386 lines
21 KiB
TeX
386 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-queens-gambit-offered}{%
|
|
\chapter*{Interlude: Queen's Gambit,
|
|
Offered}\label{interlude-queens-gambit-offered}}
|
|
|
|
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-queens-gambit-offered}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Queen's Gambit, Offered}
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``Do I even need to give the order?''}{Dread Empress Massacre}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
``Mobility is how they have survived, Your Most Serene Highness,''
|
|
General Altraste said. ``We have easily five times their number on the
|
|
field, but divided and constantly forced to march in different
|
|
directions. The moment the Legions are trapped we have won the battle.''
|
|
|
|
The man's long and elaborate mustache moved distractingly as he spoke,
|
|
though Cordelia forced herself to ignore it. Diego Altraste had duly
|
|
embraced the Arlesite practice of turning his facial hair into a
|
|
spectacle, keeping it waxed and curved with near-religious dedication.
|
|
The First Prince had always thought the custom made men look like
|
|
buffoons, though it would not be diplomatic to voice as much. Her court
|
|
in Salia had scrupulously observed the latest fervours of southern
|
|
nobility, as it would have been too easy to dismiss her as a barbarous
|
|
Lycaonese otherwise. She herself rarely partook. A First Prince set
|
|
fashion, they did not bow to it. Watching dainty Alamans ladies weave
|
|
their hair into Rhenian war braids after she'd adopted the style for a
|
|
few months had been a rare source of amusement in a year that had
|
|
provided precious little of that.
|
|
|
|
``I am aware of the numbers, general,'' she replied. ``And of how they
|
|
have failed to lead to victories, no matter how oft repeated to me.''
|
|
|
|
``I understand you are displeased by the fall of Lutes,'' the man
|
|
delicately said.
|
|
|
|
Quite the understatement, that. Iserre's northern border was not a
|
|
heavily armed one, as its ruling family's relations with Cantal had been
|
|
more than cordial for decades. Their lines had intertwined so often it
|
|
was a popular jest in Procer that to split the difference between the
|
|
royalty of Cantal and Iserre one would need a very sharp knife. The
|
|
Carrion's Lord descent into the Principality of Iserre had only one
|
|
sharp obstacle, the old fortress-town of Lutes. A remnant of the days
|
|
when ancient Arlesite tribes had pushed deep into Alamans territory,
|
|
Lutes was a spit of rock with tall wall and taller towers. One that
|
|
boasted fewer than ten thousand souls, but unlike most of Iserre the
|
|
town had been garrisoned. Bandits had tried to take it more than once in
|
|
the past, and so Prince Amadis had found it prudent to station troops
|
|
there after the Great War. Disaffected fantassins were but a hungry day
|
|
away from banditry, after all, and there'd been quite a few of them in
|
|
Procer after Cordelia ascended the throne.
|
|
|
|
None of the First Prince's commanders had kept to the illusion that
|
|
Lutes would hold indefinitely, but there had been an expectation that it
|
|
would slow down Praesi advance into Iserre. Perhaps long enough for the
|
|
Levantine reinforcing army to make shore southwards enough it would be
|
|
able to reinforce the gathering forces in the capital of Iserre,
|
|
preventing its loss to the Legions. Instead the town had fallen
|
|
literally overnight. The Carrion Lord had struck bargain with bandits,
|
|
who'd infiltrated the fortress and opened the gates to his forces after
|
|
night fell in exchange for the lion's share of the loot. The defenders
|
|
were caught unawares and half-asleep, bloody massacre ensued and when
|
|
dawn rose the Legions of Terror were marching south once more. Worse,
|
|
the fact that the Black Knight had kept to his terms with the bandits
|
|
had spread across the entire region. The temptation of treachery would
|
|
only deepen, and the Silver Letters were not responding near swiftly
|
|
enough for her tastes.
|
|
|
|
``I know little of matters of war,'' Cordelia said. ``Yet it occurs to
|
|
me that with the fall of that fortress, we have effectively lost the
|
|
northern half of the principality. They cannot occupy it, of course, but
|
|
more importantly we cannot \emph{defend} it. And now you come to me with
|
|
a scheme that involves abandoning yet another city to the enemy.''
