551 lines
21 KiB
TeX
551 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-19-pivot}{%
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\chapter{Pivot}\label{chapter-19-pivot}}
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\epigraph{``Please, do keep digging your own grave. I look forward to your
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splendidly inevitable demise.''}{Dread Emperor Benevolent the First}
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``COMPANIES! SALUTE!''
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Two hundred swords rose up in the air, both companies standing at
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attention in the plain below the hills where a bell ago my band of
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survivors had been making their desperate last stand. Hakram grinned at
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me from where he stood in the ranks and I winked back as Ratface and I
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walked towards Juniper. The orc in question looked like she'd been
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force-fed a barrel of lemons, but she was pressing on gamely. The
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Taghreb captain had earlier informed me be there was a ritual involved
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to the declaration of victory and that I should follow his lead until I
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learned how it went. Nauk had seemed surprised when Ratface had told the
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officers of Rat Company I'd be with him during the process, the lot of
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them exchanging meaningful looks I wasn't quite sure what to make of.
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``Hellhound,'' he greeted Juniper as he clasped her arm. ``Not how we
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expected this one to go, huh?''
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First Company's captain growled under her breath.
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``Gonna be a while before I live this down,'' she replied frankly. ``I
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might have to break Morok's nose again if he gloats. Let's get this over
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with.''
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She turned towards her legionaries, unsheathing her sword.
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``One sin,'' she called out abruptly.
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``DEFEAT,'' they thundered back
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Ratface took out his own blade, facing our men.
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``One grace,'' he yelled.
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``VICTORY,'' they chorused back, slapping their swords against their
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shields with an enthusiasm that drowned out everything else.
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The scowl on Juniper's face was the stuff of nightmares as she handed
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her blade to Ratface, handle first. The handsome boy took it but, after
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a heartbeat, handed it to me. There hadn't been any mention of this in
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the books but then they were about the Legions themselves, not the
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College. Silence fell over the crowd until Rat Company burst out in
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another roaring cheer. My eyes flicked to my captain, whose face was an
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odd mixture of resignation and amusement.
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``Hand it back to her,'' he whispered.
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I did, and Juniper slammed it back into her scabbard before striding
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away. We were\ldots{} done, I guessed? I turned to Ratface.
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``So we just head back to Ater, now? Seems anticlimactic,'' I mused.
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He grinned. ``Silly greenie,'' he replied. ``Now comes the fun part. We
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spend the night here, and the extra rations should have arrived.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``Extra rations?''
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He smirked. ``Ever tried \emph{aragh}, Callow? There's a reason us
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Taghreb aren't fucking miserable all the time like the Soninke.''
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---
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Night had fallen, and the site of Rat Company's original defeat had
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turned into a giant feast. Fire pits had been dug and entire pigs put to
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roast while barrels of dark ale flowed freely. Legionaries from both
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companies mingled freely, clustering around great bonfires. Nobody
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seemed to be holding grudges over beating each other bloody during the
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game, which I supposed made sense if they were held every week. I took a
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sip from the cup of milky white liquor I'd been handed and immediately
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started coughing, much to Nauk's amusement.
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``Gods Below, what \emph{is} that stuff?'' I croaked out.
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``We call it dragon's milk,'' the other lieutenant replied, easily
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polishing off the rest of his cup. ``If you drink enough it's possible
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to set your breath on fire.''
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``Bullshit,'' I decided, pulling at it again. It was easier to swallow
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the second time.
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``I tell no lie,'' the massive orc laughed. ``Some mage from Vulture
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Company did it last year, had to spend three weeks with the healers to
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get her throat fixed.''
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I snorted.
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``People made dragon noises whenever she came into a room for the rest
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of the year,'' Ratface grinned from his seat on the other side of the
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fire.
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``If you think this is hard stuff, you should try orc liquor some
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time,'' Hakram weighed in. ``Some sappers use it as cleaning fluid for
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the catapults.''
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``I haven't been in this company for a week and my sergeant is already
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trying to kill me,'' I mourned.
