381 lines
17 KiB
TeX
381 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-39-exposition}{%
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\section{Chapter 39: Exposition}\label{chapter-39-exposition}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``It's hard for people to understand what it means to have been
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part of the Fifteenth. We were farmboys and thieves, not people that
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were ever supposed to matter. Fodder for noose and ledger. But then she
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came along, and told us we were to be the doom of gods. Heavens forgive
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me, but I believed her then and believe her still.''}
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-- Extract from the `Forlorn Memoirs', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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The banners flew tall in morning wind, carried by the Gallowborne. Two
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banners now, for I had not forgotten my promise to Talbot. A silver
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fifteen in Miezan numerals set on black was the herald of my legion, the
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standard under which it would fight until we were all ground to dust by
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time or steel. I kept to the colours, but by emblem was different.
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Silver scales shivered over us, measuring a crown and a sword. The sword
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weighed heavier, as much on cloth as it did in Creation. House
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Foundling's words were sewed under them, the one debt I owed Akua
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Sahelian I would never be able to repay. \emph{Justifications matter
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only to the just.} Grim words, perhaps, but none had rung more true
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since I'd taken the knife and the offer behind it. Juniper had not
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commented on them after an initial guarded glance. The two of us marched
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with the vanguard, though when we came in sight of Dormer she would
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retreat to her command post to rule over the battlefield. The Hellhound
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killed with her mind, not her hands. She was more terrible an opponent
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for it.
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Ahead of us lay plains that had once been green, before Summer came to
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own them. Now half the land was scorched black and the rest lusher than
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was possible in Creation. Orchards bore fruits regardless of the season,
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fields already harvested grew again tall and golden wheat. There would
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be food shortages, in the coming months. My homeland had seen war twice
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in three years, this one even more devastating than the last. Even if
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the blackened earth was made cultivable again, how many of those fields
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would lack men to till them? Summer had killed many, harmed more and I
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knew Akua would bring deeper wounds still. She was of the old breed, the
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one whose madness was worthy of some awe if only for the scale of its
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folly. Walking the aftermath of Three Hills I'd gotten a glimpse of what
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that felt like. Seen fate written in mud and blood and eerie green
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flame, and though doom had lurked in that vision when I'd thought of
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embracing it I had felt so gloriously \emph{alive}.
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I'd fought battles since then. Desperate ones, and the pull of that
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first moment had long faded. It would have been a lie to say I did not
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still relish in victory, in breaking whatever lay in path, but I had
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been tempered by so many dances on the blade's edge. It was one thing to
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gamble the lives of strangers for your purposes, to risk it all on a
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roll of the dice, but I'd come to dread it. I'd won more often than not,
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so far, but how long could I keep that up? My mistake had been coming to
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love them. It was also my last saving grace. How easy it would have been
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to become like Black, utterly divorcing affection and necessity, if I'd
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not found a family in my companions. My teacher had done great things,
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by embracing that cold unfeeling clarity. But atrocious ones as well,
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and I would not follow him down that road. The more my Name and the
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mantle I had stolen from Winter set me apart from humanity, the more I
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understood I had to grasp tightly onto it. The thing I'd become
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otherwise would care nothing for what I wanted to build.
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``We've come a long way from the College, haven't we?'' I said.
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For once, Juniper did not chide me for being foolishly sentimental. The
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Hellhound had been my opponent once, I thought, if never quite my enemy.
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It felt like a colourless dream now. I'd grown to rely so much on her
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that I'd feel lost if she was gone.
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``Didn't think much of you, back then,'' she grunted. ``Too mouthy. Not
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as clever as you believed you were.''
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``I never did manage to get the drop on you, after the once,'' I
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chuckled.
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It was a strange thing, recognizing that someone was cleverer than you.
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And Juniper was, I would not deny it. It wasn't so clear-cut a thing as
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most people pretended when posturing, of course. Cleverness was no
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perfect shield. The smartest woman in the world could be outmanoeuvred
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by a fool, under the right circumstances. Or by luck, or by a myriad
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other factors that no one ever really liked to talk about. But the fact
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remained that Juniper saw things I didn't, when it came to strategy.
