412 lines
23 KiB
TeX
412 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-11-forced-march}{%
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\chapter{Forced March}\label{chapter-11-forced-march}}
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\epigraph{``A hundred battles, even victories, will always lose you the
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war.''}{Theodosius the Unconquered, Tyrant of Helike}
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When I'd been told that General Rumena was at a forward position, in my
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mind's eye I'd envisioned a Legion outpost: neat palisade with a dry
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moat in front, raised tower to serve as a better vantage point. Stone
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for everything instead, if it was meant to be a long-term outpost and
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funds allowed. I should have known better, by now, to expect more than a
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pack of tents and heavy screens of scouts.
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``Your people are sloppy, Boss,'' Robber said. ``Nettles me a bit they
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caught my boys at all.''
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The tone had been casual and the words mild, which was a telltale sign
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he was considering knifing a few drow to even scales the goblin way --
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which was to say, inflicting twice as many wounds as you'd received and
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then rubbing dirt in to make sure infection took. I might have taken it
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as face value, the posturing and the easy cutting lines, if I hadn't
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seen him raw after losing people right before the beginning of the
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Battle of Three Hills. For all that Robber liked to put himself up as a
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goblin's goblin, much like me he'd never quite learned how to make
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losses stop bruising. Juniper had always disapproved of that. Soldiers
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died, and it should not be taken lightly or misused but that was the
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nature of being a soldier. She'd always had the knack for keeping it
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distant. There were some people who had that in them, I supposed --
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Hakram did, and once upon a time Ratface had as well. Akua acted as if
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she belonged among those, but sometimes I did wonder. \emph{Is that who
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you are, or what you trained yourself to be?} I didn't turn around to
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look at him where he sat side-saddle on my horse, all bunched up behind
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me, but I pitched my voice to be well understood.
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``I'm not happy some of ours got killed, Robber,'' I said. ``But there
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will be none of that. Like it or not, you came in quiet and ran into a
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watch that acted exactly as a watch should.''
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``They don't see so well in the day, though,'' the goblin mildly said.
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``About as well as humans,'' I said, then dipped my tone towards a
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warning. ``And I could warn you they've got entities behind them the sun
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doesn't blind but I won't have to, will I? Because I gave you an
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\emph{order}.''
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His teeth clicked softly as his mouth shut. He wasn't happy about this
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-- neither was I, even though I knew the fault did not lie on the side
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of the drow -- but he knew better than to push. Legionaries baring
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blades on drow was the very last thing I needed right now. As Special
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Tribune, the goblin had the standing to sit in on most war councils: he
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knew better than most how precarious the situation was for the Army of
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Callow right now. Juniper had done well, in all fairness. Being stuck
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between two hostile armies that together made up near the double of your
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forces was no easy mess to squeak out of, if the enemy generals weren't
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fools. And they were not, in this case. But her carefully laid plans had
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failed to account for one of the madmen on the stage, and now a
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crippling blow was coming. If we didn't move fast enough to prevent it,
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anyway, which was the opposite of my intention. We'd get there in time
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even if I had to march the drow until they collapsed. I had absolutely
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no intention of losing ten thousand legionaries and the general that was
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the finest vanguard in Callow bar none.
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There'd been a time where I would have been more effusive in describing
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Nauk, but the man under assault to the south wasn't the same one I'd
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shared meals and fires with. If anything, the occasional similarities
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made the whole situation more disturbing -- they put in relief
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everything that had changed when the Warlock had `healed' him. \emph{I
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might not have to stay this way}, I thought. Hope was always dangerous,
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but the thought refused to leave me. Warlock, for all his power and
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learning, had been a mage. Healing was an academic matter to them, a
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thing of physicality and measured energies. Most of what Summer's fire
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had taken from Nauk was not anything the Sovereign of the Red Skies
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could bring back. I was no mage, and the more I learned the more I
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realized the endless depths of what I did not know. But these days I had
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goddesses at my back, and miracles in my hands. What sorcery had failed
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to return might not be beyond the reach of the Night. Winter had been
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match for Summer, hadn't it? And Winter had been consumed. But hope was
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dangerous, and so I had kept my own council.
