513 lines
20 KiB
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513 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-20-skew}{%
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\chapter{Skew}\label{chapter-20-skew}}
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\epigraph{``An alliance of victors is like a hearth in summer.''}{Julienne Merovins, tenth First Princess of Procer}
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I'd met a handful of heroes since I'd first become the Squire, and Thief
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was one of the harder ones to place. She was, quite blatantly, an
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egotist. Yet she lacked some of the traits that were common with the
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more arrogant heroes: both the Lone Swordsman and the Exiled Prince --
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the Prince in particular -- had been almost unnaturally handsome. The
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appearance of a Named usually changed to reflect how they thought of
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themselves, after all. Yet Thief was not particularly good-looking, I
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noted as I studied her. Maybe two inches taller than me, she was a
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skinny woman with short dark hair and blue-grey eyes. The leathers she
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always wore had been cut for her frame, but weren't particularly tight:
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much like me, she'd have little to show for it if they were. Most of
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all, she lacked the \emph{weight} to her presence that I'd come to
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associate with powerful Named. William, for all his flaws, had been able
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to mesmerize a room full of rebels with but a few words. I had a hard
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time imagining Thief ever doing the same.
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``You sure you should have taken off that helmet?'' the heroine smiled.
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``You've seen how costly a mistake that can be.''
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I withdrew my hand from the arm of the chair, and slowly sat down. The
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seat wasn't made for someone wearing plate, evidently, and it groaned
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under the weight of my armour.
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``We going to play the threat game?'' I asked bluntly. ``Thief, I could
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have killed you with a hand tied behind my back last time we met. I've
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since murdered a demigod for power. We both know how that fight goes.''
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The other woman's eyes turned cold.
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``A fair fight, maybe,'' she said. ``I'm not in the habit of having
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those.''
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I snorted.
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``And \emph{I} am?'' I replied. ``Look, I'm as willing as tangle as the
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next villain but if I get an occasion to put a shot someone's back in
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the dark, I'm sure as Hells taking it.''
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``How remarkable,'' she sneered.
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``Well, I \emph{have} been spending a lot of time with goblins lately,''
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I said. ``But I gotta say that putdown's a little rich, coming from
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someone whose entire Name is about theft.''
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Thief smirked.
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``Oh?'' she said. ``Is someone displeased their treasury's gone?''
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``I am,'' I smiled thinly. ``I'm about to have to find food and lodgings
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for at least a hundred thousand refugees while also running a military
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campaign and I don't have the funds for any of it.''
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``The Tower will shell out the gold,'' Thief dismissed.
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``The Tower's putting down internal troubles, and I'm about to spit in
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its eye,'' I said. ``It's not going to be giving me a single copper for
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the foreseeable future.''
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``Villains stabbing each other in the back at the first sign of
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trouble,'' the heroine grinned unpleasantly. ``History does tend to
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repeat itself, doesn't it?''
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``I'm not-`` I began, then stopped. ``Oh \emph{fuck you}.''
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She blinked in surprise.
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``Who do you think you are, exactly?'' I asked.
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``A heroine, \emph{villain},'' she replied.
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``Someone tried to mind rape a city of a hundred thousand last year,
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Thief, and it sure as Hells wasn't anyone on my side,'' I barked. ``You
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think being William's minion for a few months gives you a pass to be an
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asshole forever and still have the moral high ground? Think again.''
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``I spoke against that,'' Thief hissed.
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``Words are wind,'' I said. ``You could have taken a stand. You didn't.
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So much for heroism, eh?''
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``I might have made mistakes,'' she said through gritted teeth. ``I'll
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own up to that. But you know what I'm not, at least? A godsdamned
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collaborator.''
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My face blanked. I'd been called a traitor before. By a crowd in
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Summerholm, when I was fresh into my name, and by the Lone Swordsman in
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the months that followed. But it was the first time anyone had actually
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called me a collaborator to my face. No doubt quite a few people had
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thought it in the past, but I'd never actually heard it spoken out loud.
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It stung more than I would have liked, even now. Things with a grain of
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truth to them usually did.