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Pondered a few steps deeper, arranged her thoughts more clearly.
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Diabolist did the same, when it came to plotting, and it had little to
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do with her Name. There was always someone better. I'd felt slighted by
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that when I was younger, as if just by being me I had to be the best at
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everything I undertook. Nowadays I just felt relieved, that I had
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someone at my side who could steer us away from the mistakes I would
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have made. Was there anything more worthless than pride, if the cost of
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it was the death of those precious to you?
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``You always get strange before battles,'' Juniper sighed. ``After too,
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sometimes. Like you're far away.''
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That was pretty funny, coming from a woman who was in the custom of
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finding high ground to sleep on whenever a fight was finished. And that
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was without mentioning how she'd apparently napped through the latter
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part of the Battle of Marchford.
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``You're odder than me,'' I said. ``Calm as you are. Nauk can't stop
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grinning for half a day before a battle.''
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``Hakram doesn't,'' she said.
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``Hakram's different,'' I replied.
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She grunted, conceding the point.
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``Used to think he was a coldblood,'' Juniper admitted. ``Everything was
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surface deep with him. Nothing real under.''
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Coldblood. A disease of the mind, I'd been taught. People who felt less,
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didn't get remorse or really understand consequences. Adjutant had told
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me some things in the dark that let me see why she'd thought him one.
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What she'd taken for absence was just apathy.
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``I take after my father more,'' the orc said.
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I looked at her, surprise. She rarely talked about her family, and what
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little she did was only about her mother.
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``He's the one who raised you, right?'' I said.
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``Until the College,'' she said. ``He's always been\ldots{} calm.''
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``So he lost the rite of raising,'' I said.
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The orc looked amused.
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``Read that in a Soninke book, did you?'' she said.
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``Taghreb, I think,'' I shrugged. ``I had a lot of books plopped onto my
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lap before meeting you, the titles kind of meld together nowadays.''
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``The custom exists,'' she said. ``But only Praesi think it's common. If
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a couple needs to fight to choose who'll raise the child, they shouldn't
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be having children. It's a sign of immaturity.''
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``Well, I learned something today,'' I mused.
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She bared the faintest hint of her fangs in what I knew to mean
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amusement. Or flirtation. Probably the former, all things considered.
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``I have it too,'' she said suddenly. ``My mother's blood. The
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battle-joy.''
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I studied her in silence.
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``I was born for this,'' she said. ``Of this. It's what I am and I can't
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remember ever craving anything else.''
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It was always hard to tell with orcs, but I thought she looked
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uncomfortable. Almost ashamed. No fangs visible, hairless brows pressing
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together.
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``We're supposed to want glory for the clan,'' she said. ``To make our
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own grow stronger. But all I saw were fucking huts and cattle and I
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couldn't wait to leave. I almost ran away, when I was younger. There's
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only so many times you can sketch out formations in the dirt before you
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feel \emph{choked}.''
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I knew that feeling. I had followed me in Laure, when I was waiting
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tables and picking up bruises in the Pit when I should have been in the
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Wasteland, learning at the College. Like I was just wasting away my
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days. That I should have been out there doing something, \emph{anything}
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but just sifting through the muck to earn enough coin to really begin my
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life.
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``I hate the orphanage, at the end,'' I quietly said. ``It wasn't that
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they were out to get me, it was just\ldots{}''
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``In the way,'' Juniper finished. ``Quicksand you'd get stuck in if you
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waited too long.''
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She laughed hoarsely.
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``I used to fight battles in my head when herding aurochs,'' the orc
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said, almost sounding like she was mocking herself. ``All the victories
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of the Conquest, how I could have won them better.''
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``I kept a tally of who I'd kill when I had the authority,'' I admitted.
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``Mazus was always top of the list. But then he hanged, and it had
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little to do with me.''
