710 lines
35 KiB
TeX
710 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-28-win-condition}{%
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\section{Chapter 28: Win Condition}\label{chapter-28-win-condition}}
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\begin{quote}
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*``Our doctrine is one of cost-efficiency. Any officer who believes
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extermination of the enemy is a valid path to victory should immediately
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be demoted back to the ranks.''
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--*Marshal Ranker
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\end{quote}
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``What makes you think she'll abandon the first wall?''
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Kilian's breath was steadier now that she'd had a few moments to catch
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it. Running in chain mail could really take it out of you, and if
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Captain hadn't made a habit of drilling me in plate it might have been
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as hard on my lungs as the redhead's. I cast her a sideways look.
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``Having doubts, Lieutenant?'' I asked.
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She shook her head. ``I'm trying to understand where your certainty is
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coming from,'' she replied.
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``It took me a while to get it, but Juniper's actually somewhat
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predictable,'' I grunted.
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Now there \emph{definitely} was scepticism on the pretty mage's face.
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``Predictable is, uh, not a word I'd use for the Hellhound. Sir,'' she
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said delicately.
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``She always makes the correct choice,'' I pointed out, closing my eyes.
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``When she has the necessary information, she makes the best decision
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she could make.''
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Kilian frowned. ``So you're saying\ldots{}'' she trailed off, evidently
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not too sure about what I was saying.
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Couldn't blame her, really. This wasn't something I'd figured out using
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wits and logic -- it had been instinctual. Similar to the way I'd read
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opponents in the Pit, only applied to warfare instead of breaking a
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single person's legs.
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``If I know what the best move for her to make is, I can be fairly
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certain it's the one she'll make,'' I replied, opening my eyes and
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turning on my belly to crawl my way closer to the crest of the hill.
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The redheaded lieutenant did the same, joining me in taking a peek over
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the dust and stone. Like I'd predicted, First Company's lines were
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preparing to retreat back across the mine field. One of Juniper's
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sappers casually tossed a smoker into the hole I'd blown through the
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palisade a moment later, preventing me from getting a look at the path
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they were using. \emph{Ugh. I mean, I was pretty sure they'd do that but
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it's still going to be a pain to figure out the way through.}
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``It's limited in scope, Kilian,'' I told her as I pushed myself back
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into cover. ``I have no reliable way of knowing what she does and
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doesn't know, so it's still very much a guessing game. But if I have the
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initiative, then I can predict some of her reactions.''
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I waved vaguely in the direction of what had once been Fox Company's
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stronghold.
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``What she knows right now is that I have access to munitions that can
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blow through her first wall and some sort of expendable creature minions
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to deliver them,'' I grunted. ``So she's going to pull back behind the
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rampart until she can figure out how I managed that. It's not like she's
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losing anything, anyway: even if we manned the first wall from the other
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side we don't have the strength to hold it against her. She could just
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claim it back whenever she wants.''
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By now the runner I'd sent to Nauk should have gotten the remnants of my
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company moving. Keeping out of sight as long as possible, they'd wait
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until the last moment to run across the ballista's killing field until
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they could take shelter behind the enemy's own palisade. Pickler had
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assured me that the same platform Snatcher had built to ensure the siege
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engine would have a clear shot at the enemy camps meant that once we got
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close enough Juniper wouldn't be able to adjust the angle low enough to
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aim at us. There was something mildly absurd about using the enemy's
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fortifications as cover against them, but the situation I was in was
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beyond the ability of orthodox tactics to salvage.
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Pretty much the only advantage on my side at this point was that by
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holing up in the fortress Juniper had given up the initiative. It was, I
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believed, a conscious decision on her part. She could have assaulted us
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almost immediately after taking out Snatcher, but the Hellhound was
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aware of what kind of fuckery Names could pull when you put their backs
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up against the wall. She was doing all she could to avoid outright
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cornering me while still stacking the odds on her side. If I'd decided
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to pull out and head into the wilds, then she would have simply followed
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in her own time: First Company functioned at its best when on the field,
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so it wasn't like she'd have been giving me much of an edge there.
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Regardless, after hitting the bottom of the barrel last night I'd
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bounced back into the semblance of a plan. My largest mistake so far was
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that I'd been trying to beat Juniper as a captain when the fact was that
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she was just \emph{better} at this than I was.
