681 lines
33 KiB
TeX
681 lines
33 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-18-match}{%
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\chapter{Match}\label{chapter-18-match}}
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\epigraph{``Always mistrust these three: a battle that seems won, a
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chancellor who smiles and a ruler calling you friend.''}{Extract from the personal journals of Dread Emperor Terribilis II}
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The fort at the end of the valley had stood there in one form or another
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since the beginnings of the Dread Empire, or so Hakram told me. Before
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the Dark Tower's authority had been firmly established, it had served as
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a choke point to hold off roving orc clans and Taghreb raiders. In later
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eras it had become the last defence against armies coming from the
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Kingdom of Callow before they could march on Ater itself, the last stand
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Evil could take before Good came to knock at the front door. It had been
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over a century since the last Crusade, however, and in the interregnum
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the Legions of Terror had taken to using the fort as a defensive
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position in their war games.
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\emph{Still, it wouldn't do to forget that they built this for an actual
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war, not a fake one}, I mused. Cadets were responsible for the upkeep of
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the fort, meaning every company knew its workings inside out: my
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soldiers were no exception, though only Robber and his sappers had been
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able to hash out a detailed plan of it in the sand. The description
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they'd given me was\ldots{} daunting.
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The fort itself was situated on the flattened top of a hill, its walls
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thirty feet high and a little more than half as thick, but the true
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terror of it came from the outside fortifications. Right in front of the
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walls a ditch about fourteen feet deep had been dug and filled with
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stagnant water. After a thin strip of land another identical ditch had
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been dug and filled with jutting wooden spikes. The open field leading
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to the ditches was dotted with the vicious traps the legionaries had
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nicknamed ``lilies'': pits three feet deep with a sharpened stake
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waiting for unwary soldiers at the bottom, hidden under a layer of
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branches and dead grass.
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All companies had assaulted the fort often enough to know the pattern of
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the traps by now, but it still forced the ranks of attacking companies
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to break. From what Robber had told me, trainees still died in accidents
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regularly -- it was considered a good omen for a company to not lose any
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freshmen cadets in their first game of the year.
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``You're sure their mages won't shoot at us while we're going through
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the lily field?'' I asked Hakram.
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``It's considered bad form to do it,'' the sergeant gravelled.
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``Companies that hate each other's guts might go ahead anyway, but we're
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not feuding with the First.''
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I raised an inquisitive eyebrow at the orc.
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``Who \emph{are} we feuding with, then?''
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``No one,'' Hakram replied, sounding rather chagrined. ``We're at the
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bottom of the company rankings, so no one's bothering.''
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I let out a vaguely empathetic noise.
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``Rat Company's been last for a while, then?'' she asked.
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``Since before Ratface took over as captain,'' her sergeant agreed.
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``He's done his best, but unless we manage a miracle today it'll still
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be his twelfth defeat: he'll lose his captainship.''
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I kept my surprise away from my face -- from the casual way Hakram had
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dropped that tidbit, it seemed like it was common knowledge among the
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rank and file. It certainly cast the captain's hostility when I'd first
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met him in a new light: no wonder he'd been furious, being assigned an
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untaught lieutenant on the eve of a game that had his rank on the line.
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\emph{Not my fault he lost the last eleven, though, so he could have
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been less of an ass about it.}
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``So, have we got an idea how many are in there?'' I asked, changing the
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subject.
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``No way to tell,'' Hakram grunted back. ``Gotta be a least thirty of
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them, but there could easily be more.''
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I grimaced. Going in blind was hardly the way I would have preferred to
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take a crack at the fortress, but we were running out of options fast.
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At least Robber's sappers had fashioned us four ladders over the night,
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meaning we'd be able to manage to assault multiple walls simultaneously.
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How much that would really help them if the enemy was as numerous as
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they were was arguable, but it was still better than nothing. Speaking
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of the devil, the goblin sergeant was swaggering his way up the hill
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towards us.
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``That's Lieutenant Trapper on the wall,'' he announced, his tone
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implying that particular fact was significant.
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``I'm sure you have a point,'' I told the goblin, ``but so far I'm
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missing it.''
