441 lines
22 KiB
TeX
441 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-congregation-iii}{%
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\section{Interlude: Congregation III}\label{interlude-congregation-iii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``We sowers of ruin, straight-backed and proud,}
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\emph{Told them arrant, and arrantly kept our vow:}
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\emph{`No bargain is there, between hunter and flock;}
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\emph{No peace between the rabbit and the hawk.'}
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\emph{We sowers of ruin, reaped all that was sown,}
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\emph{For as Mieza's sons toppled our waning thrones,}
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\emph{They arrant said: `no bargain now, o lords of war,}
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\emph{For no peace can be, between spear and boar.'}
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\emph{We sowers of ruin, the reapers that were reapt,}
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\emph{Sing the elder song still, for we must not forget:}
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\emph{No bargain is there, between hunter and flock,}
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\emph{No peace can there be, between lash and orc.''}
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-- ``Ruin, Sown'', a spoken verse in Kharsum attributed to Yngvild
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Bittertongue, chieftess of the Red Shields
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\end{quote}
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Lord Yannu Marave of the Champion's Blood felt his scalp prickle. The
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last time the Lord of Alava's instincts had been screaming this loudly,
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he'd come within a breath of having his crush skulled by a
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\emph{culebron} whose scales he'd failed to notice among the leaves of
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the Brocelian. Yannu had been a young fool, back then, but raised his
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shield on impulse and so avoided dying to a whip of the tail so strong
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it put hammer blows to shame. He could not help but wonder if there was
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not kinship between the dangers of then and now. A fool was once more
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about to step on the tail a hidden serpent and die for that mistake.
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That he now stood at the heart of a great army instead of journeying
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alone into the deeper barrow-woods to bring honourable deeds to his
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Blood made little difference. As Yannu's station had risen, so had the
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dangers accompanying it.
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``They're camped here,'' Moro of the Brigand's Blood said, tapping his
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finger. ``On the other shore of the river.''
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The heir to Vaccei had gained a few fresh scars, fighting at his
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mother's side against the Marshals. What had already been a hard face on
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a hard man was now frightful to behold, the red marks left by goblin
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steel running jagged through the umber-brown and basil-green face paint
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of his line. The effect was strikingly attractive, though Yannu was
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careful not to let his gaze linger. He was over a decade older than the
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other man, after all.
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``The river's called the Odelle,'' Princess Rozala Malanza noted,
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frowning as she bent over the table to have a closer look. ``As I
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recall, the source is further east and the depth shallow. It'll be
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frozen over.''
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The Princess of Aequitan had been a pleasant surprise, the Lord of Alava
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thought. No Alamans intriguer, that one, but a hardened Arlesite
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commander who had already fought the greater of their foes on the field
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not so long ago. Wild rumours still spread about what had taken place as
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the Battle of the Camps, but not so wild that the Peregrine had not
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confirmed some of the lot. The Black Queen, if she had truly returned,
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would be a fearsome enemy. The part of Yannu that belonged to the
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Champion's Blood was eager at the thought of measuring his prowess
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against hers. The part that was the Lord of Alava was wary instead, for
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it had fought against the Marshals for months and learned they had sharp
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talons indeed.
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``If they have ended their march, then they must believe their eastern
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columns are close to joining them,'' Yannu said. ``We may be facing as
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many as sixty thousand eastern legionaries, along with however many
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there are of these grey ghosts.''
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``Between our hosts, we have eighty thousand,'' Princess Rozala said.
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``And if Lord Tanja makes his way as swiftly as promised with Her
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Highness' southern army, that's another sixty thousand hitting them from
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the other side of the river.''
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``Likely double the enemy's numbers, unless the Black Queen is somehow
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fielding an army that leaves no tracks in the snow,'' Moro of the
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Brigand's Blood said.
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Word from Sarcella and Akil Tanja put these grey devil-ghosts at less
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than twenty thousand strong, though it was said some could wield strange
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sorceries. Yet they were also said to be no stronger than men, blade in
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hand, and just as mortal. Poorly armed as well, more tribes than
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companies.
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``We should strike at the Hellhound's camp before the rest of her
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divisions arrive,'' Princess Malanza said. ``Best for all of us we face
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that army \emph{without} Catherine Foundling in it.''
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``There would be great honour in taking the Black Queen's life,'' Moro
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told her bluntly.