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She was a better tactician and her company was flatly superior to mine
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-- which shouldn't have come as a surprise, considering Ratface had
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tried to make Rat Company a knock-off version of hers. If I played this
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game the way it was meant to be played, I'd lose every time. Like Black
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had told me in his usual semi-cryptic jackass advice session, I had to
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win despite the rules instead of according to them. The suicide goats
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were a first step towards that, as a method of attack that had no real
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precedent in the war games. The necromantic constructs weren't
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significant because of how effective they were, although it looked like
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they'd be pretty damned effective, but because by pulling out a new
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trick I'd been able to seize the initiative. As long as I had Juniper
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reacting instead of acting, the Heavens were on my side.
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``Although I guess technically they're on neither of our sides,'' I
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muttered to myself. ``Probably should stop calling on them period.''
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Kilian shot me a curious look but passed no comment. I glanced at my
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tenth and was pleased to see they appeared to have recovered from the
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run. Whatever his flaws as a captain, Ratface had drilled his
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legionaries into very good shape.
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``As soon as Nauk gets out of cover, we'll be running across,'' I called
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out, making sure all of them acknowledged the reminder before turning my
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attention back to more pressing matters.
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Crawling my way back up the hill, I scanned the distance for the rest of
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my company. Couldn't see any sign of them, which I put down as another
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mark in Nauk's favour: the large lieutenant was a highly competent
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officer, when he wasn't in the throes of the Red Rage. Overly aggressive
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in his tactics, maybe, but for a frontline commander that wasn't always
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a bad thing. Captain had mentioned General Istrid was also considered a
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little too bloodthirsty and she was one of the most respected military
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commanders in the Empire. After the three Marshals, she was one of the
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household names forged during the Conquest. I waited in silence for Rat
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Company to appear, and my patience was eventually rewarded: without so
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much as a word of warning, sixty-odd legionaries started running
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downhill towards the palisade.
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``That's our cue, ladies and gentlemen,'' I called out, pushing myself
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up.
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I picked up my shield and waited a few heartbeats before starting to
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sprint back across the grounds I'd covered only moments ago. There was
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no point in having my legionaries form up: if anything, it would be a
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liability. A tenth moving slowly and clustered together was prime
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ballista bait. Feeling my lungs burn as I forced my body to move, I
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jumped over a low-riding bush and only barely managed not to trip as my
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foot got snagged into a root. Whirling on myself I steadied my footing
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at the last minute and continued to push through. My tenth wasn't far
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behind and before I'd managed to catch my breath at the foot of the
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palisade the majority of them were already at my side.
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``We got everyone?'' I panted.
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Kilian nodded, too out of breath to get any actual words out. Gods, I
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hated running in armour. I'd heard no impact in the distance, which
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meant First Company either hadn't been ready to shoot in time or that
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we'd offered them no target worth the effort. Nauk's soldiers were
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milling by the palisade further to the south-east, slowly spreading out,
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and I gestured for my own tenth to join them. We walked, taking our time
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-- there was no need to hurry this part of the operation, and going in
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unprepared was likely to see us brutally spanked. The lieutenant with
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the still-broken arm found me easily. There was a restless way to him,
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like he had an itch he couldn't quite scratch.
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``Callow,'' Nauk greeted me. ``Divided the lot of them like you told me.
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We'll be ready to move as soon as Kilian reclaims her tenth.''
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From the corner of my eye I could see the redhead heading for her mages,
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soldiers moving out of her way as she did.
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``Good,'' I grunted. ``Pickler managed to make all the screens?''
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``They're ready,'' the orc nodded. ``Shame we don't have vinegar to soak
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them in, but we'll make do.''
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I'd been more than happy to delegate the whole affair to the sapper
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lieutenant, having no experience whatsoever in crafting the likes of it
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myself. To be honest, my skillset largely considered of ``bashing
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people's heads in'' and ``ordering people to bash other people's heads
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in''. It was a good thing that for all their quirks my officers had a
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knack for their area of expertise, because what I knew about sapper's
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work would fit into a thimble. And not even a very big one.
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``Wish I could do more than stand around like a waste of flesh,'' Nauk
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admitted. ``I've been useless to you since the scrap with Morok.''
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I clapped his shoulder. ``I don't need someone to break skulls right
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now, Nauk,'' I told him honestly. ``I need someone to watch over the
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company while I try to outmanoeuvre Juniper, and you've done that just
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fine.''