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There was a round of laughter and I smiled at the warmth coursing
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through my veins. Unlike most of the older girls in my dormitory, I'd
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never gone drinking on the beach with the guys from the boy's orphanage
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down the street. I'd tasted enough drinks at the Nest that the novelty
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had worn off, and most of the time I had better things to do. Scraping
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together enough gold for tuition at the College wasn't going to happen
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on its own. Still, this was\ldots{} nice. I wasn't sure I'd call any of
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the other three friends, but for all that they were easy to like.
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\emph{What does it say about me that I find it easier to laugh with the
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Empire's freshest batch of killers than my own people?}
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``Looking grim there, Callow,'' Ratface noted. ``Thinking heavy
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thoughts?''
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``Remembering home,'' I half-lied.
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``You're from Laure, aren't you?'' Hakram guessed. ``You've got the
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accent.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``I am,'' I agreed. ``But how would you know what a
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Laurean accent sounds like?''
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``Our history teacher is from there,'' Nauk said. ``Used to be part of
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the Thirteenth.''
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Ah, the famous Traitor Legion. \emph{Legio XIII, Auxilia.} It had been
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raised in the wake of the Conquest, made up mostly of former bandits and
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mercenaries. Every Callowan with a grudge against the throne had flocked
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to the banner, and they'd been instrumental in making sure the south
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surrendered after the fall of the capital -- the prospect of that band
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of armed malcontents sacking their way through the southern cities had
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been utterly horrifying to the few remaining nobles. Before I could
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comment on the subject, though, a band of drunken legionaries passed
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right behind us singing at the top of their lungs.
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``- they got a wizard in the West
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But no matter how he's blessed
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We got a Warlock in the Tower
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Who'll use his bones for flour
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Let them keep their priestly king
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Cause no matter how sweet he sings
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We've got an Empress black as sin
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Who'll take his throne and grin
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We're the Legion and the Terror
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They're in the right but we're meaner-''
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That was perhaps the most horribly sung rendition of the Legionary's
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Song I'd ever heard, and I'd heard some pretty bad ones. They continued
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towards the closest barrel of ale, singing the last couplet until they
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ended on the customarily yelled \emph{we're gonna swallow the world
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whole}. The old marching song had always been popular with the rank and
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file, penned by some unnamed legionary during the Conquest. From the
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unsurprised looks on everyone's face, this was apparently a common
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event.
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``The thing with Praesi,'' I started.
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Hakram rasped out an amused laugh, biting into his pork, and Ratface
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rolled his eyes.
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``The thing with Praesi,'' I pressed on bravely. ``Is that you have so
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many godsdamned rituals. Like that thing with the grace and sin earlier.
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What was that even about?''
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Ratface grinned, which suited him much better than his usual sour
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expression. He really \emph{was} a handsome one, if a little
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delicate-looking compared to my usual tastes.
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``You've never heard of the Speech at the Fields?'' he asked. ``That's
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the thing with Callowans, you always leave out the best parts of
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history.''
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I blinked. ``You mean the Fields of Streges?''
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Nauk flashed me a double-row of pearly whites.
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``Those are the ones. The Black Knight spoke to the Legions, before the
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battle,'' he gravelled. ``Every kid knows the words.''
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``Today we set aside Good and Evil,'' Hakram quoted with reverence.
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``There is only one sin, defeat. There is only one grace, victory.
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Everything else is meaningless.''
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I sometimes forgot that the man who'd claimed me as his student was the
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same one from all the legends. Back home the Calamities were the
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monsters under the bed but here in Wasteland it was different. All of
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them were treated like giants among men, the epitome of all it meant to
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be Praesi.
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``Huh,'' I mused, taking another sip of dragon's milk. ``Well, I learned
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something today.''
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``That and I named you captain of Rat Company,'' Ratface continued
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airily.
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I sprayed out the alcohol, to the delight of all the assholes
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surrounding me.
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``\emph{What?!}''
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``Why did you think he handed you Juniper's sword?'' Hakram asked,
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cocking his head to the side. ``He was acknowledging it was your
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victory. No offence, Ratface.''
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The olive-skinned boy snorted. ``I spent the entire game as a prisoner,
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Hakram. The truth's the truth.''
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``This is stupid,'' I objected vehemently. ``All I know about the
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Legions I learned second-hand. I've never even set foot in the
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College!''
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The now former captain of Rat Company shrugged.