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``I took the path that damages Callow the least,'' I said.
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``You took the path that involved selling your soul to the Hellgods,''
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she replied flatly.
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``I got a close look at the Hashmallim, in Liesse,'' I said. ``I think
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you think your side's any gentler than mine, you've been listening to
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stories too much.''
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``My `side' hasn't stolen an entire fucking kingdom,'' she snapped.
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I shrugged.
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``And what's it done to free it since?'' I asked.
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``It rebelled,'' Thief said. ``And you murdered the people that did. I'm
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sure they felt very \emph{saved}.''
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``You think putting a crown on Gaston Caen would have helped this
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country?'' I said, leaning forward. ``Gods, Thief, the man fled into
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exile before the first legion was in sight of Vale during the Conquest.
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He was a bloody coward and the First Prince owned him down to his
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toes.''
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``So you say,'' the heroine sneered.
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``So the \emph{facts} say,'' I coldly said. ``You think she poured that
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much silver into a doomed rebellion so an old rival of the Principate
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could be restored? She wanted a western protectorate to push back Praes,
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that's all there was to it.''
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``Elizabeth of Marchford would have been queen,'' Thief said. ``She
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would not have settled for that.''
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``You think she would have had a choice?'' I pressed. ``After Praes
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burned the land on the way out, who would have leant the coin and crops
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to keep Callow alive through the winter?''
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``That would have been the Empire's fault,'' she hissed.
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``Gods Below, am I tired of hearing about fault,'' I shouted. ``Fault
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and blame and Good -- none of it \emph{fixes any of this}. If you want a
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solution, you deal with realities. With what exists, not the pretty
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little world that `should be'. Praes would have acted in its interest,
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and that meant torching the country. Procer would have acted in its
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interests, which was making us a protectorate. Anyone who plans without
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acknowledging that isn't planning, they're lying to themselves. That's
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what I can't stand about the lot of you. Do you think doing the right
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thing is enough? Fuck you. I've had to bloody my hands to get this far,
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Thief. I didn't enjoy it, and some of the things I've done will haunt me
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to my grave. But the only clean victories are the ones in stories.
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Preach all you want, \emph{I have gotten things done}.''
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I panted, out of breath, my tone quieted.
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``Which of you pricks on the other side can say the same?'' I asked.
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``Sometimes you have to take a stand even if you know you can't win,''
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she said.
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``That's pride talking,'' I replied. ``That's killing people for your
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principles, and I can't think of anything more selfish than that.''
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Thief laughed bitterly.
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``You know, there's truth in what you say,'' she admitted. ``But none of
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it would have mattered if you were a heroine.''
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I'd been at this game long enough that the surprise never made it to my
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face.
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``William was never meant to lead,'' Thief said. ``He was terrible at
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it. But I look at the party we had, and can't help but thing there was
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always supposed to be one. All of us were born in Callow, except for the
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Wandering Bard -- and I'm not convinced she was supposed to be a part of
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it. One Named for every Calamity, if you'd been on the side of Good. And
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we've all seen what you can do with an uphill battle.''
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``I know them, the Calamities,'' I said. ``I know what they can do
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better than most. It wasn't a fight that could be won.''
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``The Heavens have a way of evening odds,'' she said.
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``Prayer is what people rely on when they've run out of plans,'' I
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replied. ``I've no patience for it.''
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In this, at least, I was truly Black's successor.
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``What you've built is collapsing,'' Thief said.
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``By the end of the year, there will be no Praesi governor in Callow,''
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I said.
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``I'm not talking about the governors,'' she said. ``I'm talking about
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the Ruling Council.''
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``It's done,'' I said tiredly. ``I tried, it failed. Come sunup the two
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of them will be dead and I'm not surrendering that authority ever
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again.''
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The heroine frowned.
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``You're naming yourself queen,'' she said.
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``Vicequeen, most likely,'' I said. ``A ceremonial title: I can't run
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the country if I'm waging war abroad, and it's become clear I'm not
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great at it anyway. I'll name a Governor-General to handle everything
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and keep power in name only. The Tower won't accept anyone but a villain
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at the head of Callow.''