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The large orc shuffled his feet uncomfortably. He looked pleased -- or
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hungry. It could be hard to tell with orcs.
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``Wade in their blood, Captain,'' Nauk gravelled. ``I've been looking
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forward to this part since you told us the plan.''
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So had I. It was about time we got to be the ones causing trouble. I
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left the orc lieutenant to it and went to check on the walking absurdity
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that was my trump card. Unsurprisingly, Robber was the one watching over
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Ratface's Ex. My legionaries insisted on calling the goat by the verbal
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abomination that was the other proposed name, but I refused to humour
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them in this. A girl had to have \emph{some} principles, and I drew the
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line at puns.
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``Everything ready, Sergeant?'' I asked.
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``On our part, sure,'' the goblin replied, eyes still fixed on the
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unmoving goat. ``Can't answer for Lieutenant Kilian's merry parade of
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magical minions.''
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I let the dig pass without comment, since he'd at least bothered to tack
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on Kilian's rank to it. Kneeling next to the corpse, I touched its
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forehead and with an exertion of will had it rise to its feet. To my
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surprise I'd manage to raise all of the carcasses provided by my men
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without any real trouble, though I'd yet to figure out how to manipulate
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more than one at a time. The corpses remained still unless I willed it
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otherwise, and I'd found that after leaving one alone for too long I
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needed physical contact to make it work properly again. There would be
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no zombie army for me, it seemed, and Weeping Heavens when had I reached
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a point in my life where I was using the words ``zombie army'' without a
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hint of irony?
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``Tell Pickler to get the line in position,'' I told another sapper
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standing close by. ``We won't have much time between the first hit and
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the second.''
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The female goblin saluted and scuttled off without a word as I returned
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my attention to the zombie. My main obstacle at the moment was the mine
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field. Assaulting the rampart was nothing more than a daydream as long
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as my company hadn't secured a way across it. That we weren't in the
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ballista's angle of fire anymore was one problem dealt with, but the
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fact remained that any people I sent through would be getting peppered
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with crossbow fire the whole time. I could more or less deal with that
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by putting my cadets in a testudo formation, but packing them that
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tightly as they made their way through a field line with demolition
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charges would lead to horrific casualties. My first step, then, was to
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be clearing a safe path for my company. Thankfully, I had expendable
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assets to send into the grinder.
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Ratface's Ex dutifully followed me as I passed through the gap I'd had
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blown into the palisade, coming to stand at the edge of the killing
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field and gazing at the rampart. As expected the top of it was bristling
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with enemy legionaries, all of them armed with Snatcher's crossbows. I
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couldn't see Juniper, but I had no doubt that she was standing somewhere
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she could see the whole battlefield. Behind me my sapper line trickled
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through the hole, the front ranks carrying large screens of leather
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framed by repurposed sudis. All of the components had been cannibalized
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from Aisha's camp, the leather coming from her tents and the wood and
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nails taken from her first line of defence. In the absence of the second
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tenth of my mage line and their large shields this ramshackle kind of
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cover would have to serve -- much to my displeasure, every single member
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of that tenth had been taken prisoner with Ratface. Kilian's mages
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spread out among the sappers in groups of three, the redhead in question
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coming to stand by my side in silence. I cracked my fingers and took a
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deep breath\emph{. Time to get the stone rolling.}
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Before I could get so much as a word out, Robber broke formation and
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strolled to the edge of the field. Straightening his back, he stood as
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high as his four feet and a half of height allowed him and slowly
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unsheathed his sword. Face solemn, he brandished the blade at First
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Company.
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``\emph{Unleash the goat},'' he commanded, clearly relishing every word
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coming out of his mouth.
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``Remind me to stick him with latrine duty for at least a month,'' I
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told Kilian in an aside.
