367 lines
17 KiB
TeX
367 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{deadhand}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Deadhand}\label{deadhand}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{deadhand}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Deadhand}
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\epigraph{``I do not fear wicked men, who know only cruelty and pain. The
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fear they inflict leashes them as well. But a decent man? Oh, there is
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no limit to the devilry a decent man will fall to, if he believes it
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necessary.''}{King Edward III of Callow}
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Catherine, after some gentle prodding, had finally gone to bed. She
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still had quarters that were nominally hers in the royal palace, and not
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even the rebels had been arrogant enough to lay a hand on those. The
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dark-haired woman he called both friend and leader was too tired to even
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notice the Gallowborne discreetly following her at a distance, three of
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them ordered to guard her door through the rest of the night. Hakram did
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not believe that there were many entities within the bounds of Callow
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that could kill Squire in combat, but daggers in the nights were a
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different matter. They still got the occasional assassin paid for by
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Wasteland gold, though considering the amount they'd killed over the
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last year Praes had to be running out -- there were only so many times
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Adjutant could have the heads of those enterprising fellows put on pikes
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before the pool of volunteers got truly shallow. Tribune Farrier
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lingered close, wiping blood off his sword hand with a cloth as
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Catherine's retinue herded the prisoners away none too gently. The
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Praesi household troops were still too shocked to protest the treatment.
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``Lord Adjutant,'' the pale-skinned man finally saluted, thumping his
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fist against his breastplate.
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The tall orc replied with the same gesture. He rather liked John
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Farrier, and believed the feeling was nearly mutual. The man was less
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than fond of greenskins in general -- his grandfather had gotten his
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head caved in by an orc during the Conquest, and Callowans kept grudges
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-- but their shared loyalties had done much to bring them closer.
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Another few months to work on him, Hakram thought, and they might even
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get to a place where they shared drinks. Adjutant would keep at it. The
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two of them were arguably the members of the Fifteenth who saw the most
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of Catherine, it was worth putting in an effort for them to get along.
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Hakram's purpose had been to keep everything running smoothly long
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before it became his Role.
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``You look like you want to say something, Tribune,'' Hakram gravelled.
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That or he was in pain. Humans had such delicate faces, it made their
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expressions harder to read: neither orcs nor goblins were so\ldots{}
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complicated. That the wheat-eaters rarely meant to use their teeth to
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convey what they were actually conveying only made it more confusing.
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``She pulled ahead of the cohort twice, tonight,'' the dark-haired human
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said, ``And refused to take an escort when she went deeper into the
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palace.''
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Worry. This he could deal with.
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``That was no slight to your abilities, Tribune,'' he said.
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``She's\ldots{} impatient with this entire situation. And when she was
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headed for her meeting, guards would have been of no help. If anything
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she might have needed to protect them.''
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The pale man's eyes narrowed.
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``The Thief,'' he guessed.
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``You haven't had to clean up a corpse,'' Hakram said, ``which means she
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will be cooperating with us.''
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``She ain't the nice heroine type,'' Farrier said. ``She won't be above
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sliding a knife in the Countess' back down the line.''
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The orc rumbled his approval. Awareness of threats was a good trait for
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the head of a personal guard to have. Catherine has chosen well in
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catapulting Farrier up the ranks instead of drawing someone from the
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officer pool. But then she'd always had a way for gathering talent to
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her banner, hadn't she?
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``It will be seen to,'' Adjutant said.
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The Callowan nodded sharply.
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``The Countess didn't give me any orders for the prisoners,'' he added
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after a moment.
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A concession, this. Tribune Farrier only answered to the Squire,
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theoretically speaking. That he was requesting instructions, even in
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such a sideways manner, was an offered hand. Though not an unexpected
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one: as far as the Empire was concerned, whenever Adjutant spoke it was
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Catherine Foundling's voice articulating the words. Even nobles courted
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his attention, nowadays, and wasn't that just the most hilarious thing
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he'd heard all year? Some brute like him from the Northern Steppes,
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wielding enough influence to give pause to highborn. Most days Hakram
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would have preferred to wash his hands of that entirely, but having that
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kind of clout made it easier to fulfil his duties.
