433 lines
20 KiB
TeX
433 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-41-retrieve}{%
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\chapter{Retrieve}\label{chapter-41-retrieve}}
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\epigraph{``\ldots such wanton deviousness had been unseen since the days
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of Dread Emperor Traitorous, who famously passed for his own Chancellor
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through cunning use of a wig and a pair of cantaloupes\ldots''}{Extract from ``The Most Illustrious Histories of the Inimitable Dread
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Empire of Praes'', volume IV}
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The clamour died down before long.
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The Fifteenth had been positioned according to Juniper's plan for the
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forcing of the city, with Hune's irregular kabili of over a thousand men
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taking point. Heavies in the front, with the strength of our sapper
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corps behind them. Nauk's legionaries were split between the wings,
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placed so that they would be able to reinforce weak points rather than
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engage the enemy on their own. I would have preferred for the orc
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commander to be the tip of the spear but Juniper had brought up the
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valid point that he was a lot more likely to commit to too deep an
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offensive than Hune. The ogre would not let her legionaries step even
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once over the imaginary line set by the Hellhound. I had not cheered
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with my legion, sobered by the knowledge that this was just an opening
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blow. With the gates open my own instinct would have been to rush
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through and take the enemy while they were still unprepared, but Juniper
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had pushed back against that idea hard. The Lone Swordsman had a history
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of trickiness that could not be denied, and she didn't want to have to
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learn what he'd planned the hard way.
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``So what do you have for us now, Willy?'' I murmured.
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Sharpening my vision with my Name, I frowned and peered through the
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broken gates. Like we'd anticipated the Stygian spears were surrounding
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the entrance into the city -- whether or not there were archers behind I
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did not have the angle to see, but I'd bet that there were. Neither the
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Baroness Dormer nor William himself were noted military commanders, but
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the older Stygian spear-slaves were said to be schooled in tactics and
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strategy. It was one of their selling points: the few Free Cities that
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used the slaves for war did not usually have an officer corps of their
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own to provide. A few heartbeats passed without any response from the
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other side, a fact that was almost more troubling than reassuring.
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Meanwhile, Senior Sapper Pickler's boys got to work. The trebuchets
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began targeting the ramparts to the sides of the gate bastion, massive
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stones smashing into them with professional regularity. Our pair of
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ballistas had been pointed at the bastion itself. There was no
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expectation that the smaller stones would actually able to bring it
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down, and we didn't actually want them to. They just had to clear the
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fortificiations of archers and mages, while the trebuchets made sure
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there wouldn't be flanking fire on the Fifteenth when it advanced.
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I glanced at Heiress, who'd been silent since my last cutting retort.
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Barika trailed behind her, eyes on my moving legion. They'd be giving me
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trouble anytime soon now, but whatever they had planned the
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contingencies I'd set up should hobble them. As long as Akua didn't have
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the Procerans at her beck and call, all she could put forward was a
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small retinue of her own guards and her noble minions. Dangerous, but
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not so much that I couldn't step on them if I wanted to. Getting her
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right here, where she couldn't get up to any shenanigans away from
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prying eyes, had been the most important part. I wondered if this was
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how Black felt all the time, measuring risks and moving enemies over
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traps you could trigger at any time. It would explain a lot about the
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man if he did: there was nothing wondrous or adventurous about this. It
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was just\ldots{} work. Like bartending, if more dangerous. They didn't
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talk about these parts in the stories. The sleepless nights you spent
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anticipating the actions of your enemies, the grind of preparing your
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counters to their moves. All the while knowing that you might never need
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the work at all, or that it might turn out you'd made the wrong kind of
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efforts entirely. \emph{And he did this for all of Callow for over two
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decades.}
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The thought was chased away the moment the rebels finally gave answer to
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our drawing first blood. A lone silhouette passed through the gates,
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gait assured and unhurried. For a moment I'd thought it would be the
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Lone Swordsman, come to defy an entire army on his own, but my Name
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sight found an entirely different face: Thief. The heroine was strolling
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with her hands in her pockets, whistling if the shape of her lips was
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any indication.
