402 lines
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402 lines
19 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-54-wake}{%
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\section{Chapter 54: Wake}\label{chapter-54-wake}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I imagine the High Lords would be inclined to protest the mind
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control, if I hadn't seized control of their minds, which just goes to
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show this was the right decision all along.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Imperious
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\end{quote}
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I'd believed, once, that the way Black thought was what made him
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different from his predecessors. The manner he tallied gains and losses,
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let the numbers guide his decisions instead of more sentimental
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inclinations. I'd thought it a strange thing, that a man born in Praes
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could think that way at all. But I'd understood, as I watched a thousand
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men die in a manner I tacitly allowed as part of an overarching
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strategy, that it'd been a false perception. Most Praesi thought that
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way already, when you dug a little deeper. That was the principle behind
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a sacrifice, wasn't it? Breaking something of worth so it would bring
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you something else you found of greater worth. A few thousand people for
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a flying fortress? Well, the Empire had a lot of people but few
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sorcerous war machines. Tendrils of something eldritch touching your
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mind for a demon summoning? Power was prized over sanity, when one
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intended to climb the Tower. My teacher had just taken a concept at the
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heart of everything Praesi and brought it to its logical, cold-eyed
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conclusion.
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The House of Light said men could be worse than devils, for devils were
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driven to Evil by their nature and not by choice. That it was greater
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sin to turn away from the light than be born of the dark. Choice, that
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was the word the priests exalted above all others. That men had the
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right to make decisions granted by the Gods and that what they did with
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this right defined who they were. \emph{For the Children of the Heavens
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sin is in action, not in birth.} I didn't believe that, not really.
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Malicia was a monster not because she'd fed a civil war that lasted
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decades and killed dozens of thousands, but because she was someone who
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had it in her to \emph{make} that decision. Her sin, if I was to insist
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on such a word, was that she was a woman with that capacity. Even if
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she'd become a cloistered sister in southern Callow and never hurt a fly
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until she died, she would still have that bleak thing within her. Evil
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was not an act so much as it was a state of mind, a way of thinking I
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had been raised to despise even against the best efforts of the Imperial
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orphanages.
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But I had the bleakness in me too. It was almost pathetic it had taken
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me so long to admit to that fact, that it had taken writing off a
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thousand men under my protection as \emph{bait} before I could no longer
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deny it, even deep down. I'd sacrificed the Ankouans, and men of the
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Fifteenth as well, to draw out the ritual Akua's hounds had up their
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sleeves. I'd have done the same with General Istrid's men or any other
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of the soldiers on this field, because that ugly bloodletting had seemed
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to me the path to victory. \emph{Was this what you saw in me, Black? The
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same absence where better people have qualms.} The decision had been no
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different -- no worse -- than sending the vanguard into the jaws of
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Summer at Dormer or forcing a battle against the full might of the Court
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in Arcadia. But the selfishness of this one had been bare, beyond even
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my ability to paint over. It should have grieved me, but aside from dull
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shame the sight of the dying had done nothing to move me. \emph{If I
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cannot be kind or just, then I will at least be victorious.}
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I had sacrificed my last illusion of being a decent person for a win,
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and I could not even muster regret at the the thought of that. Maybe
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Diabolist had spoken truth, when she'd said I'd become like Praesi. The
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gap between them and me was not as wide or deep as I would have liked. I
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heard Hune approach through the silence, her heavy footsteps unlike any
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other, but did not turn to greet her.
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``Legate,'' I simply said. ``You have a report for me?''
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Ahead of us were the remains of the day. My little necromantic trick,
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turned from dagger to sword by Winter's mantle, had turned the tide at
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exactly the right time. While I led my own dead smashing the wights, the
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legions on the flanks had begun breaking through. Istrid's Fourth had
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been the first among them, but closely followed by General Orim and the
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Fifth. Ranker's legion had not been far behind them, a quarter bell at
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most, and the moment the Ninth was free move the battle had been over.
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With four breaches in the enemy line their formation had collapsed and
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then the rebels had grown desperate. They'd fled, of course. Dying for
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the cause was not a Wasteland virtue. To prevent pursuit Lord Fasili had
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thinned his centre and thrown everything he could at the marching
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veteran legions while he and his fellow living escaped. It hadn't been
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enough. Orim had sent a division of one thousand to delay the wights
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meant to block him and pursued, only backing down when Fasili threw his
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last reserve of three thousand wights at the Fifth. Akua's general had
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brought twenty-three thousand soldiers south and fled with barely two
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thousand when the Battle of Dead Dawn ended.