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``Staff Tribune Bishara lent us one of her men,'' he said. ``He'll be
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going through the prisoners to see which can be ransomed back to the
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Wasteland. The rest we'll be handing to the Governess-General for
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judgement.''
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The Tribune's eyes widened.
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``It's true, then?'' he said. ``Baroness Kendall is still alive?''
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``We've had word of it,'' Adjutant grunted. ``We still need to confirm,
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but it seems likely.''
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``Thank the Gods,'' Farrier said. ``If anyone can put some order in
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Laure, it's her.''
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He bit his lip the moment the words left his mouth.
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``Not that I mean to impugn the Countess' abilities,'' he hurriedly
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added.
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``She doesn't enjoy being behind a desk,'' Hakram said. ``It's not a
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crime to notice it.''
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It would have been hard for the both of them not to, given how often she
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used personally drilling the Gallowborne as an excuse to foist off
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paperwork on him. It wasn't that she was incapable of ruling, Adjutant
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knew. She had, after all, managed to set Callow on the path to recovery
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after less than a year in charge even with the Ruling Council slowing
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the process. In large part that had been through allowing her
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newly-appointed Callowan governors the leeway to do as the saw fit, but
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knowing when to give over power was also part of ruling. But she hadn't
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taken to it the way she had to battlefield command, that much was
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glaringly obvious. The Squire shone brightest with a sword in hand, like
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the Warlords of old. There was a reason orcs called her that, and it
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wasn't just respect. A damned shame it was not possible for her to
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transition into that Name: it would suit her better than that of Black
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Knight in many ways. But even after centuries to be the Warlord was,
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deep down, to be an orc. \emph{The} orc. There was no changing that
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bedrock foundation.
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``We'll keep them in the city gaols, then,'' Farrier said. ``It would
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save the Baroness some trouble to execute them now, but I suppose a
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public trial will help strengthen her grip on the city.''
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Hakram nodded and allowed the man to leave, trading salutes. He waited
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until the Tribune had left before clearing his throat.
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``Tordis,'' he said.
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The orc lieutenant emerged from the shadows where'd she been leaning
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against the wall, hand resting idly on the pommel of her sword.
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``Deadhand,'' she replied, inclining her head.
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Catherine had granted him a tenth under Tordis as his personal command
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during the Liesse campaign, and he'd later expanded their numbers to a
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full line after having Tordis promoted from sergeant to lieutenant. He'd
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needed the manpower, even if his original task of finding the leaks in
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the Fifteenth had largely been handed off to Ratface and Aisha since.
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The lieutenant was an old friend from Rat Company, and one he'd shared a
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bedroll with in the past. There'd been nothing more to that than flesh
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and comradeship, and neither of them had been interested in anything
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more serious -- her being under his command had effectively closed off
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that avenue for good since. Squire had already amusedly called him a
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harlot for a month last time she'd seen a woman come out of his tent,
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and if she ever did that around Robber odds were he'd have to deal with
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a song about it. The goblin had proved he could compose truly filthy
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rhymes when'd he'd penned that tune about Nauk and the Fifteenth's oxen,
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so Hakram was eager to avoid the pitfall if he could. He'd made a point
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of being even more discreet since becoming the Adjutant.
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``Take word to Nauk,'' he said. ``I'll need legionaries tomorrow to
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serve as public criers. Callowans, if possible. No more than a
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company.''
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She nodded.
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``And send someone to speak to Farrier,'' he added after a moment.
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``We've got two high-profile prisoners, and I want them held separately
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from both each other and the rest of the soldiers.''
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There might be mages among them, and there were discreet ways to scry.