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``Twelve losses and you lose the captainship. That's the rule. I didn't
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win this, Callow. In fact I lost pretty badly. Your win, your claim.
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That's what that entire scene was about, when it comes down to it.''
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``You've got other lieutenants,'' I pointed out. ``Who might feel a
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little slighted they got passed over for the promotion.''
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Ratface turned to face Nauk.
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``Are you feeling particularly slighted, Lieutenant Nauk?'' he asked.
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``We ain't so thin-skinned as you monkeys, taking offence at
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everything,'' the large orc scoffed before addressing me. ``Callow, the
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reason Ratface ended up Captain in the first place was that none of the
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lieutenants want to be.''
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The boy in question shrugged. ``Not that I particularly wanted the job
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either, but my marks are the highest in the company.''
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I was about to muster up another denial when Hakram intervened.
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``It's only for two months, Callow,'' he grunted. ``We're graduating
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soon, and our points are so badly in the negatives it's not like you
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could do much damage anyway.''
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I sighed.
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``Fine,'' I surrendered. ``But I want my objections on the record.''
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``To Captain Callow, then,'' Nauk toasted, raising his cup.
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``May she manage to have us graduate slightly less in the negatives,''
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Ratface replied cheerfully.
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It was a horrible toast, but we all drank anyway.
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I wasn't sure how much time passed when I found myself wandering away
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from the fire to get my hands on a fresh bottle of \emph{aragh}. Nauk
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had disappeared at least half a bell ago when he saw Lieutenant Pickler
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pass by, running off after her while we all jeered at him and Hakram
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made some very suggestive comments about his canine length. Apparently
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that was a thing with orcs? He was replaced almost immediately by
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Sergeant Nilin. The dark-skinned boy was quiet one, compared to the
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others, but he had a wry sense of humour that was almost Callowan. I
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supposed it made sense for Nauk's sergeant to be more grounded, given
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the large orc's tendency for impulsive decisions. Ratface passed out by
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the time we'd polished off our second bottle of dragon's milk and I was
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officially mandated by the survivors to get us a new one before we did
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the same. It hadn't occurred to anyone, including myself, that I had no
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idea where to get one. I headed for the latrines first anyway, only to
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find a grim-looking orc waiting for me when I came out.
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``Captain Callow,'' Captain Juniper said flatly. ``Let's take a walk.''
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---
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I followed the Hellhound to the edge of the festivities, too drunk to be
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nervous but sober enough to be wary. We ended up standing at the top of
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the tallest slope, where a few bells before Juniper had tried to bury me
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under an avalanche of logs -- the wood in question was still at the
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bottom of the hill, mostly intact.
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``You have a Name,'' the captain of First Company spoke.
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It was not a question.
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``That's quite an assumption to make,'' I replied anyway. ``For all you
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know, my family might have a long tradition of being great jumpers.''
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It might even be true, though admittedly the odds weren't that great.
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``I've seen Roles in action before,'' Juniper denied me sharply. ``Don't
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take me for an idiot.''
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I probably should have put in a little more effort into that parry, I
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admitted ruefully to myself. I'd been lulled into a sense of false
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security by the fact that no one had called me out on the fact that I'd
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done something that bordered on the limits of human capabilities -- part
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of it, I assumed, was that few people had been looking at me except for
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Juniper and her personal line. For something done in broad daylight,
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there'd been surprisingly few witnesses.
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``Everything's possible,'' I finally said, deciding that vagueness was
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still the way to go. I'd been supposed to keep a low profile, after all.
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``Are you here to complain that made the fight unfair?''
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The orc eyed me like I'd just sprouted wings.
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``This is practice for a real war,'' she said slowly. ``Fair doesn't
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factor in it. Anyhow, I should have seen it coming. An unknown stranger
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with an obviously fake name takes a rank in the lowest-ranked company on
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the edge of their twelfth defeat? Name bait. I should have sent two
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lines to bury you on the first night just in case.''
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``Yeah, that would probably have worked,'' I admitted.
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The greenskin captain's eyes narrowed.
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``So not a Name that's overwhelmingly strong,'' she murmured in that
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smoky voice of hers. ``Something transitional, maybe?''