|
|
|
|
That this conversation even needed to be had was infuriating. A mere
|
|
sixteen thousand men had escaped the Red Flower Vales to wage war on the
|
|
greatest nation of Calernia's surface and yet the last four months had
|
|
brought only word of defeat after defeat. Exiled vagabonds were burning
|
|
a swath through the heartlands of Procer, which was a disaster in too
|
|
many ways to count. Cordelia knew better than anyone how fragile the
|
|
Principate truly was, at the moment. The land had not yet truly
|
|
recovered from two decades of civil war, though she'd had few other
|
|
choice than to wage yet another conflict -- it would have been
|
|
near-impossible to rebuild if the mass of fantassins left from the Great
|
|
War were still there to agitate. Cantal being made a ruin had been a
|
|
heavy blow, and if Iserre was put to the torch as well would mean
|
|
starvation in the south-east come winter. The bloody Praesi were burning
|
|
every granary they couldn't carry, after all, years of accumulated grain
|
|
going up into smoke.
|
|
|
|
The most aggravating part was, she thought, that she still had armies to
|
|
field but that she could not send them after the Black Knight. Now that
|
|
Catherine Foundling had made it clear the Dead King's assault was
|
|
imminent and not months away, the host under Uncle Klaus had to hurry
|
|
north at the expense of all else. The northern invasion force under
|
|
Princess Malanza was already marching towards Cleves, but the woman had
|
|
made it clear that the Callowan campaign had left the army a wreck. The
|
|
Black Queen had apparently assassinated almost every professional
|
|
officer in it, then butchered her way through a significant portion of
|
|
the most reputable fantassin companies. Malanza had described her host
|
|
as having \emph{more generals than lieutenants}, and the First Prince
|
|
did not need to be a seasoned veteran to understand the dangers of that.
|
|
If Malanza held tall walls, she might weather the storm long enough for
|
|
Uncle Klaus to arrive. If she did not make it to Cleves swiftly enough,
|
|
the shores of the Tomb would fall and the Dead King would gain solid
|
|
foothold in Procer.
|
|
|
|
The last significant Proceran force was guarding the border with the
|
|
League of Free Cities, and it could not be moved. The political
|
|
consequences of that would be dire enough -- if Cordelia could no longer
|
|
offer protection the Princess of Tenerife would seek another patron and
|
|
further damage the First Prince's position in the Highest Assembly --
|
|
but the strategic ones were worse. The League had yet to declare war,
|
|
but it had mustered its armies. The moment the twenty thousand soldiers
|
|
in Tenerife left the south became wide open to invasion. She'd attempted
|
|
correspondence with the Hierarch to probe intentions and six months past
|
|
the man had finally deigned to reply. Cordelia almost wished he hadn't.
|
|
The missive had been three pages long, most of which castigating the
|
|
notion of inherited rule as Wicked Tyranny, Procer itself as A Rapacious
|
|
Pack Of Foreign Oligarchs and her suggestion of formal truce talks as
|
|
Treason Against The Will Of The People. Which people in particular,
|
|
she'd noted, he had not specified. He'd at least recognized her title of
|
|
First Prince, as it was the result of an election.
|
|
|
|
The Tyrant of Helike had sent a secret missive along the other letter,
|
|
swearing eternal friendship and making assurances that he'd increased
|
|
the size of Helike's army twofold as a `purely defensive measure'. He
|
|
went on writing of his deep regrets for the recent civil war in the
|
|
League, which he was apparently trying to cast himself as mournful of
|
|
after single-handedly starting and winning. The First Prince had not
|
|
known until then it was possible for someone's calligraphy to come
|
|
across as blatantly insincere, but her horizons had since been expanded.
|
|
|
|
``Your Highness,'' General Altraste said, ``may I be frank?''
|
|
|
|
``I expect all my officers to offer me truth, no matter how
|
|
unpalatable,'' Cordelia replied, and meant it.
|
|
|
|
``If we try to defend the city with every force at our disposal, we may
|
|
very well still lose it,'' he said. ``And that defeat would be the end
|
|
of Iserre. I will not pretend the plan I offer is pleasant to behold: it
|
|
will require ugly sacrifice. But if we do not cut the rot before it
|
|
spreads, it is not only Iserre we risk losing.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia did not answer. She looked out the windows instead, watched
|
|
Salia below her. The tall bell towers of the many churches, the mansions
|
|
and palaces of royalty. The people still filling every nook and cranny
|
|
of the largest city on Calernia when autumn was painting leaves red and
|
|
gold. She thought of a cold night in Rhenia, when she'd been seven and
|
|
come across her mother drinking alone in the hall. Mother had still been
|
|
half a goddess in her eyes, back then, implacable and undaunted. She'd
|
|
asked her why she looked so sad. \emph{Sometimes survival is an ugly
|
|
affair, my sweet}, Mother had told her. It would be years until she
|
|
learned that her mother had just ordered a pass collapsed and every
|
|
village beyond it abandoned to the ratlings. Too many soldiers had gone
|
|
to Hannoven to aid in turning back the warbands come with spring thaw.