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The mage snorted. With a sigh, I willed the goat to move forward. The
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pace I set was fast, though not enough to damage the corpse's integrity,
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and I set it to a path that passed straight through the middle of the
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field. It was facing the only part of the ramparts that wasn't ten feet
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high: instead of packed rock and dirt there was a palisade there serving
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as a makeshift gate. More importantly, it was the only part of the
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fortifications that wasn't barred by the ditch. The goat made it about
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fifteen feet before the sand under it detonated. I grimaced. It was a
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good thing that my ability to sense through the creature's skin numbed
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pretty quickly after I raised it, otherwise that would have been a bitch
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of a backlash. I focused on my connection to the necromantic construct
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and noted that while it was damaged it was still, in fact, capable of
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moving. \emph{Makes sense. Snatcher's not going to use a munition grade
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that risks actually killing other cadets.} No doubt a living creature
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would have been knocked unconscious or, barring that, been incapacitated
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by the shattered bones. Fortunately, Ratface's Ex had no such
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limitations. Mustering vague memories of when I'd done the same to my
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own fingers, I pulled at strings and popped the goat's bones back into
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place. It slowly got back to its feet and started limping forward the
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field. It managed to make it to fifty feet before the first fireball
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from the rampart struck it. Another three followed almost a heartbeat
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later, hitting the goat almost simultaneously.
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``Gotcha,'' I grinned sharply.
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``NOW,'' Kilian called out.
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My three clusters of three mages immediately fired back fireballs of
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their own straight at the source of the enemy magic. All but one of the
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enemy casters were drowned in a storm of flame before they could get
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back in cover. One fireball they might have weathered without too much
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damage, but three? Those three mages had been knocked out of the melee
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for now. Unfortunate that I'd had to split my mage line in clusters of
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three instead of pairs, but Kilian had informed me she couldn't promise
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a sure takedown if she couldn't concentrate the magic at least that
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much. First Company was superbly trained: before I could count five
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heartbeats the rest of its mage line was returning fire at my now
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exposed mages. \emph{Too late, Hellhound.} My sappers moved their
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screens forward and the mages ran to take cover behind the stretched out
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leather. I frowned as the flame impacted Pickler's screens: two of them
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held up admirably, but the third's frame splintered as fire spread
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across its surface. Kilian cursed and I followed her gaze to a lone
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silhouette on the rampart, where a mage's raised hand was slowly
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wreathing itself in bolts of blinding energy\emph{. Shit.} I hadn't
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anticipated Juniper would have any mages capable of calling down
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lightning. If they managed to hit the screen that had already been
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damaged\ldots{}
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``No you don't,'' the Duni growled.
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The redhead bit her thumb as I blinked in surprise, drawing blood and
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swiping a line of it across her cheek.
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``I am the root and the crown, the source and the flow, the storm and
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the calm,'' she murmured. ``Power is purpose, purpose is will. Gods of
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my mother, take this offering and \emph{grant me the wrath of Heaven}.''
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The last words were an angry hiss, and she threw her hand forward in a
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snap. A gauntlet of lightning burst into existence around her fingers, a
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thick thread of it streaking forward across the air with a violent
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crackle and colliding with the bolt thrown by the enemy mage maybe four
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feet above my fleeing soldiers. The magic impacted with a deafening howl
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but Kilian's spell held, both streaks of lightning flickering out of
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existence after the clash. My lieutenant's cheeks were flushed and she
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was panting, the streak of blood on her cheek somehow turned to ash.
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That had been\ldots{} impressive. And, if I was to be entirely honest,
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just a little bit arousing. Seeing her harness that kind of power with
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nothing more than a handful of words and being pissed off\ldots{} I
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coughed and turned my attention back to the now-smouldering Ratface's
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Ex. Now was definitely not the time to wonder what the redhead looked
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like out of her armour.
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Unfortunately, my zombie was no longer in a state fit for running. I
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willed it to crawl forward anyhow and it made it another ten feet before
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a last fireball destroyed it beyond even my ability to control. I
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clenched my fingers and unclenched them. \emph{Sixty feet out of a
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hundred, not bad.} The question was, was there another charge buried in
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those last forty feet? The path I'd cleared was the easiest, quickest
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way to the fort's entrance. If there was somewhere to mine, that was
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definitely it. On the other hand, Snatcher might have thought that no
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one would be stupid enough to go further in a straight line after
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running into a charge fifteen feet in. Out of my four undead, two were
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already unusable. The remaining goat and the gazelle were loaded with
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munitions I couldn't afford to lose on a mine: I needed that gate blown
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up, and quickly.
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``Well, Snatcher,'' I murmured to myself. ``Here's hoping you decided to
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get tricky on our asses.''
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Pickler had brought the next goat forward when she'd moved in her
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sappers, propping it up against the palisade like it was a poorly-built
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bookshelf. It took no more than a few moments to re-establish my
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connection with the undead, the animated corpse skipping back with me
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when I returned to Kilian's side.