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``Not the Named I was expecting,'' Hakram gravelled.
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``Preaching to the choir,'' I said. ``Angling for single combat, do you
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think?''
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``She doesn't have a fighting Role,'' the orc frowned. ``I could more or
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less handle her before I came into my Name: she tries you and she'll end
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up bleeding on the floor.''
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There was no flattery in that reply, just a matter-of-fact
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acknowledgement of how good I'd gotten at killing things.
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``Even if she calls for a duel, she'll be getting the princely reply,''
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I said. ``We don't have time to waste on posturing.''
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The Thief agreed, apparently. She stopped sixty feet away from the gate,
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on the open field but still out of crossbow range. A ballista stone flew
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over her head, hitting the wall without making a kill but keeping the
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archers crouched behind the fortifications. She flipped a finger in our
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general direction then took up a leather pouch from her side, turning it
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upside down as if to empty the contents on the ground. A heartbeat
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later, twenty-odd river barges fell in a crash of wood and floodwater. I
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blinked just to make sure I wasn't hallucinating.
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``What the \emph{actual} fuck?'' I said eloquently.
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I had a few more relevant questions in mind, but that was the one that
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came out. I glanced at Heiress, whose face was emotionless. Not tell to
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find there, unfortunately. Had the Thief\ldots{} summoned boats? This
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was aspect stuff, there was no doubt about it, but she wasn't a mage.
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That I knew of, anyway. I gestured for one of the Gallowborne to come
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closer.
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``Tell Apprentice to hurry back here,'' I ordered. ``This was, uh, not
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part of the plan.''
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``If this turns into a naval battle, we're down a fleet of our own,''
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Hakram commented drily.
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``Less sass, more figuring out what the Hells was the point of that,'' I
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ordered.
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There hadn't been much water, and it was already seeping into the
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ground. Still, I somehow doubted making a little mud had been the plan
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there. There was no sign of the Thief anymore, but I knew it'd be too
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much to hope for she'd been crushed under the barges.
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``They're blocking access to the gate,'' Hakram said.
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I cursed. True, the boats had fallen all over the place: some forward,
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yes, but some backwards also. The ones in the back probably forbade
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entrance to the same gate we'd just knocked open. The heroes had replied
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to our forcing a way in by dropping a mountain of wood in front of that
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path. I might have picked up on that faster, had I not been befuddled by
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the absurdity and overkill of the answer.
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``They'll be putting the gate back up as we speak,'' I grimaced.
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``We can order Pickler to smash the boats to kindling,'' Adjutant said.
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``That'll take too long,'' I said. ``And I doubt our trick on the gate
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will work twice.''
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The orc cast me a cautious look.
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``You only have so many cards up your sleeves,'' he warned me.
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``I only have so many hours before the actual bloody Heavens show up,''
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I replied, then turned to another of the Gallowborne. ``Run to Juniper.
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Tell her I'm slapping down my first trump early.''
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There'd be no need to be any more precise than that, not with the
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Hellhound. I closed my eyes and reached for my Name, opening pupils on a
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corpse far to my left. The ox rose to its feet. I'd been meaning this
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particular surprise for Willy, a way to make swordsmanship irrelevant to
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our coming fight. I'd had several of our labour oxen slaughtered and
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stuffed with goblin munition loadouts, including one full of goblinfire.
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\emph{He'll be expecting them after this.} The ox I'd reached for was
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one heavy on demolition charges, the flesh carved deep and filled to the
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brim. It would have been enough to casually level a city block, Robber
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assured me, so it should be enough for the barges. If not, I had another
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six oxen to finish the job. I set the undead construct to a steady trot,
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only then opening my eyes. Hakram was looking at me, trying not to grin.
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I sighed.