|
|
Hundreds of Rhenians had been left to die to tooth and claw, abandoned
|
|
in the cold. The thousands that would have died had the ratling made it
|
|
through the pass were spared.
|
|
|
|
``Do what needs to be done, general,'' Cordelia Hasenbach quietly said.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Interesting,'' Amadeus said.
|
|
|
|
The others insisted on treating him like he was made of glass, yet for
|
|
all that his body had become pale and sickly his mind had not dulled.
|
|
Spreading an aspect across sixteen thousand soldiers -- closer to
|
|
fifteen now, he corrected -- exhausted him to the extent he could barely
|
|
stand, most days. Being carried like on a litter an invalid had been a
|
|
private humiliation, though he was not one to let petty pride get in the
|
|
way of necessity. He was currently more useful as a logistical asset
|
|
than a field one. Still, the sweat and shivers had been an unpleasant
|
|
surprise. He'd not known sickness in a very long time, and this was
|
|
perhaps as close as a Named could come to it.
|
|
|
|
``We won't get to plunder a waystation twice,'' Scribe said. ``The
|
|
Circle of Thorns is recalling all assets in the region and the Silver
|
|
Letters are withdrawing everything but observers.''
|
|
|
|
Those two organizations were, respectively, the foreign and domestic
|
|
intelligence apparatuses of the Principate. The Silver Letters
|
|
occasionally also dabbled in assassination or a spot of sabotage in the
|
|
past, though under Hasenbach they're curtailed those activities to
|
|
Praesi agents only. He had great respect for the Circle of Thorns,
|
|
personally. They were one of the most skillful and well-funded spy
|
|
networks in the history of Calernia, and had been pursuing Procer's
|
|
interests abroad with regular success for centuries. It also operated
|
|
with only middling oversight from the throne: even at the height of the
|
|
Proceran civil war, the Eyes of the Empire had been forced to fight them
|
|
tooth and nail for every success in the Free Cities. Their information
|
|
was, as a rule, reliable and delivered to the appropriate individuals in
|
|
a timely manner. The Silver Letters, on the other hand, had been made
|
|
sport of by Imperial agents for decades. They had connections with the
|
|
gutter and the servants as well as the ruthlessness to properly use
|
|
them, but they lacked the professional training and arcane tools the
|
|
Eyes of the Empire had gained since Alaya climbed the Tower. Their
|
|
internal squables had been exploited by Scribe's agents with relish,
|
|
though only ever through careful intermediaries -- they despised the
|
|
Eyes to the bone.
|
|
|
|
``It does not matter,'' Amadeus finally said. ``From what we have
|
|
learned we can deduce more, and sooner or later we will succeed at
|
|
getting our hands on royal correspondence.''
|
|
|
|
The household guard of Cantal had burned their ruler's personal papers
|
|
when it became evident the capital would fall, which was good and clever
|
|
service yet somewhat inconvenient to the Black Knight. He'd personally
|
|
commended the captain responsible and offered the man an officer's
|
|
commission in the Legions, though sadly he'd refused. Out of respect
|
|
he'd allowed the captain poison instead of the blade, though the
|
|
execution had been a given. Amadeus was fond of talent, yet not so fond
|
|
he would leave it in the service of his foes. Grem strode into the tent
|
|
moments later, parting the flap and letting in the scent of smoke and
|
|
blood. Two villages had been sacked today, though legionaries had only
|
|
ever marched on one. It remained a matter of great amusement to Amadeus
|
|
that the Proceran campaign was yielding a greater harvest of traitors
|
|
than the civil war in Praes ever had.