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Thief stared at me for a long time.
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``What do you want, Squire?'' she said. ``I thought you'd come here to
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threaten me or force a fight, but that's obviously not the case. Why are
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we here?''
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``A tenth,'' I said.
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The heroine blinked.
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``What?''
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``You get to keep a tenth of the treasury,'' I said. ``The rest goes
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back in the vault.''
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``Are you trying to bribe me with coin already in my possession?'' she
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asked.
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``Bribe, no,'' I said. ``I'm hiring the Guild of Thieves.''
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``We're not for hire,'' Thief said.
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``Fine, I'm giving you a `gift' for anticipated services, then,'' I
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grunted. ``Do I need to wink, or are we on the same page?''
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``That's not-`` the heroine stopped before finishing her sentence.
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``What do you want to hire us \emph{for}?''
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``The Empress and Black have networks of informants forty years in the
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making, backed by the Legions of Terror,'' I said. ``The First Prince
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has a hundred thousand battle-hardened veterans and the wealthiest
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nation on Calernian at her feet. If I want to play in the same league, I
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need talented people and I need them \emph{now}. Your people are
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criminals, but they're criminals with presence in every Callowan city
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and a fountain of foreign contacts. Right now I only have eyes in the
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Legions and the Wasteland -- I'm blind everywhere else and it's already
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cost me.''
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``I'm a heroine,'' Thief reminded me.
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``If William had stuck to killing criminals in the streets of
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Summerholm, I would have given him a salary and a godsdamned badge,'' I
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replied frankly. ``I work with the monsters because they give me the
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means to do what I need to, not because I have any illusions about what
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they are. I don't fight heroes out of principle, Thief, I fight them
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because they keep trying to kill me and make a mess of Callow in the
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process.''
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``And if I don't cooperate?'' she asked lightly, but her eyes betrayed
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how serious she was.
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``This is the part where I say `if you're not an asset, you're a
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liability', right?'' I sighed. ``I get back the treasury, is what I do,
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because I need it. And then as long as you stay out of my way, I will
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politely pretend you don't exist.''
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I smiled thinly.
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``And I think you will,'' I continued. ``Stay out of my way. It's not
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like you want any of my opponents to win instead: I'm the lesser evil.
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Besides, in case you hadn't noticed, there's wolves at the gates. I
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don't have the time or energy to spare on pointless pissing matches.''
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The Thief stared at me in silence. I met her eyes without flinching.
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``Assassin tried to recruit me, when I first came into my Name,'' she
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suddenly said.
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``I'm told he's a regular bundle of laughs,'' I replied.
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``The conversation couldn't have lasted more than a quarter hour,''
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Thief said. ``To this day, I shiver when I think of it. That\ldots{}
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\emph{thing} was death made flesh.''
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I wasn't sure where she was headed with this, so I kept my peace.
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``And yet,'' the heroine said, ``I think you might just be the most
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dangerous villain I've ever met.''
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``You've never met Black,'' I said.
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``It's not about power,'' Thief replied. ``You make it easy to want to
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follow you. Because you make sense, because you get results. I should
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try to kill you tonight, because if I don't you might just damage
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Calernia beyond repair.''
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``Will you?'' I asked.
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Silence reigned.
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``Baroness Kendal is still alive,'' Thief said. ``She was wounded, but
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took refuge in the cathedral. The priests are hiding her.''
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I nodded slowly, then rose to my feet.
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``I'll need the treasury back in the vault before I leave,'' I said.
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``Minus our tenth,'' Thief smiled bitterly, looking up at the ceiling.
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I made for the door, passing her by.
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``Squire,'' she said. ``No, Foundling now I suppose. If you ever become
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what you say you're fighting\ldots{}''
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``Then more dangerous people than you will be putting me down,'' I
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replied, and walked away.
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I got the last word, I thought, largely because she had nothing to reply
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to that.
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---
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``Lady Squire,'' Orim the Grim greeted me.
