555 lines
26 KiB
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555 lines
26 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-4-warpath}{%
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\chapter{Warpath}\label{chapter-4-warpath}}
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\epigraph{``I'm not saying all your closest friends are shapeshifting devils
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I sent to spy on you after having the originals murdered, but I'm
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certainly implying it very heavily.''}{Dread Emperor Traitorous, making small talk}
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``I think I might hate your people,'' Juniper growled.
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The Hellhound was sprawled in her seat instead of sitting ramrod
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straight, a visible mark of how exhausted her duties had left her. A cup
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of orcish brew in hand -- which I'd been oath-bound to decline when
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offered -- she looked like a particularly grumpy green cat. Normally I'd
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be alarmed by the highest military officer in the kingdom professing
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hatred of its inhabitants, but I'd learned to read Juniper in our years
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together. That was a `I can't believe I have to deal with this shit'
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growl, not a `I won't need supper after I'm done with you' growl.
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``Not even a month ago you were praising the quality of the foot you've
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been drilling,'' I pointed out.
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``The soldiers are fine,'' the Marshal of Callow said. ``Better than
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fine, even. They're taking to the formations better than I'd hoped, and
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they've got fire in the belly. But your \emph{fucking} nobles,
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Catherine. Now was a bad time to pick to stop answering backtalk with
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gallows.''
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``Talbot can't be crawling up your ass,'' I frowned. ``We sent him on
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manoeuvre out of the city specifically so he wouldn't be able to have
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his little meetings.''
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``His Regals are still knocking at my door,'' the orc said. ``Foundling,
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if a single more hints at favours in exchange for an officer's
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commission there's going to be blood on the ground.''
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Grandmaster Brandon Talbot was more than just the head of the Order of
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Broken Bells, these days: he was also one of the founders of the
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tight-knight group of former aristocrats that had formed into one of my
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court's two major power blocs. They'd called themselves the Patriots, at
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first, but I'd made an idle comment to Talbot about how that reminded me
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of the Truebloods and that name had died an early death. Considering the
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most infamous member of the Truebloods now had her soul sown into my
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collar, I could see why he'd taken that as a pointed hint. The Queen's
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Men were the counterweight, centred around Anne Kendall, but they had
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much fewer connections. A consequence of the fact that were made up
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mostly of guildsmen and aldermen.
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The Regals weren't nearly as much of a nuisance as the people the
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northern baronies had sent to Laure, but they were also much smarter
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about how they were going about gaining influence. Instead of naked
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power grabs through trade they were placing men in the bureaucracy that
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had grown out of the court centred in Laure. The problem was that,
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often, their candidate was the most competent to be had. None of the
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Regals still had noble titles or privileges, Black had seen to that
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after the Liesse Rebellion, but several were still wealthy landowners.
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And their kinsmen were \emph{educated}, which I was coming to prize most
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of all. Keeping their influence in check while making sure the cogs of
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the bureaucracy didn't get clogged with incompetence was like walking a
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tightrope. And it wasn't like I could hand every appointment to Anne's
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men instead, they were barely more trustworthy and they tended to
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heavily favour the interests of Laure and the guilds.
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``They're still under the impression they can just buy commands?'' I
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asked, surprised.
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Juniper bared her teeth savagely.
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``Of course not,'' she mocked. ``They're simply recommending candidates
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for fast-tracked officer training. Every one of them above the cut.
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Every one of them someone's cousin or aunt.''
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My frown deepened. That was still overstepping.
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``You know you have my full backing in this,'' I told her. ``If there's
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anyone being too insistent\ldots{}''
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``They don't repeat, Catherine,'' Juniper sighed. ``They always send
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another envoy, another candidate. And they're just important enough I
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can't foist them off on Aisha.''
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I grit my teeth. We were at war, now, the same war Juniper had been
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trying to prepare the kingdom for since she first got her baton. That
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she'd had to spend hours fending off ambitious Regals while trying to
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scrape together enough force to resist Procer was getting on my nerves
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more than a little bit. A measured expression of displeasure to these
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fine men and women was in order.
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``I'll take care of it,'' I said. ``But you know that's not what I'm
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here for.''
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She nodded soberly.
