476 lines
22 KiB
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476 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-22-rescue}{%
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\section{Chapter 22: Rescue}\label{chapter-22-rescue}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Prayer and a sword gets better results than prayer alone.''}
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-- King Jehan the Wise
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\end{quote}
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The words had barely left Masego's mouth that my officers exploded into
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chatter, the panic-tinged voices struggling against one another. Two
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exceptions stood apart: Hakram rose to calmly pour himself a cup of wine
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he tossed back instantly, then frowned and poured himself a second.
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After a heartbeat he grabbed another cup, filled it and handed the wine
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to the other exception -- Juniper, who took it without looking. She
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wasn't paying attention to the mess of voices, instead eyeing a bare
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bones map of Marchford county. It wasn't Imperial work, so it wasn't as
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precise as the fare we'd both becomes used to. I allowed the babble to
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go on a moment longer, then slammed my palm against the table. It made a
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sound like a sharper exploding, and in the wake of it silence fell. A
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moment later a crack spread across a whitewood table that looked like it
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was at least a hundred years old, but I valiantly managed to ignore the
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fact I'd just messed up an heirloom worth twice my yearly salary.
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``Now that I have your attention,'' I spoke calmly. ``You're the ranking
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officers in the Fifteenth, fucking act like it.''
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I met their eyes calmly until the message had sunken in, then continued.
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``Good. Masego can you narrow down where the demon is? Wait, scratch
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that, can you tell me \emph{what} it is?''
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Apprentice grimaced. ``Hell Egg. There's a Hell Egg in the hills. That's
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what Lord Black was trying to say,'' he said after a moment, my
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teacher's title sounding almost sardonic in his mouth.
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He was more used to calling him Uncle Amadeus, much as I found the idea
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of Black being anyone's uncle utterly horrifying.
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``Pretend I don't know what that is,'' I sighed.
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``Dread Empress Triumphant-``
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``May she never return,'' everyone but him and I muttered, pressing a
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knuckle to their forehead.
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``That's going to get old fast,'' I noted.
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``\emph{That one Empress},'' Apprentice spoke peevishly, ``used demons
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and devils when she conquered Calernia. Most demons were bound to the
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standards of her legions, though she kept several on hand for her
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personal use. By the time she died and collapsed the Tower on top of the
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heroes that came for her, there were only a handful of standards left.''
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He paused, gratefully taking a cup of wine I hadn't seen Hakram pour for
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him. I suppose we could all use a liquid courage, right now.
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``Black assigned Father to find those in our newly-acquired territory
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after the Conquest,'' he continued, already forgetting the lordly
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courtesy he'd tacked on earlier. ``There's one near Harrow he built
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additional wards over. He suspected there was one in the hills around
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Marchford, but he could never be sure -- there was some kind of priestly
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ward protecting it, and Imperial policy is to leave those alone unless
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they're a direct threat.''
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I cleared my throat. ``The history lesson is nice and the Harrow
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location is as of now under seal by my authority as the Squire, but that
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doesn't tell us what kind of demon it is. It it a madness one, like the
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one she dropped on Laure?''
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Nine inhabitants out of ten had died in the wake of that particular
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abomination of a war tactic, including the entire Alban royal line. He
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shook his head.
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``It has to be absence or corruption,'' he replied. ``All the others are
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accounted for. I'm inclined towards corruption, considering we remember
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why we need to have this conversation at all.''
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A shiver went up my spine at that, I was unashamed to admit. Every
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Callowan was raised on stories about what demons could do when let
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loose, and both of those kinds had famous legends to their names. An
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absence demon was widely believed to be the reason the entire Yan Tei
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Empire had no mention of it anywhere during two centuries and then had
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suddenly reappeared in the histories. People hadn't even noticed it was
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gone, or even that anything had been missing at all. As for
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corruption\ldots{} there were tales of an elven forest kingdom on the
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other side of the Tyrian Sea, where a stranger had once laid a single
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finger on the jewel that was the heart of the woods. Within a fortnight
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the entire kingdom had been turned into ravening beasts that fed on
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blood and bones, killing thousands before the were mercifully put down
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by heroes. That was perhaps the most terrifying thing about demons: most
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of what they did could not be undone. It scarred Creation permanently.
