430 lines
22 KiB
TeX
430 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-12-relief}{%
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\section{Chapter 12: Relief}\label{chapter-12-relief}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``After Isabella the Mad was appointed to the command of the hosts
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of Procer to turn back the forces of the Tyrant Theodosius, the First
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Prince asked of her when she expected the war to be brought to a
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successful conclusion. `It should take,' she famously replied, `about a
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hundred battles.'\,''}
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-- Extract from `The Banquet of Follies, or, A Comprehensive History of
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the First League War' by Prince Alexandre of Lyonis
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\end{quote}
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It was around half an hour before Noon Bell that we got close enough to
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Sarcella to get a decent idea of what was happening inside. Well, aside
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from the fire. That one had been pretty obvious even from miles away,
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which in my surprisingly extensive experience of setting fire to things
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wasn't a good sign for the people in the area. As it turned out the city
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of Sarcella itself was, well, almost offensively Proceran. How anyone
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could bother to shell out coin for an elaborate ring of ogre-tall
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statues and arches around their city but not a proper curtain wall was
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beyond me. Oh, sure, whoever that tall bald man in furs with a sword was
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might be nicer to look at on a sunny day, but that was the kind of
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thinking that got you invaded by the Legions of Terror. The damned
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things were granite, too, which I vaguely remembered being one of the
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cheaper stones floating around Principate markets. Bastards hadn't even
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been able to afford marble or limestone, had they? There was still a tax
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on granite back from the days of House Fairfax, I was pretty sure,
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though it wouldn't have been applied in over forty years -- trade with
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Procer had understandably hit something of a low point after the
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Conquest. I supposed the saving grace of the whole affair was that
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granite statues would at least take more than a single glancing
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trebuchet shot before breaking.
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Still, for all that at least Sarcella was slightly more defensible than
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I'd expected. It'd been raised on a few lazily-sloped hills, so there
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was some incline to work with, and unlike the flammable nightmare maze
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that had been Rochelant this city had a few paved and relatively
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straight avenues for troop deployment. Some parts of the outer city had
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houses of wood and stone clustered so tightly together they were
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impassable, a wall in fact if not in name. I couldn't quite get a look
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at the furthest reaches of Sarcella, but it looked like it'd been the
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same parts of it burning for most of our march: with a little luck, the
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flames had run into row stone houses or a ditch of some sort. I really
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hoped it'd been accident, to be honest, because if it wasn't odds were
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it'd been Nauk giving the order and if that was the case I might be
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responsible in a broader, metaphysical sense. Well, it \emph{was} my
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army, but aside from that I doubted Rat Company officers had been so
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prone to tactical arson before they'd come under my command. Aside from
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Robber, anyway, who in these matters did not count since he was both a
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goblin and a sapper -- the moment he'd chosen that career track at the
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War College he'd grown beyond saving. Regardless, most of the
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southeastern corner of the city was a hellscape of flames and smoke but
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it wasn't spreading much further out. Which had done absolutely nothing
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to prevent the inhabitants of Sarcella from fleeing in a panic.
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That was even more obvious than the fire, in a way, because the
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Procerans were crowding the road out Sarcella like a massive flock of
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startled birds. There were at least five or six thousand civilians
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streaming out of the city, with more behind, and they were moving at a
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slug's pace. Few of them had carts to carry their possessions, and those
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that did got stuck on the muddy road out more often than not. The
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overwhelming majority were carrying everything they could of what they
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owned in bags or tied on their backs, a roiling exodus of people and
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goods. Some were even dragging furniture, with a least one very nice
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\emph{armoire} put on planks and dragged by two middle-aged men.
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Probably the most expensive thing they owned, I mused. The river of
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fleeing Procerans filled the road in full, moving forward sluggishly,
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and as my gaze lingered on the \emph{armoire} I realized why they'd been
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allowed to drag even furniture out of the danger. General Rumena caught
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up to me after I reined in my horse ahead of the first fleeing
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civilians, our six thousand warriors still further behind.
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``This is madness,'' the old drow said, eyes contemptuous as it watched
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the civilians. ``Why was this allowed to happen?''