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He'd been sleeping until recently. I'd learned to tell the signs, with
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orcs -- the voices got a little deeper, and they showed their teeth more
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often. The general was almost as tall as Hakram, who was unusually so
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for his kind, and his skin was of a yellow-green I'd only ever seen in
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goblins before. It was uncommon in the Lesser Steppes, I knew: almost
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all my legionaries from there were of a green so dark it looked like
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black. Of the man himself, I knew little. When it had become clear he'd
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remain one of the important people of Laure for the foreseeable future
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I'd asked my own orcs about him, but gotten only vague outlines. Juniper
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had told me he'd been chieftain of the Silent Men before Black recruited
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him halfway through the civil war, one of larger clans in the Lesser
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Steppes. Nauk had remembered he'd been known for his warring with the
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Deoraithe of the Wall, and all Hakram knew was that he'd once wiped out
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an entire smaller clan in a single night for having stolen some of his
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cattle. I wasn't surprised, considering the cognomen his legion had
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earned during the Conquest: \emph{Exterminatus}.
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The Fifth had been under Marshal Grem's command during his assault on
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the Wall, a campaign undertaken to make sure none of the Deoraithe would
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be with the army of Callow at the Fields of Streges. After taking one of
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the forts, Orim the Grim had put every soldier in it to the sword as
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keeping any prisoners would have slowed his march. That had happened a
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long way from Laure, though. In the capital his reputation was as a fair
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but distant commander who would not hesitate to resort to violence if
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pushed. His open enmity with the late Governor Mazus had won him some
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esteem, since the Fifth's legionaries had made it a point to put the
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governor's men in their place whenever they could. I'd been raised to
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the sight of big armoured orcs punching the teeth out of city guard who
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overstepped, and it had gone a long way in teaching me to see greenskins
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were not the enemy. A long time ago, that. My ascension to the Ruling
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Council has not granted me any better insight into the man, since he'd
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withdrawn from any relation to it after ensuring the Fifth would not
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have to obey any orders from its members.
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``General Orim,'' I replied.
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The room in the barracks was almost bare, a sure sign the orc didn't use
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it regularly. In my experience greenskins like to decorate with trophies
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from victories anywhere they stayed longer than a few weeks. The Fifth's
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general staff was nowhere in sight: it seemed Orim had grasped that this
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wouldn't be that kind of meeting. Save for a table with a jug of some
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dark alcohol -- almost empty by now -- and two cups to accompany it,
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there was little of note here. I'd not been offered any of the drink,
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and had not asked: orcs drank liquor hard enough to leave holes in
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whatever it touched. Something about their stomachs taking to alcohol
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differently, Hakram had told me. As it happened said orc was seated at
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my side, across from the general. He polished off the rest of his cup
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and let out a pleased little sigh.
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``Callowan drink just isn't the same,'' Adjutant said.
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``They make passable wine in the north,'' the general replied amusedly.
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``But nothing close to \emph{brannahal}.''
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My eyes narrowed. I did not recognize the word. It was from an older
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dialect of Kharsum, I thought, but aside from the part meaning fire I
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didn't recognize the rest. As for the mention of the north of Callow, I
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almost grimaced. `Wine' to the north of Ankou was actually a heavily
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concentrated version of brandy made by farmers and cattle-herders out in
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the field. It was said that in a pinch it could be used instead of lamp
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oil.
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``Deadhand tells me you're to handle order in the city,'' Orim suddenly
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said.
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Coming from a Praesi, the way he'd been called by his nickname instead
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of his Name would have been an insult. From an orc, though, the meaning
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was different. The Clans didn't really have titles aside from chieftain.
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Even their rare mages did not get much distinction from the mass. Orcs
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who distinguished themselves in some way earned a nickname, and for
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someone not sharing a clan to use it was a mark of respect. Evidently
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Adjutant had made some inroads here while I'd been busy in the city.
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``I have the usurpers in my custody,'' I said. ``I'll be executing them
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publicly come morning and re-establishing a civilian government
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afterwards.''
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``We're under martial law,'' Orim gravelled.
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``We don't have the soldiers to waste to enforce that,'' I replied
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calmly. ``I need you with General Istrid as soon as possible.''
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``She knows the people here, general,'' Hakram said. ``If she says the
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peace will hold, it'll hold.''
