499 lines
22 KiB
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499 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-kaleidoscope-v}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Kaleidoscope V}\label{interlude-kaleidoscope-v}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-kaleidoscope-v}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Kaleidoscope V}
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\epigraph{``The final disappointment of heroism is to find that a just war
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was, in the end, just a war.''}{Theodore Langman, Wizard of the West}
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Ink and parchment would see the day recorded as a victory, but Juniper
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of the Red Shields knew better. Despite her best efforts, the Army of
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Callow had reached the threshold where even the slightest losses began
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to affect combat efficiency. The loss of the crossbowmen on the first
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day had already crippled the host's ability to wage open battle, but the
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second day's losses had been a mere hour away from catastrophe.
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Twenty-two thousand soldiers had come to these plains, and now less than
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fifteen thousand remained fighting fit. The mage lines had nearly burned
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themselves out fixing minor injuries, an ugly choice to make. The
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Hellhound had broken Legion triage doctrine, which emphasised keeping as
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many legionaries alive as possible, in favour of getting as many men
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able to fight as possible. The deeply wounded had been allowed to die,
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or put out of their misery when requested. It burned her, the knowledge
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that the other side would have no such decision to make. Priests were a
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larger logistical advantage than she'd believed they would be.
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The Marshal of Callow set aside the thought temporarily, though it never
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strayed far. There were decisions to make tonight in the dark and they
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would be no more pleasant than those of the day. She entered the tent
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without a word, the pair of legionaries guarding it saluting as she
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passed.
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``If you're here to cheer me up, you should have left the armour
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behind,'' Archer drawled.
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The orc did not bother to humour the Named's coarseness with an answer,
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instead looking her up calmly. Lady Ranger's pupil had done away with
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the woven scarf that usually covered the lower half of her face, along
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with the cloak and coat she insisted on wearing even now that spring had
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come. It bared skin, but despite the other woman's finest attempts at a
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suggestive pose there was nothing seductive to be found. She was a mass
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of bruises and cuts, a red scar going up her cheek and across her left
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eye, through the eyebrow.
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``She beat you like a drum,'' Juniper stated.
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Archer's nose wrinkled.
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``Got a few shots in myself,'' she denied. ``Pretty sure I broke her
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shoulder, near the end.''
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``It will have been fixed within the hour,'' the Hellhound said. ``They
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have a healer among their Named.''
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``You asked me to cover Nauk's retreat,'' the ochre-skinned woman
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shrugged. ``Mission accomplished. Now where's my seraglio of doe-eyed
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Taghreb beauties and oiled-up Soninke manservants?''
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``Lodge a request with my supply tribune,'' Juniper blandly replied.
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``I'll have it fast-tracked.''
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``We are the least decadent Evil side I've ever heard of,'' Archer
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whined. ``Who does a girl have to stab, to get fresh dates and a
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fan-waving pretty boy?''
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``The Empress, one assumes,'' the Hellhound grunted. ``Will you be able
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to fight tomorrow?''
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``If you're going to use me for my body, you could at least make it
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enjoyable,'' the Named snorted.
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Engaging with this one, Juniper knew from experience, was akin to giving
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a stone that initial push down a hill. She let silence do the talking.
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``Not confident about taking on the greybeards,'' Archer admitted. ``I
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could handle a few round with the side-pieces, but the Saint's gotten
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used to my forms and the best I can manage with the Pilgrim is a
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shooting war.''
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The orc's lips pressed tightly, revealing dismay. That limited their
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options sharply. Already the loss of most of Pickler's repeating
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scorpions and all of the Spitters had taken a tool out of her available
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arsenal, but if Archer couldn't even be counted on to check either of
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the prime threats? It might still be possible to win, if she defended
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cleverly enough. But even if she did, the ruin inflicted on the other
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side would be matched by the devastation of her own host. Should the
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Army of Callow take even another four thousand casualties -- a very
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conservative estimate of minimal losses considering enemy numbers and
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Named -- then it was done for the year as anything but a second-rate
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defensive force. The recruiting camps in central Callow would continue
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providing a trickle of freshly-trained companies, but that covered only
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mainline infantry. Sappers, mages, knights. Neither of these could be so
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easily replaced, and without them it would be exceedingly difficult for
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the Army of Callow to handle the numerically superior forces the Tenth
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Crusade would inevitably send their way.