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``We'll operate under the assumption of corruption for now,'' I said.
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``Any objections?''
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Shaken heads all around.
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``Lord Apprentice,'' Commander Hune spoke softly. ``Do you have any idea
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who could have set this demon loose? Did the Silver Spears disturb wards
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in their flight south?''
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Oh, Weeping Heavens. The mercenaries were in the hills, where \emph{the
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fucking embodiment of corruption was}. That wasn't going to end well for
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anyone involved.
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``-has been the target of sabotage on her part several times before, I'm
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given to understand,'' Masego was saying when I started paying attention
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to her again. ``Wolof has the best historical records in the Empire, I
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wouldn't put knowledge of the location past her.''
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``It's Heiress,'' I spoke flatly, cutting to the chase. ``It's always
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godsdamned Heiress, when things go to shit like this. The Lone Swordsman
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is a first rate prick but he's not the demon-summoning type. I doubt
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anyone else on the rebel side would have the ability to break wards good
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enough to hold back a demon or the balls to go through with it.''
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Hune blinked. ``She's an Imperial citizen,'' the ogre said slowly. ``We
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are in the middle of military operations against a threat to Praesi
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hegemony. This is\ldots{} absurd. What could she possibly gain from
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this?''
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``She wants to bleed the Fifteenth, I'd imagine,'' I replied. ``Or
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discredit it us so that her own contributions to the war effort look
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better in comparison. She's only invested in putting down the rebellion
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insofar as it advances her own position, Hune. If she's the last woman
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standing when the dust over this mess settles, she gets all the
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rewards.''
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``Trust a human to manage fucking up a perfectly good war,'' Juniper
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growled. ``No offense meant, Aisha.''
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Ratface, it seemed, did not even rank a half-assed apology. I probably
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shouldn't have been as amused by that as I was.
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``A little taken,'' Aisha replied drily. ``Akua Sahelian is a wretched
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bitch with more ambition than sense, if you'll all forgive my language.
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Wolofites are a notoriously proud and fickle lot.''
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Well, if there was one constant in Creation it was that whenever there
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were two Praesi nobles in a room there'd be at least three differing
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opinions offered about every subject. Still, I filed away the distaste
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in Aisha's tone for further reference -- I'd taken her into the
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Fifteenth at Juniper's request and had never been given reason to
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complain about her service, but it had not escaped my attention that she
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was the most politically-connected of my officers. If she were a mage,
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she'd be my strongest candidate for who was leaking information to
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Heiress. It didn't matter how far down the line of succession she was,
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in the Wasteland blood had a way of telling.
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``So, corruption,'' I spoke, getting us back on subject. ``Apprentice,
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you're the closest thing to an expert we have on this. Any chance the
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Silver Spears will get out of the hills before they get all\ldots{}''
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I waved a hand around vaguely to get my point across, the precise
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adjective for this situation escaping me. The Soninke mage massaged his
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forehead as he thought.
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``No,'' he finally replied. ``Demons of corruption become a locus of the
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concept the moment they're in phase with Creation. The area they can
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affect grows over time, but the Tower has anecdotal evidence implying
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that even from the first contact it can carry over several miles.''
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I frowned. ``Nobody's ever tried to chart this?''
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``Once,'' Apprentice admitted. ``The Warlock who did went mad while
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trying to write down the numbers and three floors of the Tower had to be
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torched before the\ldots{} things that formed could spread any
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further.''
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Well, that wasn't ominous at all.
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``So marching the whole legion on the bastard isn't a solution, then,''
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Nauk grunted. ``Fine, if numbers don't work we can still solve this the
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way the Fifteenth deals with most problems. This whole corruption
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bullshit takes time, right? We've still got goblinfire. Let's send a
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sapper company in and set the fucker on fire.''
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``I'm not sure whether that would work,'' Pickler replied. ``As far as I
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know it's never been used on demons. Part of that it that the substance
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has only been around for two hundred years and demon summoning is rare,
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but we'd be committing on a long shot.''