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Better to keep the High Lords in the dark about what was happening in
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Laure as long as possible, or they'd start to wonder how the Fifteenth
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had made it so quickly to the old capital. It was only a short set of
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conclusions from there to figuring out they'd used Arcadia, and that
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trump card was best kept under wraps while they still could. The moment
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they realized that the Fifteenth could march straight into the Wasteland
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without ever needing to cross at the Blessed Isles, they'd start taking
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desperate measures. Too many of them had openly aligned with the
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Diabolist for them not to fear brutal retribution now. Catherine had
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something of a reputation in that regard.
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``Should I have a study prepared for you?'' Tordis asked.
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Hakram shook his head. His bare bone fingers tightened.
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``I still need to have one last conversation tonight,'' he said.
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---
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Hakram had visited Laure more than he'd ever thought he would, since the
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Liesse Rebellion, but the former capital of Callow was still foreign
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city to him. Unlike Robber, who would start feeling at home the moment
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he'd stabbed someone in an alley anywhere in Calernia, he'd never become
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comfortable here. Marchford was starting to feel like home, though not
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as much as the Fifteenth, but the history here would never allow the orc
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to feel as anything but a stranger. How many hundreds of thousands of
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his kind had died, trying to take these streets for the Tower? Laure had
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been the beating heart of the Praesi occupation since the Conquest, but
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for all that it still felt Callowan to the core in a way few other
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cities he'd visited did. It was unlike Summerholm, where Callowans
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strode through the streets eating Soninke grilled meats and Praesi
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bartered in the markets with pale-skinned merchants, or even Marchford
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where young widows now traded heated glances with good-looking
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legionaries while goblins cheated at dice games with old men in older
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taverns.
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Even Liesse, in the depths of the south, had felt\ldots{} different.
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There was a difference there the way there was a difference between
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Taghreb and Soninke: cousins, but not ones who always got along well.
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Hakram had come to learn that Callow was no more a monolith than
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Callowans often assumed Praes was. The northern baronies to the east of
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Daoine were little involved with the rest of the realm, busy with their
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cattle-herding and weaving, and the wide central plains surrounding Vale
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saw themselves as a breed apart from both the Liessen to the south and
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the larger cities bordering the Silver Lake. There were divisions, but
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shallower ones than in the Wasteland. They were more like the Clans,
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only willing to squabble amongst themselves so long as there was no
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other enemy to fight. The Legions of Terror had forged unity between
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these old tribes one failed invasion at a time, he thought. Breathing
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the foul city air, Hakram dismissed the thoughts and slowed his steps
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until he stood in the centre of an intersection.
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He reached for his Name, the feeling like putting on his armour and
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letting the weight of it settle on his shoulders. \textbf{Find}, he
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whispered inside his mind, and the wheel spun.
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He picked the avenue his Name nudged him towards and trod down until the
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next intersection, where he invoked his aspect again. It was slow going,
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and twice he had to readjust the course. His target was moving, and had
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noticed it was being pursued: his ears caught the sound of footsteps on
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rooftops, too large to be those of goblins. It took half a bell for him
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to end up in the part of the city Catherine called ``Dockside'', though
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no sign marked it as such. The orc was panting lightly when he found the
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alehouse he suspected was the hiding hole, cold sweat going down his
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back. The more he called on the aspect the more tiring using it became.
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But he was well-rested, and barely needed to sleep these days. He could
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take it. The establishment was shuttered, but there were lights peeking
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through. The footsteps quickened behind him, and Adjutant turned to meet
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his greeters.
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Two men, Callowans. The older one took out a knife, a slender little
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thing that almost made him want to laugh.
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``Alehouse's closed,'' the younger one said.
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``Not to me,'' Hakram gravelled.
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``Shouldn't have come alone,'' the older one said, ``if you were going
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to mouth off.''
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He moved. Adjutant did not bother to take his axe in hand. He waited,
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then caught the wrist holding the knife and bent his legs: his muscles
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shifted as he swung the man around, using him to clobber the other
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Callowan. The two of them landed in a pile of limbs and curses.
