473 lines
21 KiB
TeX
473 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-57-betwixt}{%
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\chapter{Betwixt}\label{chapter-57-betwixt}}
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\epigraph{``Come now, my lords, you started this war knowing what I'm
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about.''}{Dread Empress Massacre the First}
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It was too large for a pond but much too small for a lake. A reservoir?
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Nah, I was pretty sure that implied spadework, which this clearly didn't
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have. Pool, maybe. Regardless, it was a source of unsullied freshwater
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and it'd been almost a day since we'd run into one of those. Tactically
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redeploying in the opposite direction of an incoming army was thirsty
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work and the drow weren't nearly as enduring as the rest of us, so it
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was probably time for a break. We'd need a bit to refill the skins,
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anyway, and if there was some kind of edible creature in there it'd be a
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nice change of pace from our increasingly stale rations. Indrani had
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taken to pouring brandy on hers, though in all honesty I wasn't sure
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whether the taste was the actual reason for that.
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``Half hour,'' I called out, withdrawing the finger's I'd been dipping
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into the waters. ``Ivah, tell your fellows they're responsible for
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rationing their water as well as filling the skins. They're not dipping
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in ours a second time no matter how thirsty they get.''
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I could make ice and let it melt into drinking water, sure, but at the
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moment we were keeping a low profile. I wasn't sure whether the dwarves
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had some sort of device that would allow them to sense sorcery, but if
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they did I was pretty sure using Winter to any great extent would be
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like lighting a brightstick in a dark room. My mantle could do subtle,
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theoretically speaking, but it'd never been a specialty of mine and I
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wasn't willing to gamble our remaining hidden on it. My guide nodded and
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addressed the rest of its kind in an even tone. Ever since the former
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Mighty Kodrog had been disciplined and I'd declined to let anyone
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harvest its Night and serve as a replacement guide, Ivah had gotten much
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more self-assured.
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Akua had voiced opinion that since it'd functioned as a lieutenant to a
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violent and unpredictable entity for decades, it was falling back on
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those habits now that it was under my protection. Bogdan wasn't too
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happy about that, but I'd ordered Diabolist to get the broken bones
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patched up and nothing more. The message had been received, from the way
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it was now behaving much more carefully. I got up from my crouch and
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sighed. Our pace was being slowed down by the drow more than I'd like,
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but there was little I could do about it and leaving them behind wasn't
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on the table. If they weren't in my custody, they'd be in that of the
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dwarves. Indrani was at my side a heartbeat later, footsteps so soft I'd
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barely heard them.
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``They're getting near the end of their rope,'' she observed. ``Might
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want to give them a full hour instead, stretch out the last gasps.''
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``We're already crawling at a snail's pace,'' I grunted back. ``You've
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said it yourself, we're probably a little more than a day ahead of the
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dwarven army.''
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``Guesswork,'' Indrani reminded me.
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``Guesswork based on the messengers you've seen going back and forth,''
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I replied. ``We're not swinging in the dark here.''
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She opened her mouth, but I raised my hand.
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``If what passes your lips is a pun, Archer, I will drown you myself,''
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I threatened.
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There was a pause.
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``Fill my skins,'' she offered, sounding very casual. ``I'll take a look
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ahead, see if I can rustle up anything.''
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``Ivah says we're nearing the edge of the outer rings,'' I told her.
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``If the vanguard is going to dig in and wait for reinforcements, it'll
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be soon. The odds of running into the army have significantly
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increased.''
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``If they dig in, it's our opportunity to go around them,'' Indrani
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countered. ``Best we know as soon as possible and plan accordingly.''
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I mulled over that. She had a point. Half the reason she wanted to go
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for a wander was likely that she was starting to feel like she had a
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leash around her neck -- I'd asked her to cut back how far she went on
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her exploratory trips -- but she was right on the nose about the
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vanguard digging in. My bet, at the moment, was that when they got close
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to the first strong drow position they'd set up and wait for proper
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assault troops. If we went around them while their eyes were on the
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local sigil, there were decent odds we could make it through without
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getting noticed.
