530 lines
22 KiB
TeX
530 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-13-fireside}{%
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\chapter{Fireside}\label{chapter-13-fireside}}
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\epigraph{``Swiftness is the lifeblood of war. No army can win a battle if
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it isn't standing on the battlefield.''}{Theodosius the Unconquered, Tyrant of Helike}
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There were still a few days before we linked up with the other Legions,
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but we were making good time.
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The Fifteenth was camped for the night, sprawled over the plains of
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central Callow like some enormous steel-clad beast. Fires dotted the
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inside of the fortified encampment now that night was beginning to fall,
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both for cooking and heat: spring out here could get chilly after dark.
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The winter snows were long gone, melted by an unexpectedly early
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warming, but once the sun was gone traces of the harsh Callowan winter
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could still be felt. Especially for my Praesi legionaries, unused to it
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as they were. Seasons in the Wasteland were a complicated a changing
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affair, for at some point a Dread Empress had tried to ``steal the
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Kingdom's weather'' and instead screwed up seasons for the entire Empire
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-- not to mention breaking what little cultivable land she'd still had.
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It was, Black had told me, the reason that there was a permanently
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brewing storm in the sky above the Tower. One of the only parts of Praes
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spared the backlash had been the Green Stretch, forever cementing its
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role as the breadbasket of the Wasteland. Though that label now also
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extended to pretty much all of Callow, these days. The Empire imported
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grain and fruit heavily from the conquered lands, the wagonloads of food
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almost as precious as the gold they taxed out of the people farming it.
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I was ahead of paperwork, for once in my life, and so I'd decided to
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reward myself with a bell of drinking with friends by the fire. I'd had
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precious little time for that kind of thing since the Fifteenth had been
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raised. Even with Hakram handling the lion's share of the parchment that
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came my way I still needed to sign more forms than it was physically
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possible for me to read through during my waking hours. If our legion
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had been better structured I'd have been able to delegate more, but for
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all that legally speaking we were a full legion the fact that we
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remained at half-strength caused no end of headaches. Our stay in
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Summerholm after the Lone Swordsman business had been wrapped up had
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granted me a dent in the pile, though, and that was something to be
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celebrated. Nauk and Ratface were on duty tonight, but both Hakram and
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Nilin weren't. Whether Juniper and Aisha would make an appearance was a
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toss up depending on the mood of my Legate, but with the addition of
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Masego to our little crew I'd nabbed another companion. The
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scholarly-looking mage was horrible at holding his drink, for a Soninke,
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but that only made it more hilarious.
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Before I could decide what bonfire I'd claim for my miscreants I ran
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into Pickler, who looked to be in a murderous mood. Unusual, that: of
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all the goblins I'd met she was one of the most even-tempered. Not
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particularly diplomatic, sure -- I'd caught her sketching out schematics
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a few times when general staff meetings ran too long -- but on the
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goblin-eagerness-to-commit-violence scale she pretty much defined the
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low end. I whistled sharply to catch her attention before she passed me.
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``Pickler,'' I called out. ``Is there a problem?''
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The goblin started, jarred out of her thoughts. She came closer,
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pitching her voice so she wouldn't be overheard.
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``I've spent the afternoon within talking distance of both Nauk and
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Robber,'' the Senior Sapper cursed. ``If I don't get a drink in me soon,
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I will drown the both of them.''
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I winced in sympathy. I liked both the men she'd mentioned well enough,
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but together they could be a massive pain in the neck. It must have been
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worse for the common object of their affections.
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``Hakram has a stash of aragh he thinks I don't know about,'' I told her
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with a friendly clap on the shoulder. ``I'll go grab it. Find us a fire
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and you can vent.''
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The goblin eyed the hand still on her shoulder with a frown.
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``I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you're not
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signalling your willingness to sleep with me,'' she said.
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The hand came off like I'd gotten my fingers burned.
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``Is that what shoulder claps mean for you guys?'' I asked.
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``We don't usually do touching unless we're involved with the
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individual,'' Pickler grunted. ``Except for males, but that's more along
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the lines of roughhousing.''
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If that meant goblins didn't get hugged as children, in my opinion that
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explained a lot.
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``Well,'' I muttered. ``I learned something today.''
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``No need to feel bad,'' she comforted me. ``I still have a hard time
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telling Callowans apart. You're all pale and dark-haired and your accent
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is horrendous.''