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The look in the younger man's eyes spoke of esteem lowered for shying
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away from a worthy struggle. Yannu would withhold judgement instead. The
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Peregrine and the Regicide had promised they would take the field
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against the Arch-heretic of the East should she bare her blade, but the
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Lord of Alava still remembered the stories from the rise of the Barrow
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Lord. The warring of Bestowed was never kind to their lesser, and the
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Black Queen was said to be one of the greatest living villains. Even in
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death she might wreak great slaughter.
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``The lucky ones died when the lake fell on their heads, at the Camps,''
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Princess Rozala said, tone calm yet not less sharp for it. ``Those that
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drowned, though? It wasn't as quick. They had long enough to realize
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there would be nothing to save them.''
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The dark-haired princess smiled pleasantly.
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``Which would you prefer to happen when you turn comes, Levantine?'' she
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asked.
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The heir to Vaccei twitched, no doubt reaching for one of the many
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poisoned blades on his person, but the Arlesite's hand was already on
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the pommel of her sword. It was never very far from it, Yannu had
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noticed, and she seemed uncomfortable when it was.
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``Enough,'' he said. ``Moro, you would bare a blade on an ally when the
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\emph{Peregrine} is among us?''
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The man's lips pressed together in disquiet, as well they should. The
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Pilgrim might not be at this council, but the incarnate soul of Levant
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had made it clear as rain to all of them that his blessing had been
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given to the Grand Alliance. To dishonour the living inheritor in Blood
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and Bestowal of the Dominion's father would be\ldots{} Even should the
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Peregrine not take Moro's life, the sheer weight of the shame might see
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the man slice open his own throat.
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``There is nothing to be gained from threats, Princess Rozala,'' Yannu
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said, eyes then moving to the Proceran. ``We are to fight side by side
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on this field and more to come.''
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``Apologies, Moro,'' the dark-haired woman curtly said, dipping her
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head.
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The heir to Vaccei returned the courtesy, just as curtly. It was for the
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best that Lady Itima had not been the one given slight to, for the Lady
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of Vaccei would not have left it at that.
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``I stand by my words nonetheless,'' the Princess of Aequitan said. ``We
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must strike now, before they gather.''
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``I am reluctant to engage without our full might,'' Yannu admitted.
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``The armies of the League are marching towards us, Princess. If they
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are to try our flank while we face the Marshals then I would have all
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our soldiery arrayed against the enemy.''
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Rozala had, amusingly enough, inquired if the Tyrant of Helike had sent
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envoys to make a bargain with Yannu's host not long after she joined her
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army with the Lord of Alava's. He'd replied that was indeed the case,
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and that those envoys could easily be found: the corpses, after all,
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were still hanging from the personal banner of the Lady of Vaccei. Lady
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Itima's line had faithfully kept to the hatred the Vengeful Brigand had
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held against foreigners, and not hesitated to slaughter any sworn to the
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likes of Kairos Theodosian.
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``If we get them to retreat from their camp, we can seize it and close
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ranks with Lord Tanja's force there before the League arrives,''
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Princess Rozala suggested.
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``Or their returning columns could find us engaged assaulting a
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fortified camp and spring an ambush before Tanja is close enough to
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reinforce,'' Yannu pointed out with a frown.
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Her insistence puzzled him, for she should well know that the Marshals
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were capable of plying nasty tricks against opponents made sloppy by
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haste. Had she not fought the Hellhound herself and come out the lesser
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captain? The Lord of Alava had lost hundreds to a vicious charge of
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Callowan knights before learning to keep his own horse close to his
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skirmishers, and would not go after his foe so brashly again.
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``If we lose the initiative we risk this entire campaign stretching out
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for months,'' the dark-haired princess reminded him, sounding
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frustrated.