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``Rest up,'' Juniper finally said. ``We'll need you tomorrow.''
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Archer leaned back in her seat, eyes for a single heartbeat bereft of
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the usual mocking indolence.
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``Hellhound,'' she said. ``The Saint? I might have gotten a handle on
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her weakness.''
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The orc paused, meeting the gaze of the Named.
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``She never used an aspect,'' Archer said. ``And her cuts, it
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\emph{looks} like she's tossing them around carelessly but there's
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always a purpose to it. Either as a deterrent, to allow her to move
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quickly or to put down an opponent hard before they can fight back.''
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Juniper chewed over that.
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``I've had very few reports of her using the cuts against soldiers,''
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the Hellhound finally said.
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``She'd been fighting for over an hour when we scrapped,'' Archer
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murmured. ``And she never used any of the fancier tricks Catherine
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mentioned she has up her sleeve. I think she physically
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\emph{couldn't}.''
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``She has limited amount of power, then,'' Juniper deduced.
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The other woman shook her head.
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``I think she'd old,'' Archer replied. ``And that using tricks and
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aspects takes a toll on her body. She doesn't fight your boys because,
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even if she kills a thousand, after that she's emptied her tankard. It's
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why she's not the tip of the spear, she only comes out to remove
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problems.''
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The Marshal of Callow inclined her head in silent thanks. It would not
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tip the balance of the battle, but it was great contribution
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nonetheless. So far, the Saint and the Pilgrim had acted as invincible
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forces of nature wherever they arrived, only ever checked by other
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Named. Juniper already suspected that the Grey Pilgrim could only
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intervene when others were threatened -- else why only take the field
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when the repeating scorpions had already struck? -- but now there might
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be a vulnerability to exploit in the other monster as well. The
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Hellhound offered a simple nod before leaving the tent, mind already
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returning to the decisions ahead. Which, to her irritation, she would
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have to consult another before making. The Thief was easy enough to
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find. It had been hours since she'd first settled in front of the camp
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fire she now stared into. Juniper claimed a log by her side, displeased
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she had to share a fire with the likes of this one.
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``We need to retreat,'' the Hellhound bluntly said, eschewing greetings.
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``You know we cannot,'' Thief replied just as bluntly. ``If the
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Principate keeps a foothold on this side of the Whitecaps, there will be
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no truce to be had.''
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``There'll be no truce if the Army of Callow is wrecked either,''
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Juniper growled. ``Which is the best outcome to be counted on if we
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fight tomorrow.''
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``Duchess Kegan-`` the other woman began.
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``Is half a month away, at the earliest,'' the orc interrupted. ``And
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not to be relied on if the tide looks like it's turning against us. The
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Watch contingent in our ranks is a blade that cuts both ways.''
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``The duchess will not lightly go back on her word,'' Thief said.
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Juniper frowned. The Named spoke as if she knew something the orc did
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not.
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``What are the odds of Malanza following us, if we retreat to Hedges?''
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the Callowan asked.
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``Slim to none,'' the Hellhound replied. ``We just torched their last
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supplies. They can last a little longer by butchering their horses, but
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by my count they'll be starving for at least a week before they get to
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the fortress. They'll know they can't win a battle in that state. If we
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withdraw, I am certain they'll fall back to Harrow and disband part of
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the host while sending for supplies.''
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``Which leaves half of northern Callow occupied,'' Thief said. ``I am no
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student of strategy, but I can assure you that is a diplomatic and
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political defeat that will cripple us.''
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``The moment we get Catherine back, we can link up with the Deoraithe by
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gate and drive them entirely out of Callow,'' Juniper replied. ``They'd
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have a few months in the region at most.''
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``It is still too long,'' the woman tiredly said. ``Depending on the
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outcome at the Red Flower Vales, the Empress might backstab us during
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that period. And if public perception is that Catherine cannot defend
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Callowan borders, much of the crown's support vanishes. Riots, at the
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very least. Possibly small-scale rebellion. That divides our manpower,
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and I assure you we will not be allowed to put back the army together
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after it has been split. No major player save perhaps the Carrion Lord
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would see our strength preserved as being in their interest.''