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``Trapper's only the fourth senior-most of the First Company
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lieutenants,'' Robber replied. ``So that means\ldots{}''
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``They can't have more than two lines in there,'' I finished
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thoughtfully. ``Otherwise someone else would be in charge.''
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Robber hummed in agreement, palming a smoker from his satchel and
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twirling it through his fingers. I frowned and readjusted her plans.
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Forty legionaries we could manage, with a little luck. It all depended
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on the nerve of the officers holding the walls, of course, but Robber's
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deduction was the first bit of good news I'd heard all day.
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``How do you know about Trapper's seniority?'' Hakram asked, breaking me
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out of my train of thought.
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``Oh, that's easy,'' the yellow-eyed sergeant replied nonchalantly. ``We
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know each other from the Great Goblin Conspiracy meetings.''
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My sergeant barked out a laugh but after a moment of awkward silence he
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shot an uneasy look at Robber.
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``There's not really a Great Goblin Conspiracy, is there?'' he rumbled.
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``Would I tell you if there was?'' the goblin replied with a wicked
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smile, throwing his smoker up and snatching it out of the air.
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Robber saluted lazily and swaggered off back to join the tenth I'd
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assigned him to. I did my level best not to snicker at my sergeant, but
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from the disgruntled face the orc was making I guessed some of my
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amusement was showing. Studying the steel-capped legionaries standing on
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the southern wall of the fort, I decided to make a last minute change to
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the assault. We still didn't know how many crossbowmen First Company's
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garrison could muster, but as far as I could figure our best shot at
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setting foot on the walls was splitting up the enemy with multiple
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assaults. Nilin's tenth would assault from the west, Kilian's by the
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east and Nauk's would take the gate. If anyone could manage to land a
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ladder while getting shot at by a whole line, it was the orc lieutenant.
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The pair of mages I'd rescued yesterday was too exhausted to be of any
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use, so they were hiding in the woods with the standard: I'd given them
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orders to hide until the games were over if the assault failed. Better a
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tie than a defeat, if it came to that.
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``We won't be backing Nauk at the gate,'' I told Hakram. ``Our tenth
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will hold back until we see an opening. Give our sappers to Kilian and
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tell her I want the whole eastern wall turned into a cloud of smoke when
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she assaults.''
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The greenskin sergeant cocked is head to the side and eyed me
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thoughtfully as he tried to puzzle out the meaning behind the corrected
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instructions.
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``You're banking on Trapper panicking when he loses sight of what's
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going on in the east and giving us an opening,'' he stated after a long
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moment of silence.
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I blinked in surprise.
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``How are you still a sergeant?'' I asked.
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``Failed Foreign Languages two semesters in a row,'' Hakram admitted.
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``Fucking Old Miezan. Can't make higher than sergeant if you'd don't
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pass everything.''
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``Lucky for me,'' I murmured.
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I shuddered to think of how much harder this whole game would have been
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without the tall sergeant quietly covering for all the gaps in my
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military education. I got a pleased grin for my comment and Hakram
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walked away to spread my last orders, leaving me alone to watch my plan
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come to life.
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``Let's see how steady your nerves are, then, Lieutenant Trapper,'' I
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whispered to myself, watching Nilin and Kilian's troops start moving
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through the lily field.
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The first crossbow shot from the walls clattered uselessly against the
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shield of one of Nilin's soldiers in a matter of moments, though I
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immediately heard a sergeant barking for First Company to hold their
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fire. \emph{Praesi crossbows can hit a target to up to three hundred and
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fifty yards, effective kill range at one hundred fifty}, I recited
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mentally. The lessons had been a pain to learn, but I was beginning to
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understand why Black had put so many military treatises in the pile. The
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attacking tenths still had at least fifty yards to go before they would
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start getting shot at in earnest, but the officers were already calling
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up for the legionaries to form the testudo. The first rank stopped and
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raised their shield, the second one propping theirs up to form a roof
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over their heads. It would slow them down and it was nowhere as
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effective as if it had been full lines forming up instead of tenths, but
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it was still better than going in bare. Twenty yards to go, then ten and
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finally the order came from the enemy on the wall.
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``First Company, take aim,'' a sergeant bellowed.
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I clenched my fingers and unclenched them, resting the palm of my hand
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on my short sword's pommel.