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I snorted, resisted the urge to clap her shoulder again to say goodbye
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and went on a holy quest to pilfer my right's hand secret liquor trove.
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---
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By the time I found her again Nilin was by her side, propped up against
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a log and warming his feet near the flame. I tossed the tribune one of
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the bottles and he deftly caught it, popping the cork with practiced
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ease. The other three were set aside as a reserve while I sat on
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Pickler's free side.
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``I don't even know what they're trying to accomplish with the
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bickering,'' the Senior Sapper complained. ``All it does is infuriate
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me.''
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``Knowing Robber, that's probably half the reason he does it,'' the
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dark-skinned boy snorted.
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``That's being pretty generous,'' I commented, allowing myself a little
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sigh of pleasure at the sensation of sitting down.
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I no longer got as saddle-sore as I'd used to when I'd started out
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riding Zombie, but I still felt the ache at the end of the day.
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``He'd be a lot more tolerable if he didn't act so\ldots{}'' Pickler
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started then trailed off, looking for the word. ``So \emph{manly}.''
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I spat out a mouthful of aragh, handing back the bottle to Nilin as I
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coughed it out.
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``Robber?'' I croaked. ``\emph{Manly}? I mean, he's my friend, but he's
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also the sentient equivalent of a pack of walking razor blades.''
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``That's what a male goblin is supposed to be, Callow,'' the Senior
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Sapper sighed. ``Vicious, clever, fearless of death. He's our equivalent
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of the big hairy human who goes around picking fights in bars.''
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``Now there's a disturbing thought,'' I murmured, drawing a chuckle out
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of Nilin.
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``Nauk does fall for his provocations too easily,'' the tribune
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admitted. ``He usually regrets it afterwards, but he can't help himself
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when it happens.''
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``He's a sweet man,'' Pickler muttered. ``A little too sweet, to be
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honest. And he couldn't build a trebuchet if his life depended on it.''
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I choked. That was her standard for who she kept company with? If they
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could build a \emph{trebuchet}? I wasn't sure whether that was a goblin
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thing or a Pickler thing, but I elected to have another swallow of aragh
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instead of pursuing the matter.
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``You could just let them down gently, you know,'' I said as the warmth
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burned down my throat. ``That should be the end of it. That
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\emph{better} be the end of it.''
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A darker note had entered my voice for the last part. It was fine for my
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officers to express interest in one another, so long as it respected
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regulations, but continuing after a refusal would have crossed the line
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into harassment. That wasn't something I had any tolerance for. Pickler
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coughed and looked away.
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``It's, uh,'' she cleared her throat.
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``She likes the attention,'' Nilin smirked. ``And I owe Hakram half a
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day's pay. Gods, he's never wrong about this stuff.''
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``You can't have it both ways, Pickler,'' I said.
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``It's different for us,'' the Senior Sapper admitted. ``Our marriages
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are arranged by our mothers and overseen by the tribe's matron. Having a
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choice is\ldots{} refreshing.''
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When it came down to it, I knew next to nothing about goblin culture.
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There weren't books about it and people weren't usually allowed into
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their territory past Foramen -- where the vast majority of them actually
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lived, burrowed into the side of the Grey Eyries. They were a matriarchy
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ruled by the Council of Matrons, who answered directly to the Empress,
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but aside from that? Just general facts. They were the only ones who
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could make the eponymous munitions and as a species they had an interest
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in engineering going back since the Miezan occupation. They had a
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language of their own, though they never spoke it outside their confines
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of the Tribes and Black had implied that goblins inclined to break that
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rule tended to disappear. Only a handful of words from it had ever been
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translated, and records noted that within a generation every identified
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term disappeared, replaced by another\emph{. There's a reason the
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chuckles are always a little nervous when Robber makes a Great Goblin
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Conspiracy joke.} My train of thought was interrupted by a fresh
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arrival.
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``The Deadhand finally graces us with his presence,'' Pickler greeted my
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adjutant in a drunken slur, waving the bottle in his direction
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The tall orc snorted. ``I guess there's no need to ask where my stash of
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aragh went.''
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``I requisitioned it for the good of the Empire,'' I informed him.
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``Besides, under your mattress? Seriously? That's the first place people
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look.''
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``I suppose that's my own fault, for befriending a villain,'' Hakram
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sighed melodramatically before claiming the space next to me. ``What did
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I miss?''
