424 lines
18 KiB
TeX
424 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-2-alarm}{%
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\chapter{Alarm}\label{chapter-2-alarm}}
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\epigraph{``In conclusion, the court recognizes the desertion of the
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sentient tiger army raised by Dread Emperor Sorcerous as sufficient
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precedent to rule that tapirs can, in fact, commit treason but that lack
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of sentience bars them from laying claim to the Tower by right of
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usurpation.''}{Official transcript from the Trial of Unexpected Teeth, which
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resulted in the execution of the man-eating tapirs that devoured Dread
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Empress Atrocious}
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The mist had come out of the clay pot and formed a mirror-like surface
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in front of us without any need for visible prompting. Even as Archer
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loudly cussed me out and dragged herself out of the pool like a hissing
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wet cat, my eyes went to the images that had bloomed across solidified
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must. Massive was the first word that came to mind. Masego had somehow
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raised the perspective to high up in the sky, above the still-unfolding
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ritual, and only vague memories of how large that mountain range stood
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otherwise allowed to grasp the scale of what was being done. It was
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deceptively simple, at first look. Some kind of white fire was being
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used to carve a passage across the Whitecaps from the Principate to
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Callow. It was difficult to put a finger on the exact size of the
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passage from this perspective, but I'd gauge as broad enough for two
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large carriages to pass simultaneously without getting too close.
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Hierophant had taken the moments I spent looking at his scrying to
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gather himself. I could tell from the way his breath was steadying and
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his heartbeat calming.
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``I will begin by clarifying this is a ritual and not the making of an
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artefact,'' the blind mage said.
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``Afternoon, Masego,'' I said. ``How are you doing? I'm doing great
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myself, thanks for asking.''
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He cast me a dubious look.
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``I would have thought that the obvious precursor to an invasion would
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spoil your mood,'' he said.
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``She's being sarcastic, Zeze,'' Archer said.
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She got close enough to me before shaking off the wet that my entire
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left side was made dripping. She was a charmer, our Indrani.
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``Ah,'' Hierophant said. ``Is that entirely necessary?''
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I sighed, if only to prevent my sharpening worry from showing. A few
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months ago he would have caught that. Spending his days strapped to the
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Observatory's central device looked like it might be unmaking years of
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progress. I needed to keep a closer eye on him, force him to talk with
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actual people once in a while. I knew Archer broke the wards protecting
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this place with chagrining regularity to come pester him, but that alone
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obviously wasn't enough.
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``Not an artefact, you said,'' I said. ``I thought those were pretty
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small by definition.''
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``Liesse as rebuilt by Diabolist would be considered an artefact under
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most accepted definitions,'' he noted. ``It certainly served a sorcerous
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purpose.''
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Mildly interesting, but not the kind of edification I was currently
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after.
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``Ritual,'' I repeated. ``I was under the impression Procer doesn't
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usually have the chops for those. You've been pretty dismissive about
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their mages whenever we discuss threat assessments.''
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``Eh, the Lady says the same thing,'' Archer said. ``She always told us
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Proceran wizards are nothing to worry about unless they're Named.
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Apparently their kind's not real popular with the powers that be in the
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west.''
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``The Principate has been consistently at least a generation behind the
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Empire in matters of sorcery for centuries,'' Masego said, almost
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sneering. ``No other nation has even half their number of hedge
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practitioners and even their `finest' still ascribe to the Jaquinite
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theory of magic. It tells in their work here, Catherine. It is
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amateurish in everything but scale.''
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I wrinkled my nose at the sight of the white flame burning through rock.
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It hadn't moved in a while, I noted. Was something messing with our
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scrying?
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``I was going to ask you when they'd be done, but they don't seem to be
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moving,'' I said.
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``Performance issues,'' Archer suggested. ``I mean, if they're going to
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wave around a big fire dick it's only fitting.''
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Oh Gods, now that she'd put the image in my head I couldn't unsee it.
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Fucking Hells, Indrani.
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``That is planned,'' Masego said vaguely. ``And the reason is\ldots{}
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ah, there we are.''
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I raised an eyebrow and it kept rising when I saw half a mountain's
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worth of snow and stone collapse into the flame. Avalanche.
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\emph{They'll only start moving when they're sure the passage wont be
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clogged}, I thought.
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``It is not fire,'' Hierophant suddenly said. ``They are\ldots{} um, the
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structure seems based on a miracle? \emph{Fascinating}.''