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``We'll be ready to march half a day before predicted,'' the Hellhound
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said. ``All we're waiting on is the Broken Bells. Hakram's provision
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office delivered the goods smooth as silk.''
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``Twenty thousand in whole then,'' I said, leaning back into my seat.
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``We're still outnumbered raw, Juniper.''
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Her lips split into a fanged grimace.
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``If you'd not spent coin on shit like the Observatory-``
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``We'd have heroes in the heartlands,'' I interrupted flatly. ``Consider
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it an investment to ensure we didn't have to fight this war on more than
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one front.''
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She conceded the argument with an ill-humoured grunt.
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``I can't answer for the heroes with the host, we don't have a clear
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enough assessment of what they can do,'' Juniper began.
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``Thief should be back soon with what the Jacks managed to put
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together,'' I said. ``But the army?''
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``We can take them,'' the Hellhound said. ``Don't get me wrong, it'll be
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bloody. But our army's in a much better shape than theirs. As long as we
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can bring them to battle on an open field, I believe we can beat them.
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Which is why I wish you'd reconsider Harrow. I can't promise anything
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for two to one and walls.''
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``Orders already went out,'' I reminded her. ``Baroness Morley is
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emptying her stores and evacuating towards Hedges.''
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``The Proceran supply chain will be a nightmare when they've crossed,''
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Juniper noted. ``And without granaries and cattle to plunder they can't
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live off the land. So, all things aside, I agree with you there's a
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decent chance they'll be forced to continue pushing south or start
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eating faster than they can bring food. But if they don't everything
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goes out the window. I don't like that our plan is centred around the
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enemy doing what we want them to.''
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``There's too much of a risk involved in fighting them near Harrow,
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Juniper,'' I sighed. ``Even if we could manage to get there in time, I
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won't engage when there's a Hell Egg unaccounted for in the region.''
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The north was one of the few parts of Callow that hadn't been devastated
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by the latest round of wars to hit the country. Not even a better
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strategic position was enough to have me take the risk of changing that.
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``There's too much politics in this war, Foundling,'' my Marshal said.
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``Careful you miss the defeat in front of you for staring at the
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treaties on the horizon.''
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``We can't slaughter fifty thousand Procerans,'' I flatly said. ``Aside
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from the brutal bounding our manpower would take in achieving that, it'd
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be impossible to make peace with Hasenbach afterwards.''
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``Hasenbach's invading us,'' the Hellhound retorted. ``The high horse
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stops being that when you ride it to war. If she doesn't want dead
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soldiers, she has no business sending them to the field.''
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I knew that in speaking that she spoke as an orc. She had the bone-deep
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conviction that no one with a sword in hand had the right of complaining
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about death. And there was a lot about that way of looking at the world
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that appealed to me even now. But that was a seductive simplicity that'd
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become the kind of luxury I could no longer afford. If I offed half a
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hundred thousand Procerans, the Principate would be fighting this to the
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bitter end. The First Prince might very well get deposed if she
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suggested otherwise. I had to defeat the crusaders, force them out of
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Callow, but it couldn't be a massacre. Assuming I could even deliver one
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of those, which was quite an assumption given the number of Named on the
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other side.
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``I still think we should have gone ahead with Bonfire,'' the orc spoke
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into the silence. ``I understand why you refused, but-``
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``Juniper,'' I said quietly. ``I love you like a sister. You're one of
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the smartest women I've ever met. But trust me when I say that Bonfire
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would have been the end of us.''
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It'd begun as an exercise for her general staff. How to win against the
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crusade without Callow ever seeing combat? The answer had been crude,
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vicious, and horrifyingly popular among my high-ranking officers. Even
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Callowans. Only greenskins had been more vocal in their approval than my
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people. It was simple enough: instead of waiting for Procer to muster, I
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was to take twenty thousand men and a full siege train through Arcadia
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and emerge on the upper northern edge of Procer's coast. Then I'd burn
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my way south, city by city, until the Principate mustered an army to
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force me out. At which point I'd pass through Arcadia again, and emerge
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on the other side of the Principate. Rinse, repeat. Again and again
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until Procer collapsed from the inside. The death toll would have
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been\ldots{} It didn't bear thinking about. It'd been the support the
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plan had found that surprised me. Hells, \emph{Talbot} had spoken in
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favour. He'd `mourned the loss of innocent lives, but if losses must be
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had better Proceran than Callowan.' I'd stomped the notion out of high
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command and not been gentle about it. Aside from the sickening mass
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slaughters Bonfire entailed, it would have made Callow the foremost
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enemy of every Calernian nation. It had not escaped my notice that my
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ability to take hosts through Arcadia might be seen as as dangerous a
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weapon as the Diabolist's gate-device, in its own way. I had to use it
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sparingly and responsibly or we'd all pay for it. The thought came,
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uneasily, that we might regardless of what I did.