|
|
|
|
There was reason to it, of course. The fresh auxiliaries gained by his
|
|
host were bandits who'd been at odds with local authorities long before
|
|
he ever came, and who intended to melt back into the countryside with
|
|
their loot the moment the Legions left. His army was seen as a passing
|
|
storm here, an opportunity to be exploited. When he'd fought to put
|
|
Alaya on the throne it had been with the stated intent to crush every
|
|
significant Praesi power block underfoot and have them remain in that
|
|
state for the foreseeable future. That he'd been a Duni backed largely
|
|
by orcs and goblins in the initial stretch of the war had only added to
|
|
the perception that Alaya's supporters were hungry outsiders that would
|
|
throw away all old privileges and influences in order to rise. Few
|
|
Praesi of authority had been willing to lend their aid to a faction so
|
|
estranged from traditional avenues of power, not until it became
|
|
exceedingly clear it would win the war.
|
|
|
|
``Heard you found the letters of some Proceran spies,'' Grem said,
|
|
striding towards a seat.
|
|
|
|
The one-eyed orc glanced at him first, lips thinning in dismay. Amadeus
|
|
kept his irritation off his face. He was exhausted, not dying.
|
|
|
|
``A waystation belonging to the Circle of Thorns,'' Eudokia specified.
|
|
``The letters were meant to be carried to Salia at least a week back,
|
|
but our advance disrupted the journey.''
|
|
|
|
``News from abroad, then,'' Grem grunted. ``Shame. Knowing what the
|
|
Silver Letters are up to would be a great deal more useful. That's twice
|
|
we ran into bandit groups fighting over succession, now, and I don't
|
|
think it's a coincidence.''
|
|
|
|
``Damage control by Hasenbach, most likely,'' Amadeus agreed. ``Yet
|
|
their correspondence has been\ldots{} enlightening. Klaus Papenheim is
|
|
on the march.''
|
|
|
|
The orc's hairless brows rose.
|
|
|
|
``He's finally willing to chase us?'' he said. ``I didn't think his
|
|
niece's position in the Assembly was that weak. Would Iserre falling
|
|
really unseat her?''
|
|
|
|
``He's marching north, old friend,'' Amadeus said. ``The letters also
|
|
mentioned that an eye needed to be kept on the Stairway in case Duchess
|
|
Kegan decided to raid into Arans. It was deemed unlikely -- and I agree
|
|
-- but the implication that there was need of a watch at all is
|
|
telling.''
|
|
|
|
``It means Malanza's not going to be holding the pass from their end,''
|
|
Grem said. ``That's their two largest field armies on the move.''
|
|
|
|
He paused.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Shit},'' he finally said. ``You're sure?''
|
|
|
|
``We are,'' Eudokia said.
|
|
|
|
``Then the entire north is about to be hip-deep in dead men,'' Grem
|
|
bluntly said. ``I can't think of another reason for Hasenbach to pull
|
|
out. The Iron Prince only let us burn our way through the heartlands
|
|
without lifting a finger because he judged toppling Callow as quick as
|
|
possible was how the war would be turned around. He wouldn't leave the
|
|
Vales if he had any another choice, not after committing for so long.''
|
|
|
|
``That is my assessment as well,'' Amadeus said. ``And it means our
|
|
horizons have just expanded a great deal.''
|
|
|
|
``Hainaut's the longer coast, and it's a maze of cliffs and passes,''
|
|
Grem continued, thinking out loud. ``No, Malanza won't head there. Your
|
|
apprentice ripped through her officers, that army's running on fumes and
|
|
fantassins. If it's spread out for coastal defence half of it will bolt
|
|
when the Dead King comes out. She'll head for Cleves. It's where Keter
|
|
aims for, whenever they try to land a force, and it's fortified almost
|
|
as heavily as a Callowan city. She'll count on the walls to hold the
|
|
army together and wait until Papenheim makes it north to contest
|
|
Hainaut.''
|
|
|
|
``Both those forces will not return south for years,'' the Black Knight
|
|
said. ``That leaves them conscripts and Levantines. The army in Tenerife
|
|
is unlikely to budge so long as the League doesn't declare for anyone.''
|
|
|
|
``The Dominions has two field armies of thirty thousand,'' Grem said.
|
|
``I'm not worried around the one going around the lakes through
|
|
Salamans, it's not going to pursue unless we tweak their nose. But if we
|
|
scrap with the one that just made shore, this campaign is finished.''