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``If Lord Black wins-`` Juniper began.
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The Thief spat into the flames.
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``Then it is a \emph{certainty} that the Empire will sabotage us,'' she
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said. ``From Malicia's perspective, a Proceran foothold in the north is
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a leash on both the Carrion Lord and Callow. Neither can turn against
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the Wasteland while the kingdom is in danger of falling to the next
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offensive. She'll want us strong enough we can bleed the crusade, but
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weak enough we have no negotiating leverage.''
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``If we fight tomorrow, the army's done for the war,'' Juniper honestly
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said. ``At most, if we force them to retreat all the way back to Procer,
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with the Deoraithe backing us we can hold our end of the passage. Any
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offensive operations became a fantasy until our next three training
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cycles are done, and that's at least a year. Longer, for sappers, and we
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drained the pool dry for both mages and knights.''
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The Thief hesitated.
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``Perhaps a partial retreat?'' she ventured. ``Followed by a
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counteroffensive when they are unaware.''
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``Without the gates we don't move nearly as swiftly as before,'' the orc
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refused, shaking her head. ``I've already considered it. Might soften
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them up a bit to let them starve, but it won't make enough of a
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difference with heroes in the ranks. We still bleed too much.''
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The Callowan brushed back her hair, then grimaced.
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``You are telling me that either path has a decent chance of taking us
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out of the war,'' she said. ``That there are no good choices to make.''
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``Only bad ones,'' Juniper agreed. ``And among those, there's one we
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haven't discussed.''
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The Named stiffened, the fire's flickering light revealing cold fury.
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``You can't be serious,'' she hissed.
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``You have a way to shut her down,'' the Hellhound said, and it wasn't a
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question.
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Thief's eyes grew cold.
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``A heavy assumption,'' she replied.
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``I've known Catherine longer than you,'' Juniper said, baring her
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fangs. ``She didn't even trust her Name, and her mantle is a great deal
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more dangerous. She would have contingencies in place, and within the
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Woe you're the only she considers to have a moral compass.''
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``I will not allow \emph{Akua Sahelian} to walk free,'' the Thief
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hissed. ``Much less to wage war.''
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``Then this conversation is over,'' the Marshal of Callow said
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unflinchingly. ``I refuse to a fight a battle tomorrow in the current
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circumstances. We'll take our chances with a retreat.''
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``How could you possibly trust her with any kind of power?'' the
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Callowan said.
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``She's a Praesi of the old breed,'' the Hellhound said. ``In front of
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her is the Tenth Crusade. Blood will tell. Trust has nothing to do with
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it.''
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``If she gets loose, she'll turn on us,'' Thief said. ``Without a second
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thought.''
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``You have your leash, and we still have Archer,'' Juniper calmly said.
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``Sahelian is a coward at heart, and she plays the game according to the
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old rules. That makes her predictable. She will not make a move unless
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she is \emph{certain} she can slip the noose.''
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``The Callowan half of the army would defect, if they ever knew,'' the
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woman said.
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``If they ever knew,'' Juniper repeated softly.
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She had won the argument and they both knew it.
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---
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Akua Sahelian wore Catherine's body seemingly without the slightest
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awkwardness. Sitting with her legs crossed, stripped of anything but a
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loose tunic, the Diabolist opened her eyes when Vivienne entered the
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tent. The glow of the wards keeping her contained was the only light
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there was to be had, weaving strange and moving shadows over the panes
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of cloth.
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``Vivienne,'' Sahelian smiled with lips not her own. ``I'd expected
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another bell before you came to terms with the necessity. Your
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perspective has broadened since I last had you studied.''
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Thief dragged a seat and dropped it in front of the butcher, dropping
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down into it without even the pretence of elegance. Idly flipping a
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knife her aspect had dropped into her palm, she watched the Diabolist
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silently. Were she not uncertain of the effect it would have on
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Catherine, she would have already ordered Sahelian's soul to be ripped
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apart piece by piece.
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``Think you have it all figured out, do you?'' Thief said.
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Catherine's body inclined its head with an understated grace its true
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owner had never quite managed.
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``Though your hostility is understandable, it is unnecessary,''
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Diabolist said. ``We serve the same mistress, after all.''
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``Eclipse,'' Vivienne said. ``Rip out your left eye.''