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``Goblin arranged marriages,'' Nilin said. ``Also, I owe half a day's
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pay.''
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The orc grinned. ``It's almost too easy fleecing you people.''
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``I hope you get the ash plague,'' Pickler muttered under her breath.
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Hakram raised a hairless brow. ``Worry not, dearest Pickler, I will keep
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your secrets,'' he assured her. ``\ldots{} Probably. So arranged
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marriages, huh. I keep forget you lot do that. Seems unnatural.''
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``Hakram Deadhand,'' I mocked gently. ``Champion of free love.''
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``No proper orc would stand for that kind of foolishness,'' he insisted.
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``Chiefs who meddle in stuff like that get an axe in the skull.''
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``Save me the orc pride speech,'' Nilin moaned. ``Nauk already spits it
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out at least once a day. \emph{My clan could have walked twice that
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distance in the same time, Nilin. My sister's daughter would have walked
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that off without a word, Nilin.} I'm starting to think his sister's
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daughter should be a legion of her own, with all those things she can
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do.''
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I grinned at his utterly ineffectual imitation of Nauk's gravelling
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tones. The Soninke's voice wasn't exactly high-pitched, but it was a far
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cry from his commander's deep orcish baritone.
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``In all fairness,'' Hakram noted, ``we really \emph{are} better than
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you glorified herbivores.''
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``Herbivore,'' Pickler repeated dryly. ``Big word you're using,
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adjutant. Do you need to punch something to compensate?''
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``The mighty Clans are ever surrounded by detractors,'' the tall orc
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mourned. ``You should be protecting my honour, Catherine. Doesn't your
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House of Light say jealousy is a sin?''
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``I wouldn't know,'' I admitted. ``I tended to nap through the more
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boring sermons.''
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``That explains a lot,'' Nilin murmured with a smirk.
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``Hakram, defend my moral fibre from the uppity Soninke,'' I ordered,
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uncorking a second bottle and handing it to him.
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He took a sip. ``Tribune Nilin of the Fifteenth Legion,'' he intoned
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solemnly. ``You have impugned the reputation of the Squire. The sentence
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for which\ldots{} is death.''
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The dark-skinned boy gasped and put a hand over his heart.
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``Let me tombstone read that I spoke only the truth,'' he declared.
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A shadow was cast over me, someone leaning over my head.
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``The rebels would win this war outright, if they just kept sending us
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barrels of wine,'' Juniper opined.
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``This coming from a woman who spent the better part of a night trying
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to convince Nauk to wrestle an ox,'' I shot back immediately.
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``It would have done wonders for morale,'' she gravelled, somehow
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managing to keep a straight face.
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My legate sat on the log by Pickler, taking the offered bottle without
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missing a beat. I looked for her usual shadow only to find nothing.
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``No Aisha tonight?'' I asked.
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Juniper growled. ``Ratface has been dragging his leg in putting the
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trades he made in Summerholm on paper. She'll be riding him hard tonight
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until he does.''
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I exchanged a look with Nilin, then we burst out laughing.
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``That's one way to motivate him, I suppose,'' Pickler snorted.
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``\emph{Children},'' Juniper grunted, rolling her eyes.
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``Which reminds me,'' Hakram said. ``The warlock's get won't be joining
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us.''
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I raised a questioning eyebrow.
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``He was elbow-deep in something's carcass when I went to check on
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him,'' the adjutant explained. ``I decided not to ask twice.''
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``Understandable,'' I conceded.
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``But worry not, Boss,'' he grinned. ``We won't be without mage presence
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tonight. Kilian should be joining us.''
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I took in a sharp breath and straightened out the mess that was my hair.
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I really should have washed before coming here. Gods, I probably still
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smelled of horse. Dead horse, at that. I looked around and everyone was
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smirking at me.
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``What?'' I asked, the tone coming out a little defensive.
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``I'm sure your hair looks just fine, Catherine,'' Nilin grinned.
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``I have no idea what you're talking about,'' I replied, gathering the
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tattered shreds of my dignity.
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``She \emph{did} ask if you would be there,'' Hakram gravelled
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knowingly.
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I was not going to smile, not when I was being baited this obviously.
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Still, hearing that put a warm feeling in my stomach. It was just an
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infatuation, I told myself. Even if it'd been a while for me, it was
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just an infatuation.
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``Why would we talk about the wasteland that is my love life when we
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have Pickler's juicier one to dissect?'' I replied, shamelessly throwing
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the Senior Sapper under the chariot.