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``First Company, FIRE!'' the call came.
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The twang of crossbows unleashed filled the battlefield, the bolts
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whistling eerily as they tore through the air. From the corner of my
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eye, I saw one of Nilin's legionaries get caught in the knee and fall to
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the ground with a yell but Nauk's tenth was the one they were trying to
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take out -- the orc lieutenant took a blunted bolt straight to the chest
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but he laughed it off and replied with an obscene gesture. Still, two of
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Nauk's legionaries were hit, one dropping his shield with a yelp and the
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other slipping to the ground without a word, knocked out cold. The
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legionaries fell out of the testudo the very instant First Company was
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done shooting, sprinting across the lily field as fast as they could.
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They'd be safe for a minute or two: crossbows might be easier to wield
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and pack more of a punch than longbows, but their rate of fire was
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horrendously slow. With a little luck Kilian and Nilin would be past the
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ditches by the time First Company was ready for another volley.
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Nauk's tenth was already at the feet of the gates and trying to prop up
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their ladder but it kept getting pushed away by a pair of legionaries
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with forked poles. The lieutenant barked out an order and a pair of
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smokers spun through the air to land on top of the gate, letting out
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streams of thick grey smoke. Unlike real smokers it wasn't poisonous,
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but it was still hard to breathe in. First Company immediately tried to
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throw those back but a pair of cussers followed and blew an enemy
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legionary straight off the rampart. Robber's handiwork, at a guess. I
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winced: a fall from that high was sure to earn broken bones. Turning my
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attention to the west, I saw Nilin was failing at getting his own ladder
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up. First Company had somehow managed to set it on fire and his tenth
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was too busy trying to put the flames out to press their assault.
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\emph{Magic}. Mages always made everything more complicated. Eyes
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flicking to the east, I saw Kilian was making good progress. In a matter
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of moment she would\ldots{} and there they went, the smokers had landed
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on the wall.
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``Come on, Trapper,'' I murmured. ``You could lose the east if you're
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not careful, and we both know you've got too many soldiers covering
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Nauk.''
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A minute of tense anticipation passed as I waited with baited breath
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until a handful of legionaries hurried through the battlements to link
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up with the eastern wall. I grinned.
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``Gotcha,'' I said.
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Turning to Hakram, I saw he was milling around the tenth I'd been
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holding back.
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``Sergeant, get our tenth ready to move. We'll give them a minute to get
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entangled before we hit the wall next to Nauk.''
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``Aye aye, Lieutenant,'' the sergeant saluted.
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The legionaries picked up the ladder and spread in two lines of five.
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Fastening my helmet's leather straps, I checked my blade a last time out
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of habit and made my way to my soldiers.
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``We go in hard and fast,'' I addressed them as soon as I was close
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enough. ``Wounded get left behind, we head straight for the standard.''
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My tenth managed an awkward salute while keeping a hand on the ladder
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and I took the lead, my shield already brought up. It would have been
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shame to get this far only to be taken out by a lucky crossbow shot. I'd
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already decided we'd stick to the road as long as possible before
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veering to the right. Nauk was making enough of a mess around the gate
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that First Company would have more pressing problems on their hands than
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my tenth. I kept the pace brisk, but there was only so fast the
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legionaries could go while carrying a ladder -- twice I had to slow down
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so I wouldn't pull ahead too much. By the time they got to the first
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ditch the smoke on top of the wall was starting to clear and I could see
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a handful of Nauk's legionaries desperately fighting on top of it to
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protect the ladder they'd managed to land. \emph{Good}, I thought.
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\emph{Keep them busy for me, Lieutenant.} I slid down the slope and
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threw my shield on the strip of ground separating the first ditch from
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the second, picking it up as soon as I'd made the climb.
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My soldiers were following close behind, Hakram exhorting them to hurry
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every step of the way, and in a matter of moments they'd propped up
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their ladder. It was a good thing every company knew how tall the walls
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were, I had a feeling the sappers' ladders would have come up short
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otherwise. I was second up on the ladder behind a pale-skinned girl
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whose name I did not know and I winced when a enemy legionary popped up
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at the top of the battlements and unloaded his crossbow straight in her
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chest -- the girl managed to divert her fall off of the ladder so I
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didn't fall with her, but it had been made clear enough that speed was
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of the essence. I jumped over the edge of the battlements to be greeted
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by the sight of half a dozen First Company legionaries headed my way.