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``Out with it,'' I said. ``What did they call this one?''
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``The Oxis of Evil,'' he confessed.
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Sappers were, I reflected, the worst of the worst. As if to prove my
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point the ox I controlled came into my field of view and I noticed there
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was someone riding on it. A goblin. I couldn't use my Name sight and
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control the corpse at the same time, but there was no real need to.
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``Remind me to demote Tribune Robber,'' I told Hakram.
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``I'll make a note of it,'' the orc said.
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``Lesser footrest,'' I decided. ``That'll be his new rank.''
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``You don't have another footrest,'' Adjutant pointed out.
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``But if I did,'' I replied vindictively, ``he'd be beneath them.''
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Heiress, to my surprise, had not taken the occasion to snipe at either
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myself or the Fifteenth. She was looking at the scene, turning her back
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to me. Discreetly, I gestured at Captain Farrier to have another two
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crossbowmen ready to take her out. I didn't trust how quiet she'd
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gotten. With Pickler's engines keeping the enemy archers busy, Robber
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and his mount covered the ground with only a handful of pot-shots taken
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at them. One arrow hit the ox right in the brains, but the corpse wasn't
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exactly using those at the moment. A few moments before impact Robber
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leaned forward and struck a match, setting off a fuse before rolling
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off. Landing on his feet, the goblin spread out his arms at the soldiers
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on the rampart and yelled out something. I was too far away to hear, and
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anyhow I was busy cutting the strands connecting me to the ox before it
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exploded. The corpse hit the side of the closest barge, horns getting
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stuck in the wood, and a moment later Creation lit up.
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I'd again underestimated how much munitions were amplified by Name
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power, it seemed. The hand of an angry god swatted aside the centre of
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the boat pile, smouldering planks of wood catapulted in every direction.
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One large piece hit the first rank of Hune's heavies, slapping down an
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orc nearly as large as Nauk like he was a child. I winced. Broken bones
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for sure, even if he'd caught it on the shield. When the mess settled
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down I saw that something resembling a path had been cleared. Half a
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barge was still in the way and would make passing under the bastion much
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trickier, but it would also be usable as cover. Like I'd suspected, the
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gate was already back up. Our way to get rid of it had left it largely
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intact, after all, even if I doubted they'd have repaired the hinges so
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quickly. I was beginning to think I should have used the oxen on the
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walls, surprise or not. With the Fifteenth ready to pour in the gap the
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moment it settled we might have avoided the mess at the gate entirely.
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\emph{Too late for that now.}
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``You were using your sight on Robber?'' I asked Hakram.
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He was actually better as sharpening his senses than I was, nowadays. He
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still lacked a second aspect but the few tricks Black had taught me he'd
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taken to like a fish to water.
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``I was,'' the orc agreed.
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``What was he yelling?'' I asked with morbid curiosity.
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Adjutant smothered another grin.
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``I believe it might have been `knock knock, motherfuckers','' he
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informed me.
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``\emph{Lesser} lesser footrest,'' I muttered under my breath.
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Behind us, horns sounded and the Fifteenth began to stir itself to
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movement. The foreplay was over and Robber fled back to the safety of
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our lines to the loud acclaim of his cohort of insane murderous
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hooligans. That they were actually \emph{my} cohort of insane murderous
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hooligans was something I was trying very hard not to think too much
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about. In the distance I saw that Apprentice was coming back in my
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direction, then frowned when he started gesticulating wildly. I gazed in
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the direction he was pointing at. The Procerans, I saw, were not moving
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in formation. They were supposed to slip in front of Hune's men to
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harass the Stygians before impact was made, but they were splitting off
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my host to the left.
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``Heiress,'' I barked.
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There was a chorus of swords being unsheathed and two dozen crossbows
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instantly covered Akua and Barika . My rival cleared her throat
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daintily.