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``Because Nauk's tactical acumen has improved,'' I replied. ``Watch the
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city's sides, Tomb-Maker.''
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He caught what I had quickly enough. Levantine light cavalry out in the
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snow, at least a thousand on either side. Not massing for an assault, at
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the moment -- if I had to guess, there'd be crossbows and spikes
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awaiting them at every street large enough for a charge. But if I were
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the enemy commander, I'd keep them there to force those crossbow
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companies into remaining there where they weren't shooting at my
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soldiers. Maybe strengthen the cavalry numbers when things got heated on
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the main front enough that a simultaneous charge on both sides could
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serve as the killing blow for the entire Callowan army. Having to watch
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both sides as well as the city's back, where the avenues where the
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largest and most open, would have been a waste of soldiers. So I was
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thinking Nauk had encouraged the Procerans to flee with their
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possessions, neatly filling that space with scared civilians the
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Levantines couldn't ride down without starting the kind of major
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diplomatic incident that'd send cracks going down the Great Alliance. I
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was honestly impressed with my general. He'd never been a fool, but his
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cleverness had always been a military one. It now seemed his thinking
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had expanded to other theatres. Unfortunately, at the moment his clever
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trick was also preventing us from reinforcing him quickly. I weighed
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down my options in silence.
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I could probably scatter the crowd with some application of Night, but
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should I? That'd be leaving a hole in Nauk's defensive perimeter, most
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likely. There'd be enough of a risk I'd have to leave drow behind to
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hold that territory, and considering the size of those cavalry
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contingents it would have to be at least two thousand warriors. Light
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horse or not the Firstborn just weren't used to facing down cavalry
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charges, and they lacked the bows, pikes and discipline to be naturals
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at turning them back. Slipping in through one of the flanks would take
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longer, though. Maybe an hour or so, and I wasn't sure I wanted to take
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that risk without a better notion of how the fight for the city was
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going. There was no point in arriving neatly if the delay cost us the
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battle. And that the fight \emph{was} going, there was no doubt about
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that -- I could make out the command horns and the faint sound of
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screams and steel even from where I sat. There was nothing quite as
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catastrophically loud as a hard battle, was there? Clenching my fingers,
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I spit to the side.
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``Rumena, pick out two thousand warriors,'' I said.
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``Will you be spitting on them as well, First Under the Night?'' the old
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drow drily asked.
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``That one's a bit of a stretch,'' I replied without missing a beat.
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``Careful with those, you know your back's not what it used to be.''
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``At least one of us should live to reach old age,'' Rumena smoothly
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retorted.
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Damn it. Was it really too much to ask to get the last word against it
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even once? The fact that my bloody goddesses were quite literally
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crowing in the back of my head at this most recent of defeats only made
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it worse. My eyes flicked ahead. It wouldn't be long before the first
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fleeing Procerans arrived in shouting distance, but I'd have the drow at
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my side before it came to that. I yelled at Rumena to fetch me Robber
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while it was at it, watching it stroll away to carry out my orders. I
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looked up at the noon sky, that vast spread of blue without a single
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cloud to temper the glare of the sun. It was good fighting weather, I
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thought. Mild for a winter day, and the snow might thaw a bit if it kept
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up. Twin shadows flickered into sight, gliding down with lazy grace, and
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I turned my eyes back to the Procerans as the crow-shaped slivers of
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godhood landed on my shoulders. They ran their metaphysical fingers down
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the spine of my thoughts, partaking of my intent.
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``First time I ever saw Black use the trick, I wasn't sure it was one,''
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I mused. ``The second time, though? I promise myself I'd make it my own
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one day.''
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``Not a subtle tool,'' Andronike said.
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``Yet versatile,'' Komena opined.
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We left it at that, for now. General Rumena came back holding a wiggling
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Robber by the scruff of the neck -- impressive, considering it was day
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and my Special Tribune still had his armour on -- before offering him up
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like some kind of furious green cat.
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``Get on,'' I said, cutting in before the goblin could complain.
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``There's a war on, Tribune. Rumena, tell our warriors to stick close to
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me and not spread out.''
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``As in all things your guidance is paramount, Losara Queen,'' it
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replied.