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The boy with the crossbow had already taken out his sword but he was too
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slow. I punched him in the jaw and threw him off the wall while taking
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out my blade. Hakram suddenly appeared at my back, sword in hand, and
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with a shared grin we ran towards the enemy. We didn't need to win, we
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both knew, just delay them long enough for my tenth to make it up the
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wall.
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Shield impacted against shield and I was forced to take a step back, but
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my adversary's defence was sloppy: I landed a hard blow against the side
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of the helmet and turned aside a sword stroke from another legionary.
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Another of my soldiers joined the fight and then another, the whole
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tenth trickling in before too long had passed. I might not have liked
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Ratface, but I had to admit that the captain had drilled his legionaries
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superbly. First Company's legionaries backed off when they saw they were
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outnumbered, one of them running for reinforcements, but I had no
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intention of pursuing. The whole melee had cost us only one wounded and
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I offered the dark-skinned legionary a sharp nod before running off
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towards the stairs. Keeping the map of the fort Robber had traced in
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mind, I knew I'd have to take my tenth through the melee on the eastern
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wall before reaching a way down: time to see what Kilian had managed to
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accomplish. The smoke on the battlements had faded away to wisps, making
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it easy to see the sergeant's men were busy giving First Company a hard
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fight: Kilian's tenth had wounded and had been outnumbered from the
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start, but they were fighting with a ferocity that surprised me. Maybe
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I'd underestimated how badly Rat Company's legionaries wanted a win. My
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tenth took to First Company's flank like fire to kindling, tearing
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through it in a matter of moments and scattering the enemy.
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``You sure know how to throw a party, Lieutenant,'' Kilian herself
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gasped as she made her way towards me, cheek badly bruised.
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``It's all about the guest list,'' I replied amusedly. ``Think your men
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have it in them to head for the standard?''
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``HEAR THAT, GIRLS AND BOYS?'' Kilian roared out. ``LIEUTENANT CALLOW
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WANTS TO KNOW IF YOU'VE STILL GOT A WIN IN YOU!''
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The noise of blade slapping against shields and cheers drowned out
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everything else for an instant, my own legionaries joining in without
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hesitation.
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``That good enough, sir?'' Kilian asked with a cheeky smile.
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``It'll do,'' I agreed. ``Fall into rank, we're moving out.''
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The inside of the fort was about what Robber had described: a low stone
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house up against the northwestern corner to house prisoners and a series
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of tents surrounding the wooden palisade that made up the centre. I
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could see over it from my current vantage point and the enemy standard
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was right there in its socket, without so much as a single guard. If we
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hurried enough I'd be able to pull out my troops before casualties got
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too bad. Ordering my men to pull up the ladder that had brought Kilian's
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tenth to the top of the wall, I took the lead once more and started
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running down the stairs. I'd have to set up a cordon of legionaries to
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make sure we weren't flanked.
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The gate to the inner fort wasn't even locked, my soldiers found out to
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their surprise: they must not have been expecting an assault. This whole
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thing was going off much more smoothly than I'd thought it would, to be
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honest. \emph{No point in looking a gift horse in the mouth}. I left the
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enemy standard in Hakram's capable hands and got my legionaries moving
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towards the western wall: as far as I could see Nilin was making no
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progress on it, but we could use his ladder to escape. That was when the
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first hitch in my plan appeared. Yells came from the cordon I'd set up
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and I cursed when I saw what was going on. The survivors from the east
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and what seemed to be at least half the soldiers who'd been fighting
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Nauk were hitting my flank, the distinctive silhouette of Lieutenant
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Trapper haranguing them into pushing forward. The whole thing could turn
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into a rout in a matter of moments, I knew: all it would take was First
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Company breaking apart my men and then it would just be a matter of
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taking out scattered groups of my attackers. There was only one thing
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for it, I'd have to\ldots{}
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``Lieutenant,'' I was interrupted by Kilian, ``it doesn't have to be
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you.''
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I blinked in surprise.
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``I'm not sure what you mean,'' I hedged.
