339 lines
19 KiB
TeX
339 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-24-vanguard}{%
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\chapter{Vanguard}\label{chapter-24-vanguard}}
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\epigraph{``My dear Chancellor, I didn't murder my entire family and use
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their blood to turn myself into an undead abomination to be told I
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couldn't do things.''}{Dread Emperor Revenant}
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We'd wasted another sennight at Denier, to my displeasure. In part
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haggling terms with Duchess Kegan, who must clearly have been a fishwife
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in a past life, and in part because we were waiting on the Twelfth
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Legion to finish its march towards us. Those four thousand men were
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still led by General Afolabi, who I'd met once before when the Lone
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Swordsman was making trouble in the city the Twelfth garrisoned. I'd
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been unimpressed by his inability to handle the mounting tensions in
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Summerholm, he'd been unimpressed by the fact I'd launched an ambush on
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a hero in his own backyard without warning him. Neither of us were
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particularly pleased to see the other, but if I had to traipse through
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Arcadia I'd rather do it with thirty thousand men than twenty-six
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thousand. Besides, I rarely had to deal with him directly: he was under
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Marshal Ranker's command and his legionaries stuck to their own camp. It
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took us another three days to ferry the Deoraithe army across the river
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with fishing boats and barges, the mounting delays driving me up the
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wall.
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The longer we tarried here the longer Diabolist had to set up her end
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game. I was anybody's guess how long we'd be in Arcadia, and more
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importantly where the gate out would be. After all, I didn't control
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that part. Masego had given me a very complicated explanation on the
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subject involving alignments, symmetry and what had struck me as a bit
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of religion no matter how much mathematics he brought into the mix. My
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own understanding was a bit simpler: my will was a needle. By opening a
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gate I was punching through the fabric that was between worlds into
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Arcadia, but where the needle had to punch through to get me \emph{out}
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of Arcadia was determined by where I'd come from and where I wanted to
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go. No doubt there were sundry metaphysical implications to all of this,
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but if I wanted to be babbled incomprehensively at I could just buy
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people drinks. Hells, considering I'd basically taken control of the
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treasury for Callow I could actually afford that these days. Progress.
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Our supply situation had been another headache, and I'd never missed
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Ratface more than when Ranker sent a copy of our stores for the campaign
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to my desk. The Marshal and General Afolabi had essentially emptied
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Denier and Summerholm's granaries to ensure they could operate alone for
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a few months, but there was a major difference between driving those
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supply carts down Callowan roads and through the wilderness of Arcadia.
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Getting the matter sorted took another two days, then another two when
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Duchess Kegan insisted on bringing he own carts across the river instead
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of relying on Legion ones. My officers learned to enjoy their wine cold,
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because the temperature in the room when I heard about that descended
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\emph{sharply}. There'd been talk from the Deoraithe of keeping a
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different supply train instead of keeping all the rations together, but
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after I glared the meeting table frozen they'd `magnanimously' declined
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to further pursue the matter.
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And now here we were, over a fortnight after when I'd wanted us to
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leave, assembling the allied armies in the darkness before dawn. The
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largest gate I could open was an equilateral triangle seventy feet at
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the base, so there was no possibility of going through in ranks. It
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would have to be a marching column, which had prompted another round of
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what I refused to even call bickering. I knew bickering, it was the true
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tongue of all my closest friends. There was fondness in bickering, a
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give and take. This was just an ugly brew of distrust and spite spilling
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over what should have been an exceedingly straightforward manner.
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Marshal Ranker had wanted her two legions to go through first, and
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General Afolabi had backed the notion. Duchess Kegan had suggested her
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own infantry be the first to cross, heavily implying the goblin couldn't
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be trusted not to set up an ambush for her army on the other side.
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Ranker had then wondered out loud if there'd been enough left of the
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body of Kegan's younger brother to identify him after Grem One-Eye
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killed him at the Wall, during the Conquest. Before that could get any
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uglier, I'd slammed my fist on the table.
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It had promptly broken, because these days I was pretty sure I could
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punch through iron if I put my mind to it. That wasn't worrying in the
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slightest.