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``We're not committing to anything,'' I said. ``We're bailing, is what
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we're doing. Masego, can you narrow down its location? Unless it's right
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on top of us we're getting the Hells out of here.''
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``Demons leave marks in Creation wherever they are,'' Apprentice
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acknowledged. ``I know a ritual that could triangulate its location. I
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can't use it much, though, Catherine. It will notice, and corruption
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works on magic too. Three times at most.''
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He didn't need to elaborate on how much damage an embodiment of
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corruption could wreak, given a thaumaturgical link to a mage of
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Masego's calibre.
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``Legion doctrine when presented with first class special asset is to
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retreat to a choke point, fortify and send for reinforcements,'' Juniper
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said. ``We could make it back to the ford in four days with forced
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marches, and from there we should be able to scry for further
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instructions.''
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I shook my head. ``We won't be able to go that fast,'' I told her. ``The
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people of Marchford are civilians, they can't keep that kind of pace.''
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There was a moment of silence. I realized with a sinking feeling that
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everyone in the room had expected me to leave them behind.
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``Catherine,'' Ratface said hesitantly. ``There's at least eight
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thousand people in the city right now. Just getting them in shape for an
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evacuation would take days, and that's if they cooperate. Which they
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won't.''
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``By that time we will have corrupted cataphracts to deal with and
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worse,'' Hune spoke softly. ``We don't have the men to protect a body of
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people that large when on the move.''
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Aisha said nothing, only casting a look at Juniper whose face had gone
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utterly blank. Without a word Nauk moved around the table and came to
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stand by my side. Pickler cursed softly, then did the same. Hakram
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poured himself a third cup of wine. Masego claimed a chair and propped
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up his feet on the table, looking fascinated with the whole situation.
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``They're rebels,'' the Hellhound said flatly.
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``They surrendered,'' I replied. ``They are now Imperial citizens again,
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with all entitled protections.''
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``Until that surrender has been accepted by the Tower their legal status
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is unclear,'' the legate growled. ``Regardless, decisions about legion
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deployment are at the discretion of field commanders when higher
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authority cannot be reached.''
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``We have a mandate to protect imperial interests,'' Adjutant
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contributed mildly.
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``Imperial interest here is not to destroy the Fifteenth failing to save
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people who support a rebellion against Praes,'' Juniper barked. ``You're
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not thinking with your head, Foundling. This is sheer fucking
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sentimentality, and feelings have no place in the thought process of an
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officer.''
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Slowly, carefully, I let out a breath.
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``I could tell you,'' I spoke softly, ``that feeding that many people to
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corruption is the makings of a disaster. I could tell you that if word
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got out a legion abandoned a city to a demon every major city in Callow
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would rise in rebellion before summer comes. Gods, I could even say that
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the demon is a Praesi mess and the Praesi should clean it up.''
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My eyes hardened.
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``But that's not why I'm making this decision. There are eight thousand
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innocents in Marchford, Juniper. I refuse to abandon them.''
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``And by doing that, you're risking the life of every man and woman
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under your command,'' the grim-faced orc said. ``Your soldiers, dying so
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your conscience is clear.''
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``Is Callow part of the Empire?'' I asked. No reply, and Juniper seemed
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wary. ``Anyone, feel free to answer.''
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Ratface cleared his throat. ``I don't think anyone is denying that, Lady
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Foundling'' he said.
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I bared my teeth.
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``That's funny, because if this was Aksum or Kahtan we were talking
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about I don't think anybody would be arguing about how we should or
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shouldn't be feeding \emph{eight fucking thousand people} to a demon,''
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I snarled.
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``Marchford rebelled against the Tower,'' Aisha said, though she did not
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meet my eyes.
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``So did every city in the Wasteland, at some point,'' I retorted.
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``Hells, not even fifty years ago two thirds of the High Lords were
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backing the bid for the throne of the Empress' sworn enemy.''
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``There's been seven goblin rebellions, and nearly an eight under
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Nefarious,'' Pickler added in an undertone, and for that I could have
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kissed her.
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``The Empire's talked a good game since the Conquest,'' I said. ``But
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now's the time where we find out whether it was all empty words after
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all. Does Praes stay the course, when it costs something to do it?
