324 lines
18 KiB
TeX
324 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-28-gambits}{%
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\chapter{Gambits}\label{chapter-28-gambits}}
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\epigraph{``I've yet to encounter a situation that couldn't be improved by a
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copious amount of lies and body doubles.''}{Dread Emperor Traitorous}
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Well, it'd taken two years and some change but I was finally on the
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right side of a cavalry charge. And all it had cost me to get there was
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a \emph{lot} of murdering, and that one spot of high treason.
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The thoughts were flippant, but the sight before me killed the urge to
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continue in that vein. Three thousand knights of Callow were breaking
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through the western flank of the fae, taking death with them wherever
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they went as they carried the banner I'd named on a spur. I'd read about
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the chivalric orders, the men and women who had once been the pride of
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the Kingdom, and I thought I'd understood the kind of weight they could
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bring to bear. I'd been very, very wrong about that. Two thousand fae
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died in the blink of an eye, pierced by lances and trampled by
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destriers. It wasn't that the knights were gifted with eldritch power,
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not like the Watch. They were mortals through and through, though
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trained in war since they could walk. Neither were they like the
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paladins of the Order of the White Hand, sworn to fight Evil and made
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able to call on lesser miracles for it. Or so the old books said,
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anyway. The Order had been long buried by the time I was born, Black
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destroying it in an exceedingly thorough manner so that no hero would
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ever rise from their scattered ranks. No lost daughter of the White Hand
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would ever claim an old birth right and bring rebellion to Callow.
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No, they were just Callowans. I watched a gout of flame splash against
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the breastplate of a long-haired woman and leave it untouched. Just
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Callowans, but no babes in the woods for it. The knights of Callow had
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not been forged by the old wars with the Principate, though enough of
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those were fought. No, they were the answer of the Kingdom to the
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sorceries of the Wasteland. There was a reason a Warlock could not
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simply wave his hand and burn a thousand of them to ashes. \emph{Clad in
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steel and prayer}, the old song went. Hymns from the House of Light were
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carved into their armaments, mere grooves in steel until sorcery touched
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them. Then they glimmered, and magic slid like droplets off a duck's
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back. It was not immunity: they could still be harmed through the
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protection, often had been, but it was telling that when Black had
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thought to break them he had turned to orcs and pikes instead of
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whatever madness Warlock could have unleashed. In front of goblin steel,
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the armaments of the knights were armour like any other. There was a
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lesson in there. The chivalric orders had been founded to check a
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threat, and when the nature of that threat changed they were caught
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flatfooted and destroyed.
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Today, though? I'd found them an enemy that could not, \emph{would} not
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change.
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``Captain Firasah,'' I said, and the mage at my side stiffened. ``Word
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from the other side?''
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``She has gone through, ma'am,'' the one-eyed Taghreb replied.
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Firasah had been one of the mage officer who'd tried to scry the Summer
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forces when the Fifteenth had still been in Summerholm. She was one of
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the lucky ones -- she'd excised her eye before the burns from the
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backlash could spread across half her face. Not all the mages had been
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so fortunate. She'd hesitated when I'd told her we would be scrying
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Winter while on the march, but as I'd thought my title shielded the
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mages from the frozen fury that had poured through the connection. It
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had done little to soothe the Prince of Nightfall's temper, when I'd
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found him, but the bait of Summer crippled I had dangled had been too
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tempting for him to resist. The lateness of the arrangement had limited
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what forces he could bring, though, more than I would have wished.
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Another ten thousand fae would have made it all much easier. He'd taken
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another royal with him along for the ride: the Princess of Silent
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Depths. They'd asked for prizes and to know my plans.
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Naturally, I'd lied.
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``Good,'' I replied quietly, closing my eyes.
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I'd begun this battle thinking I was aware of every string being pulled.
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Winter was out for blood and plunder, unquenchable hunger in their
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bellies. Kegan and Ranker wanted to leave Arcadia as soon as possible,
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convinced this fight could only be measured in shades of defeat. And
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Summer? Summer wanted to crush me. To turn the quibbling mortals who'd
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dared step foot in their domain to ashes. I'd understood that before the
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other two commanders in my army, because I had an advantage they didn't.