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``Give the signal,'' I ordered her. ``We're beginning phase three.''
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``Operation Fainting Goat is a go,'' she murmured, and I shot her a
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genuinely betrayed look.
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Kilian had been one of the few strongholds of sanity left when the
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undead suicide goat plan had spread to the rank and file, that she would
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get on the wagon now was treachery of the worst sort. That Hakram had
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been the one to dryly suggest the name was even worse. Regardless, the
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mage raised her hand and with a few mangled syllables created the Miezan
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numeral for three out of flames. A moment later half of my sappers got
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moving, escorted by the surviving tenth of Ratface's line: Sergeant
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Tordis led from the front, shield raised high. This would be the tricky
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part, when it came down to it. I should have made Juniper wary of using
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her mages by making it clear my own would immediately retaliate but she
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had other options. Risking one of my remaining tenths in fighting shape
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left a foul taste in the mouth yet it was necessary if the sappers were
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to get within range without getting put down by crossbow fire.
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The first bolts hit when they'd made it twenty feet in through the path
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I'd cleared. Immediately my regulars tightened their ranks and the
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sappers crouched behind them, the lot of them still pushing forward at a
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glacial pace. When Juniper's mages popped out my own were ready to
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pre-empt them, but she was ready for us this time: every one of First
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Company's spellcasters had a pair of soldiers covering them with their
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shields. Not even concentration of fire managed to break through it. I
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grimaced when the enemy's own fireballs impacted Sergeant Tordis' group,
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knocking three cadets out of formation and immediately seeing them shot.
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``Kilian,'' I spoke up. ``That thing you did with the lightning; could
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your mages do the same with enemy fireballs?''
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``No,'' she admitted. ``The spell they teach us at the College isn't
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precise enough for that.''
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``Godsdamnit,'' I cursed, watching as another two members of Tordis'
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tenth bit the dust. ``This is going to cost us.''
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They were in position now, at least. The sappers wasted no time in
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throwing their smokers ahead, their whole position becoming obscured by
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the thick smoke in a matter of moments. They started backing up almost
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immediately, another regular getting hit by a blindly-thrown fireball
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but managing to shake it off since it wasn't immediately followed by
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getting shot. The sappers dragged back our unconscious cadets, the
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entire formation managing to get back safely out of enemy range without
|
|
any further trouble. From fifty feet into the path to the very bottom of
|
|
the enemy rampart was now covered in smoke, but there was no time to
|
|
waste. Smokers didn't last as long when the space they filled was that
|
|
broad, and though the day wasn't particularly windy it wasn't absent of
|
|
wind either. Without so much as my looking in its direction, the goat
|
|
started running forward.
|
|
|
|
``So what's this one called, anyway?'' I absently asked Kilian.
|
|
|
|
I could feel her smile through the tone, though my attention was still
|
|
on my zombie.
|
|
|
|
``Snatcher's Cousin,'' she replied.
|
|
|
|
``That feels mildly racist,'' I mused.
|
|
|
|
``Can it really be racist if goblins are the ones who named it?'' she
|
|
wondered out loud.
|
|
|
|
I didn't answer the question, as the Cousin had finally entered the
|
|
smoke. I'd ordered the obscuration of the battlefield to ensure Juniper
|
|
couldn't blow the zombie before I did, but the obvious downside was that
|
|
I couldn't see where it was going either. All my Name was giving was a
|
|
vague sense of where it was standing and how its parts were moving. It
|
|
would have been useful if I'd been able to see through the zombie's own
|
|
eyes but when it came down to it what my ability could create was little
|
|
more than an elaborate flesh puppet. All I could do was send it in a
|
|
straight line and hope for the best. With a silent tug of the strings I
|
|
had the goat halt at what I estimated was about eighty feet, returning a
|
|
portion of my attention to Kilian.
|
|
|
|
``I can have it at the gate in about six breaths,'' I told her. ``Tell
|
|
me when to get it moving.''
