardly needed
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considering how many cooking fires there were out there: the trail of
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smoke in the sky must have been visible for miles. The inside of the
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pavilion was empty except for a large table of polished wood surrounded
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by comfortable-looking chairs. There was only one person inside: a small
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goblin woman, under five feet tall and so heavily wrinkled her face
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looked like a mask. General Sacker, I assumed. She looked almost
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half-sleep, her yellow eyes were half-lidded even as she gave me an
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once-over before turning towards my teacher.
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``Lord Black,'' she murmured from her seat, bowing her head ever so
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slightly.
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She was so quiet I almost missed the words, but the green-eyed man
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nodded back without missing a beat.
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``General Sacker,'' he replied, ``It's been too long.''
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She inclined her head again.
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``Gods Below,'' General Istrid interrupted with disgust, ``the both of
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you sound like you're attending a feast at the Tower. I'm going to need
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a drink, if we're doing the fucking Praesi rituals.''
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``Finally,'' I muttered, ``someone's willing to say it out loud.''
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Istrid shot me an amused look as she poured herself a cup some sort of
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amber liquor from one of the carafes on the table. When I returned my
|
|
attention to the others, I found that General Sacker was looking at me
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|
-- and there was no longer anything half-asleep about her demeanour as
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|
she studied me. I'd always heard calculating eyes referred to as cold
|
|
and cool, but if anything the yellow gaze pinning me seemed to burn with
|
|
focused intensity. \emph{Clever as a snake and twice as mean}, Captain
|
|
had told me.
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``You're from Laure,'' General Sacker spoke in the same whisper-thin
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|
voice. ``Interesting. Orphan?''
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|
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|
I wasn't sure who the question was addressed to so I glanced at Black,
|
|
but he'd already claimed a seat and was pouring himself a drink from the
|
|
same carafe as Istrid, paying no attention to the conversation.
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|
\emph{Worst mentor ever.}
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|
``I am,'' I confirmed warily.
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Sacker nodded to herself. ``Calloused hands, mhm. Fighting rings?
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|
Illegal in Callow, I do believe.''
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|
Her tone didn't make it clear whether she approved or disapproved.
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|
``So I've heard,'' I simply replied.
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|
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|
I had no idea what her game was, but it felt like she was toying with me
|
|
and I very much disliked the feeling of it. My first instinct was to
|
|
bite back, but I pushed it down. There was the fact that Captain had
|
|
specifically warned me about her, of course, but there was more to it
|
|
than that. General Sacker was \emph{old}. By far the oldest goblin I'd
|
|
ever met and that made her very, very dangerous -- most of their kind
|
|
never made it past thirty five, and looking at the general I guessed she
|
|
was pushing forty. Older goblins were notoriously frail and sick but
|
|
Sacker was still not only in command of a legion, but of a legion
|
|
holding one of the most important fortresses in the Empire. She was, in
|
|
short, \emph{not someone I wanted to fuck with}.
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|
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|
``You can mess with her head later, you vicious old bat,'' Istrid broke
|
|
in cheerfully, apparently not caring about any of that in the slightest.
|
|
``We've got fresher corpses to eat, like our little hero problem.''
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|
General Sacker pursed her lips.
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|
``There's not definitive proof that we have a-''
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|
That was when the pavilion exploded.
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