|
|
|
|
Amadeus had, in a rare flight of fancy, called this war an invasion when
|
|
speaking to Ranker. It was not, practically speaking. No territory taken
|
|
had been held, and this entire affair could more accurately be termed a
|
|
large-scale raid. One pursued in a manner that would shake the First
|
|
Prince's position in the Highest Assembly while also aiming to damage
|
|
the Principate's ability to wage war past winter, but those were deeper
|
|
strategic pursuits. Tactically, the Legions of Terror were behaving as a
|
|
roving force avoiding field battles and attacking only soft positions.
|
|
Raiders, by any definition. That the countryside and cities had been
|
|
emptied by the massive conscription preceding the Tenth Crusade allowed
|
|
Amadeus' army to draw on its comprehensive siege experience to breach
|
|
and sack cities a more traditional force would avoid, but that ability
|
|
should not be mistaken for actual fighting strength. If the Legions
|
|
engaged a Levantine army outnumbering them twofold, even a victory would
|
|
be so costly his forces would be effectively knocked out of the war.
|
|
That would be the beginning of a death spiral, Amadeus knew: without the
|
|
strength necessary to forage his army would begin to starve, further
|
|
slowing and weakening it until even thinned city garrisons would be
|
|
enough to stamp it out.
|
|
|
|
``We know for a fact they've slowed down to a crawl,'' Scribe said.
|
|
``Even if they began a forced march tonight we should be able to take
|
|
the city of Iserre and withdraw before they arrive.''
|
|
|
|
``It's a tempting target,'' Amadeus noted. ``The food stores would keep
|
|
us fed through winter easily and the treasury would allow us to
|
|
significantly expand the ranks of our auxiliaries. Prince Milenan's
|
|
capital was spared by the civil war: it's one of the wealthiest cities
|
|
in Procer at the moment.''
|
|
|
|
``My very point,'' Grem said. ``If it's that good a prize, why is
|
|
Hasenbach botching its defence so badly?''
|
|
|
|
``I suspect it is beyond her control,'' Scribe said. ``The Dominion has
|
|
expressed doubt that the terms of alliance signed cover the defence of
|
|
Procer itself.''
|
|
|
|
``They can't seriously expect that to hold up,'' the orc growled.
|
|
``They'd be stabbing an ally in broad daylight. If they screw another
|
|
crusader in the middle of a crusade their reputation is \emph{dust}.''
|
|
|
|
``Eudokia is of the opinion that they're shaking down the First Prince
|
|
for concessions,'' Amadeus said. ``Letting Iserre burn would make her
|
|
fold quick enough, no matter her objections.''
|
|
|
|
The orc's sole eye turned to him.
|
|
|
|
``And you?''
|
|
|
|
``Six months ago, the Ashuran committee liaising with the Grand Alliance
|
|
formally requested access to the Thalassocracy's most accurate maps of
|
|
Praes as well as the tally of trade goods compiled by its merchant
|
|
captains,'' Amadeus said. ``There can be no doubt that the signatories
|
|
are already debating how best to partition Praes after the crusade.
|
|
There are also known proponents of the extermination of all humans
|
|
within Imperial borders in the Dominion's upper ranks, though they
|
|
remain a loud minority for now. They still represent a significant
|
|
portion of the Levantine armies we are facing at this very moment, which
|
|
grants them leverage. The First Prince is currently losing control of
|
|
the Highest Assembly, desperately in need of reinforcements to face both
|
|
us and the Dead King and it's an open secret she fought against the
|
|
results of the conclave in Salia and lost. If Levant was ever going to
|
|
turn the screws on her for concessions, now is the time. All the stars
|
|
are aligned.''
|
|
|
|
``Queen Catherine is also still unaccounted for,'' Scribe said. ``In a
|
|
way she's the most immediate threat of all. She could appear on the
|
|
outskirts of Salia with the entire Army of Callow, and even if the Augur
|
|
warns Hasenbach in advance her armies cannot magically cross half of
|
|
Procer to arrive in time. Every single plan they make has to take that
|
|
under consideration.''
|
|
|
|
``They can fight a better war than this,'' Marshal Grem One-Eye said.
|
|
``I won't deny anything you said, but you both know I'm speaking the
|
|
truth. There's the scent of hubris in the air, Black. I don't like it.''
|
|
|
|
``So there is,'' Amadeus murmured. ``I suppose there's only one question
|
|
left to ask, then.''
|
|
|
|
``And what's that?'' the orc said, eye narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``Shall we roll the dice one more time, old friend?'' the Carrion Lord
|
|
smiled, slow and thin and utterly cold.
|