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I rode into the camp at a brisk pace, having barely slowed from the
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gallop that brought me there, and ignored Robber's malicious cackle at
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the splashes of muddy snow that drenched warriors too slow in getting
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out of my way. There was no missing where General Rumena itself would
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be: at the heart of the camp, within a tall pavilion, twin heartbeats of
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power whispered to me. The Sisters had known of my coming for some time,
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though conversation was difficult if we strayed too far from each other.
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They should have felt the urgency of my purpose, though, and Komena at
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least had served as a high-ranking officer many years ago. Between her
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and Rumena, I was not beyond hope that the six sigils whose banners I'd
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spied had prepared for immediate advance upon my arrival. I reined in
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Zombie with a thought when we arrived in front of the pavilion, sending
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a shiver of Night down my bad leg to make leaping down into the snow
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tolerable. It would ache later, I knew, but what patience I had left was
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better spent on other matters. Special Tribune Robber followed suit in
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his freshly-cleaned leathers and mail, shortsword at his side and
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crossbow at his back. The sapper's bag hanging off his other side was
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still full, the drow not having bothered to paw at the munitions after
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making sure there were no maps or papers.
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The goblin swaggered at my side as I entered the tent, baring his
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needle-like teeth at every warrior eyeing him. Well, he wasn't one of
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the candidates I'd had in mind when I'd considered how to establish
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friendly ties between Callowan forces and the southern expedition. Maybe
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I should even consider this a good thing, I mused. The sooner the drow
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learned that trifling with goblins tended to end up in bear traps and
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mocking laughter the better, and who could get that point across faster
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than Robber? The war council awaiting me inside had few familiar faces
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aside from Rumena's, as it turned out. Mighty Jindrich was the only one
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I knew even remotely -- he'd apparently survived the mess in Great
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Strycht largely on account of being too angry to die -- though names
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were hardly impossible to know considering their sigils spelled them
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out. Room had been left at the low table of obsidian and granite for me
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to join them down on the carpet, but instead of moving to do so I cast a
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look around. In the shadows of the upper pavilion I caught sight of a
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pair of crows. Their dark eyes rested on me, but they did not speak
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either in thoughts or words. The Sisters, it seemed, were currently
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disinclined to meddle. From the corner of my eye I caught Robber looking
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exactly where I was, though from the way his gaze swept over the
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goddesses without slowing I suspected he'd not been allowed to glimpse
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anything.
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``General Rumena,'' I greeted, leaning on my staff. ``Many Mighty. At my
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side stands Special Tribune Robber, an officer in my service. He will be
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seated with us for this conversation.''
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A few of the Mighty seemed displeased, but they stowed that away when my
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stare moved towards them. There was a reluctant bit of shuffling about
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until room for two was made. The sole goblin present's amused smirk was
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a nearly physical thing. He might not speak Crepuscular, but he knew how
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to read a room.
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``Losara Queen, First Under the Night,'' General Rumena pleasantly
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greeted me in Crepuscular. ``And\ldots{} company. Please, claim seat at
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this table.''
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``Our nice drow friends invited you to sit, Robber,'' I translated in a
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mild tone. ``And you're going to be nice to them in return, aren't
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you?''
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``I will offer them every diplomatic courtesy you've taught me, Boss,''
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he smoothly agreed.
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Well, there had to be at least one or two of those. Right? Not willing
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to take the plunge of thinking too deep about that, I sat myself down at
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the table and silently declined an offer of \emph{rodleva}. While a few
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of the drow were sipping at polished cups of the brownish, warm mixture
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I'd never taken to it. That it involved butter made from the milk of a
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creature that looked cousin to a lizard would have put me off even if
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the liquid didn't smell like cheese sent to the gallows and left for a
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week under the sun. Given the finer nose of goblins, no doubt Robber was
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taking it as torture.
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``I won't waste time on idle talk, given the situation,'' I said. ``I've
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had a fresh report from the Special Tribune including the location of an
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army in my service that it less than a day's march from here. I assume
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our scouts have already found it?''
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Rumena inclined its head.
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``That and more,'' it replied. ``There is a force of horse-riders in the
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area that has been hunting our warriors.''
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I frowned. If the Dominion already had cavalry this far behind Nauk's
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back, his situation was worse than I'd been given to understand.