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I still remembered that hard-bitten hatred I'd felt after crossing the
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gate, when I'd gazed upon the moonlit field. It didn't matter, whether
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or not it made tactical sense for the Princess of High Noon to withdraw
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from Creation to assail us. She \emph{had} to. It was in her nature. I
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was of Winter, and Summer could never shy from a challenge as brazen as
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the one I'd issued. This battle had always been a certainty. It was a
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matter, then, of stacking the odds in my favour. I needed a story, or at
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least an engagement that had the shape of one. A larger Summer force
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blundering into a trap had served that purpose, leaving me only with the
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need to, well, make an actual trap.
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So I'd spared the Count of Olden Oak, though through his actions he had
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earned an ugly death at my hands one day. Because a fae of count rank
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could \emph{open gates}. Not gates like mine, sadly, but their ability
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to sort of step through the boundary protecting Creation could be
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extended to a group. Like half of Robber's cohort, along with enough
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mages to keep the Count of Olden Oak suppressed by layered wards. Iron
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knives had to be taken to him to convince him of making the gate, sadly,
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since the flame of Summer inside him made Speaking ineffective. Robber
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had been able to take care of it. He'd gleefully informed me that the
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College had an entire week of classes dedicated to the subject, along
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with the question of `how much torture is too much torture'. The answer
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was apparently more complicated than I'd assumed. The goblin's assertion
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that it was an old cadet favourite along with the class about why `vast
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and terrible powers' were not a valid reason to lack a supply train, I
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chose not to think too much about.
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When back in Creation, his orders were to scry Juniper in a hurry.
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Depending on where the Fifteenth was relative to where he emerged with
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the Count, there could be two options. The first was that the legion
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would be too far too join up in time for the battle, in which case he
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was to simply call for the knights to ride in haste ahead of the
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infantry. The other was to bring all he could across and smash the fae
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flank according to the directions I have him. I'd confirmed, before the
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beginning of the fight, that the second situation had come to unfold. On
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the other side of the portal that had just opened the entire Fifteenth
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was arrayed, and by now they would have begun to cross. So would
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Apprentice and Archer: the person who'd been on the other side of the
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scrying I'd arranged the moment I opened the gate was Masego, Captain
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Firasah was certain of it. Good. Then I could proceed according to what
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I'd meant this fight to be instead of a lesser scenario. Wiping out
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Summer in full here would be too much to hope for, I was aware. We were
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too deep in their territory for that. But if I played my cards right, I
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might just get what I needed to fight this war on my terms.
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The thing was, when I'd left Marchford I'd been thinking of taking a
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force through Arcadia as a risky gamble that would allow me to steal a
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march on the Diabolist. After all, everybody knew fae were stronger in
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Arcadia. Able to use more of their power. The assumption of every
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commander in this war had been that I would try to fight them in
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Creation, where the grounds were more to my advantage. But were they
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really? The thought had been in the back of my mind since Laure. I could
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concentrate the Legions and the army of Daoine in the south and try to
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smash the Summer Court there, but that would be \emph{costly}. We'd lose
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thousands in that fight, and thousands more would be too wounded to be
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of any use when I put down Akua. If I got Winter involved, that meant
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letting rapacious fae loose in Callow under the command of an entity I'd
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have a hard time handling, much less killing if it came to that. And
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even if I won, then what? Maybe we chewed half their number before they
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retreated having cost us twice that much, and then they would just pop
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out from somewhere else. The Fifteenth and whoever else I dragged with
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me were perhaps the most mobile force on Calernia at the moment, but the
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fae had the same advantage and they were better at using it.
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So if I didn't want them to waltz past my army and burn Callow from the
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Waning Woods to the Silver Lake, I needed to dictate where they had to
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go. The way Juniper had done to me in our first war games, giving me her
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flag so she could be certain where I'd be instead of waiting out the
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days to a draw. The first place and moment I knew they'd be for sure?
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Here. Today. I had to bleed them hard here, because Arcadia was the only
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place where I could make their numbers meaningless. As long as I had the
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story on my side today, I could butcher them in droves in a way I simply
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couldn't in Creation without losing thousands myself. I couldn't end
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them here, that was true. There would be a second battle, and to be able
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to dictate when and where that one happened I was going to have to get a
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little\ldots{} reckless. This was the only chance I'd get, which meant
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we were returning to the old standard of all or nothing. I'd never lost
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that bet before, and I didn't intend on starting today.