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``Your call to make, Warlord,'' the orc acknowledged.
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Silence lingered for a while afterwards, the two of us alone in her
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tent.
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``Finally back at it,'' the Hellhound finally mused, and there was
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something like savage glee shining in her eyes.
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``We march West, once more,'' I spoke in Mthethwa.
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I was quoting an old verse Nauk loved. He'd spoken it years ago, before
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we left for the Liesse Rebellion.
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``Waging the same old war,'' Juniper finished, and she met my gaze.
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Neither of us finished the verse, though we both knew the words.
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\emph{Onwards to the fields of Callow,}
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\emph{Swift death and graves shallow.}
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---
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It was past midnight when I finally allowed myself a break. There was
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only so much time I could spend learning Reitz without wanting to jump
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off the balcony I was currently leaning against. It was important I
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learn, though. I'd have interpreters with me on the field, but going to
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war with the Principate without even understanding their languages was a
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weakness tailored to cause blunders. Still, I'd never missed my old
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aspect of Learn more. Hells, it wasn't like I'd been lazy when it came
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to learning languages. Aside from the Lower Miezan of my childhood I
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spoke four others well, though my Old Tongue was still admittedly
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sloppier than the rest. It was enough for tonight, I decided. Back to
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the histories after that. I'd gotten my hands on an Ashuran chronicle of
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the Humbling of Titans, the abortive and bloody war between Procer and
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the Titanomachy that had sown the seeds of hate between the nations that
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still held to this day. Writings from the Thalassocracy were slightly
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less inclined to paint Procer in a bad light than those of Praes or the
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Free Cities, though from what little I'd read there wasn't much
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defensible about why and how the Principate had waged that war. I looked
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up at the stars and allowed the wind to stream across my face. It was a
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cool breeze, not that I'd notice unless I forced myself to.
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``\emph{Finally},'' Thief crowed from behind me.
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I almost lashed out by reflex, Winter coiling in my veins, but I let out
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a steamy breath instead.
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``That game's gotten a lot more dangerous than it used to be,'' I told
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her, voice sounding with just the hint of an echo.
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Vivienne leaned against the railing next to me, blowing away an errant
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strand with a mischievous smile.
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``Just like you to say that when I start winning,'' she said.
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``Welcome back, Thief,'' I sighed, and put an arm around her shoulder in
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the distant cousin of a hug.
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She only squirmed a little. Vivienne had never been a touchy sort but
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compared to, say, Masego she was neediness incarnate. I released her
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after a heartbeat, and pretended not to notice the slightly pleased
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smile on her face.
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``So I hear we have a Proceran problem on the march,'' she said.
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``They won't start moving until tomorrow, according to Masego,'' I
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replied. ``But you might say that, yes. I don't suppose you have
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anything to tell me that'd make this loom a little shorter?''
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``You want a report?'' she asked, eyebrow rising.
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``Nothing too detailed,'' I said. ``We'll have a proper briefing with
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everyone at a sane hour. But give me the broad strokes.''
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She hummed.
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``Well, before we touch Procer, I have something from down south,'' she
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said.
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My gaze sharpened.
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``The League?''