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``Do it,'' I finally said, taking the mostly empty water skin in her
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hands. ``As usual-''
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``Tread lightly, steel stays in the sheath,'' she finished, rolling her
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eyes. ``At this rate you're going to get that tattooed on my arse.''
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``I assumed something deeply tasteless was already taking up the
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space,'' I replied without missing a beat.
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``Hey, my arse is extremely tasteful,'' she protested.
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``You're confusing words again,'' I airily said. ``What you're looking
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for is \emph{tawdry}.''
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She flipped me off, I mimed drowning her in the pool and with the
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traditional rites complete we parted ways. I watched her saunter away,
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though with the leather coat on there wasn't much to look at, and
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absent-mindedly tossed up the skin before snatching it out of the air.
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The drow were going about their business visibly exhausted, and to my
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quiet amusement Mighty Bogdan seemed to have no earthly idea how to fill
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up a skin. I was too entertained by its struggles to seriously consider
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offering help. Akua was kneeling by the pool as well, though her skin --
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which she didn't need, or use -- was full. She was staring at the far
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wall, unmoving. A few steps took me to her side, and in a blatant abused
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of my queenly prerogatives I threw Archer's skin at her shoulder.
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``There,'' I said. ``Since you seem in need of something to keep your
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hands busy.''
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The shade picked up the leathery folds between two fingers, somehow
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managing a full monologue's worth of disdain without speaking a word.
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``It smells like aragh,'' she said.
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``So does Archer, half the time,'' I shrugged. ``What deep thoughts did
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I take you away from, Diabolist?''
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``I was pondering,'' she said, ``the nature of this invasion.''
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``The term is usually pretty self-explanatory,'' I noted, only
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half-serious.
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``Context, Catherine,'' she chided. ``This was a significant investment
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of resources, even for the Kingdom Under. The kind that would have to be
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prepared over the span of decades, requiring specialized labour
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otherwise in high demand and significant preparations of logistics.''
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``And you're wondering why they'd bother, given that the Everdark is a
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mess of collapsing tunnels filled with violent lunatics,'' I said. ``I
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mean, there's the obvious answer. Drow don't mine much, as far as we can
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tell. Lots of wealth to claim once they take over the place.''
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``Over time, the investment made could be recovered tenfold,'' Akua
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agreed. ``Yet we both know that kind of long term planning in the
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highest reaches of a nation is a rarity. The expense would have to be
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justified in the face of more immediate uses for that coin giving more
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obvious benefit.''
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``It's rare on the surface,'' I said. ``Where sinking that much of your
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treasury into anything makes you weak elsewhere and your rivals will
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take advantage of it. What rivals do they have left, down here? They can
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afford to take the long view. Hells, they \emph{live} longer than humans
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too. This could just be the life's work of some highly influential
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dwarf.''
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How long dwarves actually lived remained a matter of bitter and divisive
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scholarly debate, a matter not helped by the fact that their kind lied
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profusely about the matter whenever they ventured to the surface.
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Theories ranged from a few hundred years to a couple thousand, though
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most scholars agreed it was under five hundred. Considering people
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weren't even sure how dwarves reproduced, lifespan uncertainty was no
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surprise.
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``And yet the invasion only takes place now,'' Diabolist said.
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I could have replied that there was precedent for the Kingdom Under
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evicting other underground nations to the surface largely out of
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principle -- the goblins were testament to that -- but that would rather
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be missing the point, wouldn't it? Dates for the goblin exodus were
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vague, since the Tribes rarely gave straight answers to anything unless
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there was a blade at their throat, but it was a fact it preceded the
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Miezan occupation of Praes. Which meant at least a millennium and a half
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ago. If the entire point of this was to remove a rival power, however
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comparatively weak that rival was, then they'd taken quite a while to
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get around to finishing the work.
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``Might be it was just that one tedious chore they never got around to
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doing,'' I mused. ``They polished off the rest of the list over the
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centuries, now they're out of excuses not to massacre the neighbours.''
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``Overdue spring cleaning,'' Akua mildly said. ``This is your theory for
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what drives the fate of two nations?''