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Taking a country isn't enough to rule it, Juniper. That has to be
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\emph{earned}. If Callow is part of the Empire, then our oaths apply to
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it. Every soul within its borders is under our protection, whether that
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means fighting Procer or the Free Cities or the children of Hell. We
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don't get to pick and choose who those oaths apply to.''
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My eyes swept across my officers.
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``The eyes of the rest of Calernia are on us. So tell me, all of you --
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are we hypocrites or not?''
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``Not,'' Nauk chuckled, running his tongue over his teeth. ``Doesn't
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matter who we fight, Hellhound. The Fifteenth wins, that's all there is
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to it.''
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``Not,'' Pickler agreed. ``I've always been curious as to whether a
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trebuchet can kill a demon. I doubt I'll get another opportunity to find
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out.''
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``Not,'' Ratface sighed. ``Though I'd like to live to collect my
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pension, so let's not get any heroic ideas.''
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The goblet in Hune's hands looked like a small toy compared to the size
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of her fingers -- earlier we'd all pretended not to notice when she'd
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partially crushed it by accident.
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``This is foolish,'' the ogre commander complained, then clenched a
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fist. There was the sound of metal crumpling like cheap parchment and
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wine dripped through her closed fist. ``Not, ancestors forgive me. I was
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not raised to go meekly.''
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I cast a look at Hakram, who shrugged.
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``Do you even have to ask?''
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That left two. Juniper's face had gone pale green with anger, eyes
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burning. Aisha had slipped back into the court mask she'd no doubt been
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taught as a child, expressionless save for a polite smile.
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``We set a pace before moving out,'' the legate said. ``Anybody who
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can't keep up gets left behind.''
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This was, I knew, as far down as I'd be able to bend her neck. I could
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make it an order, of course. Respect for the chain of command was so
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deeply ingrained in Juniper that she'd follow an order she thoroughly
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despised without argument. \emph{But if I do that, I cross a line I
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can't uncross. What little trust we have between us will be gone, and
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it'll never come back.}
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``Agreed,'' I conceded.
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Masego cleared his throat. ``Delightful little bit of drama, ladies and
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gentlemen, good show all around. Now if we could get back to the matter
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at hand?''
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``Highest priority is to get the locals ready to leave as fast as
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possible,'' I said. ``Kilian's still overseeing the garrison, she needs
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to be brought up to speed.''
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``We have a higher priority than that,'' Juniper replied. ``Our worst
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wounded are still half a day's march away from the city, Foundling.''
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Shit. I'd totally forgotten about that. They'd been too slow to keep up
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when we'd marched on Marchford, so they'd been allowed to trail slightly
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behind with our extra supplies.
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``Apprentice, how likely are they to be targeted?'' I asked.
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``Normally I'd say the odds are low,'' Masego grimaced. ``But stronger
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corruption demons can affect the creational laws of time and space --
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there could be a force headed there as we speak.''
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``Infantry wouldn't move fast enough,'' Ratface mused. ``But the
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cataphracts might.''
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I clenched my fingers, then slowly unclenched them.
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``Hune, I'm taking one of your cohorts to back them up on the way
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here,'' I announced. ``The rest of you need to get this evacuation
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moving.''
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``There'll be riots,'' Aisha said. ``And without your\ldots{} skills in
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defusing those, we have fewer options to deal with them.''
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I closed my eyes.
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``Marchford is under martial law,'' I finally replied. ``Do what you
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have to.''
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---
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The awareness that a fortnight ago I would have used Nilin's cohort for
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this was like a throbbing wound in the back of my mind. Tribune Galia
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was a solid officer, an orc nearly as tall as Hakram with skin a shade
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of green so dark it bordered on black, but she was not my friend. She'd
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not been with me since Rat Company, hadn't followed me through thick and
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thin in the war games. I kept those thoughts away from my face as well
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as I could while she hurried the cohort down the road. For once I'd
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bothered to bring Zombie along to a possible fight, riding ahead of the
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column to serve as the scouting line we were lacking. We'd already been
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marching for over a bell without any signs of the wounded, but we should
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be coming across them any moment now. The night was dark and the now
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blood-red moon cast treacherous shadows everywhere, so I rather wished
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I'd thought to bring goblins along -- I was the only person in the
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cohort with any real night vision to speak of. I'd ordered for us to go
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without torches as not to warn the enemy we were coming.