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``Levantines?'' I said.
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``They do not bear the sigils as drawn by the Mighty Shade,'' Rumena
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said.
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Akua had used charcoal and skins to draw everything she remembered of
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Levantine heraldry, which was largely the great bloodlines but still
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much better than the previous nothing we'd had. I flicked at a glance at
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Robber, who was currently engaged in a staring contest with a very
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pleased Mighty Jindrich.
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``Special Tribune,'' I said. ``When you left, did the Dominion have
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cavalry at the army's back?''
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The goblin let out a whistling breath.
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``No,'' he said. ``But it might not be them, Your Majestic Terribleness.
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The riders, did they have bows?''
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I almost translated for Rumena, until I remembered it spoke Lower Miezan
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just fine. It nodded when I met its eyes.
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``Helike cataphracts,'' I said. ``\emph{Shit}.''
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I'd had a conversation with Juniper, once, about which Calernian cavalry
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was the finest. It'd been the knights of Callow in my eyes, of course,
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and the Hellhound had conceded that on open field and charging that was
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the case. She'd noted, though, that there was one other mounted force on
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the continent that would be able to take my countrymen apart. Helikean
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\emph{kataphractoi} were more lightly armoured, as a rule, and unlike
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Callowan horse rarely used lances. They were, however, exceedingly
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well-trained in the use of curved bows meant to be used while mounted.
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There'd been no war between the League and Callow that would see the two
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forces conflict, and Helike as a city-state certainly couldn't afford to
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field as many cataphracts as there'd been knights in the heyday of
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Callowan chivalric orders. But with matched numbers, Juniper had been of
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the opinion that given room to manoeuvre the Helikean horsemen would be
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able to slowly whittle away at Callowan heavy horse while taking minimal
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losses. And considering no other army on Calernia fielded mounted
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archers, there was no mistaking these for anyone else no matter the
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banner.
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``Let me guess,'' I sighed. ``Less than four thousand overall, no
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infantry with them?''
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``That is so,'' General Rumena agreed.
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Well, there was the rest of the Tyrant's army. I'd suspected it wasn't
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the full muster back in Rochelant, but I'd expected what remained to
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stay with the the League's armies. Silly me, not anticipating Kairos
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would send his city's entire cavalry contingent to stir up the pot as
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much as physically possible.
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``All the more reason to link up with General Nauk's forces,'' I finally
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said. ``If we want to drive them off on foot, we'll need Callowan
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crossbow companies.''
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Come night, it was true, a few packs of Mighty could probably tear
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through the Tyrant's horsemen. But then somehow I doubted they'd risk
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that. They'd raid during the day, harass the expedition and retreat
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before a counterattack could be mounted. The drow didn't have proper
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companies, after all, they had tribes. Some of those had archers and
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javelinmen, but getting a cohesive volley fired at the cataphracts would
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take too long -- unless we took all the archers out of their sigils and
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made companies of them, which would be difficult. Not even a year ago
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most of these people had been at each other's throats, and they weren't
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used to taking commands from anyone but their own Mighty. Who'd be quite
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infuriated at having their warriors taken from their command, besides. I
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could see it done, of course. I had the Sisters at my back and General
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Rumena commanded respect from all but the most stubborn. But they
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weren't trained to fight this way, and I was wary of eroding my
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goddess-given authority by using it too much. It was one thing to follow
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a high priestess to war against the contemptible surface peoples after
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the enterprise was blessed by the Night itself, another to remain all
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nice and supportive when said high priestess started chipping away at
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your subordinates. Proof, I supposed, that not even open divine favour
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was enough to get me out of fucking politics.
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I needed the Mighty supportive, if I was to get steer this war to the
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right kind of ending.
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``How soon can we set out?'' I asked.
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``Seven \emph{pridnis},'' Genera Rumena replied without missing a beat.
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``Though we number only six thousand, Losara Queen. Fighting under pale
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light will carry risks.''
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About two hours, I thought. We still had most of the afternoon until the
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sun set, but we wouldn't get there today so that wasn't what he meant.