|
|
|
|
The redhead frowned but nodded, eyes faraway as she tried to puzzle out
|
|
the timing. Aiming for perfection here would be overestimating ourselves
|
|
but we couldn't let it stand in front of the gate too long either: I
|
|
couldn't take the risk Juniper had figured out a way to deal with it
|
|
without blowing it up. Frankly, just sending out a legionary to pick it
|
|
up and run back inside might do the trick if they were fast enough. The
|
|
mage softly started chanting and I kept an eye on her as red-orange
|
|
flames started forming around her hand. Suddenly she nodded and instead
|
|
of replying I set my construct moving, the ball of flames shooting into
|
|
the smoke a moment later. A few heartbeats later I felt the goat run
|
|
into something solid. The explosion that struck a moment later was, once
|
|
again, deafening. While I couldn't see the effect of it through the
|
|
smoke, I had a hard time believing it wouldn't have wrecked the gate.
|
|
There were twice as many sharpers stuck inside the goat as last time,
|
|
after all. Hopefully none of Juniper's soldiers had been standing right
|
|
behind the gate, because that would have been pretty brutal to go
|
|
through.
|
|
|
|
``Now what?'' Kilian asked, peering into the distance.
|
|
|
|
``Now we-``
|
|
|
|
Before I could finish the sentence a flash of lightning came out of the
|
|
smoke. I reacted on instinct, trying to get Kilian down, but she pushed
|
|
away my hand and thrust out her arm. I felt goose bumps on my arms as
|
|
she spat out a word in that strange tongue mages used, sorcery meeting
|
|
sorcery once again. Whatever it was she'd done, it stopped the better
|
|
part of the lightning: a shudder run through me but that was the only
|
|
effect I could feel. The redhead fell on her knees and I made to help
|
|
her up when I noticed her hair had turned\ldots{} strange. It looked
|
|
more like fire than dark red locks, and when she turned to face me her
|
|
eyes had turned from hazel to an inhumanly vivid green. Her body had a
|
|
spasm, her back arching like something was trying to break out of it,
|
|
and I wasn't sure whether I should try to hold her down or let it
|
|
happen. Thankfully, after a moment it stopped.
|
|
|
|
``Fuck,'' she cursed, the words coming thick and slow on her tongue. ``I
|
|
hate it when that happens.''
|
|
|
|
I helped her back to her feet. ``Too much magic?'' I guessed.
|
|
|
|
``Tried to abshorb -- \emph{absorb} -- the hit to keep it from
|
|
splashing,'' Kilian replied.
|
|
|
|
She took a deep breath, then stood on her own.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be fine, Captain,'' she told me. ``Bit of a headache, that's all,
|
|
and I'll keep the spells simple for a while.''
|
|
|
|
I clapped her shoulder. ``Take a break, Lieutenant,'' I ordered.
|
|
``Nothing'll happen until the smoke clears anyway.''
|
|
|
|
I let her limp away without comment, deciding it was about time I
|
|
relocated myself. Whoever had said lightning never struck the same place
|
|
twice obviously had little experience with mages.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
By the time the smoke cleared I'd returned to my old vantage point, the
|
|
undead gazelle idling by my side. Robber had informed me it had been
|
|
dubbed `Stealth Goat' by popular acclaim at which point I'd informed
|
|
\emph{him} that he was going to find me a stool or I would be dragging
|
|
him along for the ride as my official footrest. I took great
|
|
satisfaction in the fact that he looked genuinely worried by the threat.
|
|
To my surprise he reappeared later with a fold-up stool apparently
|
|
looted from Aisha's camp. I blithely pretended I hadn't been sending him
|
|
on a fool's errand and assured him he was safe from my feet for at least
|
|
the next few days. The first thing I noticed when the ramparts came into
|
|
sight again was that the new batch of munitions had \emph{definitely}
|
|
been more powerful than the last. There was no trace of the former gate
|
|
and even the tightly packed sand and stone surrounding it had been
|
|
damaged.
|
|
|
|
I stood in sight of the walls for a long time, letting the lazy breeze
|
|
fall on my face. Juniper must have believed I was baiting her mages,
|
|
because there was no repeat of the lightning incident. I didn't think it
|
|
would have been enough to take me out anyway. I'd punched a sharper two
|
|
days ago and all my fingers had gotten out of the experience was a set
|
|
of bruises. Squires were a hard breed to kill, apparently. After
|
|
remaining in the open long enough that there could be no doubt Juniper
|
|
had seen me, I left Stealth Goat behind and casually strolled down the
|
|
path I'd cleared earlier. I left my shield behind, keeping the folded
|
|
stool under my arm instead. My soldiers milled uncomfortably behind me
|
|
as I kept walking, stopping about halfway through without anyone from
|
|
the ramparts trying anything. I was close enough to see that two full
|
|
lines had crossbows pointed at me, but for now they refrained from
|
|
shooting. Calmly, I unfolded the stool and placed it on the ground. I
|
|
plopped myself on it and waited.