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``As the Sahelians have unfortunately been put under a strong financial
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burden by Her Most Dreadful Majesty, I'm sad to inform you we can no
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longer afford to keep the mercenaries in our pay,'' she said. ``As a
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result, I no longer command them and therefore no longer qualify as an
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auxiliary officer according to Legion regulations.''
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``They're in the Tower's employ,'' I said.
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``They've never signed any contract with the Tower, or been handed gold
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by it,'' she smiled.
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``Get off your horse,'' I spoke softly. ``Hands on your head, and the
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same with your minion. You so much as make a vaguely suspicious move and
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my men will drop you.''
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Akua did not move.
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``On what grounds do you demand this?'' she asked curiously.
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Apprentice barrelled onto the scene a moment later, panting and looking
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like he was about to throw up.
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``Catherine,'' he said, his robes now sweat-stained. ``\emph{That's not
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Heiress}.''
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Without missing a beat I reached for the knife at my belt, palmed it and
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threw it. It spun and sunk to the hilt in the leg of whoever was wearing
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Heiress' face. The illusion shattered with a tinkling sound and the
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sight of Arzachel, bound and gagged, was presented to my eyes. Barika
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laughed.
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``Too late,'' the heiress to Unonti said.
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The haft of Hakram's axe caught her on the temple a heartbeat later,
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throwing her down the horse and sending her straight into
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unconsciousness before she even hit the ground. There was surge of power
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in the distance, from among the mercenaries.
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``The demon,'' I said. ``Masego, are we-``
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``It's not getting through,'' he interrupted.
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And like he said, a moment later, there was a responding surge of power
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from where Kilian's task force of mages was waiting. We'd prepared for
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this, thank the Gods. Horns sounded again and the left flank of the
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Fifteenth turned to face the Procerans. They didn't seem interested in
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giving battle, though. They were fleeing towards the walls. Not that
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Juniper cared: before twenty heartbeats had passed the legion's
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ballistas had been repositioned and a pair of bloody furrows was carved
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in the mercenary ranks. Pickler's sappers had managed to hit the ground
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at the right angle for the stones to bounce and continue rolling,
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killing dozens instead of mere handfuls with every shot. Wouldn't have
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worked as well on better armoured men, but these were light infantry. I
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glanced at Masego, whose face had turned ashen.
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``We have the wrong target,'' he said. ``She's not bringing something
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through.''
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Ripping one of the silver trinkets from his hair -- this one with a
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reflective surface -- he spoke a few words and an image appeared on the
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side of it. Zombie moved closer to him and I hunched over. We were
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looking at the Stygian spears, arrayed behind the gates.
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``They're the target?'' I asked.
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``Not them in specific,'' he muttered. ``This is High Arcana, it works
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through\ldots{} associations. Metaphysical concepts.''
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One of the former slaves in the front ranks staggered, his muscular body
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turning into a weak husk in the blink of an eye before he dropped dead
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on the ground. One after another, the Stygian spears dropped. Two
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thousand, they were. Before thirty heartbeats had passed every single
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one of them was a corpse.
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``Weeping Heavens,'' I whispered. ``What kind of a ritual is this?''
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``She fed them, didn't she?'' Masego said. ``She gave them water and
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rations. Hers. And she just retrieved that gift.''
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``If it's retrieved, that means she \emph{got it back},'' I hissed.
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Two thousand lives in fuel. The power to the east had not dimmed, it had
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grown. And even as I thought, I could feel it taking shape. The
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ballistas continued taking their toll but they were irrelevant now.
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Heiress had never intended for the Procerans to be the force she used
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today. They'd been a red herring for me to focus my efforts on, thinking
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I was scoring victories by hobbling them. In front of the fleeing
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mercenaries a tear in Creation formed, pouring out a geyser flame and
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sulphur.
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``Contact the task force,'' I ordered Masego immediately. ``Shut this
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down, \emph{now}.''