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Most everything had been going the way I wanted it to, which was why I'd
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been less than surprised when Ranger had shown up. There was no doubt it
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was her: I knew that cloak for my Name dreams. I'd swiftly given orders
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to not provoke her in the slightest -- as I understood it she refrained
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from killing Praesi for sport more out of courtesy for Black than any
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real fondness, and that might go out the window the moment someone
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irritated her. I'd thought she might be here for the Prince of
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Nightfall, to collect a second eye for her jewellery, but she'd not
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stirred when he'd come out. And she'd made no move against Princess
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Sulia, which had been my other guess. That was\ldots{} not good. Were it
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someone else I would have presumed she was waiting for the fae to tire
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themselves out against each other before sweeping in, but that went
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against my understanding of Ranger. If she was here for a fight, she'd
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wanted whoever she was fighting at their peak. The longer she refrained
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from getting involved the more nervous I got, but what the Hells could I
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do about it? I was pretty sure I could take Archer, if I needed to, but
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the other Named had been pretty frank about the kind of margin her
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teacher outclassed her by.
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That had pretty blatant implications about how that fight would go if I
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picked it, which I \emph{really} didn't want to.
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I opened my eyes and watched the battle. I still had cards to play, more
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than the opposition probably thought, but if I wanted to make this a win
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I'd have pick the right moment. To the east, Summer and Winter clashed.
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The centre of Winter's line was made up of a chunk of five thousand of
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my old buddies the deadwood soldiers, and they were chewing up the
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Summer regulars real bad. The flanks, though, were made up of the same
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rabbled that had assaulted Marchford -- and they were taking a bloody
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beating. The tricks that had worked on my legionaries left other fae
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indifferent, and unlike the Summer fae those twits didn't fight in a
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proper battle line. \emph{Warriors against soldiers}, I thought. My
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`allies' had to take out their heavies early when the left flank
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wavered, a thousand Riders of the Host on their murderous unicorns
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charging out of the woods to slam into the enemy and take off the
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pressure. The winged knights of Summer took flight, though, and with
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matching numbers on both sides there was only one way that scarp would
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go. The battle in the sky above them wasn't going beautifully either.
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Princess Sulia and her easily offended patsy had lit up their wings and
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flown above to scrap with the Prince of Nightfall and the Princess of
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Silent Depths, and watching that go down made me want to wince. The
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Winter prince opened with filling the sky with a howling blizzard, which
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the Princess of High Noon promptly screamed out of existence. Just
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screamed. Not even fire or anything. That must have been embarrassing.
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Watching the Summer royalty fight was giving me a notion of what it must
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have been like watching Apprentice and I go all out. Sulia kept the
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Winter royals busy up close and personal while the Prince of Deep
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Drought lashed out with sorcery. The Princess of Silent Depths slowed
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them down some when she called on some kind of power whose weight could
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be felt even from where I stood, bringing down crushing pressure that
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dented the ground under them -- pulping fae from both sides in the
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process -- and nearly knocked the Summer pair out of the sky. Didn't
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last long, though, and Princess Sulia retaliated by hacking her arm off
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and smashing the Prince of Nightfall's nose with it. I would have
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admired her style, if I wasn't next in line on her kill list.
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It was unfolding like a lesson on why Winter got whipped whenever it
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came to a battle, and though they were holding for now -- Silent Depths
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made herself a brand new arm out of ice and promptly tried to strangle
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the prince on the other side with it -- that hourglass was going to run
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out eventually. Couldn't let that happen, much as I would have liked for
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the Prince of Nightfall to become an object lesson about why trying to
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use me was a bad idea. I still had a use for them.