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To my fury, I'd been unable to engage in pursuit. With the necromancers
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gone the wights had gone wild, turning on each other as well as my
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soldiers, but their numbers had not dwindled swiftly enough. I could
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have followed on foot, or with a confiscated horse. But I'd weighed the
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gains and losses. If I pursued, there was a chance I could kill Akua's
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best general. It was not a given I'd be able to, though, since he had
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hundreds of mages and at least one ward he believed could trap me. If I
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remained, I could significantly lower casualties on my side by carving
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my way through the disorganized wights with my procession of dead
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soldiers. Uncertain greater gain or certain lesser one. A year ago I
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would have pursued, but I'd been taught the price of recklessness since
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then. Powerful as they might be, villains who faced armies on their own
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died to them more often than not.
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``Two hundred and thirty-three fatalities from the Fifteenth,'' Hune
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said, delicately handing me a scroll. ``Twice that many wounded. Numbers
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are still coming from the other three legions and the Callowans lack
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even basic registries, but I am projecting at least two thousand dead
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Ankouans from the debriefs.''
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A quarter of the initial Ankouan force gone before Afternoon Bell even
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rang. The colder part of me assessed that, even with the five thousand
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men from Southpool sure to have been lost, this battle had still seen me
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come out ahead in the grim arithmetic of war. On the surface, at least.
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Diabolist could afford to lose more troops than I could. At this rate of
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exchange, I'd be the last woman standing in my army and she'd still have
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over a third of hers. Or what we thought was hers, anyway. Inside the
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walls of Liesse was barred to scrying and trying to guess the amount of
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people there'd been in the city when it rose into the sky was a
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logistical nightmare. Refugees didn't exactly declare their intent to
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travel, nor fae offer casualty reports.
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``Then we've decisively proven the Legions can beat wights when the
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armies field similar numbers,'' I said after a long moment.
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``I would mitigate that statement,'' the ogre said. ``A third of our
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number were Ankou watchmen. That said, Liesse is a fortified city. The
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nature of the engagement there will be different.''
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``You're worried about her mages,'' I said, hazarding a guess.
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It wasn't a stretch to do so. They had me worried as well.
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``They will have had months to prepare the grounds,'' Hune said.
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``Superior spellpower and numerical advantage will weigh heavily against
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us, ma'am.''
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``Superior spellpower,'' I smiled wanly. ``Not something they can claim,
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I think, so long as we have Hierophant.''
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``One man,'' she said.
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``One \emph{Named},'' I replied.
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``They have one of those as well, Your Grace,'' the ogre reminded me.
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``Had I not been informed there are temporal concerns at work, I would
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have advised for a protracted siege instead of an assault.''
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Temporal concerns, huh. A roundabout way of saying everybody was worried
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about what Akua Sahelian would be able to cook up if we didn't kick down
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her front door quickly enough. The ogre's notion wouldn't have been
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wrong on a tactical level, if we set aside Diabolist. But it would have
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been a mistake on a strategic one. The longer it took us to put the
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rebels down, the higher the chances Procer would attack while half the
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legions were tied up around Liesse. The ogre wasn't high enough up the
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ranks to be in the know for that, though I'd wager she'd heard some
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rumours. They were cropping up often of late and I doubted it was a
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coincidence. The Empress, I suspected, was preparing public opinion for
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the wars to come. Even if she had a plan in the works that involved
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never fighting those at all. Malicia was not the kind of woman inclined
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to leave any of the angles uncovered. I had no intention of discussing
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any of that with the ogre, through, so I changed the subject.
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``Fasili Mirembe,'' I said. ``Your opinion on him?''
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``Skilled,'' the legate immediately replied. ``Clearly studied Legion
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doctrine in depth. He accurately gauged how long it would take the
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legions to deal with the wights set against them. His tactical judgement
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is solid as well. The Ankouans were the correct target for his ritual.''
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``Terror tactics,'' I murmured. ``He was banking on a Callowan rout to
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win this.''
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``They have evidently made plans to limit your ability to act on the
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battlefield, ma'am,'' Hune said. ``I am somewhat at a loss as to how
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they were fooled by a decoy.''
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``That was Thief,'' I said. ``Keep quiet a Name's power and it can be
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hard to differentiate between them, from a distance. It won't work
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twice, but it shouldn't need to. Using wards against Masego is like
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trying to drown a fish.''
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``I confess a degree of wariness over how heavily we rely on Named for
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for our tactics,'' the ogre noted.