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The image on the trinket shifted and Apprentice immediately began
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talking in a low voice to someone. I didn't stick around to supervise:
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he knew how to handle that situation better than I did. I passed by
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Hakram and the Gallowborne securing the unconscious Barika. Someone had
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gotten Arzachel off the horse and handled the wound, but he wouldn't be
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talking: his tongue had been removed. \emph{So that's why the Procerans
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are listening to Heiress.} Odds were someone with Arzachel's face was
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giving them their orders. When had she made the switch? I doubted she'd
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managed to put a prisoner on a horse under my nose without my noticing,
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so she must have found a way to fool Apprentice's spectacles from the
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beginning. \emph{But then how did he figure out she wasn't the one on
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the horse when he came back?} Suspicion gnawed at me, but I set aside
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the matter for now. My eyes turned to the ritual gate, and what I saw
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there had my limbs going numb. Devils were spewing out of it by the
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hundreds. Ironhooks, jackalheads and the lizard-tigers. Other kinds I'd
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never seen before too, with wings.
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All of them were going for the walls. The ironhooks would be able to
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climb them with no trouble. Some would die going up, shot by archers,
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but eventually a foothold would be made. And then the levies would
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panic, and the whole infernal host would spill into the city. Thousands
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would die, I already knew. Tens of thousands, even, since the civilians
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would be so tightly packed. All of it because I'd thought Heiress would
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use an old trick again instead of pull out a new one. My Name was
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silent. It should have been howling in anger and outrage, but there was
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not so much as a ripple in the pond. The stillness in my mind was all
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mine. So was the vicious, frozen fury going through my veins. Eventually
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Kilian's task force managed to shut down the ritual gate by following
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Masego's instructions, cutting through a giant snake as it did. It
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didn't matter: another one had passed through unhindered, and it was
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closing its jaws on the top of the ramparts. Lesser devils were already
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beginning to use it as a way up.
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I got down from my horse and walked to Barika's prone form, crouching to
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slap her awake. I felt like my body was not my own, like I was puppeting
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myself the way I did corpses. The Soninke opened her eyes with a pained
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gasp.
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``You breed are ever sore losers,'' she sneered the moment her eyes swam
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back in focus.
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I felt myself exhale.
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``It truly is a game to you, isn't it?'' I said. ``Even when people die.
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Just part of the steps.''
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``You're in over your head, Foundling,'' Barika said. ``You have been
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since the beginning.''
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I smiled.
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``You know, I've had a lot of time to think about things on the march
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here. After Marchford, you see, I seriously considered assassinating
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Heiress even after Black essentially warned me off the idea. Do you know
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what held me off?''
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``Fear,'' the aristocrat mocked.
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``Yes,'' I agreed softly. ``You're right. I was \emph{afraid}, Barika.
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Not of her but of\ldots{} escalation. How much worse would she get, if
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she felt that her life was on the line?''
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``Your mistake,'' the Soninke said, ``was to think that you should only
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be afraid of us when you threaten our lives.''
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``Right again,'' I chuckled. ``Not in the way you meant it, but there it
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is. I keep expecting you lot to have lines you won't cross. But you
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don't, do you? You weren't raised to think that way. Anything goes if it
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gets you what you want.''
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``Torture might be preferable to your petty moralizing,'' Barika said.
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``Not that you'll get anything out of me. I've been trained to resist
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the likes of what you can bring to bear.''
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``You probably have,'' I acknowledged, and rose to my feet. ``Thank you,
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Barika Unonti, for this valuable lesson.''
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Calmly, I took the crossbow of the closest Gallowborne and placed a bolt
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through her eye. She was dead before she even realized what was
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happening.
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``Masego,'' I said, looking down at the corpse. ``Scry Juniper. I'm
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ordering a full frontal assault.''
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``And what will we be doing meanwhile, Catherine?'' Hakram asked.
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I spat to the side.
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``We're going to have a conversation with the man who cut off your
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hand.''
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