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There was a hoot of delight from the vultures and the conversation
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turned at the goblin's expense. From the corner of my eye I watched
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Hakram's skeletal hand close around the bottle and almost frowned.
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``You do that a lot,'' Juniper said.
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The legate had moved next to me while the others talked, leaning close
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enough we wouldn't be overheard.
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``Do what?'' I asked.
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``Stare at the hand, when you think nobody's looking,'' the Hellhound
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spoke flatly.
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\emph{We really need to go over the concept of letting people dodge
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uncomfortable subjects at some point, Juniper.} I knew from experience
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the orc wasn't one easily put off when she brought a subject up, so I
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sighed and resigned myself to the conversation.
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``Can you blame me?'' I asked. ``I'm the reason it's there.''
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The legate rolled her eyes again.
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``Lady Squire-``
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I cleared my throat.
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``Fine,'' she growled. ``Catherine. He's an orc.''
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``I'd noticed,'' I replied.
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``I don't think you understand what that really means,'' the Hellhound
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grunted. ``We're not green-skinned humans with better teeth. We're
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\emph{orcs}.''
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``And?''
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``While human children are learning to read, we're learning to kill.
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While you're picking up a trade, we're learning to kill. While you're
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going to pray in your pretty little churches, \emph{we're learning to
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kill}. War isn't just what we do, Catherine, it's what we are.''
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The orc rolled her shoulders.
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``If we're not fighting the Empire's enemies, we're fighting each other.
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If an orc loses a hand, it means they were too weak or too slow. Hakram,
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though? He went up against heroes and came out \emph{stronger} for it.
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There's not an orc who'll look at those bones and see anything but a
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mark of pride.''
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I guessed I'd known that, on some level. My adjutant had never once even
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implied that he was anything but satisfied with his new hand. But that
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wasn't the part that really unsettled me, was it? It was that I'd given
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the order. Maybe not spoken the words out loud, but I'd tacitly sent
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Hakram to fight the Thief. He wasn't even a claimant, not the way I'd
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been before becoming the Squire -- he just had\ldots{} potential, almost
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realized. In the heat of the fight, I'd sent the closest friend I'd made
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since leaving Laure into a duel with a heroine, knowing very well
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chances were he'd die in the process. It didn't matter that he saw
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nothing wrong with that. I wasn't comfortable with what it said about me
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that when blades came out I could make a decision like that without even
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hesitating. \emph{But that's on me. It's not their problem to deal
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with.}
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``If it makes you feel any better,'' Juniper grunted, ``you should see
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the way women look at him now.''
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I laughed. ``It's bad?''
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My legate wrinkled her nose. ``He's never been one to have an empty bed
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for long, but it's almost disgraceful how often he gets hit on
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nowadays.''
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My grin widened. ``Are you telling me \emph{Hakram} is a womanizer?''
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The Hellhound nodded, distinctly amused. ``He's discreet about it, at
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least. You ever notice how for such a gossip he almost never talks about
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himself?''
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Huh. I hadn't, actually. Though now that she brought it up, I could see
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how he tended to steer the conversation towards other people. I knew who
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his friends were and what clan he was from, but that wasn't much at all.
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Something to think on. The volume of the chatter rose suddenly and I
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glanced in the direction of the others. In the middle of the throng,
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suffering what passed for my minions' sense of humour, Kilian stood. She
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looked a little overwhelmed by the drunken attention, though she was
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smiling. Her pixie-cut dark red hair had been freshly combed, by the
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looks of it, and she seemed to have traded the usual legionary under
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tunic for more comfortable cotton shirt and trousers. I could not help
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but notice how they made her legs look even longer than usual, or the
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fact that her armour hid away rather noticeable curves.
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``And I don't want any part of that look on your face, so if you'll
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excuse me,'' Juniper gravelled.
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I let that go without a response, though I schooled my face into an
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expression that was a little more appropriate. My legate took back her
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old seat and everyone else shuffled along, leaving an empty space by my
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side in what I assumed to be the opposite of happenstance. Kilian
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promptly filled it, gracing me with a smile.
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``Finally found his stash, did you?'' she said.
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I opened a new bottle and grinned. ``Under his mattress, if you can
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believe it.''
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``Rookie mistake,'' the Senior Mage chuckled, shaking her head in mock
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dismay.