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She sounded, I thought, almost like my teacher. \emph{Never rely on an
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artefact or a power for victory. They will always fail you. There is no
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such thing as being invincible, but lack of glaringly exploitable
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crutches will do wonders for your lifespan.} There was truth in that,
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but the number of Named on my side was my main advantage. I would be a
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fool not to exploit it to the fullest.
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``We'll meet him again in Liesse,'' I said, winding the conversation
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back to Lord Fasili.
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``I would rank him as inferior to most Imperial generals, General
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Juniper among them,'' the ogre said. ``Though battles are rarely so
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clear-cut as to allow such gaps in ability to be a deciding factor.''
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She was right about that. On open grounds with identical armies, it
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would change quite a bit. But in a massive pitched battle around Liesse?
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That was a different story. I had faith in the Hellhound, but I did not
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think she would be better at leading a traditional Wasteland army than
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an intelligent man who'd been raised to do that very thing. \emph{We
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still come out ahead by miles when it comes to experienced officers.
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They'll be dependent on magic to control the wights, and that'll make it
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hard to manoeuver quickly.} Juniper had been crafting a plan of attack
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for Liesse for quite some time now, refining and improving it every day.
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I would trust in her, as she trusted in me. I silently watched the
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legionaries piling up corpses all over the field, preparing the pyres
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that would be lit before nightfall. Wights broke after they were damaged
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enough, whatever sorcery animated them ceasing to function, but some of
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the corpses still struggled as they were dragged away. They would burn
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anyway.
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``Do you think you're a good person, Hune?'' I suddenly asked.
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``That's a human way of looking at the world,'' the ogre said. ``Drawing
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lines and saying that standing before or past them defines who you
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are.''
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``Then how do ogres think of it?'' I said, glancing at her.
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The legate smiled thinly, fat lips tightening in a line.
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``We are what Creation lets us be,'' she said. ``That we get to decide
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is the first and oldest lie.''
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``I was taught differently,'' I said.
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``And how much control did you have over that?'' she asked.
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She shook her head before I could reply.
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``I must return to my duties, Your Grace,'' she continued. ``I leave you
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to your musings.''
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I inclined my head in dismissal, not eager to keep her around. I had
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another conversation ahead of me, after all. As she strode away I sought
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the six hundred and forty-nine remaining undead I had raised, a writhing
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bundle in the back of my mind. I could see through their eyes, guide
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their hands and feet, but there was\ldots{} danger in that. There were
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too many, more than I could truly handle. Orders that were more thought
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than word could direct them as a pack, but if I went any deeper I was
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certain there would be consequences. A god, perhaps, would not have been
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troubled by those. But stealing one's mantle had not raised me to
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godhood: all it had done was allow me to claim some of that power as my
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own. Safety lay in shallowness. It was my instinct to release the dead
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from service now that the battle was over, but I thought twice of it.
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I'd proved in the past that I could go a great deal of damage by filling
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dead animals with munitions. Six hundred purely expendable troops were
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too useful of a tool to dismiss without good reason.
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``I know you're around,'' I said.
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Thief clucked her tongue, and appeared ahead of me. She was sitting on a
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dead man's back, though from this angle I could not tell whether it'd
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been one of mine or a wight. She pulled at a waterskin, looking somewhat
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ill.
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``I'll never get used to the smell,'' Vivienne Dartwick said. ``The reek
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clings to you, somehow.''
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``I thought the same after my first real battle,'' I said. ``I barely
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notice it now, to tell you the truth.''
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Thief's answering smile was sharp.
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``And that doesn't worry you?''
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``Not only villains fight battles,'' I said. ``Or have noses, for that
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matter.''
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She didn't press the subject, nor I had not expected her to. Talking
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with Vivienne, I thought, was much like sparring. All deft footwork and
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probing for weaknesses, a game where victory and defeat were ever moving
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targets for both players.
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``A great victory,'' Thief drawled. ``Should I offer you
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congratulations?''
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``A skirmish,'' I said.
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``Forty thousand men fought on this field,'' Vivienne said.
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``Not even a third of either real armies,'' I said. ``Minor parts of the
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whole. That makes it a skirmish, no matter how large of one.''
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``If this was just a skirmish,'' Vivienne said. ``Then why did Diabolist
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risk her best general?''
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My fingers clenched, then unclenched.
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``I,'' I murmured, ``have been wondering about the same thing.''