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``Someone has to hold the rearguard,'' the sergeant replied flatly.
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``But it can't be you.''
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``You think I can't handle it?'' I challenged her.
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``I think Lieutenant Nauk was right,'' Kilian retorted, meeting my eyes
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squarely. ``You're the one holding this together. Let me handle it,
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Callow -- there must be a reason you got me back in the first place.''
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Tempting, oh so tempting, but could I really let anyone else do this?
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Rat Company didn't really need me to get the standard back to camp and
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claim victory. I closed my eyes, furiously trying to find another
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solution, but all I could think of was a pair of pale green eyes looking
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back at me. \emph{The only clean victories are the one in stories,
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Catherine}. I let out a string of curses that drew a raised eyebrow from
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Kilian. Sacrifice has never come easy to me, and sacrificing people
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under my command left an even worst taste in my mouth. \emph{But that's
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why you sent me here, isn't? So I'd learn that sometimes you being
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charge means making decisions like this.}
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``Fine,'' I grit out. ``Give them Hells, Sergeant.''
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Kilian saluted grimly and unsheathed her sword, heading out for the
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melee.
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``LEGIONARIES!'' she screamed. ``TO ME!''
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Hakram tugged at my elbow urgently and I clenched my fingers. Without
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another word I ran off towards the stairs to the western wall, my tenth
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falling in behind me while Kilian's delayed First Company. Time to get
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out of there.
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---
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The way out had been surprisingly easy, Nilin's tenth managing to land
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their ladder within moments of my soldiers hitting the wall. I'd gotten
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my men through and linked up with Nauk while the orc was making his own
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escape, having somehow managed to unlock the front gate. We'd hurried
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away after getting back our own standard, well aware that if we lingered
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too long the rest of First Company was bound to find us. The walk back
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to the initial camp site had become more and more leisurely as we neared
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their objective, though, my soldiers laughing and teasing their way up
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the valley. And yet I couldn't find it in me to join the merriment. The
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victory had been too easy, and the more I thought about it the more this
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was beginning to feel wrong -- it was too much of a coincidence that so
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many troops from the First Company would be out on patrol at the exact
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moment my own cadets had hit the fort. Hakram had said that Juniper
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liked bold strokes and swift victories, that it was likely she'd been so
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frustrated by them surviving that she'd overcommitted on patrols, but I
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was beginning to think he'd been wrong.
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The way the mage line had been hit first had been bothering me for a
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while: if Captain Juniper meant to take out Rat Company, why hadn't she
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gone for the scouts? With them silenced she might have managed to
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overrun the entire camp before the alarm was rung. \emph{Unless that
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wasn't what she was after}, I thought. \emph{Crippling the company by
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taking out our healers the first night makes more sense if she was
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aiming to just chip at us day by day.} But on that night, when the First
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Company's soldiers crept around the camp, they'd found that Ratface had
|
|
ordered a half-watch and realized they could do a lot more damage than
|
|
just taking the mages. Juniper hadn't bet it all on a night assault that
|
|
could easily have gone wrong, she'd taken an opportunity when she saw an
|
|
opening. And if that was true\ldots{} \emph{then there's no way she
|
|
overcommitted on patrols. There's something I'm missing here.}
|
|
|
|
``If I couldn't find my enemy,'' I mused out loud to myself, ``how would
|
|
I catch them?''
|
|
|
|
What did Juniper need to win? \emph{Our standard.} Just as we needed
|
|
hers. But as long as Rat Company's survivors were on the move, she might
|
|
as well have been looking for a needle in a haystack: Spite Valley was
|
|
full of hidey-holes, and a more defensive-minded leader than I might
|
|
have elected to wait out the remaining time in one and let the game be a
|
|
draw. \emph{But I showed her I wanted to go on the offensive by hitting
|
|
the watchtower}, I realized. \emph{So then why were there so few
|
|
soldiers guarding the prisoners?} \ldots{} there'd been no senior
|
|
officers among the prisoners at the prison camp, now that I thought
|
|
about it. And only two mages.