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I detected the faintest hint of sarcasm in that, due to my unparalleled
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courtly sentivities.
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``Wait, you speak Lower Miezan?'' Robber hissed out. ``You prick, you
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pretended you-''
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I cleared my throat, and with ill-grace the goblin scampered onto the
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back of my mount. I patiently watched until my six thousand drow formed
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into a rough column. The vanguard of the fleeing civilians had finally
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noticed our presence and distant shouts in Chantant and Tolesian
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sounded. Some angry, some curious, some afraid. I could have tried to
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engage, but to be frank I didn't have the time to be gentle about this.
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``Follow,'' I called in Crepuscular.
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My staff of ebony rose, and I reached for the Night. The Sisters helped
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me shape it, refine my intent and cut away the impurities until all that
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was left was \emph{fear}. I felt Robber stiffen behind me, then almost
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defiantly loosen his limbs and grip. Zombie started at a gallop without
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further ado and the drow followed behind me.
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With screams of blind terror, the inhabitants of Sarcella parted like
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the sea.
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It was a simple enough working that maintaining it wasn't too much of a
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strain, especially with the guidance of the Sisters, but I was
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noticeably tired by the time we reached the tall arch that was the
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broadest entrance into the city. There'd been a few incidents making our
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way down the road, civilians who reacted to even supernatural terror
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with aggression, but they were beaten down and thrown to the side
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without any deaths involved. One drow was nicked by a wildly flailing
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sausage knife and was loudly mocked by the rest of its sigil for the
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rest of the walk, but that was the closest thing to a casualty we
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incurred. To my approval, the sight of my army approaching by the
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largest road into the city was met with hastily assembled palisade and
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at least half a hundred crossbows. From atop my horse I could even see
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messengers running further in to ask for reinforcements. I rode up ahead
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of the drow, allowing the fear to die and my shoulders to loosen. I felt
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like I'd run a footrace -- in a metaphysical instance where both my legs
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were still in good shape, it should be said -- but I was tired and not
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exhausted. Tired I could work with. It was old hand to me. The Sisters
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took flight before we were hailed, more interested in taking a look at
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the killing than staying around for the formalities.
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``Close enough, stranger,'' an officer called out from atop the
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palisade. ``Identify yourself. This city has been seized by the Kingdom
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of Callow, in the name of Her Majesty Catherine Foundling -- are you
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friend or foe to her?''
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I cocked my head to the side. A mop of blond hair could be made out from
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under the helmet, and that was definitely a Liessen accent tainting the
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hail spoken in very shaky Chantant.
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``Yes, Boss,'' Robber murmured, sounding utterly delighted. ``Are you
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friend or foe to \emph{Her Majesty}? I think a case can be made for
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both. Tough call to make, really.''
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``You're talking to her, lieutenant,'' I called back in Lower Miezan.
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``Split those palisades and take me to General Nauk.''
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``Come off it,'' the Liessen laughed. ``You're way too short. If you're
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the bloody Black Queen then I'm Empress of Procer.''
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Blowing up the palisade was not an acceptable response, I reminded
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myself. It was \emph{my} palisade, technically speaking, so it was
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doubly beneath me to do so. Robber shook convulsively behind me, trying
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not to cackle out loud. There was some talk coming from out of sight,
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behind the palisade, then a goblin's head popped over the edge. I
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squinted. I'd seen that one before, though I couldn't put a name to the
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face. He was one of Robber's officers.
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``Captain Borer,'' the ingrate gargoyle behind me provided, still
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snickering.
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``Open the way immediately,'' the goblin ordered. ``Your Majesty,
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welcome back.''
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I inclined my head in thanks. The Empress of Procer turned white as a
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sheet. I barked out orders in Crepuscular for the drow to follow me in
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good order, then put Zombie to a trot as the wooden fortifications were
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dragged open. Captain Borer, unlike his commanding officer, snapped a
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textbook-perfect salute when I approached. There were less than a
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hundred soldiers here, most of them crossbowmen, though I suspected with
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the runners I'd seen move out earlier that was about to change. I
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glanced at the still-pale Liessen lieutenant, who'd joined the throng of
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officers gathering around me, and cocked an eyebrow.