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The redhead leaned back against the log, our bodies closer than was
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strictly necessary. The kick of the liquor wasn't the only reason for
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the flush on my face, though the pleasant haze of drunkenness kept me in
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a mellow mood.
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``We should have done this more often, back in the College,'' I said.
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``With the responsibilities we all have now, we won't be getting chances
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like this often.''
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``There weren't as many of us, back then,'' Kilian replied. ``Just Rat
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Company. It's nice, having the others along.''
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Juniper was the only one who'd not been with the Rats there tonight, but
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I took her point. Aisha was good company, when she got that stick out of
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her ass, and I took a twisted sort of satisfaction out of goading Masego
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into drinking the hard stuff. Apparently there was no magical cure for a
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hangover, which made his shambling the following morning a very
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entertaining spectacle.
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``This is all still new to me,'' I admitted.
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Kilian raised an eyebrow. ``You didn't go drinking with your friends in
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Laure?''
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``I didn't really have friends, in Laure,'' I shrugged. ``Colleagues,
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some contacts. The occasional interest. But I didn't quite fit in back
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at the orphanage, or anywhere else for that matter.''
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The redhead looked surprised. ``But you're one of the friendliest people
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I've ever met,'' she protested.
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I snorted. ``That's overselling it a bit.''
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``Catherine is convinced she's uncharismatic, for some reason,'' Hakram
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called out from the other side of the fire.
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``I make enemies a lot more often than I make friends,'' I reminded him.
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Juniper barked out a laugh. ``Can't really call it ``making'' an enemy,
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if they were already out for your blood. Foundling, there's not another
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captain that could have talked their company into following a plan as
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messed up as the one you pulled in the melee. And the Rats took it on
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faith, going in blind.''
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I grimaced. ``The company didn't have a lot to lose by listening to me,
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no offense to you lot.''
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``There's a difference between hitting the bottom and believing someone
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can drag you back up,'' Pickler said. ``You were the one with a plan. We
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|
all learned to trust in that, before you were done.''
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|
Her tone was a little odd and I shot her a quizzical look. Was she still
|
|
feeing guilty about the way she'd spoken up against me during the melee?
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|
She'd had legitimate concerns, even if she'd phrased them
|
|
unflatteringly. Besides, it was water under the bridge as far as I was
|
|
concerned. The Senior Sapper had been one the cornerstones of what could
|
|
be called my ``faction'' inside the Fifteenth, along with Nauk and
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|
Robber. The way everyone was looking at me was starting to make me
|
|
uncomfortable so I raised my bottle.
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|
``To taking refuge in audacity, then,'' I toasted.
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|
There was a round of cheers, some louder than others, and the
|
|
conversation drifted away. Kilian eventually hummed quietly, looking
|
|
away from my face.
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|
``So ``interests'', huh,'' she said. ``Left behind any broken hearts
|
|
when you got out of Laure?''
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|
``Hardly,'' I snorted. ``I never got into anything too serious. Well,
|
|
there was that fisherman's son who was getting there, but I broke it
|
|
off. I was already aiming for the College, back then, staying in the
|
|
capital wasn't in the cards.''
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|
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|
``Oh,'' she spoke. ``A boy. I was under the impression you
|
|
were\ldots{}''
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|
|
|
The redhead gestured vaguely, though I got the gist of the meaning.
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|
|
|
``I'm bisexual,'' I informed her amusedly. ``I've been with people of
|
|
both genders. I mean, don't get me wrong, girls are nice but there was
|
|
this boy called Duncan back home who had pecs like you wouldn't
|
|
believe.''
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|
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|
``You're rather horrible at this, aren't you?'' Kilian spoke wryly.
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|
Shit. Right. Maybe should have kept that one under wraps. The aragh was
|
|
not doing wonders for my tact, not that it had ever been one of my
|
|
strongest traits. I cleared my throat.
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|
|
|
``Have you?'' I asked. ``Been interested in girls before, I mean.''
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|
|
``Only the one, so far,'' the redhead sighed. ``I honestly can't tell if
|
|
she's not interested or just very bad at picking up on signals.''
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|
Oh. \emph{Oh.}
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|
|
``Would you like to go for a walk, Kilian?'' I croaked out.
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|
``As long as it leads towards your tent,'' she replied frankly.
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|
``I think that can be arranged,'' I said, hurriedly rising to my feet.
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|
Well. This might turn out to be an even better night than I'd thought.
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