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``I'd be within my rights to kill them,'' Hakram called out to the
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night.
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``Squire agreed to a truce,'' Thief replied, strolling out of the alley.
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``Then discipline your people,'' Adjutant grunted. ``If they'd killed a
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legionary, a great deal of blood would have followed.''
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``I refrained from drowning your goblins in the Lake when they poked
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around,'' the short-haired heroine said. ``That's already showing a
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great deal of restraint.''
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The orc glanced contemptuously at the two thieves, who were hastily
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rising to their feet.
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``Don't try to rob Legion personel again,'' he told them. ``You'll live
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longer.''
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The Thief glanced at her men.
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``Scuttle off, boys,'' she ordered. ``And remember not all orcs are this
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calm after steel comes out.''
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Hakram did not bother to watch them flee into the night, his attention
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all on the Thief.
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``Let's talk,'' he said, and it wasn't a suggestion.
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``For a bunch of villains, the lot of you sure do \emph{chatter} a
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lot,'' the woman sighed.
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She signalled from him to follow her anyway, her knuckles against the
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door resounding in a pattern so swift he almost missed it. The door
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opened and they were ushered in. The place was a pisshole, as the
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exterior had indicated. After his years at the War College Hakram was no
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stranger to those, though, and at least out here his nose didn't have to
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deal with clouds of poppy smoke hanging in the air. The dozen men and
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women inside, scattered throughout the tables, watched him in silence as
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he followed Thief to to a dimly lit alcove in the corner. She already
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had a pitcher of ale on the table, and she stole a tankard from another
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table on the way to the table to fill it. The tall orc sat, the wooden
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chair creaking under the weight of him, and after taking a sip made an
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effort not to grimace. The ale might as well have a rat still floating
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in it. She couldn't possibly be drinking the same stuff, could she?
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``Deadhand,'' Thief enunciated. ``Now there's a fancy title. Catchy,
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too. Praesi do have a way with that.''
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``You were there when I earned it,'' Hakram said.
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The heroine laughed, pushing back her bangs.
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``Is that what this is about?'' she asked. ``Are you holding a grudge,
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Adjutant?''
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Her grin was almost mocking.
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``Can't have that,'' she said. ``We're on the same side now. Gotta get
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along.''
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Hakram set aside the tankard patiently.
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``Catherine likes to think of the best of people,'' he said. ``That they
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see reason. That they will hold to their promises.''
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``Naïve, for a villain,'' Thief said.
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``It has paid off more often than not,'' Adjutant said. ``Put trust in
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people and they feel the need to live up to it.''
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``I'm deeply honoured Her Gracious Majesty Foundling has seen fit to
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make me a minion, of course,'' Thief smiled. ``All hail the queen.''
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``Of course,'' Hakram continued calmly, ``sometimes people think to take
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advantage of that. To use their second chance against her.''
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``It's almost like the fish she's selling smells slightly off,'' the
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Thief mocked.
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Adjutant's dead hand snaked across the table, lightning-quick, and
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seized the woman by the throat. He knocked the table away rising,
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slamming her against the wall hard enough the wood shattered like clay.
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He heard a chorus of knives being taken out in the room to their side,
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and slightly raised his voice as he continued choking the heroine.
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``A single one of you moves and I'll snap her neck,'' he mildly informed
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them.
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None of them did.
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``When people make that mistake, Thief, and aim a knife at her back --
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they find me waiting,'' he continued, still in that mild tone. ``Now,
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what I'm doing tonight will make you hate me. That's fine. As long as
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you also remember the fear in your guts right now. Listen to that fear,
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when you start thinking about turning on her. Because I'll be watching,
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and unlike Catherine I don't believe in second chances. \emph{Much less
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third ones}.''
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He released Thief, letting her drop to the floor and gasp for breath.
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``Enjoy your evening,'' he said politely. ``I look forward to working
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with you.''
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He walked away, and not a soul dared stop him.
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