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Over a month of late evenings had been spent wording the contingency
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oaths. Possession by the Diabolist had not been the issue they'd
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expected -- Catherine's fears had been centred around Winter making her
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lose perspective -- but the conditions were cleared by this state of
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affairs regardless. Thief had reason to genuinely believe Catherine's
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judgement was impaired by an external factor, which allowed her to call
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on the first three oaths. Sahelian smiled even as her fingers dug behind
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her eyeball, ripping it out. Vivienne noted with satisfaction the smile
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had grown a little stiff during. She could still feel pain, then.
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``Try to play me again and I'll have to get inventive,'' Thief said even
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as the eye reformed.
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``Noted,'' the Diabolist replied, inclining her head. ``You have a use
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for me, or at least the power this body holds.''
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``I do,'' she said. ``You're going to kill crusaders.''
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``A most enjoyable task,'' Sahelian smiled.
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``Eclipse,'' Vivienne said. ``Rip out your left eye.''
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She waited until the eye had reformed before speaking again.
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``That one,'' she said, ``was just because you pissed me off.''
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The fucking smile never went away.
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``I expect there will be heroic opposition,'' the Diabolist said.
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``There should be at least ten left, maybe more,'' Thief replied. ``Most
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dangerous are the Saint of Swords and the Grey Pilgrim.''
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The Queen of Callow's body hummed and cocked its head to the side. The
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gesture was so \emph{Catherine} that Vivienne almost ordered Sahelian to
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rip out her eye again.
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``Not unworthy opponents,'' Diabolist said. ``I will prevail
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regardless.''
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``You are not to cause a massacre,'' Thief said. ``After inflicting no
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more than six thousand casualties, you are to retreat.''
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Sahelian's smile turned sharp.
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``Restraint,'' she drawled. ``How quaint. You miss an opportunity.''
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``Eclipse,'' Vivienne said. ``Rip out your left eye.''
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The Diabolist's breath grew ragged, in the aftermath. She continued
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speaking anyway.
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``You need the crusaders dead,'' Sahelian said. ``Yet you also require
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Catherine's reputation to be unsullied when negotiating a truce. Allow
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me, then, to bloody my hands. I will make it clear to the heroes that
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this her body is not currently her own.''
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``You don't know shit about the current political situation,'' Thief
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said.
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``I know you cannot fight a war against Procer while unseating the
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Empress,'' the Diabolist said. ``What follows is a mere exercise of
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logic.''
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\emph{We can't negotiate with the heroes if they think Catherine is a
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sharper than can go off at any time}, Vivienne thought. Sahelian had not
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grown beyond the causes of her failure. She still looked at all the
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nations of Calernia with the belief that sooner or later she would war
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against them all. Peace stretching further than a temporary truce never
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entered her calculations.
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``You will pretend to be Catherine,'' Thief said. ``And stick to the
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limits I have already outlined. In addition, you may not slay the Grey
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Pilgrim.''
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``Even if this body is at risk of permanent destruction?'' the Diabolist
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probed.
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``Eclipse,'' Vivienne said. ``Rip out your left eye.''
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This time she flinched, to the Callowan's satisfaction.
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``Don't attempt to make a loophole again,'' Thief said. ``Not even then.
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Flee instead.''
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Sahelian softly laughed.
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``And what,'' Thief asked, ``has you so happy?''
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Catherine's dark eyes met her own.
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``Do you believe in redemption, Vivienne Dartwick?''
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The Callowan shivered.
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``There's nothing in you to redeem,'' Thief said. ``You are a thing
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pretending to be human.''
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``My people,'' Akua Sahelian murmured, ``do not put much stock in it
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either. But I have pondered this matter deeply, of late. Perhaps there
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is some worth to be found in it.''
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\emph{The moment I have a speck of leverage, I will convince Catherine
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to break any semblance of thought in you}, Vivienne thought. \emph{You
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are too dangerous a loose end to allow, and you should have forever
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disappeared after Liesse. There is no place left in this world for you.}
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``How hard could it be possibly be,'' the Diabolist mused. ``Acting
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heroically, that is.''
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Vivienne rose to her feet.
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``You will `awaken' slightly before dawn,'' she said. ``Prepare
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yourself.''