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Looking at all of this, there were parts that weren't adding up. I could
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generously assume that I'd lost five thousand men today. Diabolist, on
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the other hand, had lost twenty thousand. Even with the five thousand
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Southpooleans she would kill and raise, I'd come out of this round ahead
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by ten thousand souls. It wasn't a horrible trade, for her. The more
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troops I lost the fewer I had to assault her walls with. \emph{But she
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sent Fasili, and hundreds of mages. Knowing she could lose them.} Akua
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never did anything with only one intention in mind.
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``The wards they tried to pen me in with,'' Thief said. ``I could have
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strolled out at any time. They weren't \emph{keyed} to me, if you get my
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drift.''
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``You think she wanted to find out if she could put me in a box at
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will,'' I said.
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``I'm no general,'' the dark-haired woman said. ``But I get the
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impression that, army for army, she has you beat. What you've got over
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her is a bunch of Named, and arguably you're the most powerful of
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them.''
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I wasn't so sure of that, to be honest. When it came to killing single
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opponents, maybe, and Named in particular. But Hierophant could wipe a
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company from the face of Creation without losing his breath, these days.
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And Archer was, well\ldots{} Hard to contain, for lack of better term.
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She was the living incarnation of the proverbial grain of sand in the
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machinery. Adjutant wasn't overwhelming by himself, but that wasn't his
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Role in the first place. He was supposed to empower another Named, and
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though he worked best with me he could serve that function with others
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as well.
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``It would be reckless of her, to risk so many mages just to answer that
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question,'' I said.
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``If you'd been stuck behind the wards,'' Thief said, ``would this
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battle have been won?''
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I grimaced. Maybe. But then, maybe not. And if Diabolist had wiped three
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legions and a contingent of the Fifteenth right before our last battle,
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well, there went my chances of taking Liesse. This campaign could
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survive the loss of the Ankou city guard. Fourteen thousand legionaries
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were another story.
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``There's too much we don't know for sure,'' I finally said. ``Guesswork
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and schemes are her bread and butter, we won't be coming out on top if
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we keep playing this her way.''
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Thief was silent for a long moment, staring at me.
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``You want me to go to Liesse,'' she said.
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I slowly nodded.
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``Not to fight,'' I clarified. ``But I need eyes in the city before
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attacking it. I've tried to seize the initiative repeatedly, Vivienne,
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but she's always been a step ahead of us.''
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``It won't be like my last visit there,'' Thief said. ``She knows I'm
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part of your little band of miscreants. She will have measures in
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place.''
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``I know,'' I said quietly. ``I'm asking anyway.''
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``This is the part,'' she said, ``where you use your eloquence to talk
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me into this.''
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I looked up at the blue sky and smiled bitterly. I could manipulate her,
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I thought. I'd glimpsed levers to pull in our past conversations. I had
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a grasp on the kind of threats and pressures that would make her cave.
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But this, the urge to \emph{bend her to my will} that I was feeling in
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my bones? That was how villains forged the same blade that'd kill them.
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I didn't know if that sharp instinct was from my Name or Winter, or more
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distressingly neither of them at all. But I would not give in to it.
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``Do you think you're a good person, Vivienne?'' I asked instead.
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``Good is irrelevant,'' Thief said. ``There are debts, paid and not. The
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rest is garnish.''
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``A hundred thousand Callowans,'' I said. ``Killed and made servants.
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That, I think, may be the debt of our lifetime. Help me settle it.
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\emph{Please}.''
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Vivienne said nothing at all, and drank from the water skin. She wiped
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her lips and chuckled darkly.
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``I used to think there wouldn't be a need for idiotic heroics, on this
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side of the fence,'' she said. ``How I miss that assumption.''
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I didn't push any further. It had, in the end, to be her decision.
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Anything else and there would be a cost, sooner or later. \emph{I do no
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want servants}, I thought, the conversation I'd had with Hune on a hill
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still fresh in my mind. But some part of me whispered that kindness was
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as much a leash as fear, in its own way, and that what I wanted mattered
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a great deal less than what I actually did.
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``Don't dawdle south,'' Thief said. ``I'll be cautious, and retreat if
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the danger's too great.''
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``That's all I can ask,'' I said, and the matter was settled.
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By nightfall, the pyres were burning. A hundred candles of cooking flesh
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in the night. Thief went north, to the enemy's lair. I had the three
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legions under General Istrid escort the Ankouans to our mustering
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grounds, and returned south with the remained of my men. To the
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Fifteenth, to Juniper and Hierophant and the plans that would make or
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break Callow.
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And, I found out, to Black.
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