|
|
|
|
Enough to patch up all my wounded, sure, but we'd still been barely
|
|
forty afterwards and my two healers had been too exhausted to be of any
|
|
use for the assault. I'd thought it was a coincidence at the time, that
|
|
the more important prisoners had been kept elsewhere. But if that was
|
|
the case, why had there been any mages at all? \emph{She was giving me
|
|
those. Building up my confidence so I'd attack the fort.} So I'd taken
|
|
my men to the fort, and at the cost of almost half of my force taken the
|
|
First Company's standard. Now I had only a little over a line left and I
|
|
was headed back for the deserted Rat Company camp, where I'd put down
|
|
the enemy standard and officially claim victory. \emph{If couldn't find
|
|
my enemy, how would I catch them}?
|
|
|
|
``I'd dictate where they have to go,'' I whispered, a shiver of dread
|
|
going down her spine.
|
|
|
|
``What's that, Callow?'' Nauk called out cheerfully, the standard still
|
|
resting on his shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``RAT COMPANY,'' I roared, ``FORM UP!''
|
|
|
|
Hakram, bless his soul, instantly started slapping around the
|
|
disbelieving soldiers around him until they formed a wobbly square. Nauk
|
|
pushed through the shifting cadets to get at my side, a sceptical look
|
|
on his brutish face.
|
|
|
|
``That just gave away our position to any patrol in the area,'' he
|
|
growled. ``Care to explain?''
|
|
|
|
``They already know we're coming, Nauk,'' I breathed out. ``Think about
|
|
it -- hasn't it all been going too smoothly?''
|
|
|
|
``So we got lucky,'' the orc grunted out. ``It happens.''
|
|
|
|
``We haven't been lucky, we've been played,'' I retorted, eyes scanning
|
|
the woods around us. We were already in sight of the cluster of hills
|
|
where we'd camped on the first night. Was it too late? Were we already
|
|
far enough into the trap that there was no backing out? If we managed to
|
|
get away with both standards, we might still be able to turn this
|
|
around.
|
|
|
|
``You're thinking too hard, Callow,'' Nauk growled. ``Juniper's good,
|
|
but there's no way she's that-''
|
|
|
|
In an unpleasant concession to the universal laws of irony, that was the
|
|
very moment that the soldiers emerged from the woods on both our sides.
|
|
A line per flank, I guessed, and the garrison we'd escaped from back at
|
|
the fort had probably been shadowing us during the whole trip, just out
|
|
of sight.
|
|
|
|
``Hellgods,'' Nauk spat out. ``That's all sorts of fucked.''
|
|
|
|
A handful of silhouettes appeared at the crest of the hill we'd been
|
|
about to start scaling, first among them a large orc in legionary armour
|
|
who idled her way down the dirt path. So there was another line waiting
|
|
for us uphill -- they'd probably caught Robber when I'd sent him
|
|
scouting ahead with his sappers. Rat Company closed ranks, shields up
|
|
and faces grim. They still had fight in them, I knew, but none one was
|
|
expecting to win the battle anymore. The joy had gone out the company
|
|
the moment the first enemy soldiers had come out.
|
|
|
|
``So which one of you would be Lieutenant Callow?'' the lone orc called
|
|
out in a smoky voice as soon as she got halfway down the hill, resting a
|
|
hand on the pommel of her short sword.
|
|
|
|
I sighed.
|
|
|
|
``I'm guessing that's Captain Juniper?'' I said in an aside to Nauk.
|
|
|
|
``The Hellhound herself,'' the orc grunted. ``Think we could grab her if
|
|
we charged?''
|
|
|
|
I snorted, shaking my head.
|
|
|
|
``Too obvious,'' I replied. ``She's planned it all out so far, I doubt
|
|
she missed a ploy that obvious. Guess it's time to meet the woman of the
|
|
hour.''
|
|
|
|
I tapped the soldier in front of me on the shoulder and the company
|
|
parted to let me through. I made my way to the bottom of the hill before
|
|
deciding it was far enough.
|
|
|
|
``So, you're Captain Juniper,'' I said. ``I'd make a pithy comment about
|
|
expecting you to be taller, but you've got at least two feet on me.''
|
|
|
|
``Funny,'' Juniper replied with bared teeth. ``I'll get to the point,
|
|
Lieutenant, we're both busy girls. The Tactics manual says I should
|
|
offer you a chance to surrender, since you're both surrounded and
|
|
outnumbered.''