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She nodded and I grimaced. I'd wanted a garrison in Dormer to keep that
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front under control, but Juniper had dug in her heels. The city was
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indefensible, she'd argued, without a fleet. And Callow had neither the
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gold, the sailors or the know-how to make one. She had a point about
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Dormer, especially after the fight with Summer had wrecked major parts
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of its defences that we'd only partly repaired. Coin, coin, coin. More
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relentless a foe than even Akua. The men had been sent to Vale instead,
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with only a handful of mages in Dormer to sound the alarm if it came to
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war. Which it was hard to say if it might. My attempt at diplomatic
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correspondence with the newly-elected Hierarch had yielded only a
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neatly-penned letter chastising me for being a foreign despot, which
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while very politely phrased was less than promising. On the other hand,
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merchant shipping up the Hwaerte had actually increased over the last
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few months if Ratface was to be believed. Not the sign of hostilities
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about to erupt.
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``I have reason to believe that the League has no interest in Callow,''
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Thief said.
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``And how good is that reason?'' I asked.
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``The Tyrant of Helike had one of the Jacks taken off the streets and
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brought to him so he could swear eternal friendship with you,'' Vivienne
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bluntly said.
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I closed my eyes and rubbed the bridge of my nose, warding off the
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headache I knew wouldn't come.
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``The man,'' I said slowly, ``is notoriously mad. And treacherous. And,
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not to repeat myself but it bears mentioning, \emph{fucking insane}.''
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``Agreed,'' Thief mildly replied. ``He is also, as of last month, very
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discretely sending people into Waning Woods.''
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My eyes flew open and I kept my mouth shut as I considered the
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implications of that. The Waning Woods could lead straight into southern
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Callow, true. But he didn't need to go through there to make war on us.
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He had the fleets to just sail up the Hwaerte uncontested without any of
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the risks strolling through that hellscape of a forest entailed. Which
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meant he was considering that route to sidestep something else, and
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there was only one force I knew about that qualified. The Proceran army
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in the southern principality of Tenerife, sent there specifically to
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discourage League aggression.
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``You're sure?'' I quietly pressed.
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``There's a decent chance that he allowed my people to see him sending
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his own in there,'' Thief admitted. ``It could be a plot to get us to
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lower our guards, but at this point does he really \emph{need} us to
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lower our guard?''
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No, I thought. Not with fifty thousand crusaders marching into Callow
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and an even larger host knocking at the front door in the Vales. There
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wasn't a lot I could immediately do to drive him back if he just decided
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to invade without all the fanfare.
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``That would change things,'' I murmured. ``If he pulls the trigger on
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that\ldots{}''
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``Looming shorter yet?'' Vivienne teased.
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``I'd kiss you, if you weren't so painfully indifferent to women,'' I
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replied with a smirk.
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She coughed awkwardly. I had no intentions there whatsoever, but seeing
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her get jittery at the lightest of suggestions was always good for a
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laugh.
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``Yes, well, Procer,'' she muttered. ``We've already had some talks
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about what's waiting in Arans. As far as the Jacks can tell, there's two
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real ringleaders in that crowd. The Procer part, anyway.''
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``Prince Amadis Milenan of Iserre,'' I said. ``Princess Rozala Malanza
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of Aequitan. Milenan's supposed to be the one holding most everyone
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else's leash.''
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``Don't discount Malanza,'' she warned me. ``Politically she'd dependent
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on Milenan -- her younger brother's trying to sweet-talk Hasenbach into
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backing him -- but she's the one that'll be leading the armies. Her
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mother fucked up so catastrophically during the civil war that she's low
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on allies at the moment, but she's the best commander in that army and
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they all know it. She'll get a lot more influential in that circle when
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the swords come out.''
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``And what do we know about her?'' I frowned.
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``Not much,'' Thief reluctantly admitted. ``She's stayed off of the
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stage since taking her coronation. But I have somewhat reliable word
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that she's one of the hardline expansionists in the Highest Assembly
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even if she's quiet about it.''
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``If she's out of favour with Hasenbach, that reinforces the case the
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First Prince isn't actually out to annex us,'' I said.
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``Hasenbach broke her mother's bid for the throne and made her drink
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poison afterwards,'' Thief hedged. ``It might just be personal.
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Regardless, if the First Prince is out for land we both know she can't
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admit that right know. It'd eat away at the crusade from the inside.
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Levant's not mustering armies for the Principate to grow larger, and if
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they get even a hint that's the plan\ldots{}''
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``I think she might genuinely be after only the Empire, Vivienne,'' I
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admitted. ``And if that's really the case, she has a fucking point.