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I whistled sharply.
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``Focus, Zeze,'' I said. ``We're at war.''
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``And I have another wooden duck,'' Archer added cheerfully.
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He seemed a lot more concerned by Indrani's announcement than mine, but
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then she'd been spending a lot of time with him. I doubted it was the
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first time a shitty wooden carving ended up bouncing off his forehead,
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knowing them both as I did.
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``Dispersal of matter,'' Hierophant said. ``That is the nature of the
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working employed.''
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``The passage smokes after they clear it,'' I pointed out.
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``Because they are sloppy,'' he disdainfully said. ``Their spell formula
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is inexact, thus the dispersal causes the release of heat. Had they done
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it properly their army could be walking behind the front but they're
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\emph{Jaquinite}s, Catherine. The man was a priest. I'm pleasantly
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surprised they didn't just kneel down to \emph{pray} the passage would
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happen on its own.''
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``Let's not even speak about that,'' I grimaced. ``With the amount of
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heroes they've assembled, I wouldn't call that too much of a stretch to
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take place.''
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``Praying,'' Archer drawled. ``By far the least interesting thing that
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can follow someone getting on their knees.''
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I shot her a look. Indrani really needed a roll in the hay, didn't she?
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My court was packed with attractive men and women around my eye these
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days -- and Gods Below, that Talbot thought he was being subtle really
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was the most insulting part of that -- so the fact that she hadn't
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dragged anyone into her rooms yet was starting to warrant a
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conversation.
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``They've mastered the basics of scrying, at least,'' Masego conceded.
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``It's why they're forging a pass instead of a tunnel even if it risks
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avalanches.''
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``Wait, I know that one,'' I said. ``Scrying doesn't work underground.
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Or across tall obstacles.''
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``An oversimplification on both counts,'' Hierophant told me. ``The
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Greyfang Range-``
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``The Whitecaps,'' I corrected him.
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The glass orbs that were his eyes shifted under the cloth in what was
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likely the reflex of a blink without the physical ability to do one.
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``That is not their name in Imperial atlases,'' he said.
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``The Empire doesn't have a city next to them either,'' I replied.
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``That is not how atlases work, Catherine,'' he plaintively said.
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``I thought they were called the Parish,'' Archer contributed, because
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never once in her life had she seen a fire without reaching for a jug of
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oil.
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``That's the Proceran name for them,'' I grunted. One of them, anyway.
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``Whitecaps. Moving on.''
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``There's mushrooms called that,'' Hierophant mutinously said under his
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breath.
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``But not capitalized,'' I pointed out.
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If there was one thing to love about Masego, it was that he could easily
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be side tracked by technicalities. I was getting fairly good at that,
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these days. His expression brightened and he nodded. From the corner of
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my eye I saw Archer looking at me amusedly.
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``The Whitecaps are a too broad a range to penetrate through blindly,''
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Hierophant said, picking up where I'd interrupted.
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``Yeah, penetrating blindly never helps,'' Indrani agreed, voice choked
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up.
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``You're bargaining for another visit to the pond,'' I whispered at her.
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``I'll be good,'' Archer whispered back, hands raised and her vulpine
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grin immediately betraying the lie.
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``They're adjusting with scrying,'' Masgeo said, blithely unaware of the
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background chatter. ``The entire array is a backwards mess, however.
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They likely have to communicate adjustments by \emph{voice}.''
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I consciously refrained from asking what the alterative to speaking was.
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``Can you tell me when the ritual will be done?'' I asked, then winced.
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``Never mind, don't answer that. Can you tell me when you \emph{think}
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the ritual will be done?''
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Hierophant's mouth closed over this initial answer, then he took a
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moment to consider.
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``Assuming there are fewer than five avalanches,'' he said. ``And that
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the pool of accumulated power they're using does not run out\ldots{} Two
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days. Going into three. It depends on the amount of practitioners
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they've gathered. Serving as guide for so large a working will be
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exhausting. If they've fewer than three hundred mages some will begin to
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die or birth derangements before nightfall.''
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I worried my lip. Worst case, two days. Actually crossing the passage
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would take them longer. A week before the first troops were in Callow?
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No, shorter if they used cavalry for the vanguard. Which I would, in
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their place. The Order of Broken Bells had swelled, but it was still
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just a fraction of the horse the Principate could bring to bear.