|
|
|
|
There was a pregnant pause.
|
|
|
|
``This is where you refuse with a scream of defiance and I get to crush
|
|
you lot while still getting full marks,'' Captain Juniper prompted.
|
|
|
|
I eyed my opponent thoughtfully, letting another silence take hold.
|
|
Juniper had chosen everything about the encounter so far: the terrain,
|
|
the troop disposition, even the time of day. That little petulant voice
|
|
in the back of my head was urging me to throw back the offer of
|
|
surrender in the orc's face and give her a fight to remember, but I knew
|
|
better than that. Even before I'd spent a month getting taught by the
|
|
most dreaded strategist of the age, I'd known better than that. Never
|
|
give the opponent get what they want. \emph{If you let them dictate the
|
|
flow of the encounter, you'll lose every time.}
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I decided. ``We'll surrender. No point in dragging this out,
|
|
you're right. Give me a minute and I'll talk Lieutenant Nauk into it. Do
|
|
I just give you the standards or is there a protocol I don't know
|
|
about?''
|
|
|
|
Juniper eyed me distrustfully, clearly taken aback. It was all I could
|
|
do not to smile.
|
|
|
|
``First you give us back ours, then I send someone to collect yours,''
|
|
she replied. ``Don't try to be cute, the moment one of you steps out of
|
|
line my legionaries are charging. I'll be waiting up the hill.''
|
|
|
|
Dismissing the idea of such wanton treachery with a vague hand gesture,
|
|
I made my way back to Rat Company's ranks. The company's remaining
|
|
officers gathered around me.
|
|
|
|
``Lieutenant,'' Hakram rumbled. ``You can't seriously be considering a
|
|
surrender. I know the odds are bad, but --''
|
|
|
|
``Don't be an idiot, Sergeant,'' I whispered, ``I have a plan. Pick
|
|
another two men to accompany me when I give the Hellhound back her
|
|
standard.''
|
|
|
|
The orc hid a grin and saluted. I turned to face Nauk and Nilin.
|
|
|
|
``So, gentlemen,'' I said cheerfully. ``How long do you think you can
|
|
hold against the bastards?''
|
|
|
|
Nauk let out a belly laugh.
|
|
|
|
``For you, Callow? We'll last `till sundown,'' he grinned, looking like
|
|
the world's meanest, ugliest green cat.
|
|
|
|
``A quarter hour,'' Nilin ventured more pragmatically, ignoring the
|
|
dirty look the orc shot him.
|
|
|
|
I clenched and unclenched my fingers, trying to limber them up. A mostly
|
|
pointless gesture, but I'd found it helped me think.
|
|
|
|
``A quarter hour will have to do,'' I decided. ``By then I'll have
|
|
either failed or succeeded anyway. Give them Hells, boys.''
|
|
|
|
They saluted with grim looks on their faces, but there was an energy to
|
|
them that had been missing a moment earlier. Funny the way even the
|
|
slightest hope could fundamentally change the mood in the worst
|
|
situations. No wonder heroes kept talking armies into taking doomed last
|
|
stands. Hakram and the two soldiers he'd picked -- the pale dark-haired
|
|
girl I'd seen kick Nauk and a female orc even taller than my sergeant --
|
|
caught up with me before I left the ranks.
|
|
|
|
``So what's the plan, Lieutenant?'' Hakram whispered.
|
|
|
|
``We get close, then we charge towards the victory point,'' I replied in
|
|
a low voice.
|
|
|
|
``Simple,'' the sergeant mused in his gravelly voice. ``I like it. And
|
|
when we get surrounded and stabbed?''
|
|
|
|
I shot the sergeant an amused look.
|
|
|
|
``That's also part of the plan, I'm afraid.''