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Juniper hesitated.
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``What Lord Black was to you,'' she said. ``You were to me.''
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My face flickered in surprise.
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``Not a mentor,'' she growled, but the irritation petered out. ``The
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offered hand, I mean. If I hadn't become your legate I'd be a junior
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officer in someone else's legion right now. I never thanked you for
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that.''
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``Don't,'' I said. ``I wouldn't have gotten this far without you,
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Juniper. Stings to admit it, but it's true.''
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``Wouldn't be the same without you either,'' she said. ``It's not about
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the rank, Catherine. The rank is just what gets me there. I
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want\ldots{}''
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There was something burning in my general then that I'd never seen in
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her before. I'd seen her cold and amused and furious and irritated more
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times than I could count. I'd even seen her tender, though only with
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Aisha.
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``More,'' she said, sounding angry at the inadequacy of the word.
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``Three Hills, Marchford even Arcadia. No one's fought like that before.
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We get to \emph{make} that. They'll study our battles, centuries from
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now. Some other girl stuck herding godsdamned aurochs will think about
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our mistakes, how she could have outsmarted our opponents.''
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``Making history,'' I mused.
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She laughed.
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``Fuck history,'' she said. ``We're changing the face of \emph{war}. And
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it's just beginning, Catherine. The storm ahead will make this all look
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like drizzle.''
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Ahead was Dormer, the full might of Summer and the Queen that ruled it.
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But she thought beyond that, and so did I. The Diabolist had carved doom
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out of stone and sorcery, and she would not quietly into the night. And
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on the horizon, Procer sharpened its blades. In a year or ten, the
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Principate would come calling and with the greatest army on the face of
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Calernia. There would be heroes in that host, and not like the ones I'd
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killed. The real legends, the heroes weren't bound to small stories like
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mine. The Calamities were the greatest monsters of the age, but they'd
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lived so long because they kept their wars small and their enemies
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distracted. One day the great Named of the other side would come forward
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and the old wars would be born again. Those that warped the lands,
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flattened mountains and burned cities. I'd have to be ready for them,
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for the people who wanted to make my home the battlefield of the
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continent again. If I could not have peace in truth, then I would settle
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for the peace of the grave.
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It was the kind of victory I'd been trained for.
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``I don't think,'' I said quietly, ``that we'll be remembered fondly.
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Not you, and certainly not me.''
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``Ah,'' Juniper of the Red Shields smiled. ``But they \emph{will}
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remember us.''
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Silence reigned for a long moment after that, more comfortable than I
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would have thought. The Hellhound wasn't someone who felt the need the
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fill the air with words when she had nothing to say. Something I'd grown
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to appreciate, since Archer had joined by band. The quiet was how I came
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to hear it even though the wind blew the other way and we were ahead of
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the thick of the host. The Fifteenth and its allies trailed at our back
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like a great snake of glittering steel, and it was from my legionaries
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that the song came. Lightly, at first, the words indistinct even to my
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Name-sharpened ears. But after the first time it was sung, thousands
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more voices joined in. Even the vanguard around us.
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``I was born out in the green where their banners flew high
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And the boots of the great lords they did tread over us
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Oaths we made and service gave, kneeling to the oldest lie
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But now the world's turned around and we sing this chorus.''
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Orcs and goblins. Soninke and Taghreb. But, most of all, Callowans. The
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muster of my homeland sang, light and bright but there was such
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\emph{anger} underneath. It scared me. My veins sang with it, but it
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scared me.
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``Come forth you old devils,
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Bring out your lesser evils
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Blight the skies and the land
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You'll be met sword in hand
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One day your children'll tell
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Of the deep and rebel yell,
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That on his field so sombre
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Conquered host of horror.''
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Juniper looked up at the sun. The red-painted steel had warmed over the
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march, though like most orcs she did not sweat easily.
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``I wondered if they'd sing it,'' she said.
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``You knew about this?'' I said quietly.
