384 lines
20 KiB
TeX
384 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-19-precedent}{%
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\chapter{Precedent}\label{chapter-19-precedent}}
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\epigraph{``The evening before a battle is like an entire nation breathing
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in. Only morning will tell if what comes out is acclaim or
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lamentation.''}{King Albert Fairfax of Callow, the Thrice-Invaded}
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``Liability almost seems like too mild a word,'' Hakram said.
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The words were not voiced as blame or complaint, but as a simple
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statement of fact. Adjutant was assessing a weakness, nothing more. I'd
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known him for long enough by now to take it was it was, and in truth
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Indrani probably had as well. It didn't stop her from snatching his
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handless arm and twisting it behind his back, forcing a heavily muscled
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orc over a foot taller than her to bend over in pain. The sight of it
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was rather absurd: Hakram was on the tall side even for his kind, and
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his shoulders were broader than any human I'd met. Between the set of
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plate he wore like it was made of feathers, the knife-like fangs and the
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bone hand Adjutant looked like he should be able to snap her in half.
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And yet I wasn't even sure he was faking it, when he struggled against
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Archer's tight and sudden grip.
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``I think you meant to say `Archer, you peerless beauty whose appeal is
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known even to orcs, thank you for bringing me this nice army and saving
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my whinging orc ass','' Indrani said.
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There was a pause.
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``I guess Cat helped,'' she conceded. ``And Akua was there, probably.''
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``Such lavish praise,'' Diabolist drawled. ``Do cease, Archer, or I will
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be most terribly embarrassed.''
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The shade's night-black dress rippled down to her feet, legs crossed
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elegantly as she ignored the laws of Creation and somehow managed to
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lounge gracefully in a Legion-issue folding chair. The neckline was low,
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though not overly revealing of the curves below, and held up only on one
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shoulder by some sort of cloth strap circling around her neck. The
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saffron yellow trim along it stretched down casually, bringing attention
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to the long slit revealing a portion of her leg. Now and then I could
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feel Akua's amused golden eyes on me, almost daring me to look.
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Diabolist looked like sin, which I was not unconvinced might be what she
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was actually metaphysically made of these days. Still, this was a great
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deal les subtle than usual: she usually only resorted to this kind of
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jabbing when she was irritated, so clearly being cut out of the
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happenings in Sarcella so she could concentrate on building my well
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still had her ticked off. She'd get over it, I decided, and did not look
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at the smooth dark skin a dainty twitch of her foot was further
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revealing.
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``You're not going to let my arm go unless I repeat it, are you?''
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Adjutant sighed.
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``Guess,'' Indrani smiled, all batting her eyelashes with a coquettish
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smile.
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Being a merciful woman by nature, I allowed Hakram the dignity of
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pretending not to hear while he offered his full surrender. I was still
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looking at the same thing he'd been, the fifty thousand drow outside
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that dawn had chased back into their tents for exhausted slumber.
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General Rumena had agreed that we needed to keep at least a tenth of the
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warriors awake during the daybreak exhaustion, as relying entirely on
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the Army of Callow for protection would be risky, but the logistics of
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that were proving tricky. We had to put up full sigils for the duty, as
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mixing warriors from different ones would cause no end of trouble, but
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it was seen as a punishment duty. Sigil-holders were duelling each other
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to make other drow's sigils hold watch instead, and though the Sisters
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had long backed my order that drow were not to kill each other over
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Night while in my army `first blood' was another story. The sigil-holder
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for the Kuresnik was the weakest of their kind in the southern
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expedition, and its sigil had been forced to hold watch seven days in a
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row before the matter was brought to me.
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The Kuresnik Sigil had been quite literally falling apart under the
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strain, the first proof we'd had that keeping drow awake through the
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early hours repeatedly would have physical consequences. Many of the
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dzulu had taken sick, becoming extremely sensitive to light, and some of
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the Mighty had found their powers weakened even after nightfall.
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\emph{Dawn-sickness}, the Firstborn were calling it now. Rumena had
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stepped in to handle the problem, but ending the duelling entirely had
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proved impossible even for it. Though respected, the Tomb-Maker remained
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a first among equals and not someone wielding the kind of largely
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uncontested authority a general would in the Legions or the Army of
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Callow. I'd eventually lost my patience and told sigil-holders that if
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they intended on pursuing this, it would be by my rules. Matches were
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now arranged by random draw between pairs of sigil-holders, and I'd
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informed them I would personally rip the Night out of anyone who tried
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to further debate the outcome after it was settled. And of anyone trying
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to pull this shit over watches when there were enemy within marching
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distance. Mighty Radenbog had seemed dubious of my ability to enforce
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this, when I made the announcement, so I left it to spend three days
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without so much as a speck of Night to call on.