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Juniper, I noticed, did not smell of alcohol at all. Had she been
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waiting for me to get drunk before we had this conversation? I would
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have admired that kind of patient ruthlessness, if it hadn't been
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directed at me.
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``Something that's supposed to stay \emph{quiet},'' I replied briskly.
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``You're the Squire,'' the Hellhound realized after a heartbeat.
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``You're the girl who set half of Summerholm on fire just to smoke out a
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hero.''
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She eyed me up and down, like she had a hard time reconciling what was
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apparently my reputation with the person standing before her.
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``Why do people keep blaming me for the goblinfire?'' I complained,
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deciding that at his point the deception was so flimsy it wasn't even
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worth it to keep trying. ``I'm not the one who was throwing munitions
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around!''
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``I'm sure you weren't,'' Juniper replied, clearly not believing a word
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of what I'd said. ``So the Squire, huh. No wonder you ended up being a
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pivot for Rat Company.''
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I really wished people would stop using words out of the blue and
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somehow keep expecting me to know exactly what they were talking about.
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It always made me feel like an idiot when I had to ask.
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``A pivot,'' I repeated, flavouring the words with an invitation to
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elaborate.
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Juniper frowned, which I'd always thought looked strange on orcs -- they
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had no hair on their brows, only thick ridges of skin.
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``Your ignorance offends me on a personal level,'' the other captain
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informed me. ``How can you not know what a pivot is? It's basic Name
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knowledge.''
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``Hey! I'm new at this,'' I defended myself. ``And my teacher's a bit of
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an ass. He never tells me anything outright. I think me might be
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physically incapable of not being cryptic.''
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``Did you just call the Black Knight an ass?'' Juniper replied, aghast.
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``He really is,'' I told her frankly.
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``Lord Black is the best thing to happen to the Empire in centuries,''
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the Hellhound glared.
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I squinted.
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``Are you \emph{blushing}?'' I asked. ``It's hard to tell in the dark.''
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``You're seeing things,'' Juniper growled. ``Fine, I'll educate you.
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Names are stories.''
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``I do know that much,'' I said with a roll of the eyes.
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I was familiar with the look she got at that -- it was the face someone
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made whenever they were asking their deities of choice for patience.
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``The stories have been around since the dawn of Creation, meaning
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there's an endless variety of ways they can go. A pivot is a point in
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time or a decision where the Named pushes her story in a particular
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direction. It influences the kind of powers you develop.''
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Mhm. Had I ever had one of those? My little talk with Heiress, maybe.
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Otherwise I couldn't think of-
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``Oh,'' I spoke. ``\emph{Oh}.''
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Juniper frowned.
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``What?''
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``I fucked up,'' I admitted out loud. ``Today was the first time in
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weeks I've been able to tap into my Name, and I think I just realized
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why.''
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``That ought to be illuminating,'' Juniper sneered. ``Do continue.''
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``So a pivot is the beginning of a plot in the story, right?'' I
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mumbled.
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``Truly, your insight is an awe-inspiring thing,'' the Hellhound
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commented.
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I glared at her, but she was magnificently unconcerned.
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``So take a boy and a girl, of roughly the same age. They're on opposite
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sides. The boy doesn't take a golden opportunity to finish the girl when
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he has it, and after she gets her shit together and beats him she also
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spares him.''
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``The girl's on the side of Evil?'' Juniper asked, eyes much too knowing
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for my comfort.
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``Something like that,'' I grimaced.
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``That's a redemption story,'' the Hellhound opined.
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It was. I'd heard a dozen different tales that went that way, all with
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the same pattern. Spared on the first fight, an even match on the second
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and the climactic third meeting ended up with the conflicted evildoer
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changing sides after an impassioned speech by the hero or the heroine.
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\emph{No wonder my Name threw a shitfit.} I looked back on the way I'd
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reacted to the hangings in Summerholm, and I could see I'd been\ldots{}
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influenced. Not by much: most of the disgust I'd felt then I still felt,
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but my reaction had been too strong. I'd been nudged just a little to
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the side of my usual mindset, and the realization sickened me. I'd been
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pulled by my own mind in two different directions, and the effect had
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been bad enough I'd ended up weeping my eyes out in an alley.
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``I'm going to smother him with his own intestines,'' I spoke into the
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night, tone cold as ice.