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Anyhow, that had gotten their attention. I'd told them that it was
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\emph{my} fucking gate so my people were going through first, led by
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myself, after which Ranker's Fourth would follow. The Deoraithe would go
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through next, and General Afolabi's legion would be in charge of the
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rearguard and covering our supply train. Tactically speaking this entire
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disposition was shit and nobody liked the compromise, but apparently
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breaking furniture made people less prone to arguing with you on minor
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details. Robber had since informed me that rumours went around the camps
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about my temper, nowadays, but I doubted even Black would have been able
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to handle this level of futile squabbling with a smile. As for Juniper,
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well, she'd have sent them to cool their heels by digging holes and
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filling them at least twice by now. Gods, I missed the Fifteenth. The
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wretches gave me lip, sure, but at least they did whatever I asked them
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to without arguing for a quarter bell first. Still, here we finally
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were. The blood in my veins cooled and power wafted off my armour like
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smoke even as the gate shuddered open before me. I found myself panting
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when my mind finally returned to itself, leaning against the neck of my
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horse. I waited ten breaths for the tiredness to leave me before looking
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at the Gallowborne around me.
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``Forward,'' I ordered.
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We went through. Moving into Arcadia was a hard feeling to describe. It
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wasn't a pressure, not exactly. It was like being stripped away of a
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second skin you didn't know you had, leaving you feeling oddly naked
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even when wearing full plate like I was. I'd ridden ahead of my retinue
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so I had a moment to get my bearings before they caught up to me,
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breathing in the scene. It was night here too, but nothing alike. The
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fields south of Denier were cabbage and radish, mostly, while here it
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was long grass as far as the eye could see. A lazy breeze had the fields
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shivering while in the sky above us a full moon hung. I would have known
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we were in Summer even if I were blind, just from the irrational hatred
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I could feel welling up inside of me. The power I'd gained in Skade did
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not like being here at all, and the hatred sharpened when I glanced up
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at the moon. \emph{Really?} I thought. \emph{The moon?} My title was
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Duchess of Moonless Nights, so I saw the logic in it, but come on.
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\emph{I've fought some pretty absurd things since I became a villain,
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but I draw the line at the godsdamned moon.}
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I spurred Zombie the Second ahead as the Gallowborne came through behind
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me, immediately spreading out in formation and following behind me. In
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the distance, a few miles ahead, I could see tall and pale towers
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reaching for the sky. I frowned as I looked: the power I felt from that
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place was a mere shard of what Skade had felt like, so this was unlikely
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to be the seat of the Summer Court. But it was likely there'd be fae
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there, and the faint presence of the exit gate I could feel in the
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distance was beyond it. \emph{Far} behind it. Shit. I'd had strong
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suspicions I'd have to fight my way through the third Arcadia voyage,
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but an expedition into the heart of Summer was beyond my worst
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expectations. Fighting the Summer Court in their own territory was not a
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recipe for success. \emph{But what choice do I have?} We'd have to move
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quickly, before Summer could muster its entire army and strike at us.
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Force march directly to our way out, ignoring the fae as much as
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possible -- getting drawn into a campaign out here would be consigning
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the thirty thousand soldiers I'd managed to assemble to the grave. It
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wasn't long before the entirety of the Gallowborne were behind me, and
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the moment the first of Nauk's legionaries set foot into Arcadia I began
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moving forward.
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I wished Hakram was at my side, but I'd had to leave him back in
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Creation to make sure no idiocy would unfold between the `allies' while
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my back was turned. The great tragedy of Adjutant was that I could only
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have one of him.
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``Ma'am, are you certain we shouldn't wait for reinforcements?'' Tribune
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Farrier asked quietly from my side.
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``I need to be sure there's no army waiting to ambush us,'' I replied.
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``If we have to give battle when most our forces are stuck on the other
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side of that portal, I have no words for how fucked we are.''
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The dark-haired man nodded obediently, though he did not seem convinced.
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Since I was astride a horse I was the only one whose head was above the
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grass, and I allowed myself to luxuriate in the feeling of being the
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tallest person around for once as we moved towards the towers. My
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retinue moved warily in a square formation I was near the middle of, the
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greenery making the lines wobbly: this was not land made for marching. I
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could see no trace of any roads, and to my mixed relief and dismay no
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road conveniently appeared after I had that thought. When nearing a mile
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away from the gate, I clicked my tongue against the roof of my mouth. No
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sign of anyone, but the grasslands made it hard to gauge that
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accurately. There could be ten thousand fae crouched down somewhere and
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none of us would notice until we stumbled over them. My instincts
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screamed trap, though in all fairness they almost always did. That
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healthy level of paranoia had kept me alive through a few years of being
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mortal enemies with Akua Sahelian, though, so I wasn't inclined to
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dismiss it out of hand.