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After losing two toes to frostbite it was duly humbled when I returned
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its power.
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``Now that Archer has ceased browbeating the Lord Adjutant, perhaps we
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could attend to more pressing matters?'' Akua suggested in a sweet
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voice.
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``That's \emph{Lady} Archer to you, Bad Faith Wraith,'' Indrani replied,
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tone amused instead of heated.
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That detail hadn't escaped Hakram's notice, I saw when I turned back to
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my informal council. I could almost hear the readjustments taking place
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behind that calm face, the questions the orc would keep a lid on until
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it was just the two of us.
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``Akua's not wrong,'' I said. ``We have a few hours until the drow can
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resume march, and at least two of them will have to be spent with the
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generals of the Third and Fourth getting everything in order. I want us
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with a clear course of action before that.''
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Letting the tent's flaps drop, I retreated back into the warmth and
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claimed a folding chair for myself. My staff remained propped up the
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cloth wall, its surface seemingly hazy for the closeness with the coal
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brazier close to hit. I accepted a cup of wine when Akua offered it,
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pleasantly surprised to find it Vale summer wine at the first sip. I
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inclined my head at her in thanks and she smirked back, raising her own
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cup. Indrani preferred plopping herself down atop the table to her
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folding chair, predictably, and Hakram remained standing. Like an
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officer giving report, I couldn't help but think.
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``We're moving to link up with Juniper's columns,'' I said. ``That much
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is not up to debate. But I need some context.''
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I met Hakram's gaze with a raised eyebrow.
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``As in, specifically, what the Hells you and Vivienne were thinking
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marching most the Army of Callow into this mess,'' I said. ``Why not
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just you and the Hunt, Hakram? You don't need forty thousand legionaries
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for an extraction.''
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``We had situations on our hands,'' Adjutant said. ``We were going to
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have to come for the stranded Legions regardless, but complications grew
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quickly.''
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That they'd come for the legionaries Black had led into Procer I had no
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true issue with, as he'd well know. Aside from the utter waste of lives
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involved in letting the Dominion and the Principate run down some of the
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finest soldiers and commanders on Calernia on the eve of all-out war
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with Keter, there'd been other considerations. Like the fact that the
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Army of Callow had brought into its fold two of the old school Legions
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after Second Liesse, and that many of those officers had friends and kin
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in the stranded army. At the very least, mass discontent and desertions
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would have come of us doing nothing. Add to that the fact I'd personally
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given my word to Juniper that I'd intervene if it went bad for them, and
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it would have potentially made for a very ugly brew if Vivienne and
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Hakram had left Marshal Grem and his armies to die. On the other hand,
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there was a difference between putting together a rescue operation and
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fielding what had to be the majority of the Army of Callow in the middle
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of Proceran territory.
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``Malicia is on the move,'' Akua softly said, ``is she not?''
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It did not sound like a guess, but then it never did with her.
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``Indirectly,'' Hakram said. ``High Lady Abreha of Aksum has been named
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the Imperial Governess of the Blessed Isle, and tasked with handling the
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refugee situation.''
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I frowned. I'd spoken with this particular highborn once before, after
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First Liesse. She's offered to back my petition to establish a ruling
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council over Callow if I killed the other Trueblood hostages I'd taken
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from then-Heiress Akua, immediately turning on her supposed allies when
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it became clear I had the upper hand. She'd later become the head of the
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so-called `Moderates', after Malicia began methodically dismantling the
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Truebloods. The old Soninke was treacherous and no doubt just as
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dangerous as anyone capable of claiming a High Ladyship of Praes but I'd
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not considered her anything to be truly worried about. The Empress
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should be stepping on her as hard as she could, and while Aksum would
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still have mostly untouched household troops the High Lady Abreha did
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not have a reputation for military talent.
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``Thalassina was vaporized, which means the Kebdana are done as a
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political entity in Praes for at least one generation,'' Akua mused.
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``Yet that would not be enough to make Abreha Mirembe a true threat.
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Which has fallen, Okoro or Foramen?''
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There was a slight twitch to Hakram's jaw, the only visible hint coming
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through that he was impressed. He shouldn't be so surprised, I thought.