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The Lone Swordsman had muddled my free will. \emph{Unforgivable.} Not
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even Mazus had tried to rob me from who I was, and he'd hanged for what
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he'd done. My fingers clenched and I felt hatred twist my stomach.
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Juniper's face was unreadable.
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``We're done here,'' she finally said. ``Go to sleep, Callow. We've got
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a long march ahead of us tomorrow.''
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I stumbled into my tent, my good mood evaporated into thin air. The
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others would have to soldier on without me, I didn't feel like keeping
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company with anyone at the moment. Besides, Juniper was right. The
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hangover I was headed for would already make the march back to Ater a
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painful affair, there was no need to add to it. My bedroll was where I'd
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left it, blessedly unrolled. There was, however, a small bowl next it. I
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knelt on the ground to take a closer look. It was unadorned wood, full
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of water and with a small piece of granite incrusted at the bottom. Was
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it supposed to be symbolic of something, or had someone put it here by
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mistake? The answer came when the water rippled, the barely-visible
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reflection of my own face turning into the profile of my teacher as a
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subtle glow lit up the surface.
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``Lieutenant Callow,'' Black greeted me, his voice sounding like he was
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speaking from across the room.
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``Black,'' I replied, not as surprised as I should have been. ``This is
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new.''
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``Long-distance scrying. One of Warlock's more useful tricks,'' he
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acknowledged. ``I hear the war game is over?''
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``Pulled off a win at the last minute,'' I grinned. ``Though you seem to
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be missing a crucial piece of information.''
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His brow rose. ``And that would be?''
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``You are addressing \emph{Captain} Callow,'' I informed him.
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His lips twitched. ``Well done. We'll go over your campaign when I
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return. Which company did you happen to beat?''
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``Who do you think? First Company, of course,'' I replied haughtily.
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``It wouldn't happen to be headed by an orc girl by the name of Juniper,
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would it?'' he asked.
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``You've heard of her?'' I blinked.
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He laughed.
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``Istrid keeps bragging about how her eldest is the next Grem One-Eye
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whenever she gets into her cups,'' he murmured. ``Well now. Finally I
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have a retort.''
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``\emph{General} Istrid?'' I said, surprised. ``She never said anything
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about being her daughter.''
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``I imagine it's not common knowledge,'' Black mused. ``She's rather
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independent-minded, I've been given to understand. Doesn't want to trade
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in on the family name.''
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I could respect that. The orc captain rose up a notch in my esteem.
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``How are things in the south?'' I asked, changing the subject. ``Are
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the Matrons giving you trouble?''
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``Much to the contrary,'' he replied. ``The situation's already taken
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care of. They even sent an envoy to apologize for not catching on before
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the situation warranted a Red Letter. I should be back in Ater by
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tomorrow evening.''
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``Good to know,'' I grunted. ``Am I staying in the College even after
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you're back? I'd prefer not to leave Rat Company until graduation, if
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that's possible.''
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He inclined his head. ``I'm inclined to grant that, within reason. You
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won't be attending most of the classes -- we'll be continuing our
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|
lessons instead.''
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I nodded. It was what I'd wanted anyway: I was sure the teachers at the
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College were competent sorts, but I doubted what they had to offer
|
|
compared to one-on-one tutelage by the Dread Empress' right hand.
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|
``Did you have time to look into what I asked you to?'' I asked after a
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|
breath of hesitation.
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|
``The orphanage is untouched,'' he replied. ``Not a soul missing. A good
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|
thing you killed the other claimants in such spectacular manners, I
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|
doubt Heiress would have taken you seriously otherwise.''
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``That would have been unfortunate,'' I murmured. ``Because I meant
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|
every word.''
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|
He smiled. ``You're beginning to garner enough of a reputation that you
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can leverage it. Be careful in managing it. Oh, and there's one last
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|
thing.''
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|
``Now why did you have to say that?'' I complained, rubbing the bridge
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of my nose. ``This conversation was going so well.''
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He snorted. ``Keep your evening free tomorrow, you already have plans.''
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``Am I allowed to know what those plans are?'' I asked sardonically.
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``Of course,'' he agreed. ``Catherine Foundling is being officially
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introduced to the Imperial Court.''
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Well, shit.
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