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Imperial spy reports and what the Jacks had managed to compile had the
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host waiting in Arans around fifty thousand strong. The commanders
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weren't supposed to be anything too worrying, a Prince Milenan and his
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allies none of who had notable military achievements under their belt
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from the civil war. They were the First Prince's primary opposition
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within Procer, though, so I suspected she would not be shy about
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spending their lives to damage my position. Even if I pulled together
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every part of my armies in Callow -- which I couldn't, not without
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leaving my borders with Praes and the Free Cities dangerously bare --
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the invaders still outnumber me a little less than two to one. I'd have
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what Juniper called a qualitative edge, considering most my soldiers
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were professionals while a lot of theirs would be levies, but the core
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of that army was principality troops. Varying shades of light cavalry
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and professional heavy infantry. Those would be a hard nut to crack, and
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that was without even considering the fucking battalion of heroes
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reports placed in the war camp. It would take me at least two days to
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have the Army of Callow ready for a march, and that was just the part in
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the permanent camps near Laure. Taking them through Arcadia was spinning
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the wheel, but we'd made tests. For that kind of distance, the average
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was eight days. Going as low as six and high as fifteen.
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``I don't suppose you could shut down the ritual?'' I asked Masego.
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He shook his head.
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``They are not using their own sorcery to do this, Catherine,'' he
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elaborated. ``A receptacle was forged and what must be hundreds of
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practitioners poured their own magic into for years to create the
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reservoir they are now employing. It would be like trying to put out a
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bonfire by spitting on it.''
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``And if I gave you every mage in Laure to work on a ritual?'' I
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pressed.
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He considered it seriously.
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``No,'' he finally said. ``If we had caught their ritual before it began
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in earnest, perhaps, but no longer. Considering the distance it would be
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insufficient to do anything but slow it a few hours. And even that would
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come at great cost.''
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``You're going at this wrong,'' Archer said. ``Let them make their hole.
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After they're spent, prevent them from using it.''
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I looked at her suspiciously.
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``You're not usually this helpful,'' I said.
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``I'm a woman of many layers,'' Indrani haughtily replied.
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I had a fairly scathing comment to offer involving onions and how she
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should perhaps bathe more often but the grass was cut under my feet.
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``You mean attacking them as they pass,'' Hierophant said, tone musing.
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``That is a possibility. Triggering further avalanches from Laure is
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possible, with sufficient preparations.''
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``You don't sound enthused,'' I said.
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``While their practitioners are a backwards lot, I do not believe them
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to be actual imbeciles,'' Masego said. ``At least one of them was clever
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enough to conceive of this ritual.''
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I frowned.
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``You think they'll have protections,'' I guessed.
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``If they do not disperse the wizards they have massed to carry this
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out, they have the ability to resist anything I would seriously consider
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using against them,'' Hierophant said. ``Three hundred blunderers with a
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heavy club are dangerous even to someone of my proficiency.''
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Throwing bodies at the problem, huh. Well, the Principate had no lack of
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those to swear into service. It wasn't an elegant solution, but I was
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living proof that sometimes hitting things really hard could be enough
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to pull through.
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``They'll have priests, too,'' Archer said. ``The robed rats are
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everywhere in Procer.''
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Brothers and Sisters of the House of Light swore oaths that prevented
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them from taking lives, but there'd always been a lot of wiggling room
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left to interpret how that should be carried out. Priests were a
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historical staple of Callowan hosts, to shut down sorceries and heal
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wounded soldiers. And there were always a few to be found who were
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willing to make an exception about that whole no killing thing and
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repent afterwards. Turning miracles against an avalanche sent down by an
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Evil mage wouldn't even require them to do some rhetorical footwork
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afterwards. \emph{And let's not forget the House of Light in Procer is a
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different creature than the Callowan one.} The Fairfaxes had always kept
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the House out of the crown's affairs, but in Procer the priests were
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influential power brokers. It would be safe to assume they'd be
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involved, and that was the final nail in the coffin of considered
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magical intervention. If we couldn't head them off at the pass, it'd
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have to be in the field. And odds were they'd get close to Harrow before
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I could get my army up north.
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``Masego,'' I said quietly, pitching my voice so none of the guild mages
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would overhear. ``The Hell Egg up north, have you managed to find it?''
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``I am still awaiting answer from the Tower about consulting the private
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histories,'' the blind man replied.