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The older orc conceded the point with a grunt.
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``Where is the Fifteenth headed?'' he asked.
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``I've sent Juniper south,'' I said. ``She'll be gathering additional
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men as she goes.''
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``She should be marching to Vale,'' the orc bluntly stated. ``To put her
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soldiers under her mother's command.''
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``That won't be happening,'' I replied frankly. ``The forces will remain
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divided for the campaign.''
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``Ruling Council's dead,'' Orim said. ``And it didn't have authority of
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the Legions went it was still breathing.''
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``I am the Squire,'' I coldly said. ``Her Dread Majesty is preoccupied
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with Wolof and Black is abroad. My orders are not to be gainsaid.''
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The general's face went stony.
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``Knightsbane's fought two wars and a hundred skirmishes,'' he growled.
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``So have I. What do you have under your belt, three half-baked battles?
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The soldiers should go to Vale.''
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``I could make this about power,'' I replied idly. ``We both know that
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using a sliver of power I could order you to drown yourself and you
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would. But I don't need to. I have information you don't. The chain of
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command is clear. \emph{Do it}.''
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The orc was twice my size. Scarred, bursting with muscle and capable of
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popping a man's neck off his shoulders with his bare hand -- and yet he
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knew better than to try to loom. Orim glanced at Hakram and saw only ice
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there. Adjutant had picked his side long ago. The general scoffed, but
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did not push any further.
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``You'll have orders for General Istrid,'' he said, tacitly offering to
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carry them.
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``Juniper is already in contact with her by scrying,'' I said. ``The
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Knightsbane will be marching on Holden as soon as your men arrive.''
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The older orc frowned.
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``We're pretty sure the fae can portal from one stronghold to the
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other,'' he said.
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``They can,'' I confirmed. ``We'll be splitting their forces with
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multiple assault so you don't bear the brunt of it.''
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``And you think they'll just let General Juniper leisurely stroll
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south?'' he sceptically asked. ``They've raiding parties out.''
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|
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``And the Diabolist has an army out in the field,'' I said. ``So far the
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Summer Court has refrained from hitting Liesse. I've sent two Named down
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there to remedy to that. Akua Sahelian will have to be dealt with after
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the fae are repelled, and I don't want her forces fresh when it
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|
happens.''
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|
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|
Apprentice had been less than pleased at being partnered with Archer,
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|
but sending either one on their own would have been a disaster.
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|
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|
``My detachment will be stabilizing Laure, then we'll move on,'' I
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|
continued. ``To Denier. I mean to free Marshal Ranker's legions if I
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|
can.''
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|
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Orim's dark eyes lingered on my skin, the visible reminder that I was at
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|
least half-Deoraithe by blood.
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|
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|
``Kegan's not to be trusted,'' he said. ``She was never comfortable
|
|
under the Tower -- the Fairfaxes allowed her to run things the way she
|
|
liked without even tribute.''
|
|
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|
``I know what she wants,'' I said. ``That gives me leverage. And twenty
|
|
thousand men is nothing to sneer at, if they can be pointed in the right
|
|
direction.''
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|
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|
``Rely on them and you'll get a knife in the back,'' he gravelled.
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|
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|
``The correct word is use, not rely,'' I said. ``When can I expect you
|
|
to move out?''
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|
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|
He mulled over it.
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|
|
|
``Two days,'' he said. ``Supplies are mostly ready, but I want them
|
|
prepared for a hard march.''
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|
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|
I nodded.
|
|
|
|
``We should be gone, by then,'' I said. ``Until we are you can liaise
|
|
with Adjutant if you need anything. I'll be busy pacifying the
|
|
capital.''
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|
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|
He saluted, reluctantly, and I pushed back my chair.
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|
``Hakram?'' I prompted.
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|
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|
``I'll be in touch, general,'' Adjutant said.
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|
We left together. I still had over a bell before dawn, by my reckoning,
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|
but I'd need to sleep at some point. And when I woke up, I'd have to
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|
make sure the largest city in Callow didn't start rioting the moment my
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|
legionaries left. Joy.
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