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The east was going more smoothly. Regulars of the Fifteenth were
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establishing a beachhead as they continued crossing, though it would
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take a while before there were enough to be effective. Apprentice had
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told me months ago he'd be able to turn fae into portal-makers of my own
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calibre, given a prisoner of sufficient rank, but I couldn't help but
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notice the portal he'd finagled was noticeably smaller than mine. I
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suspected there was another lecture about the ins and outs of turning
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fae into fodder for runic arrays on the horizon, and I wasn't looking
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forward to it. As for the knights of Callow, well, they'd carved their
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way through what must have been four thousand fae before withdrawing in
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good order. They would have taken more if the fae in front of them had
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not taken to the air instead of docilely allowing themselves to be run
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down. Now the Summer soldiers were attempting volleys, but even their
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tricky little fire arrows weren't swift enough to catch up to good
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cavalry on the move. The knights rode out of range, losing only score of
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men to the fire: heavy plate armour was nothing to sneer at, and without
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the fire sorcery those arrows were little different from mundane ones.
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They formed up again and began wheeling around to take the fae in the
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back, to my delight. A few thousand Summer regulars had hastily formed a
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line where they'd been charging before, only to find themselves facing
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nothing. It took the edge off the mass attacking the walls of my camp as
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well, and on that side Afolabi's legionaries were teaching the fae how
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the Twelfth had earned its name. I might not like the man, but when it
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came to war he knew his business. I could already see a threat forming,
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though for now the advantage was ours. The fae who'd been readying
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themselves to weather another cavalry charge had nothing but a few
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hundred legionaries of the Fifteenth in front of them, and if they took
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it into their head to take that gate there wasn't much Juniper could do
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about it from her side. I'd have to give them something else to worry
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about.
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``Captain,'' I said. ``Get the message across: they're to meet me on the
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field. They just need to find the loudest screaming.''
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``Ma'am,'' Firasah saluted.
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I rolled my shoulders under the plate. Shame I couldn't have prayers
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carved into it like the knights, but considering I'd kind of sold my
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soul to the Gods Below odds were all I'd get from that was charred skin.
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Well, maybe not sold. It'd been a little too casual for that, wasn't
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like I'd had a scribe make the transaction official. Pawned felt more
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accurate. I sent a runner to Nauk and watched as all around the central
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avenue of the camp barricades were set aside. Hakram came to me side not
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long after, fresh from the fighting on the outer palisades. His axe was
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slick with red and his pauldron cut straight through. His good mood was
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evident.
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``Sortie?'' he asked.
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``About that time,'' I agreed, tying my hair in a ponytail.
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I shut the claps of my helmet and slid on my gauntlets, flexing the
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armoured fingers carefully. Good. They might not be much help against a
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proper fae blade, but they did ensure that whenever I punched something
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it broke.
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``Duchess Kegan sends word that she'll have regulars and the Watch
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follow,'' Adjutant said. ``Since those winged knights aren't coming from
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us.''
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``Numbers?''
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``Nine thousand total,'' the tall orc said. ``Marshal Ranker is of the
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opinion that pulling off more will weaken the walls too much.''
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When it came to sieges, at least, I was inclined to follow the old
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goblin's lead. She'd been the one to mastermind the taking of Summerholm
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and Laure, during the Conquest.
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``They're pulled as close and thick as we'll get them,'' I noted.
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``She said the same thing,'' Adjutant grinned, like the ugly green cat
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who'd caught the bluejay. ``First blooming before we begin our
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countercharge.''
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``You know, I'm sure there's a lot of things Summer is ready for,'' I
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mused. ``Magic, flying fortresses, Named. Goblin engineering, though? I
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doubt it's one of them.''
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Nauk's two thousand formed into an avenue-wide battering ram, heavies at
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the front, and the Deoraithe readied behind them. I took the front, with
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Hakram at my side and the remains of the Gallowborne clustered around
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me. Behind us, near the centre of the camp, the sound of gears and
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pulleys releasing filled the air. A dozen ballista bolts tipped with
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cold iron screamed through air, followed a heartbeat later by trebuchet
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stones. The Gallowborne opened the gates wide for me, and in front of us
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I saw scores of fae bleeding on the ground even as the ranks ahead were
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punctured with rocks the size of horses. Ranker had been kind enough to
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soften the opposition for us, and would continue pounding at the flanks
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as we drove forward. Gods was I glad the fae disdained machinery.
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``FIFTEENTH,'' I called out, unsheathing my sword. ``\emph{FORWARD}.''
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All the Hells broke loose, but for once we were the damned.
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