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``You got anything better?'' I said.
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``Let us assume,'' the shade said, ``that the Everdark's continued
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sovereignty is the result of dwarven \emph{incapacity} instead of
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\emph{unwillingness}.''
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``Which is a wild guess on your part,'' I said.
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``One that aligns with other facts,'' Diabolist said. ``Regardless, it
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is fact that there was a dwarven contingent on the surface during the
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Liesse Rebellion.''
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``Mercenaries,'' I said. ``That's not exactly unheard of. They also took
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the first bribe offered to leave.''
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``Because their purpose was not to make war, but to assess the
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situation,'' Akua suggested.
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``They already do that through Mercantis, supposedly,'' I said.
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``Everyone sells information about everyone else in exchange for crumbs
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about what's happening down here. Why send soldiers?''
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``A host of dwarven infantry would represent a significant force,'' she
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said. ``One which would be worthy of courting by surface powers, as the
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Carrion Lord did. As the Callowan rebels did, and the First Prince
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behind them.''
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My eyes narrowed.
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``So you think the point was to gauge how invested all the players were
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in the rebellion and the wars that would follow it,'' I said. ``They
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shouldn't \emph{need} to go that far, Akua. Who the Hells would be
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stupid enough to pick a fight with the Kingdom Under? They'll be selling
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cheap weapons to at least half the nations involved in any scuffle.
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There's a reason the Principate can throw massed levies at us without
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going bankrupt.''
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``Dread Empress Triumphant, may she never return-''
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``Forced them to pay tribute, sure,'' I interrupted, rolling my eyes.
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``Once, after she flooded a few of their tunnels with demons. Didn't
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stop them from funding and arming a continent's worth of rebellions
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against her a few years later, did it? They just threw gold at her so
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she'd fuck off and then paid for other humans to actually put her down.
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Let's not pretend it was more than a headache for them.''
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``That is still precedent for a surface power proving troublesome to
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dwarven interests,'' Akua insisted. ``A cautious assessment of the
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situation was therefore made, yielding the answer that the largest
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surface powers were preparing for large scale and long term warfare.''
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``After which they did nothing,'' I said. ``That was years ago, and
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they're only moving now. I doubt it would take them that long to
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mobilize.''
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``Indeed,'' the shade agreed in a murmur. ``They acted only after a much
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more recent development.''
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It wasn't the Tenth Crusade. There had, after all, been nine
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predecessors to it. But if her argument was about a power on the move
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that usually remained put\ldots{}
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``How would they know about the Dead King?'' I frowned. ``It's not like
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he sent them a letter. \emph{We} don't even known how he'll go about
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participating in the war, and we were guests in Keter not that long
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ago.''
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``The Kingdom Under has borders with the Kingdom of the Dead,'' Akua
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said.
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``Which are, famously, tunnels they drowned in lava and molten metal
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until there was nothing left moving,'' I said.
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``Your argument is that the preeminent power on Calernia has no way to
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observe the going-ons at its most dangerous border,'' Akua mildly said.
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I grimaced. Yeah, fair point.
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``So they see him pull back his undead for a push on the surface,'' I
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mused, following the thread. ``And take that as an open invitation to
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march on the Everdark. Why? That's still thin, Akua. If they're that
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worried about the Dead King, why take the risk at all? It's not like the
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drow are a threat to them.''
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``So I wondered,'' Diabolist admitted. ``If neither wealth nor pride are
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the reason, then why? It cannot be room for expansion, they could simply
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layer deeper. Such a large undertaking could hardly be made without
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sanction from the highest powerbrokers of dwarven authority. That
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implies, to me, a strategic motive.''
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``Hard to guess at those when no one knows their exact borders,'' I
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said.
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She nodded in agreement. I narrowed my eyes at her.
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``But you have a theory anyway,'' I said.
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``After your distant kin settled in what is now the Duchy of Daoine,''
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she said, ``the largest threat to them was greenskin raids. Yet they did
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not strike directly at the clans, instead raising the Wall. Why?''