|
|
|
|
Juniper didn't make me wait long. The tall female orc strode out of the
|
|
gate-hole without a shield or a helmet, though like me she'd kept her
|
|
sword at her side. I was amused to note she'd brought a stool of her
|
|
own, of identical make. Must have been Legion-issue. Her face was
|
|
inscrutable as she made her way towards me, setting up her own seat to
|
|
face mine barely a few feet away. The wooden frame creaked under the
|
|
weight of her when she sat down, still silent. A moment passed, then she
|
|
turned to the side and spat in the dirt.
|
|
|
|
``So you want a draw,'' she flatly stated.
|
|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow. ``That obvious, huh,'' I said, not denying the
|
|
truth of it.
|
|
|
|
``I looked up the old rules too, Callow,'' she grunted. ``Two-way draw
|
|
means we keep half the points we bid. Probably shouldn't have bid twice
|
|
what Rat Company has in the negatives if you wanted to keep it quiet.''
|
|
|
|
The idea had struck me when the cadets Ratface had sent to scour the
|
|
College archives for old five company melees had dug up a record
|
|
three-way draw. When the instructors had outlined the rules for the
|
|
melee they'd said nothing about draws of any sort, meaning they hadn't
|
|
specifically denied the old ruling. It was sketchy as Hells, but I was
|
|
pretty sure I could swing it. There were advantages to having the Black
|
|
Knight on your side, and if Heiress wasn't above using family
|
|
connections to her advantage then I wasn't above pulling rank through my
|
|
teacher.
|
|
|
|
``Figured it was a good thing to have as a back up, if things went
|
|
south,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
``You'd lose the bet,'' Juniper pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, but here's the thing,'' I smiled. ``The Dread Empress specifically
|
|
phrased so that Heiress only got the appointment if I \emph{lost}. A
|
|
draw isn't a defeat, it's just not a victory.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{And should, Gods forbid, our Squire lose}? Those had been her
|
|
exact words. I'd wondered in the aftermath of court why a woman who was
|
|
supposed to be the political patron of Black hadn't seen fit to give me
|
|
a helping hand when I was his de facto apprentice. It was only the night
|
|
before the melee I'd realized that she'd subtly steered the terms of the
|
|
bet to give me a better chance.
|
|
|
|
``Very clever,'' Juniper smiled unpleasantly, flashing her fangs at me.
|
|
``Now tell me, why exactly should I give a fuck?''
|
|
|
|
``Because it could go either way, right now,'' I told her frankly. ``I
|
|
still have some of my little minions and I can make more.''
|
|
|
|
``You'll run out of munitions eventually,'' she growled.
|
|
|
|
``You'll run out of \emph{soldier}s eventually,'' I replied. ``The
|
|
munitions won't take you out of the game, sure, but then I still have
|
|
fighting men left.''
|
|
|
|
``Who'll have to cross an open field while getting shot at,'' the
|
|
Hellhound snarled.
|
|
|
|
``They will,'' I shrugged. ``Which is why I'll put my wounded in the
|
|
front to soak up the crossbow fire.''
|
|
|
|
The orc's eyes narrowed. ``Some of them could be crippled for life. It
|
|
messes up mage healing if you break the bones again too quick.''
|
|
|
|
My answering smile was a cold, cold thing. ``You underestimate how badly
|
|
I want this, Hellhound. If you have moral qualms about crippling cadets,
|
|
then don't shoot your fucking crossbows at them.''
|
|
|
|
That was the thing with scruples: they could so very easily be thrown
|
|
back at the person throwing them at you. Juniper looked at me like it
|
|
was the first time we'd ever met. In a sense, it was. My little
|
|
interlude at the War College had been a pleasant diversion and I'd
|
|
picked up useful skills, but there was a reason I'd come here in first
|
|
place. I was not so much of a hypocrite that I'd flinch in the face
|
|
having people crippled when I'd signed the death warrant of thousands by
|
|
letting the Lone Swordsman go. The other captain rolled a shoulder
|
|
calmly, chewing it over.