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Malicia fanned the civil war in her country for two decades. And there's
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that \emph{other thing} too.''
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Stating out loud that the Empress had essentially given Diabolist free
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reign to do whatever she wanted so long as by the time the dust settled
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she had a weapon to frighten off the rest of Calernia would have
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been\ldots{} dangerous. I'd already told the rest of the Woe this much,
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but not anyone else. Whether Hasenbach knew this was the case or she was
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just using Second Liesse to justify the Tenth Crusade, I could not know
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for sure. It wasn't like I could ask the woman when we spoke, either,
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not while I was uncertain of what she knew and did not.
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``I'll applaud and toast her health, if she brings down the Tower,''
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Thief said. ``But that is \emph{not} a woman I want deciding what
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happens to my shit, Catherine. Even if we assume the best about her,
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she's still got the Highest Assembly to answer to. And we've had long
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talks about the kind of people that have seats on that.''
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``I'm not talking surrender,'' I told Thief. ``But you know how much
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there's riding on Hasenbach being at least halfway reasonable.''
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``That begs the question of how reasonable she'll be allowed to be,''
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Vivienne replied flatly. ``And that brings us back neatly to Amadis
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Milenan. I've confirmed he was in the know for the Liesse Rebellion.''
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``We already knew Hasenbach would need a mandate to send that much
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silver across the border,'' I said. ``He's the most influential man in
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Procer, it's not really feasible for her to have kept him out of it.''
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``What we \emph{didn't} know, at least until now, is that he argued
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strongly for a Proceran to be in command of the rebel forces,'' Thief
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said. ``The man likes his wine, and he's not as careful about who might
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be listening as he should be. That said, there's a two thousand denarii
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hole in the funds you allocated me.''
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I stared at her incredulously.
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``Two \emph{thousand}?''
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``Yeah, well, even servants in that fucker's palace are rich,'' Vivienne
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muttered. ``You wouldn't believe how hard they were to bribe.''
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Aside from a mournful thought about where I'd have to take that coin
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from to compensate, I came to grasp what she was getting at pretty
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quick.
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``You think he wanted to be personally in command,'' I said.
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``Look, I know the Eyes think his ambition makes him usable to shake up
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Procer from the inside,'' the dark-haired woman said. ``But that's
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Wasteland talk, Catherine. He's a fucking snake and now we have
|
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precedent.''
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Precedent for Prince Amadis Milenan to consider war in Callow as way to
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enable his bid for the throne of the Principate. Shit. That was a
|
|
problem. I'd been banking on the commanders of the crusader host in the
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north being rational enough that after a series of minor field defeats
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they'd cut their losses and retreat back into Procer, if I gave them the
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space. But Milenan was in command, and if he saw this as his only good
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chance to dislodge Hasenbach? He might decide to gamble it all anyway,
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and that would force me to actually break his army. Which would fuck up
|
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all my long-term plans, to say the least.
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|
``We'll untangle that particular mess in full at the briefing,'' I
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sighed. ``What've you got on the heroes? None of this matters if they
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just splatter us across the countryside at the first scrap.''
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``Wasn't able to get all the Names,'' Thief said. ``But I do have a
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number for you: there's fourteen of them.''
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I let out a long breath. That was\ldots{} a lot more than I'd hoped for.
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|
Given the reputation the Calamities still commanded, I'd thought most
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|
Named would be headed there for the offensive. \emph{Still fewer than
|
|
they sent against Triumphant}, I mused. \emph{So there's that.} Black
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had always told me that too many heroes in the same place might end up
|
|
turning against them. That Creation would push some stories above
|
|
others, and that those who ended up behind were much easier to kill. It
|
|
made villains seem a lot stronger than they were when they killed a few,
|
|
and incited sloppiness and overconfidence if they survived. The thing
|
|
was, though, that those villains usually still \emph{died}. That tended
|
|
to happen when someone sent a battalion of Heavens-empowered hardened
|
|
killers after someone's head. I'd refined the Woe, over the last year.
|
|
Turned them into a group eerily skilled at killing the heroes that came
|
|
into Callow and refused my terms. But in those fights, we'd had either
|
|
superior numbers or parity. On picked grounds, with enough time for me
|
|
to prepare. None of that would apply up north.