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``Aye,'' she said. ``Nauk penned part. Named it too. \emph{In Dread
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Crowned}.''
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Gods, what had I unleashed? I'd thought I understood. That I had crafted
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an escapement for what would have made Callow claw at itself, a release
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that would let it change and escape the curse that defined it. But it
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wasn't just Callowans that sang. Greenskins and Praesi joined their
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voices to the chorus, and though their anger was of a different make it
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was no less harsh for it. There was a story the House of Light liked to
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use in sermons. That on the day of the First Dawn, the Gods Below had
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created all the evil in the world and released it. The Gods Above had
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caught it all in the box without a lock, and Creation would have been as
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the Heavens had the first of men not opened it, seduced by the whispers
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of devils promising godhood lay within. That was why the brothers and
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sisters taught rules, the priests said. So that on the last of days,
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when Good triumphed, the evils would be forced into the box again. Again
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it would be without a lock, but mankind would have learned. They would
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not open it again.
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I'd carved a crack into the box and now the insides were spilling out.
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It hadn't been evils, inside. It had been anger. Bitter old anger that
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had not before been given a banner to rally under. It had one, now. It
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flew behind me, scales that weighed crown and sword and found the crown
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wanting. There was a promise there I had not meant, but was written for
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all to see.
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``On the plain where folk were fair we stood and greatly slew,
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And by the ford a score devils with a great demon too
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Prince and page and swordsman proud to our steel they all fell
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The world stolen we take back and damn you all to Hell
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The chorus came again\emph{.} My blood ran cold, and pressed against my
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ear the Beast laughed. It was awake, alive and savouring every moment of
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this with malevolent glee. \emph{Blood}, it whispered. \emph{There will
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be blood over this}. The Fifteenth Legion sang, and declared war on the
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mighty of the world. My general was looking at me.
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``You promised a revolution, Warlord,'' Juniper said.
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She bared her teeth, perfect ivory fangs.
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``We will not settle for anything less.''
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She laughed, harsh but joyous.
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``Did I not tell you?'' she said. ``\emph{They will remember us}.''
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It spread. To the legionaries of the Twelfth and the Fourth, men and
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women not bound to me. To the Deoraithe, though not as many. I had
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gathered forty thousand soldiers to my banner, and they sang of treason
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to the morning sky. I could hear refrains in it, slivers of people I
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knew. Robber's sharp, vicious smile as he whispered \emph{they kill us
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for sport}. The fever in Ratface's eyes as he said \emph{they'll never
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stop unless we make them}. Pickler's warning, echoed in every chorus.
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\emph{It'll be to the death, Foundling}. \emph{Do not begin this
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lightly}. I'd spoken the words. Those had consequences, for Named more
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than any other. \emph{If you employ violence}, the Empress had told me,
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\emph{in violence they will follow.} I had not made peace. I had traded
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one war for another, and this one would be a thousand times bloodier
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than the last. I would be woe unto all I beheld, the Queen of Summer had
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so sadly told me. There had been a weight to the name when it was
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granted to me and finally I was feeling it in full. I'd thought I owned
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this, because I'd been the one to speak the words. That I could control
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it. Oh but the arrogance of that. You couldn't break open a dam and
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order the river.
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I had taught them this. And Gods, they had learned. One decision after
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another, spitting in the eye of gods and compromise both, and I had
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promised them that if we paid the butcher's bill we could change the
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world. I'd told Archer that there was something happening in the Empire
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beyond any of us. That they were not in control. Neither, I understood
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then, was I.
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``Be they high or resplendent our oaths stand taller still
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And in the west do quiet lie graves we have yet to fill
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Learn ye mighty that from Tower's shade to vales of red
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The Fifteenth by call of horn stands ever crowned in dread.''
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The song carried us all the way to Dormer. Behind broken walls Summer
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awaited us, a riot of silk and steel not of Creation. We had made good
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time, as it was not long past Noon Bell. We had until dawn before a god
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in the flesh came to destroy us.
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It was no longer, I thought, the worst of my problems.
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