|
|
|
|
``No deal,'' she finally said. ``Nothing in this for me, Callow. Could
|
|
go either way, sure. Means I could win.''
|
|
|
|
I sighed. ``You know, I wondered what company scores were for when I
|
|
first heard about them,'' I told her.
|
|
|
|
She'd been about to get up but when I continued speaking she stilled. If
|
|
she was confused by my interjection, then she showed no sign of it.
|
|
|
|
``Get your officers to brief you,'' she grunted. ``It affects placement
|
|
in the Legions when you graduate.''
|
|
|
|
``I know that now,'' I replied. ``Didn't seem like a big deal to me at
|
|
the time, but then I remembered I had a dream.''
|
|
|
|
The orc bared her teeth mockingly. ``You going to tell me you have all
|
|
these big plans so I should let you win? For shame, Callow. You were
|
|
almost starting to be tolerable.''
|
|
|
|
``Not that kind of dream,'' I said softly. ``I mean the Name kind.''
|
|
|
|
That got her attention, sure enough. Her mouth closed with a snap.
|
|
|
|
``The gist of it, I think, was that sometimes you have to give to get,''
|
|
I mused. ``So that had me wondering: what do you \emph{want}, Juniper?''
|
|
|
|
``You getting to a point would be nice,'' she growled.
|
|
|
|
``See, I keep hearing all these things about you,'' I continued. ``The
|
|
Hellhound, never lost a game. Best tactician to grace the College since
|
|
the Reforms, top of the class in every class.''
|
|
|
|
I could see her mustering what was no doubt a pretty scathing retort but
|
|
I interrupted her.
|
|
|
|
``The one thing I didn't hear about you,'' I spoke softly, ``was that
|
|
you`re Istrid Knightsbane's daughter.''
|
|
|
|
The orc's meaty hand closed around the hilt of her sword.
|
|
|
|
``You threatening my mother, Callow?'' she snarled.
|
|
|
|
I shook my head.
|
|
|
|
``It's telling, that you don't bring the family name into this,'' I told
|
|
her. ``Means you want to make it on your own merits. Means you're
|
|
ambitious.''
|
|
|
|
``It'd be a pretty nice feather in my cap to waste you, you know,'' the
|
|
orc grinned nastily, ``If I beat a Named on the field I'd join as a
|
|
tribune, or at the very least senior captain.''
|
|
|
|
``You take your chances and try for that,'' I agreed. ``Or you could
|
|
make a draw with me right now, and be named the highest-ranked officer
|
|
in the Fifteenth Legion.''
|
|
|
|
She gaped at me and I really enjoyed the sight of it more than I should.
|
|
|
|
``You can't promise that,'' she growled.
|
|
|
|
``Sure I can,'' I retorted flatly. ``The whole thing with being a
|
|
villain, Juniper, is that you can basically do whatever the Hells you
|
|
want unless someone stops you. And who's going to stop me in this?
|
|
Black? If I know anything, he's doing that vicious smile thing he does
|
|
as he eavesdrops on us right now.''
|
|
|
|
The other captain got her bearings back after a few moments, her now
|
|
calm face creasing with a frown.
|
|
|
|
``I'd be under your command,'' Juniper said.
|
|
|
|
``You'll be under someone's command whatever happens,'' I shrugged. ``Do
|
|
you want to serve under the shadow of someone who earned their spurs
|
|
during the Conquest, or forge an entirely new legion with me?''
|
|
|
|
I could see the conflict in her eyes, and that meant I was winning.
|
|
|
|
``You're bribing me,'' she accused.
|
|
|
|
``Shamelessly so,'' I admitted. ``But the fact that I have to bribe you
|
|
means you're worth bribing.''
|
|
|
|
That got a snort out of her.
|
|
|
|
``All a draw means is that I'm admitting that, right here and right now,
|
|
we're equals,'' I said, meeting her eyes. ``I'm not too proud for that.
|
|
Are you?''
|
|
|
|
I offered up my arm. After a long moment, she leaned forward and clasped
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
``Draw,'' she grunted.
|
|
|
|
``Draw,'' I echoed.
|
|
|
|
Thunder clapped twice and both our standards appeared in the sky,
|
|
orange-red. We rose to our feet and I looked aside.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Despite the rules}, you said. See? I do listen, sometimes,'' I
|
|
whispered.
|