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``Your Highness,'' I drily said. ``What a surprise to find you here.''
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He forced out a shaky laugh, but ended up choking on it for trying to
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swallow nervously while keeping it up.
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``Who's in command here?'' I asked.
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There were lieutenants and sergeants here, but no one any higher up the
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ladder. Unusual.
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``That would be me, Your Majesty,'' Captain Borer replied. ``I am the
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sole captain of this front.''
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\emph{Not a good sign}, I thought. Not only was the goblin a sapper, he
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was part of Robber's cohort -- which was detached from the usual chain
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of command, by my personal authority. Sappers were usually passed over
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in favour of the closest same-rank officer when it came to combined
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commands, which was hinting at a severe officer shortage.
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``You're relieved, Captain,'' I said. ``Behind me are foreign troops
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from the Empire Ever Dark, to be considered auxiliaries for the duration
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of this battle. They'll be holding the area in your place. Robber?''
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The goblin leapt down with unnatural agility, landing with a flourish.
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``Boss?'' he asked.
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``Gather your full cohort, then join me wherever the general staff has
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set up,'' I ordered. ``Captain Borer, I'll need you to appoint a liaison
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to the drow. At their head is General Rumena, who'll be advancing deeper
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into the city with four thousand infantry. Have it led at a location
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allowing for easy deployment to the fronts.''
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``I'll see it done, ma'am,'' the goblin saluted.
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There was a shudder of whispers through the assembled officers, looks
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were cast at the grey-skinned warriors still advancing towards the arch.
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The drow in the front ranks were looking back, looking distinctly
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unimpressed by the first human city most them had encountered.
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``Merciful Gods,'' a tall, dark-haired man with sergeant stripes said.
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``\emph{Drow}. I thought they were stories.''
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``Stories start from something, sergeant,'' I amusedly said. ``And our
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friends came out from the Everdark to fight on our side. Do pass the
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word along that they can be rather touchy, though. It'd be best if a
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little distance was kept.''
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The stares I got at that made me rather uncomfortable. It was just a
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handful of officers, I thought, already part of my army anyway. And
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still I wondered if there'd be as much awe on their faces, if they knew
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how badly botched and misguided my journey into the Everdark truly had
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been. I doubted it. All they saw was old stories with strange weapons
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and eerie eyes come to swell our ranks. Shaking my head, I dismissed the
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thought.
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``I'll need someone to guide me to the general staff,'' I said. ``Is
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General Nauk holding command from there, or has he gone to the front?''
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The awe was gone, whisked away in a heartbeat.
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``Ma'am,'' Captain Borer quietly said. ``General Nauk no longer holds
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command. He was killed last night when the assault began. Legate Abigail
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is the current commanding officer.''
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I was in front of my soldiers, I couldn't show weakness. And still I
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closed my eyes. \emph{Breathe in, breathe out. Control. You can grieve
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when the city's no longer burning, when your people are no longer
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fighting.} He'd not been the same man I had called my friend, but I'd
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come to hope\ldots{} \emph{Hope is always dangerous}, I
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remembered\emph{.} My eyes opened and my voice came out calm.
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``I will need a guide, regardless,'' I said. ``Let's get to it.''
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I pulled my hood over my head, then Zombie impatiently stepped into the
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avenue and away from my officers. Thirty heartbeats later, I had my
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guide and I rode the city with dried eyes.
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Pittance that it was, it was all I could afford to spare.
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---
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The high command for what I'd been informed was currently being called
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the `Third Army' -- presumably Juniper's four separate columns each
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having been granted such a number -- was clearly buckling under the
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weight of its responsibilities. It'd been a mansion, once, though
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clearly a wealthy merchant's and not a noble's as it was near the heart
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of Sarcella and not one of the more rarefied quarters. The location had
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been well-chosen, close to most of the arteries of the city and so easy
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to get messages to and from. I was ushered through a parade of wide eyes
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and gasps, until I reached what must have been the war room. It was at
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the very highest of the mansion, with broad windows overlooking the
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parts of the city either currently fought over or burning down. My
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attention, though, lingered on the fact that there were too few people
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here. A few aides, a few messengers, mages and hornblowers. But the
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actual officers? Less than ten. There were more tables loaded with
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scrolls and maps than there were people above the rank of tribune in
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here, which was stark statement as to the state of the Third Army. The
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presumed commanders saluted tiredly when I entered, obviously warned in
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advance, but I noticed the gaze of several brighten at the sight of me.