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``It's quiet,'' one of the soldiers behind me said.
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``If any of you finishes that thought, I'm feeding them to Nauk,'' I
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said sharply.
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I reined in Zombie and the entire formation slowed as I leant down to
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hide my profile, waiting for the hammer to fall. Nothing, huh? Nice try,
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but I wasn't falling for that again. I waited for another thirty
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heartbeats and sweet, sweet vindication came in the form of a volley of
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arrows taking flight from our left. A trickle of power touched my eyes
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and my sight sharpened, gauging the number of shafts. A hundred, maybe?
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Not many more than that. The Gallowborne reacted professionally, falling
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in the testudo formation mere moments before the projectiles finished
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their arc. If they'd been mere arrows, that would have mostly nixed any
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notion of inflicted casualties. Unfortunately, on the way down trails of
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fire bloomed behind the arrows and they hit the shields with streams of
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flame. I had no room to manoeuver, stuck inside the formation as I was,
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and I wasn't going to risk an arrow-catch while fighting bloody fae. I
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threw myself off Zombie the Second moments before a pair of arrows hit
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his neck and flank, detonating with burst of red and yellow flame. My
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mount died instantly, and I swore filthily in Taghreb. Those
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\emph{utter} bastards.
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Did these pricks even understand how much a good warhorse cost? Some of
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us actually had to pay for things, not just play pretend with a fucking
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illusory economy. They'd damaged him enough I probably wouldn't even be
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able to raise him from the dead: I still needed mostly intact muscled to
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make a corpse move, necromancy or not. Only a handful of my retinue died
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to the first volley, though I saw that the arrows punched through steel
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shields and detonated afterwards to burn even when they couldn't kill.
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Rising to my feet, I unsheathed my sword and ripped my heater shield
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from Zombie's falling corpse. A second volley was in the sky before we'd
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recovered from the surprise of the first and I winced in anticipation --
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I could see what they'd meant to do. First wave damaged the shields,
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second hit the unprotected soldiers. This was going to hurt. I hid my
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surprise when I saw the arrows fall in a half circle around us instead,
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though I grasped what they were actually doing the moment I saw the tall
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grass going up in flames. Sorcery drove the flames to complete the
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encirclement rather than burn aimlessly faster than I could say \emph{I
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really hate fighting mages}. So they wanted us to stay penned up and
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die.
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``GALLOWBORNE,'' I called out. ``SHIELD WALL AND FOLLOW ME.''
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I strode to the wall of flames ahead, shield up, and let the frozen
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river of power that was my third aspect come to the fore. I wasn't using
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it -- I'd not ye grasped it well enough for that -- but just using the
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power was enough for my purposes. The fire stood three feet taller than
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me, but that hardly mattered: with a hiss I unleashed ice onto the
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flames, smothering them and carving a path ten men deep.
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``Lion Devours Gazelle,'' a man's voice calmly stated ahead.
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I charged through, the shield wall behind me, and saw silhouettes emerge
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from the grass even as a third volley flew at us. This one did not arc
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in the sky: it was shot straight forward, and though the impact was not
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as strong the bursting flames shot holes straight through my ranks. Pale
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blades like ivory were unsheathed in perfect silence as four dozen fae
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formed into two lines in front of me. The fae were tall and lovely,
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dark-haired and wearing a tabard marked with an oak over their silvery
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chain mail.
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``Charge,'' I barked.
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The longer before we closed in melee, the more they'd thin us out with
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arrows. The Gallowborne were but a step behind me as I ran, the
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sensation of over a hundred steel boots thumping the ground in unison
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sending a shiver down my spine. I felt hot breath against my neck, the
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Beast licking its chops hungrily. It was eager for blood, after the
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frustrations of the last month. Truth be told, so was I. The man ahead
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of me struck lightning-quick, fearless, but he was no Duke of Violent
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Squalls. Not even a deadwood soldier. I stepped around the blow and
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flicked my wrist, tearing through his neck between the helm and the
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mail. The face of the woman behind him was splashed with crimson but she
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did not flinch: she went for my neck without missing a beat. The flat of
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my blade touched hers, redirecting the blow, and my shield hit her in
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the stomach. She coughed blood and before she could react the pommel of
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my sword hit her in the eye -- I felt the skull cave under it, but my
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boot stomped down on her throat and crushed it to be sure. In front of
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me, I saw nothing but grass. I turned and saw the same all along the
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line: my retinue's charge had been met for a moment, then the fae had
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disengaged without even attempting a proper melee, melting into the
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greenery.