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Our destination was past the town of Lancevilliers to the south. Even
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accounting for the second wind the drow would get after nightfall, the
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lethargy coming with dawn meant we wouldn't be able to both arrive at
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Nauk's position in Sarcella and be in fighting fit before at least Noon
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Bell. Unless I used a gate, which would get us there in hours but also
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light up the destination for anyone looking. I wasn't ready for the
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Saint and the Pilgrim quite yet -- if I drew them to that battle, I
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might just end up losing more than just the ten thousand under Nauk.
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``We'll have to regardless,'' I said. ``I ordered Mighty Breznej to send
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reinforcements our way before leaving, but we can't afford to wait for
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them. Send back runner with an order to catch up as fast as they can,
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with a warning about the Helikeans.''
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In a silent flutter the crows landed on my shoulders, and there was no
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further talk after that. Open divine favour, I mused, did have its
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perks.
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---
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We got to Lancevilliers before nightfall, not that it made much of a
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difference. The town was half-empty and there was no one in there
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remotely inclined to get in the way of an army. I would have preferred
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to avoid Proceran eyes entirely, but even a snowed-in road made for a
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quicker march than the countryside. I left behind a hundred drow led by
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Mighty Sudone to -- \emph{gently}, I made very clear -- interrogate the
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locals for anything they might now. The southern expedition itself had
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standing orders not to a lay a hand on anyone but soldiers unless they
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were attacked, and to refrain from looting. The first one had been a
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hard sell, though the second surprisingly not. The Firstborn were
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amusingly skeptical that anything of human make could ever rival the
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works of their own kind, and centuries of barter economy meant they put
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little stock in silver and gold. Furniture and furs turned out to be the
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main temptations: both wood and furred creatures were a rarity
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underground. I'd leaned on Rumena to allow for supply requests to be
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lodged with the Mighty when it came to furs, given the weather, but for
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the furniture I had no sympathy. We weren't going to start dragging
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around nice Alamans \emph{bureaux} anytime soon, no matter how nice they
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looked in tents. I'd also laid down a rule against rape, though that'd
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mostly been a formality. Drow hardly even slept with their own kind,
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sexual interest in humans was nonexistent.
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Ivah had once informed me that its kind considered the most visible
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characteristics associated with men and women -- beards, breasts -- to
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be somewhat vulgar. It had said that in a tone implying it was paying me
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a compliment, which when I'd grasped why had achieved something of the
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opposite effect. Sadly, Archer had yet to tire of talking about it.
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Our pace significantly quickened after dusk, even dzulu moving at a pace
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Robber found impressive. Well he'd compared them to goblins, anyway,
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which in his eyes probably counted as a compliment. Not many non-goblins
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would agree, I suspected. Mighty Sudone and its hundred caught up a few
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hours in, bearing wild rumours but nothing of any real use. I used our
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time to brief General Rumena and its cadre of sigil-holders on the
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military happenings of the last few months in Iserre as related to me by
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Robber. How the Army of Callow had ended up stuck between two hosts of
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forty thousand Levantines I covered only the broad strokes of, focusing
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on their current inability to gate out. What had followed was, in
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essence, my marshal trying to pull the wool over the eyes of the enemy
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commanders and partially succeeding. The Dominion had moved to crush
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Juniper, the army to the north throwing a delaying force in the way of
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Grem's legions before sending the rest of its number after her own forty
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thousand legionaries. The southern Levantines had not bothered with such
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subtlety, marching in full battle array towards the Army of Callow. The
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idea was, by the looks of it, to end the Callowan army before turning
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against the other forces in the principality: Grem and the League. The
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Hellhound wasn't that easy to end, though. She'd decisively marched
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south and forced a minor battle against the lower Levantine army before
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she could be stuck in a pincer.
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Reluctant to risk an all-out battle before the northern reinforcement
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arrived and their numbers grew overwhelming, the southern Levantines had
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given ground after the day's battle. My soldiers did have something of a
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reputation, when it came to facing rough odds -- and the Levantines had
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not boasted that. Juniper had then split the Army of Callow into four
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columns of ten thousand and fled under cover of night. Two columns had
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gone eastwards, to slip around the northern Levantines, while the
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remaining two had gone westwards and made sure they were loud about it.