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Diabolist had been raised to drink and breathe Wasteland politics at the
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very highest level from the moment her monster of a mother had her set
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down in a cradle. It wasn't something anyone else on our side would be
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able to ever truly understand, at least not the way she did. Behind the
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golden eyes there were decades of learning about the tapestry of
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enmities and alliances that tied together the Dread Empire's
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aristocracy, pieces of knowledge that no one but those born to that
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hallowed birth would ever be made privy too. Adjutant would have to face
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the same truth I had, about Akua Sahelian: damned as she was beyond all
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redemption, she was terrifyingly \emph{useful.}
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``Foramen,'' Hakram said, eye on me and not Diabolist. ``You tasked me
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to negotiate access to munitions and goblin steel, Catherine, and I
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have. The Kingdom of Callow has recognized the sovereignty of the
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Confederation of the Grey Eyries, including over the formerly Praesi
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city of Foramen.''
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I let out a low whistle.
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``So the Matrons actually raised the rebel flag,'' I said. ``I thought
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they'd wait until the very end, hedge their bets.''
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``We loaned them gold and armaments to incite them,'' Adjutant admitted.
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``Vivienne and I believed it was necessary to implement a containment
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strategy on Praes, after Malicia's wave of assassinations last year.''
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``The dwarven gold,'' I said, coming to the obvious conclusion. ``So you
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did get it.''
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``Accounts were made open to us in Mercantis,'' he agreed. ``We put them
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to good use. Our loans to the Matrons will be repaid in the good we want
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from them, namely their steel and munitions.''
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I nodded. Risky business, but it made a mess for Malicia to handle
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instead of the other way around for once. Besides, we needed the
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munitions if the Army of Callow's war doctrine -- which took much from
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the Legions of Terror's own -- was to remain fully usable. Without them,
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my entire sapper corps essentially lost its teeth.
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``So why does Foramen falling make High Lady Abreha a problem for us?''
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I asked, flicking a glance at Akua.
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``The goblins will have slaughtered every Banu they could get their
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hands on, which means two great families of Praes were destroyed in
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quick succession,'' Diabolist elaborated. ``That will worry the others.
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Nok was sacked, and that will shake the faith of its High Lord in the
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Empress' authority. With Wolof in the hands of my dear cousin Sargon,
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which Malicia should own body and soul -- perhaps even literally -- and
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High Lady Takisha of Kahtan now sharing a border with the
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Matrons\ldots{} Arguably, High Lady Abreha is now the second most
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powerful woman in Praes. Her holdings are untouched, her troops fresh,
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and her influence at its very apex. In olden times, this would be enough
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to make her the Chancellor.''
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``So Malicia sent her to the Blessed Isle, hoping she'd be trouble for
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us instead of her,'' I frowned.
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``I would wager the intent to be cornering High Lady Abreha into acting
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against Callow and having her killed by our hand,'' Akua said, then
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dipped her head at Hakram. ``I assume she reached out privately to
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Lady-Regent Dartwick with assurances that any such actions on Abreha's
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part would be against her own instructions?''
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Hakram bared his fangs.
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``And if we kill her, there will be no retribution,'' the orc said,
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tacitly agreeing to all she'd said.
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I closed my eyes for a moment, putting it together. Then why had the
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Army of Callow come west instead of east, given that we now had an
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ambitious and dangerous High Lady at the eastern border? I didn't
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believe Hakram or Vivienne fools enough to strip Summerholm of its
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garrison for this, or that Juniper would have agreed to them doing so in
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the first, so at least the gate into central Callow would hold even if
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it was attacked by surprise. But what was the long-term solution to this
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mess that would be found in Iserre? They were coming for Grem One-Eye,
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after all, and -- well, that would do it.
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``You want to use the Legions of Terror loyal to Black as a bulwark
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between us and Malicia,'' I suddenly said, opening my eyes. ``Grem and
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his legions to be put up on the Blessed Isle, I'm thinking, with a neat
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supply arrangement the crown would handle the grain part of.''
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``And more,'' Hakram said. ``I have been speaking with the Clans willing
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to take my envoys. There are some who still remember the Steppes nearly
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bucked the Tower's rule, when Nefarious still reigned.''
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``Ah,'' Akua breathed out, sounding delighted. ``Grem One-Eye, the orc
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who might have become the first Warlord since the Miezan occupation had
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he not entered the Carrion's Lord service instead. You mean to encircle
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the Wasteland with greenskin realms, one of them unified behind the only
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orc alive that might feasibly be accepted as lord over all the clans.''
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It wasn't, I decide, that she enjoyed the thought of Praes losing such a
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significant part of its territory. She simply admired the elegant
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viciousness of the plan, surrounding a foe with a net of allied nations
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by calling on ties that Malicia had no claim to supersede.
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``Vivienne's notion,'' Adjutant said. ``She's working on Marshal Grem,
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though unless the Black Knight dies we're unlikely to convince him.''
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``So we can settle the entire eastern border, if it goes well,'' I said.