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``Oh \emph{shit},'' I realized.
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The fourth volley killed at least twenty of the Gallowborne. They'd
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fallen out of formation when trying to force the fae into close range
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fighting. Ahead of us four dozen fae formed into two ranks, pale swords
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in hand. We'd been at this for perhaps a quarter hour and already almost
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a third of my retinue was dead or wounded.
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``Shield wall,'' I ordered.
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Lion Devours Gazelle, the unseen commander had called it. \emph{Piece by
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piece they eat us}. The fae had perfectly grasped the weakness of my
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force, compared to his. We had few crossbows -- a mere three lines --
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and no good line of sight to use it. Range was theirs, and the moment my
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crossbowmen revealed themselves they'd be eating a volley. Trying to get
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up close would just result in the same thing every time: a quick and
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fruitless melee followed by the Summer fae disengaging just before the
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archers fired. \emph{Bleeding us one skirmish at a time, taking us on a
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merry chase until all that's left is a trail of corpses.} By the size of
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the last volley and the number of swordsmen who'd faced us, I'd guess
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they weren't more than a hundred. We'd had double their numbers in
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hardened veterans when the steel came out, led by a Named. Another
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quarter hour of this and our numbers would be even. Another quarter hour
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after that and they'd outnumber us. There was nothing I could do about
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it save attempting to charge them by myself, and they'd just spread out
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to shoot at me from every direction while a handful of swordsmen kept me
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pinned.
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``They beat us,'' I said, the words leaving a sour taste in my mouth.
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Farrier was to my side, cheek burned red and an arrow wound on his
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shoulder, and I saw surprise flicker on his face.
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``Countess,'' he said, ``we can still-``
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``The longer we're at this, the more soldiers we lose,'' I cut through.
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``Call the retreat.''
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I hadn't noticed in the heat of the fight, but they'd been drawing us
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further out. Towards the towers in the distance. \emph{A hundred is
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about the size for a heavy patrol. I'm not liking the odds there isn't
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an army waiting for us there, even if it's not a large one.} If we went
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any further and they had reinforcements coming, we were as good as dead.
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They'd fire at us while we retreated and we'd take losses from that, but
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if I got stubborn here I was risking a wipe-out. I'd lost fights before.
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Been outmanoeuvred by Juniper, been beaten by Black's superior skills or
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crushed by Captain's overwhelming might. But never before had I been so
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harshly outclassed when it came to tactics, and I did not like the
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feeling one bit. So this was Summer. The season of war, I'd heard it
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called. I'd seen nothing like the people I was facing now in Winter, and
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the thought had me uneasy. These weren't warriors they were soldiers and
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soldiers fine enough to be the match of the Legions. \emph{We can't
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linger in Summer}, I thought. \emph{We'll lose the entire army if we
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misstep even once.} Farrier had barked hard enough that my men were
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already retreating in a semblance of good order, and I saw some of them
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were picking up the corpses of their comrades.
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``Leave the bodies behind,'' I ordered, tone bitter.
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``Countess, you can't possibly mean that,'' a lieutenant said, tone
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aghast.
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``We can't afford to be slowed down,'' I said.
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I watched the silhouetted of the fae in the distance, their swordsmen
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already dispersing into the tall grass. Getting ready for another volley
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already.
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``We'll be back for them,'' I said, clenching my fist.
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There wasn't much I could do right now, but there was one thing left. I
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reached for the power of Winter inside me, grasped as much as I could
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and poured it into my sword until the metal frosted. I kept taking more
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and more, until I felt my blood go from cold to freezing. Any further
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than that and it would turn to thick red slurry inside my veins.
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Gritting my teeth, I swung the blade ahead of me. Ice sprouted into wall
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ten feet high along the arc of the swing, even as exhaustion flooded me.
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I'd used too much tonight already and now my armour felt like an anvil
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on my back.
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``Hurry,'' I said, raising my voice. ``It won't slow them down for
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long.''
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By the time the fae ceased pursuit, there were barely a hundred members
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of the Galloworne left.
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There would be a reckoning for this.
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