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One of those columns was under General Nauk, the other General Bagram.
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The latter had taken a moment to place -- he was an orc, once General
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Istrid's second-in-command. Until recently he'd been tasked with holding
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Summerholm, but evidently he was moving up in the world. Nauk had been
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tasked with baiting the southern Levantines into following him, while
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General Bagram was to serve as reserve and guard his back in case the
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northern army wanted to try assaulting the western columns. It was
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classic Juniper, I thought when Robber first told me about it. Depending
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on enemy action, she could redeploy and put the hurt to them however she
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wanted.
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If the northern Levantines went after the Hellhound's two columns, she
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only had to keep them marching until Grem's force could hit them in the
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back and the pincer manoeuvre became Callow's. If they continued
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marching to join up with their southern comrades, the four columns would
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escape the noose and join up with Grem's host. If the southern
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Levantines went after Nauk and Bagram, they'd be led in a merry chase
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until Juniper and Grem came down south together to relieve the western
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columns. If they marched east or north, instead, once again the four
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columns escaped disaster and linked up in northern Iserre. It'd seemed
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to work, at first. The last Robber had heard of the eastern columns,
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they had the northern Levantines after them. The problem had come when
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Nauk's column was hit from the back even as the southern Levantines came
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after them. Helikean cavalry had ambushed his rearguard, slowing his
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advance just long enough for the Levantines to gain grounds and begin
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their own cavalry raids. Messages from General Bagram had ceased,
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presumably because cataphracts were killing the messengers, anf his
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column had never come to reinforce Nauk's. What followed was a ragged
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retreat, eventually tumbling into the minor city of Sarcella which fell
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to the column without a fight.
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Sarcella had no walls, most its people had fled because of the roving
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armies in the region and the city garrison had apparently `retreated
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towards a more defensible position' the moment they saw an enemy host
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approaching. Knowing he was in a bad position, Nauk had raised field
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fortifications in Sarcella and held the grounds against a probing attack
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by a Levantine vanguard of around sixteen thousand -- which didn't want
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to commit to more before the full forty thousand were there. He'd
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planned to start the retreat once more after forcing an opening, but
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rumours of a large force marching towards his back had forced him to
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delay and send scouts lest he blunder into a battle he could not win.
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Said force was my drow, which was biting irony. Taking reinforcements
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for foes might very well see a quarter of the Army of Callow slain in
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the heartlands of Procer.
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There were still things unaccounted for. No one knew where the Hells the
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column under General Bagram was. I doubted even Helike cataphracts could
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tie down \emph{two} forces over twice their size, but the Tyrant might
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have more tricks up his sleeve. I'd been inclined to think that between
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reports of my drow army -- an unknown -- and the \emph{kataphractoi} it
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might just be that General Bagram had written off Nauk's column as done
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for and begun full retreat, but Robber had given me the first bit of
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good news in a while when explaining why that was unlikely. Adjutant was
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with the column, nominally as an observer but in fact because he was
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keeping an eye on the two western columns. Tyrant or not, I'd put my
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faith in Hakram coming through. If he wasn't backing up Nauk there was a
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good reason for it. That, or he was on his way already. Gods, let it be
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the second. Even assuming Nauk's forces hadn't been mauled too badly
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holding Sarcella against a second assault, I was only bringing six
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thousand drow as reinforcements. And one goblin, I supposed. None of us
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could be sure whether or not the entire Dominion force of forty thousand
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had arrived yet, or if it was still only the vanguard, but if it
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had\ldots{} Well, under the light of day the Firstborn were disorganized
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light infantry with poor armour and disparate weaponry. Six thousand of
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those in addition to what remained of Nauk's army might not be enough to
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see us through to the night and the accompanying swing of the balance.
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Dawn cost us four hours, to my seething impatience, but I used the time
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to nap and get my hands on a decent steel longsword. I'd fed my
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sword-within-the-staff throughout the night, but I had no intention of
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using it yet. I could wield it as a staff, but polearms were hardly my
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specialty and I was a lot more fragile than I used to be. Best to put
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the odds on my side in every way. We moved out the moment it was
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physically possible to, and by Morning Bell we could see Sarcella.
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It was hard to miss it, what with the way it was on fire.
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