|
|
|
|
I was rewarded by a handful of snickers. I'd hoped I'd stumble upon a
|
|
miraculous last-minute master plan, but it seemed my brain was fresh out
|
|
of those. Well, it beat surrendering anyways. Grabbing the standard the
|
|
female orc was offering me and propping it on my shoulder, I took the
|
|
lead and started for the top of the hill. Juniper had deployed her line
|
|
just behind the crest so I could see the tip of their helms but not what
|
|
they were doing: clearly the Hellhound wasn't out of tricks yet. I would
|
|
just have to trust my suicide squad would be quick enough on their feet
|
|
to get out of it. We were maybe a dozen feet away from the top when I
|
|
gave my soldiers a warning look and whispered ``\emph{Now}.'' We broke
|
|
out running. I heard Juniper scream an order but refused to pay
|
|
attention, my whole focus on covering the last of the distance
|
|
separating her from the enemy line.
|
|
|
|
That was when the logs started rolling down.
|
|
|
|
Every one of them a whole tree with the branches cut, thick as man and
|
|
heavy enough to crush anything in their path. Well, I'd chosen right
|
|
when I'd decided not to charge the company up the slope, I mused with a
|
|
strange degree of detachment as the first one thundered down towards me.
|
|
\emph{So this is as far as I could go, then}, I thought. Beaten by a
|
|
pile of dead trees after having been played like a fiddle at every turn.
|
|
All the plans I'd hatched over the last three days, all of the triumphs
|
|
I'd fought for -- snatched away in an instant. I could already see the
|
|
way it would all go in my mind: Juniper's line would charge down the
|
|
slope behind the logs and snatch the standard from my unconscious body
|
|
before closing the jaws of the trap on Nauk and Nilin. They'd fight
|
|
well, but in the end they'd still lose. \emph{No}, the thought came.
|
|
\emph{I'm not done. I can still do more. I am more than this. I did not
|
|
come this far to be slapped down by a heap of firewood.}
|
|
|
|
I felt thunder dance across my skin and the world spun into focus. The
|
|
logs tumbling down slowed to a crawl and I grit my teeth before
|
|
\emph{jumping,} sailing into the air and landing behind them in a
|
|
crouch. I heard Hakram's grunt of pain and the crack of bones as a log
|
|
caught him in the chest, but I kept moving. No time to look back --
|
|
Juniper's line was already charging down, but the hill had made it
|
|
impossible for them to tighten their ranks. They were full of openings,
|
|
and the Name I'd claimed as my own howled in my mind as I slipped behind
|
|
a charging legionary, tripping him with his own standard. There was
|
|
another one behind, an orc who tried to strike me down but I laughed,
|
|
heady with battle-joy, and the shaft of hardened wood slapped away the
|
|
short sword before whipping around to take him behind the head. I pushed
|
|
forward and suddenly I'd passed the enemy line, all I needed to do was
|
|
run and-
|
|
|
|
``What the \emph{Hells} was that?'' Juniper snarled, impacting into my
|
|
side with her shield raised.
|
|
|
|
I rolled with the fall and pushed forward as soon as my feet were back
|
|
under me but the captain was there again, blocking my way.
|
|
|
|
``Me,'' I replied, ``winning.''
|
|
|
|
I ducked under a cautious sword stroke and unsheathed my own blade. The
|
|
power was already leaving me, slipping through my fingers like sand, but
|
|
I would not fail when I was so close. I could hear legionaries doubling
|
|
back to take me from behind, there was no time to waste -- throwing the
|
|
standard behind Juniper, I unslung my shield from my back and stepped
|
|
forward. The orc captain was quick, I thought as Juniper tested my
|
|
shield-side with a careful probe of the blade, but compared to the
|
|
people I'd been getting my clock cleaned by for the last month the
|
|
Hellhound was an amateur. Shield met sword and I pushed forward again,
|
|
stabbing forward only to find my own sword bouncing off the orc's
|
|
armour. Undaunted, I stepped to the side and whipped my blade at
|
|
Juniper's head. The orc's eyes widened at the speed of the strike and
|
|
she stepped back, raising her shield to counter the stroke she knew was
|
|
coming. That was all the opening I'd needed: dropping my shield I ran
|
|
for the victory point, dropping low to snatch the standard as I did. I
|
|
heard Juniper curse from behind me but the orc was slow, too slow, and
|
|
with a roar I passed by the fallen command tent and rammed the First
|
|
Company's standard into the socket meant for it. There was a heartbeat
|
|
of silence before Juniper rammed into my side, crushing me under her
|
|
weight, but then lightning streaked across the sky once, twice.
|
|
|
|
Victory.
|