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|
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|
``Most of them are green, and from all over Calernia,'' Thief spoke into
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the silence. ``Levant, the Free Cities, Ashur. Local Named, I guess you
|
|
could call them. Not the kind you see at the head of an invasion.''
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|
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|
``Any from Procer?'' I asked.
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|
She nodded.
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|
|
|
``Which brings me to the two I think we most need to watch out for,''
|
|
Vivienne said. ``The first is the Proceran, an Alamans. Laurence de
|
|
Montfort, the Saint of Swords.''
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|
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|
``I think I've heard of her before,'' I frowned.
|
|
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|
``She got started killing some alchemist villain in western Procer under
|
|
a transitional Name,'' Thief said. ``Nasty business. He was turning
|
|
people into monsters. Then she killed the Prince of Valencis when she
|
|
was in her twenties and no one's quite sure why. She disappeared into
|
|
the woodworks after that. There's rumours she went up north, but mostly
|
|
people say she was `perfecting her craft' in a retreat from the earthly
|
|
world.''
|
|
|
|
``She hasn't done anything since?'' I frowned.
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|
|
|
``Dubious source, but I was told she stared down an army into marching
|
|
around her hometown during the civil war,'' Vivienne said. ``Whatever
|
|
the truth, she's in her late sixties and she's Hells on legs. Supposedly
|
|
unbeatable with a sword, and she's been known to cut through spells,
|
|
wards and even once an actual miracle.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, that promises to be a fun evening,'' I muttered.
|
|
|
|
That sounded a lot like Ranger, only with a Choir having her back, and
|
|
wasn't that stuff nightmares were made of?
|
|
|
|
``The other big club is Levantine,'' Thief said. ``The Grey Pilgrim,
|
|
couldn't dig up a name. This one\ldots{} Well, the more I learn the more
|
|
he scares me shitless.''
|
|
|
|
Thief wasn't the bravest of my companions, but she wasn't exactly faint
|
|
of heart either. That she'd go this far was worth alarm.
|
|
|
|
``Priest Name?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Some kind of wandering monk, as far as I can tell,'' Vivienne said.
|
|
``He's not, well, not like you. He's not the one everyone attaches to.
|
|
He's the stranger in the night, and he's been around for a
|
|
\emph{while}.''
|
|
|
|
``Heroes age,'' I reminded her.
|
|
|
|
``And I've word of him going back at least sixty years under his current
|
|
Name,'' Thief bluntly replied. ``Catherine, the man's been everywhere.
|
|
Every Levantine hero in the last forty years ran into him at some point,
|
|
and in the Dominion if he said he felt like being king half the country
|
|
would rise to put him on the throne. As long as he backs the crusade,
|
|
there's not a single hero from the Dominion that'll flinch.''
|
|
|
|
``Influential and experienced, then,'' I said, but honestly as far as
|
|
direct threats went the Saint sounded a lot worse.
|
|
|
|
It also meant he couldn't be killed if Levant was ever to be brought at
|
|
the negotiating table. You couldn't kill a people's darling and then
|
|
expect a nice peace treaty after, but I wasn't sure I'd be given a
|
|
choice there. Thief passed a hand through her hair, frustrated.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not explaining myself right,'' she said. ``Just -- all right,
|
|
think about it like this. Hero out on their first lark, meets a
|
|
mysterious helpful stranger that gives advice and maybe teaches a trick.
|
|
When's the next time you see them?''
|
|
|
|
My fingers clenched.
|
|
|
|
``When that hero's in over their head,'' I said softly. ``When the
|
|
stranger appears out of nowhere and wipes the floor with the villain,
|
|
enough that the hero can flee and prepare for the rematch.''
|
|
|
|
``Yeah,'' Vivienne agreed grimly. ``That's the thing, Cat. He doesn't
|
|
always win, but I couldn't find a single instance of when the Grey
|
|
Pilgrim got into a fight and \emph{lost}.''
|
|
|
|
Well. It was a good thing I didn't need to sleep anymore, because that
|
|
was the kind of thing that would keep a girl up at night.
|