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``Which leaves us free to rebuild Callow in peace, and strike deals with
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the Grand Alliance. That's still what puzzles me, Hakram. Why so large a
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force here?''
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``'cause they're twisting Cordelia's arm,'' Indrani drawled. ``That
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about right, Deadhand?''
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Her casual tone cut through the conversation, a sudden reminder that for
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all that she'd remained quiet and seemingly bored out of her skull until
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now she'd been paying attention. And as usual, she cut straight at the
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heart of the matter.
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``You were gonna have to send \emph{some} soldiers through anyway to get
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the Legions moving,'' Archer continued, ``and would you look at that, it
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was going to be pretty close to Salia. Enough that she'd have to worry
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about a gate opening right at her doorstep, if you felt like being hard.
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So you thought, why not lean on the First Prince a bit?''
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I stared at Hakram, who looked rather abashed. Or hungry. It'd been a
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while since I'd had to decipher the nuances of orc expressions.
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``Two birds with a single stone,'' he conceded in a deep rumble. ``It
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was to be a quick campaign, with perhaps a few skirmishes to blood our
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fresh recruits. Vivienne would offer a truce to the First Prince,
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conditional on surrendering the Legions to our custody, and along the
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implied threat of our presence we'd offer to return Prince Amadis to
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her. The Grand Alliance's armies would be free to move north unimpeded,
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and at your return you would find our borders secure and a blooded army
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ready to fight against the Dead King. We would have a strong position to
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push for the Liesse Accords in exchange for our assistance.''
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``And Black?'' I asked, tone mild.
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``Not in Proceran hands, as far as we know,'' Adjutant said. ``And
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heroes are not so easily bargained with.''
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It'd been a neat, tidy plan that resolved most of Callow's issues in a
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single stroke. Malicia would be forced on the backfoot, the border at
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the Blessed Isle put in the hands of a famous general personally loyal
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to my father who'd already once ignored formal summons from the Empress
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and the Army of Callow's dangerously green soldiers would get a taste of
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campaigning in preparation for the horror that would be the war against
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Keter. It'd been even cleverer than they thought, as Cordelia Hasenbach
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making a truce with Callow would have allowed her to start buying
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armaments from the dwarves again. The First Prince must be worrying
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about that, right about now. Given the amount of cheap steel their civil
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war would had brought to the surface the Proceran armies should be in no
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danger of running out of armaments anytime soon, but Hasenbach was
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far-sighted enough she'd realize she could not fight a long-term war
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against the Dead King without outside forges propping Procer up. She had
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three choices, broadly speaking: Callow, the League of Free Cities or
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the Kingdom Under. Given that two of them were barred as long as she was
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at war with me and the Tyrant was pulling the strings of the third?
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She'd see the writing on the wall. It'd been a solid plan, I had to give
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them that.
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Only now instead of what they'd planned, the Army of Callow was split in
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half within Iserre while Proceran and Levantine armies surrounded it,
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having no way to take a fairy gate out until I got to it. We'd lost
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soldiers, the Grand Alliance had lost soldiers, and while all this chaos
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spread the Tyrant of Helike had been orchestrating his own schemes for
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his still-inscrutable purpose. Somewhere in the countryside my father
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was in the hands of the Grey Pilgrim, who would be drawn to any decisive
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battle between my armies and the Alliance's sure as dusk's coming. Add
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to that the way Masego had gone missing after witnessing sorcery
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horrifying enough to level most a city and a war fleet, promptly gotten
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his hands on the ruins of Liesse -- quite possibly the most dangerous
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magical weapon of our age -- and that he must be too hurt or confused to
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reach out to any of the Woe. This, I thought, was going to be a bloody
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mayhem of sprawling death and treachery. The kind that determined the
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path a continent was going to take in the years that followed.
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``Well,'' I finally said. ``This is going to get a little tricky.''
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``This is going to get a little tricky,'' Indrani cheerfully repeated.
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``Now \emph{there}`s the title of your memoirs, Cat.''
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``I've always been partial to `it got worse','' Hakram offered, the
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filthy traitor.
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``Murder ensued,'' Akua tastefully suggested.
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I glared but she just stared back at me, all smirking and insolence.
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``You're all useless,'' I complained.
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``Hakram's memoirs,'' Indrani grinned.
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I gestured obscenely at her, which only had her chortling harder.
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Finally remembering I'd had a cup of wine on the table during this
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entire conversation, I snatched it and watered my parched throat. Gods,
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I'd missed actually being able to \emph{enjoy} things.
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``All right, then,'' I said. ``Let's try to make a plan that doesn't end
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up dooming the entire continent.''
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``Cheers,'' Akua Sahelian smiled, raising her glass in answer.
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