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Because only an idiot would try to take the Steppes. The Miezans had
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done it, sure, but they'd had a whole arsenal of advantages no one on
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Calernia could boast of having and there'd actually been orc cities to
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target back then. Which wa no longer the case: even after the Reforms,
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the Clans had remained nomadic. Rulers of Daoine could and had cleared
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out belligerent clans near the Greenskin Marches but there'd never been
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a serious effort to conquer the Steppes. The orcs would just retreat
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deeper in and the Deoraithe armies would have to settle in for winter in
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hip-deep snow with nothing to live off of and a \emph{lot} of angry orcs
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on the prowl. \emph{Which}, I thought\emph{, is Akua's point}.
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``Containment,'' I slowly said. ``Ratlings don't lair deep, so they'd
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have a free hand under the Chain of Hunger. You think they know they
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can't take the Dead King, so they're trying to bottle him up instead.
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And for the encirclement to be complete the drow need to go.''
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``Should any significant drow presence remain in the region, the
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fortresses maintaining that encirclement would suffer sporadic
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assault,'' Akua said. ``To make the sealing easily sustainable-''
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``They need the drow gone,'' I quietly said. ``Dead or far, far away.''
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We filled our skins in silence, after that. It was a fragile house of
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cards that she'd built one sentence at a time, and all it'd take for it
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to crumple was a single assumption proved false. But it sounded like a
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distinct possibility. That was always the problem, with Akua. She was a
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skilled speaker, one that could spin a decent story out of nearly
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anything given long enough\emph{. But if she's right\ldots{}} Either the
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drow drove back the dwarves -- and reckless as I was, I wouldn't t put
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gold on that -- or there'd be a an entire race of vagrants needing
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greener pastures to move to.
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That, I thought, sounded like an opportunity to me.
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---
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Archer had returned without any fanfare, before the hour of rest she'd
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talked me into was even over. We stood to the side of the others,
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speaking quietly in tongues they would not know.
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``This place is about to be a war zone, Cat.'' Indrani said.
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``You found the dwarven vanguard, then,'' I guessed.
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She brushed back her hair, lashes fluttering over hazelnut eyes as she
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did. Her longcoat was open, revealing the silvery mail beneath, but she
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wore the metal as nonchalantly as if it were cloth.
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``Part of it, anyway,'' she confirmed. ``If there used to be three
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forces of five thousand like you guessed, that's no longer the case.
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There were at least eight thousand preparing to give battle.''
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``That's too large a force of a single cavern,'' I said.
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``Not if it's a huge godsdamned cavern,'' Indrani snorted. ``It's at
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least the size of Laure. There were a bunch of lichen and mushroom farms
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down there, I think it might have been some kind of food centre. Water
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too, the largest body we've come across so far.''
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``I was under the impression we were still a few days away from the
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closest city,'' I said.
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``''Dunno about a city, but there were a pack of drow there for sure,''
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she said. ``Cavern's a drop from our current height -- the dwarves found
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another way down, I must have missed it -- and near the back there's
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some sort of massive stalagmite melding into the wall that the locals
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carved into.''
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``Walls?'' I asked.
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``Nah, nothing like that,'' Indrani replied, shaking her head. ``It's
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like some sort of spiral ramp going up. Pretty sure it's flat at the
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top, but my vantage points was sloppy. The whole thing might be hollow,
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for all I know. There were tents going all the way to the top.''
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``That's defensible against even heavy infantry,'' I said. ``If the
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ramps are narrow enough.''
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``Our short friends were setting up a bunch of weird siege engines,''
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she said. ``Infantry's not all the drow are up against.''
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Eight thousand, huh. That was more than half of what I currently
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believed the dwarven vanguard to number, which was promising but still
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meant seven thousand should be traipsing around the tunnels unaccounted
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for. Fighting underground like this would be different from the kind of
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wars I was familiar with. With tunnels it would be much easier to defend
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than attack, as a rule, particularly if the defender had powerful
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champions capable of holding a narrow area against superior numbers. On
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the other hand, without an open field flanking operations became a very
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different kind of enterprise. No plains down here, no way to see an
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enemy detachment until they were right on top of you. If I were the
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dwarves, I'd station hardened troops on the flanks to keep an eye out
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while I was moving against a fortified drow position. Assuming
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high-ranking Mighty were as dangerous as even just green Named bent
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towards combat, a single one slipping through defensive lines was enough
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to make a costly mess. I chewed on my lip thoughtfully.