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I offered a smile, and turned to the only person in the room wearing a
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legate's insignia.
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Legate Abigail, I realized with a start, was younger than me. Barely
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twenty, by the looks of her. I'd come across her once or twice before
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Akua's Folly, and later Juniper mentioned her to me before as the woman
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who'd drowned the incipient riots in Laure through strategic use of the
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royal palace's cellars. She'd had a field promotion to legate after
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that, so she'd have the authority to keep the capital in order, but I
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was surprised the Hellhound had chosen to confirm the promotion
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afterwards. At most I'd expected her to move up from senior tribune to
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commander, after an actual legate relieved her. Were we really that hard
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up for high-ranking officers? I set aside the worry for now, looking
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over the younger woman discretely. Her black hair was slightly longer
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than Legion regulations allowed, but acceptably so for a foreign
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campaign. Sunburnt cheeks, watery blue eyes and a delicate nose. She had
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dark rings around her eyes like she hadn't had a good night's sleep in
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much too long, quite visibly exhausted. She was taller than me, I noted,
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but then who wasn't?
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``Your Majesty,'' the legate croaked out in that thick Summerholm
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accent. ``Gods, am I glad to see you.''
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The general staff around her really was absurdly sparse, and what
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remained was in rough shape. There was a senior mage -- Soninke, it'd be
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years before any Callowan was fit for that command -- with a face whose
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rosiness betrayed recent mage healing and a staff tribune missing her
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right arm up to the elbow, but that was it. No senior sapper, no kachera
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or supply tribune. Two commanders, and one large orc tribune, but that
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was no proper general staff. What the Hells had happened here?
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``Legate Abigail,'' I replied with a nod. ``Our drow allies found
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Special Tribune Robber's tenth, and I hurried a march here with a first
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wave of six thousand reinforcements. I'm beginning to suspect the
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situation is worse than what was described to me.''
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A few mirthless smiles bloomed at that.
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``It's a bloody mess, Your Majesty,'' Legate Abigail said. ``General
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Nauk swatted their first probe on Sarcella and the vanguard drew back,
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so we figured they were waiting for the rest of the army. But then they
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attacked last night, completely out of the blue. We think some noble
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showed up, riled them up for it.''
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``Are you saying Nauk and the rest of his senior officers were lost on
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the frontlines?'' I frowned.
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``Them Dominion priests hit a meeting of the general staff,'' she
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replied. ``Lanterns, I think they're called. One moment it's night, then
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it's bloody Light everywhere and most the room is dead. I was looking
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into a supply discrepancy so they didn't get me and Oakes-''
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``Legate Oakes,'' the orc at her side provided in a gravelling voice.
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``-Legate Oakes was walking the perimeter, so he didn't get hit
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either,'' Legate Abigail seamlessly adjusted.
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I hid my amusement at the interaction, and the habitual ease it had come
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with.
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``You're senior to this Legate Oakes?'' I asked.
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``By a day, ma'am,'' the woman ruefully replied. ``Marshal Juniper said
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we were to serve under General Nauk and Legate Jwahir for proper
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blooding.''
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She paused.
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``I guess we did get that, in the end,'' she darkly said.
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Well, wasn't this a mess. It wasn't like I had another commander to pull
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out of my sleeve -- Rumena was arguably the most veteran, but it had not
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familiarity with Legion tactics and was needed to keep the drow orderly
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besides -- so she'd have to do. I could take command myself, sure, but
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if this was as bad as it sounded like I'd be needed in the thick of it.
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``Then you've just received a field promotion, General Abigail,'' I
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grimly replied. ``Congratulations. Now tell me how deep into the dark we
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are and, while we're at it, why the Hells this city is on fire.''
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