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My lips thinned. The Empress had been quite willing to share reports
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from the Eyes about the unfolding situation on Procer and beyond, but my
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people were being given polite brush-offs and non-answers when it came
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to pretty much everything else. I couldn't tell whether that was
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pressure she was applying to bring me back under her thumb or that in
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her eyes I now only counted as something to be tossed at the crusade to
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blunt its advance. The former gave me room to deal, especially now that
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the invasion had begun. The latter would mean my situation was even more
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precarious than I currently believed it to be. Her people would be in
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touch soon enough, I reflected. Cold as the diplomatic exchanges had
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become, a Proceran offensive would thaw them a great deal. Especially
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since I doubted that the northern crusader army would be moving alone.
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Odds were the host in the south under Prince Papenheim was preparing for
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a run at the Vales. Black wouldn't be easy meat, especially not with
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Scribe and Warlock at his side. But he was starkly outnumbered, and he'd
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be in no position to do anything but hold the valleys for months to
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come. At the moment, the Empress needed me.
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``I thought Ratface was supposed to be some kind of bureaucratic
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wizard,'' Archer said, eyeing me sideways.
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She was sharper than Masego about these things, regardless of her vocal
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disinterest in matters of intrigue. I nodded discreetly and she
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grimaced. Yeah, I wasn't happy either that it was quite possible
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instructions had come down from Malicia to make it much harder for me to
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locate the fucking demon that was supposed to be bound somewhere in
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northern Callow.
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``Have you narrowed down what kind of a demon it is?'' I tried.
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``It cannot be Corruption,'' Hierophant said. ``That was my initial
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theory, when we last spoke of the subject in Marchford, but that
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particular entity has since been found and fought. It might very well be
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Absence, Catherine. That would be\ldots{}''
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``Balls,'' Archer helpfully provided.
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Masego frowned.
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``Genitalia has nothing to-``
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``Bad, it'd be bad,'' I interrupted before this could turn into a
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full-blown squabble.
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I clenched my fingers.
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``I don't like the shape of it,'' I admitted. ``That many Named, near a
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threat unaccounted for?''
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It wasn't a guarantee that a brawl with heroes would end up letting it
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loose, but the odds were high enough it couldn't be discounted. But if
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catching the crusaders before they reached Harrow wasn't an option, then
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the alternative was ceding most the barony before giving battle. I would
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much prefer not doing that, and not only because of the military
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implications of giving the enemy a fortified city to operate from. It
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wouldn't look good within Callow either. People had been willing to
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tighten their belts if it was for rebuilding the kingdom and raising
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armies to defend it. If I was seen to have failed in either regard,
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there would be consequences. \emph{But if the choice is between that and
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rolling the dice with a demon\ldots{}} I needed to talk with Juniper.
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Archer and Hierophant were here with me in Laure and the last time I'd
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spoken with Thief she'd said she should be back within a few days, but
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Hakram was still in Vale trying to coax the refugees out of the tent
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cities and back behind stone walls. I might have to leave him behind
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when marching.
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``Tell Fadila to keep a full roster tonight,'' I told Masego. ``I'll
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need to speak to the baronies up north.''
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And half a dozen other people, since Adjutant wasn't there to do it for
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me.
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``We getting ready for war, then?'' Archer asked, and there was a
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pleased glint in her eyes.
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``I'd prefer not to,'' I said. ``But the choice is out of my hands. Wrap
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up anything you have going on, Masego. When we go on the offensive
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you're coming with us.''
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He pouted. I blamed Indrani for teaching him that, it was surprisingly
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effective even now that his face had lost most of the baby fat.
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``I'm not hearing anything otherwise,'' I firmly told him. ``Look on the
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bright side, Hierophant. Odds are you'll be taking a close look at that
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passage soon enough.''
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``There is that,'' he conceded, but it was half-hearted.
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I cast a look at Archer, who smiled back and wiggled her eyebrows
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suggestively. It was telling that I barely even noticed when she did
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that nowadays.
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``If you run into Thief, send her my way,'' I told her.
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She waved in a manner that could vaguely be interpreted as agreement.
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About as good as I could expect. I clapped her on the shoulder, reminded
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Masego we were nearing supper time and made my exit. I had one last
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thing to do before mustering for war, after all. Tonight was the night
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for my little monthly chat with the enemy.
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Cordelia Hasenbach had just begun her invasion of Callow, so we should
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have a few things to talk about.
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