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\emph{There it is}, the Lord of Alava thought. It had been a rare
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occasion for all the great captains of the allied armies to hold common
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council, for both Malanza and he were aware that old enmities would see
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blades bared should close company be kept. Yet on the two occasions it
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had, Yannu had studied the princes and princess of Procer. Seen the
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difference, the subtle currents that ran among them. That Princess
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Rozala was first among equals was clear, beyond even her right of
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command, and that the Princess of Lyonis was her appointed warden was
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just as clear. What had been more interesting, to Yannu of the
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Champion's Blood, was that even within the Princess of Aequitan's
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faithful there was more subtle division. The princes of Creusens and
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Cantal were closer in her trust than any other, and both of those men
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had\ldots{} telltale marks. Louis of Creusens had pulled a knife without
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hesitating on a servant when she'd approached him from behind, halfway
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to her neck before he stopped himself. Arnaud of Cantal spoke loudly and
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often, but sometimes also fell into long silences where he moved not a
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finger. As for Rozala Malanza herself, Yannu had noticed when seated she
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never crossed her legs. She wore leather boots, and always kept their
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thin soles squarely against the ground. Like she was feeling for
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tremors.
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All three of these, the Lord of Alava had been told, had gone north to
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the Principality of Cleves to fight against the armies of the Dead King.
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``I was told that the lines in Cleves held,'' Yannu said, watching the
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Proceran closely.
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Princess Rozala's jaw clenched.
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``When the sea pulls back before the coming wave crashes, the shore has
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not \emph{held},'' she replied. ``We bought a month, Lord Marave, maybe
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two. Our defences will break sure as summer's turn if we wait longer
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than that. You have not\ldots{}''
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Yannu saw her lips moved in a whisper, counting out in Tolesian. Only
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after reaching twelve did she resume speaking.
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``In Callow I fought fae and dead and villain's wroth,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan finally said, voice tight. ``Believe me when I say that was a
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\emph{child at play}. The Dead King comes for us all, Yannu of the
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Champion's Blood. And every day we waste warring against mortals the
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Enemy gains a deeper foothold.''
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Eyes hard, the dark-haired princess matched him gaze for gaze.
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``I've had to claw back that shore from the Hidden Horror's clutches
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once before,'' she said. ``Gods have mercy, but I do not know if there
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are enough soldiers left in Procer to do so a second time.''
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It wasn't the determination he saw in those dark eyes that moved the
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Lord of Alava. He has seen will in others, and smashed it to bloody
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pieces when it stood in his way. Mortals failed, mortals broke: a moment
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of resolution was just that, a moment. It always passed, and more often
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than not pain and steel hurried that passing. Neither was it the fear,
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for fear was an old friend to him. Yannu's Blood was meant to strive for
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fearlessness, for the same reckless courage that was the Valiant
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Champion's mark, but he had never forgot that day in the Brocelian where
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a splintered shield might have been a splintered skull. Audacity without
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patience, without watchfulness, was just another way of being frivolous
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with lives. Fear was the voice that kept your eyes open when bravery
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became arrogance, and he would not part from his even for a chance at
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Bestowal. No, it was the heartfelt belief Rozala Malanza had for her own
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words. She genuinely believed that the bell might toll for the
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Principate if they lingered here too long in Iserre.
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``Then we march to battle,'' Lord Yannu of the Champion's Blood
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conceded.
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``It'll be ten days to reach the camp,'' Moro said, stirring from his
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silence with hooded eyes. ``If we hurry.''
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``Then we hurry,'' Princess Rozala grimly replied.
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---
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They had been, Hakram had to admit, shrewdly outmanoeuvered.
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Juniper's dispersion scheme had been solid, and it had certainly worked
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for the initial stretch of the march. The Third Army had baited the Lord
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Tanja's host towards the east while the Fourth followed along parallel
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lines further north in Iserre, both keeping lines of communication open
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and keeping watch for a sudden march south by Lord Marave's army. What
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messengers the Fourth Army had been able to receive from the Hellhound's
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own two columns headed westwards had told them that the Levantine army
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under Lord Marave was pursuing them while leaving Marsha Grem and his
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legions to gather themselves. Until then, all had proceeded according to
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Juniper's predictions: all she had to do was join with the Legions of
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Terror and force the Levantines back with a minor battle, to create a
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gap. Then the Third and Fourth Army were to shake off their own pursuit
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by Lord Tanja and hurry through that gap, assembling the entire allied
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force together. From there they could begin a fighting retreat to the
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northern passage, where the garrison under Duchess Kegan of Daoine would
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be awaiting them.