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``I look forward to our fruitful alliance, then, my trusted comrade,''
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Sahelian grinned.
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The aristocrat clenched her fingers. That wasn't her grin. She had no
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right to wear it.
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``Eclipse,'' Vivienne said. ``Rip out your left eye, seven times in a
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row.''
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She left the tent to the sound of muffled screaming.
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---
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Prince Amadis Milenan had only managed to sleep after drinking half a
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thimble of poppy brew, and even then he'd woken long before dawn. The
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trembling in his hands tempted him to indulge a second time during the
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darkened hours, but his father had always warned him off reliance on
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medicine. Many a great ruler had been unmade by growing too fond of a
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particular vice, when age or exhaustion weakened their resolve. He would
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not follow in that mistake. Instead he sent for inks and parchment,
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splaying them over his scribing desk and lighting a pair of oil lamps.
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The lines of the first illustration were botched by the shaking of his
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fingers, but the longer he forced himself to concentrate on the matter
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the steadier his hands became. It was a thorny issue to work these
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failures seamlessly into the greater design, but he'd had a taste for
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this sort of diversion since he'd been a boy and when the quill
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scratched the last of the blue on the parchment he found himself
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satisfied with the illustration. Not his finest work, but neither would
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he be ashamed of having it displayed before peers.
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He'd sketched a view of Lake Pavin in the traditional Alamans manuscript
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style, that sprawling expanse of deep blue touching stony shores. He'd
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done so from memory, drawing on the beautiful summer he'd spent in
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Cleves as a young man. Having met his wife there had left him with a
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lingering fondness for the beautiful principality that had occasionally
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been politically inconvenient. Jonquille still occasionally teased him
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for being softer on the land of her birth than she was herself, to the
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amusement of their children. He rather missed her, at the moment. Her
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discerning judgement and sharp temper, the way she could soother him
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without ever saying a word. His father had been furious he'd betrothed
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himself to a girl from a largely insignificant branch family, but never
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once had Amadis regretted it. He'd paid for the sentimentality in the
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years that followed, even risked disinheritance in favour of his younger
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|
brother, but those were all passing things. The partnership had endured
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|
far longer than the grievances. The thought that he might never see her
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again was a sobering one.
|
|
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|
He penned a missive for his wife beneath the illustration, strangely
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|
uneasy, and blew on the elegant cursive quoting the couplet by Drunken
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Berilion he'd botched declaiming at her on their first meeting. She'd
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|
recited it back at him properly with laughing eyes, and neither had
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|
looked back since. The prince sent for a footman to have it set with the
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|
diplomatic correspondence, a mild abuse of prerogative near every royal
|
|
in the host had indulged in at least once. Even Arnaud, that old sot,
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|
liked to write to his bastard son. His worries having ebbed, the Prince
|
|
of Iserre watched the sun begin to dawn as he ate his frugal breakfast.
|
|
The most extravagant of his personal foodstuffs he'd had distributed to
|
|
his men in a gesture of good will, though he'd kept enough there was no
|
|
risk of either he or his personal household starving. He remained silent
|
|
as his manservant removed the empty plate, contemplating the coming day.
|
|
Twice now, his host had waged battle against the Army of Callow. Twice
|
|
they had been driven back, at great cost. Prince Papenheim's army would
|
|
be facing that infamous old monster the Black Knight in the Vales, and
|
|
the costs of that victory would not be slight. That thread woven with
|
|
his own losses inked a picture he misliked.
|
|
|
|
The armies of the Dominion would enter the Principate soon enough, a
|
|
Principate weakened by war. Prince Cordelia might put her faith in the
|
|
alliances she had bargained for, but an alliance of victors was like a
|
|
hearth in summer. The diminished and defeated found no friends, only
|
|
hungry dogs. All of this, unfolding because a handful of children with
|
|
an army refused to be defeated. No matter. Princess Rozala believed that
|
|
this day's fighting would end it all, though the price would be heavy.
|
|
All could be remedied, once victory was attained. Trumpets sounded in
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|
the camp, and Amadis raised an eyebrow. It was not yet dawn, after all.
|
|
Malanza was displaying unseemly haste. Then they sounded again,
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|
urgently, and his blood ran cold. This was not the call to rise.
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|
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|
It was the call to \emph{battle}.
|