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Skilfully guiding Zombie through the trees that bordered both sides of
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the road, I reined him in when I finally caught a flicker of movement in
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the distance. Breathing in, I focused and sharpened my Name vision to
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get a better look. \emph{And there you are.} About two hundred
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legionaries with still-limited mobility, most on foot but some on the
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oxen carts that also carried our additional stacks of weapons and
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foodstuffs. They seemed to be ploughing along at a good pace, no doubt
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spurred forward by the fact that even the sky had apparently gotten
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licked by the Hells. I turned Zombie around and galloped back to the
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cohort, skimming our moving lines and slowing when I found the tribune.
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Captain Ubaid, in command of her second company, was engaged in quiet
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conversation with her. They both quieted when I stopped by them.
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``Found our wounded,'' I announced bluntly. ``They're just up ahead,
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they don't seem to have run into anyone.''
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``Still no sign of the enemy then, Lady Squire?'' Galia asked.
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``Apprentice said it was only a possibility,'' I noted. ``Could be the
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demon's not strong enough to be a threat so quickly.''
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Just the word for what we'd be facing was enough to have both
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battle-hardened officers flinch. For all that Tyrants had not been above
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calling up those creatures in the past, they were not counted as friends
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by any of the Praesi.
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``We're not home safe yet, anyway,'' I grunted, diplomatically ignoring
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their reaction. ``Until we're back in Marchford no one should let their
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guard down.''
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``Oh, I don't think anyone will be closing their eyes on the job
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tonight,'' Ubaid murmured. ``Not with that thing out there.''
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``Should I sound a horn in warning of our approach, my lady?'' Galia
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said.
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I shook my head. ``Not yet.''
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I trusted Masego, strange as that was to say. Maybe not to carry all my
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secrets, but he had an obsession with being exactly correct that
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predisposed him against lying. He wouldn't have brought up the
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possibility if he hadn't genuinely thought I should be prepared to deal
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with it. With a polite nod to the officers I rode ahead of the column
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again. I took Zombie into the woods more out of habit than any real
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need, moving forward at a trot. Eventually I pulled my mount to a stop,
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simply watching my forces coming closer together. I'd never been
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particularly fond of forests -- it was the city girl in me, I imagined
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-- a taste ever reinforced by the horror tales about the things that
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lurked in the Waning Woods and the Greywood. The red tinge cast by the
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moon over everything turned the mess of trunks and overgrown roots into
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a hellish labyrinth it would be easy to get lost into. A firefly passed
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in front of me, then circled around and came to rest on my outstretched
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hand. Huh. Lucky omen, that. Fireflies were rare in this part of Callow.
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The insect flew up the nearest tree and I followed it with my eyes until
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it came to rest on a branch.
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Where a creature sat, looking down at me.
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It was the size of a man, with large dark eyes and long legs ending in
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feet pointing both ways that were adorned with claws looking like iron
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hooks. It bared iron teeth at me, rustling its red-brown fur as it
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jumped. My sword cleared its scabbard before I even thought of it and I
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ducked under, blade striking at its body as it flew over me.
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``AMBUSH!'' I screamed, but I was too late.
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Horns sounded from both my cohort and where the wounded were. I'd sliced
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the creature, I saw, but there was no blood on my blade. \emph{Devil.}
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``Little girl,'' the hooked thing said in Mtethwa, putting its
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human-like palms up. ``I mean no harm.''
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``I do,'' I replied, swinging for its eyes.
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It scampered away up a tree before I could touch it, chittering
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something in the Dark Tongue. The firefly gently landed on Zombie's
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neck, and before I could so much as blink it expanded into a human shape
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with a wet squelch of forming flesh. A pale-skinned humanoid without
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eyes leered at me, baring rust-coloured fangs. My pommel struck it in
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the mouth, breaking teeth as it let out a cackle like a hyena's. More
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shapes were clustering in the trees.
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``Well,'' I said. ``This could be going better.''
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