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The opinion of the general staff had been that, considering the League
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of Free cities was invading from the south and the Dead King hitting
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northern Procer in force, the Legions and the Army of Callow would not
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even be hounded all the way through the retreat north. After the Grand
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Alliance saved face by `driving out the eastern invaders', they'd been
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predicted to focus their efforts on containing the League of Free Cities
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while sending everything they could spare north. It would have been a
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campaign cleverly salvaged from the unexpected blow of losing the fairy
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gates when already committed deep in Procer, one fought with minimal
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losses while cleanly getting out the majority of the Legions of Terror
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under Marsha Grem.
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Instead, the Fourth Army suddenly found its ability to send messengers
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north to coordinate with the Hellhound cut when a detachment of Helike
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\emph{kataphractoi} began roving north of it. The messengers south sent
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to warn Nauk and the Third Army about League interference never made it,
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and were found with arrows in their corpses by General Bagram's scouts.
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Adjutant had pushed for the Fourth Army to immediately move south and
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join with Nauk before marching north together, and the Fourth's general
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agreed. One day into the march, however, a messenger form Juniper
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stumbled bloody into the camp with cataphracts in close pursuit. The
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First and Second Armies, the man said, had been taken by surprise and
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scattered when the Grey Pilgrim joined with Lord Marave and struck with
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miracles. The messenger had been an old subordinate's of General
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Bagram's, and the seals were in order. Gritting his teeth, Hakram had
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backed the decision to hurry and relieve Juniper -- without a cohesive
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army to gather around, the legionaries of the First and Second would be
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hunted down like animals by the Levantine cavalry, scattered across the
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plains and vulnerable.
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Seven days in, the messenger began bleeding out of the eyes and choked
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on his own tongue. The priests from the House Insurgent saw nothing
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wrong with him besides the obvious, but the ranking Senior Mage did when
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the corpse was dissected. A small stone inscribed with runes was
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dislodged from where it'd been ebbed at the bottom of the man's spine,
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and examination under ritual confirmed the magic involved was illusory
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in nature. One of the few Soninke among the mage cadres eventually noted
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the runes had patterns in common with Stygian sorcery, and then it all
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fell together. They'd been had, the messenger was some poor bastard the
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Tyrant of Helike's men had captured and tinkered with the memories of
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discretely enough neither priests nor mages had caught it until too
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late. A few years back, Adjutant thought to himself, the trick wouldn't
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have worked. But the Army of Callow had expanded wildly beyond its
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capacity to field experienced mages, and the native Callowan
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practitioners that'd been brought in to try to remedy that were amateurs
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compared to Praesi warlocks. And Stygia's Magisterium, as the success of
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the deception made clear.
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Debate raged among the general staff of the Fourth Army, after that, for
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most of an evening. Some argued that if the purpose of the ruse had been
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to isolate the Third Army, it likely had been already destroyed by now.
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A strike by the cataphracts would likely slow down Nauk's ten thousand
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enough that the Levantines would surround and destroy them utterly.
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Those same officers argued that marching south now would essentially
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mean throwing away another quarter of the Army of Callow for Levant and
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Helike to defeat in detail. Others suggested that it was the Fourth Army
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itself that was the target, and the ploy's true nature was that the
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northern Levantines had let the Hellhound go and were instead marching
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south to pincer the Third and Fourth while Helike kept them all blind.
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Some even theorized that First and Second Armies truly had been broken,
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and this was all the Tyrant's trick to lead them to dismiss the notion
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and hurry south while the rest of the Army of Callow was annihilated. It
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was bloody chaos, and not for the first time Hakram wondered at how
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young their highest rung of officers was.
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The veterans brought in from the Legions that'd joined after Second
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Liesse were keeping it all functional, but there were too many officers
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who'd gone only through rough training camps before taking up their
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commission. But General Bagram was no greenhorn, and neither was Hakram
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himself. The debate ended with the decision to link up with the Third
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before the situation was further assessed, though careful scouting would
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be necessary in case the Third Army truly was destroyed and it was a
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Levantine force south of them. The Fourth Army moved out in good order,
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and a mere three days in ran into a Helike ambush. Somehow they'd
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avoided three lines of scouts, and that smacked to Adjutant of either
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sorcery or Named interference, but the result was brutal no matter the
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means employed. Three hundred dead, twice that many wounded, and the
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\emph{kataphractoi} retreated with less than a score casualties on their
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side. The entire Fourth Army was boiling with fury at the humiliation,
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but it was only the first of many assaults to come. On its entire march
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back the way it'd been tricked marching, the army was relentlessly
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harassed by Helike. Night and day assaults, at irregular intervals, and
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in the end General Bagram had to order a fortified camp raised every
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evening or risk losing entire companies.