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``I don't suppose you took a look at the adjacent tunnels?'' I asked.
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``Not in depth,'' Indrani said. ``Glanced down a few, though, and I got
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the impression most of them curve towards the large cavern.''
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A chokepoint? It'd explain while the dwarves were willing to slow their
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advance to take it. Ivah's knowledge of the region was sadly limited, as
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it'd only crossed it the once and under the understanding it was to move
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towards the Gloom as quickly as possible. I wouldn't be surprised if the
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Kingdom Under had maps, though, and good ones. It was tempting to try to
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get my hands on one even with the risks inherent to crossing
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dwarvenkind.
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``They're going to have the flanking tunnels under guard,'' I finally
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said. ``So far they've been careful to allow no runners. They'll have
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the entire place sealed up.''
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``That's my guess,'' Indrani agreed. ``So what's the plan, Your
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Queenlyness? We trying to shimmy through while they're busy under a
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touch of the ol' glamour?''
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``We still don't know if they can pick up on my using Winter,'' I said.
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``We \emph{do} know they have eyes, Cat,'' she replied. ``I'm not
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fancying our chances of sneaking through a dwarven blockade without a
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little fae juice to help things along, and you know we can't wait this
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out. The real army's not far behind.''
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I hummed, not disagreeing or agreeing.
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``So we have to place a bet,'' I said. ``If you were a dwarf and you had
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devices that could pick up on sneaks -- a pretty basic precaution, given
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who you're invading -- where would you put them? With the main force, or
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the flankers?''
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``If I were a dwarf, I'd be massively rich and drunk all the time with a
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city's worth of naked servants catering to my every twisted need,''
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Indrani mused.
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``If you were a dwarf, but not a complete waste of a person,'' I tried.
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``I know you don't have a lot of experience with that, but use your
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imagination.''
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She half-heartedly gestured for me to go hang myself.
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``Would make sense for the shortstacks to keep the trinkets on the
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sides,'' she finally said. ``The stalagmite's pretty fucking surrounded.
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But that's assuming they don't have enough devices to have them
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everywhere. And that they have those at all.''
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``If they do have them everywhere, we're screwed anyway,'' I noted.
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``Best we can do is play the odds assuming they don't.''
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``So you want to take a stroll through an active battlefield,'' Indrani
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snorted. ``With a pack of unruly drow, a self-absorbed spectre and yours
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truly. That's not one of our better plans, Cat, and that should not be a
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hard hill to climb given how we got into Skade.''
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``Worked, didn't it?'' I said. ``We played to our strengths-''
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``Blatant lies,'' she helpfully provided.
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``- and their weaknesses,'' I finished.
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``Expecting sense of us?'' she suggested.
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``Unorthodox approaches,'' I righteously corrected. ``It'll be
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dangerous, I don't deny that, but then so is every other option on the
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table. I think this is the least stupid risk we can take. Unless you
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happen to have a better idea?''
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``Aside from digging our own way through, not really,'' Indrani mused.
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``And we'd need Winter for that anyway. Shovels alone wouldn't cut it,
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and since Vivi left we don't even have those anymore.''
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I sighed and passed a hand through my hair.
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``Well, let's get moving then,'' I said. ``If this was a mistake, best
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to know it today.''
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``Hey, look on the bright side,'' she smiled. ``If this is a horrible
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blunder that's going to get all of us killed, then at least I won't
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survive to give you shit about it.''
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There was a silver lining, I mused. Shame it was on a cloud raining fire
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and brimstone, but that was life for you wasn't it? Sometimes you just
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had to put on your good boots, bring out your sword and kill your way to
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the top of the flying fortress before you got to see daylight.
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The last few years of my existence would have been a lot more pleasant
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if that were actually a metaphor.
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