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It was slowing them down even further, forcing them to end the march
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earlier in the day and exhausting the legionaries for the effort. Hakram
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suspected that might very well be the point, and by now was halfway
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convinced Nauk would be either up to his elbow in Levantines or days
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dead by the time they arrived to reinforce the Third. If any of it was
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even left. The anger of that stayed with him, and chased away the need
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for even what little sleep his body still required. His hours he spent
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either in talks with the general staff or out on watch with the
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legionaries. It was maybe halfway to Midnight Bell that he saw the glint
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of armoured riders in the distance, before even goblins caught it, and
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he immediately sounded the alarm.
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``Shit,'' Captain Mower cursed, peeking over the edge of the palisade,
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then added a very absent-minded `sir'.
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The old goblin saw the same thing, and did not gainsay Adjutant when he
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ordered for crossbow companies to be brought to the fore. And
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half-companies of regulars too. The cataphracts had yet to try a charge,
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but that did not meant they would refrain if they saw an opportunity.
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``So, what's it going to be tonight,'' Hakram said, teeth clinking
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softly. ``Fire or exhaustion?''
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``Bet you it's fire, sir,'' Captain Mower said. ``Been too long since
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they tried those pitch arrows.''
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The goblin spoke the word `pitch' with the kind of utter disdain that
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would make a High Lord proud. He was a scout officer, not a sapper, but
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in Hakramès experience that'd never stopped Eyrie get from looking down
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at the unprofessional savagery of people not using proper goblin
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munitions for this kind of work.
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``They gain more to less risk by forcing us to wake in the middle of the
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night then hitting us during the day at peak exhaustion,'' Adjutant
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said. ``The surprise with the scorpions killed a few dozen last time
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they got close to the palisade.''
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``They won't fall for that twice,'' Captain Mower sighed. ``Almost makes
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me miss Akua's Folly, at least the wights weren't mounted.''
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``I'd even settle for Dormer,'' Hakram gravelled. ``And the bloody fae
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could fly.''
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``That's the Black Queen's service for you,'' the goblin grinned. ``It
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ain't the Army of Callow if we're not fucked a different way every
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time.''
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There was a ring of inexplicable cheers from the rest of the line at
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that, as the captain had raised his voice to carry. Catherine's
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popularity with goblinkind never ceased to unnerve him. Robber had once
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told him it was because she was `the closest thing a human can get to a
|
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Matron, but you know the \emph{fun} kind of Matron not the other kind,
|
|
and it sort of helps she'd probably murder the other Matrons given a
|
|
chance, although let's be honest so would the other Matrons'. It'd been
|
|
surprisingly coherent, given how much drink his friend had in him by
|
|
that point. Not that Robber ever answered these kinds of questions by
|
|
anything other than blatant lies unless he'd been plied with liquor and
|
|
petty crime first. Pickler wasn't any more of a help, as he'd been the
|
|
one to inform her of the phenomenon in the first place. She'd never
|
|
noticed.
|
|
|
|
``Well now, \emph{that's} new,'' Captain Mower suddenly said.
|
|
|
|
Hakram's attention snapped back to the present. Behind him the thin
|
|
stripe of regulars was already standing at attention while the crossbow
|
|
companies formed up behind them and checked their gear. That much was to
|
|
be expected: they'd had a harder teacher than mere drills to get them to
|
|
do it all quick and clean. What wasn't expected was the way the Helike
|
|
cataphracts had stopped about a hundred yards away from the palisade.
|
|
They were -- wait, that wasn't a Helikean. There was a rider between the
|
|
enemy and the camp, alone. Adjutant's heart stirred, but what brought it
|
|
home was the sudden shouts of surprise coming from deeper into the camp.
|
|
A wooden post was snapped out of the frozen ground and alarm sounded
|
|
again as long wings began beating. A frankly chilling whinny sounded
|
|
into the night and Zombie the Third took flight, the wooden post she'd
|
|
been tied to swinging under her hanging by the bridle.
|
|
|
|
``Not new at all, Captain,'' Hakram Deadhand grinned, all teeth and
|
|
malice. ``\emph{She's back}.''
|