772 lines
35 KiB
TeX
772 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-6-equivalent}{%
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\chapter{Equivalent}\label{chapter-6-equivalent}}
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\epigraph{``Fairness is the refrain of the lazy, the inept, the heroic.
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Anyone unwilling to stack the deck and murder the judge to seize victory
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has no place wielding any real power.''}{Dread Emperor Callous}
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I'd seen enough presage boxes by now I could tell who it was from the
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Workshop that'd made them. The Blind Maker's carved enchantments were in
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beautifully fluid cursive, like the High Tyrian they derived from, and
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they felt warm to the touch. The Bitter Blacksmith -- the heroine, not
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her villain brother at the Morgentor -- chiselled in hers with swift,
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impersonal precision while avoiding flourishes. She had little taste for
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such work and always sought to finish it as quickly as was possible
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without compromising quality. The Hunted Magician, whose work was being
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held up in front of me right now, took to the craft with the same amount
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of cryptic paranoia that was his signature in everything else. Though
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the symbols he used were some sort of ancient Mavii runes and like much
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of that ancient people's work they were as much art as function, within
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them the villain carved entirely unnecessary and unrelated symbols.
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Masego had told me that carving those signs in any order but what it
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must have originally been done in would make the box fail to function,
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sounding about as impressed by this as he'd been miffed.
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The runes on the side, which I fancied to look like a wheel woven from
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winds when taken in all at once, remained inert even when brought close
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to me. The mage from the Third Army -- a lieutenant, by the stripes --
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tested Akua as well before drawing back with a sharp nod at the rest of
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the force surrounding us. She saluted me, pointedly not looking at Akua
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more than she needed to. Blonde, that woman, I noted. Liessen did tend
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to be fair-haired.
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``Your Majesty,'' she greeted me in Chantant. ``Lieutenant Eve Baldry,
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tenth company. I'm currently under loan to Captain Raphael Twice-Drowned
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of the Ardeni Guard.''
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Fantassins, then, not proper Volignac foot. The ten soldiers who'd come
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along with the Lanterns and the lieutenant had undeniably had that look
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about them, it must be said. It wasn't a question of equipment, not
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anymore, as Cordelia had with my enthusiastic blessing begun offering to
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pay the mercenary companies with good steel the moment trade with the
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Kingdom Under opened again. Nowadays fantassins were not significantly
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better or worse off in equipment than Proceran regulars, though the
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personal armies of the princes and princesses still boasted superior
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arms as well as training. But where regulars and sworn men wore the
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colours of some royalty or another, fantassins wore marks just as garish
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as the names of their leaders and companies. As a rule, the more
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outlandish the names and colours the longer they'd been in the mercenary
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trade, which meant the eye-watering shades of orange and green on their
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feathered helms were a good sign.
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Any soldiers wearing colours that bright in a war against Black's
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legions would get a goblin arrow in the throat before the campaign's
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first night was over, but the Principate had fought a different sort of
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wars in the days before the Dead King. The Ardeni Guard was not familiar
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to me as I knew only the most distinguished of the companies in Hainaut,
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like the Grands Routiers and Hermosa Foxes. I'd taken Klaus Papenheim's
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solid advice and left Princess Beatrice Volignac to handle the
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fantassins along with southern Procer process as a whole, which meant I
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was not forced to entertain half a hundred swaggering captains for meals
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regularly but also that I was only passingly knowledgeable about that
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particular slice of our forces. I cast a curious glance at the Lanterns
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-- faces painted white and gold and built like they'd spent the better
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part of their lives in a shield wall instead of a temple -- but got no
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introduction out of them, only respectful nods. The formal priesthood
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the Dominion answered to only the Gods Above, in principle, and not even
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the Holy Seljun could command something of them should they be
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disciplined. In practice they tended to be receptive to requests from
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the Blood, though not to the point of outright subservience. The only
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person I'd ever seen the warrior-priests take a knee for was the Grey
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Pilgrim.
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To me they offered respect but no great deference, and to use them on
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the field I usually needed to pass the order down to them through
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Aquiline or Razin. Inconvenient, but given how brutally effective they'd
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proved against undead I'd keep my complaining down to a pittance.
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``Well met, lieutenant,'' I replied in Lower Miezan. ``I don't suppose
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you could tell me what the lights above are about?''
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``Above my paygrade I'm afraid, ma'am,'' the blonde mage said. ``I heard
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there was a scuffle, but my orders didn't come with a briefing attached.
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Captain Raphael might know, though, they're in charge of the gate for
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the first night rotation.''
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I frowned. I was more inclined to head directly to the heart of the camp
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and interrogate someone in charge than stop by for a chat with a
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fantassin captain, but the casualness of the mage's reply was surprising
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me. She did not seem concern in the slightest.
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``Muster wasn't sounded?'' I asked.
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``It wasn't,'' Lieutenant Baldry confirmed.
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Akua hummed out in amusement.
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``The White Knight has returned, hasn't he?'' she asked.
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The Callowan lieutenant turned a cold glare to the shade, long enough to
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acknowledge a question had been asked before turning to me to answer it.
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``Lord White returned about half a bell ago, ma'am,'' Lieutenant Baldry
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agreed. ``He's got another two Named with him, though I can't say I
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recognized either.''
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I could have said I was warned of another's coming by the sound of
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footsteps, but that would almost have been untrue. The sound of boots on
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earth was a small thing compared to the almost aggressive loudness of
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what the approaching soldier was wearing: there was a good coat of mail
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somewhere under there, and a cuirass, but it was almost hard to see
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under the green-and-orange striped vest that went down to their thigh,
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which were in turn covered by bouffant pants going down to the knees
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that added bright blue to the palette. None of the\ldots{} frills,
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though, seemed to hinder movement: the pants were tucked into good steel
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greaves, and the vest was close enough to the body it shouldn't get
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caught in anything when a sword was being swung. The long dyed hair,
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half orange and half green with two small stripes of blue, was the
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finishing touch to the ensemble, framing an almost comically
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unremarkable face. The fantassins parted for them, which allowed me an
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easy guess.
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``Captain Raphael?'' I asked in Chantant.
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Gods, let them be the captain. I was not sure my eyes could physically
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take the amount of garishness it would take for the captain to
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out-peacock this one.
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``We meet once more, Black Queen,'' the Proceran boldly replied. ``A
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strange turn of fate, that would see us fight side by side when we were
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once enemies.''
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I smiled blandly, wondering if I was meant to have any clue at all who
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this was beyond some mercenary captain. Still, it wouldn't do to let
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anyone know I was confused.
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``Yes,'' I gallantly tried. ``That is true.''
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At my side Akua's stance stiffened the slightest bit, which was the
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Sahelian equivalent of uproarious laughter at my expense. All right, so
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maybe it'd not been the finest of my illusions.
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``Twice-Drowned?'' I prodded, cocking my head to the side.
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``When the grounds collapsed at the Battle of Trifelin, I fell into an
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underground well,'' Captain Raphael smiled. ``Along with a few hundred
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pounds of stone. Yet it was still more pleasant an evening than being
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subjected to your tender mercies at the Battle of the Camps, Your
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Majesty.''
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Trifelin was, from what I recalled, a major defeat that Princess Rozala
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had been inflicted in the early months of her defence of Cleves the
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first time she'd been charged with the defence of the principality. It'd
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been a hard setback that could have turned into a proper disaster had
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heroes not held the rearguard of the retreat. Impressive they'd survived
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that mess when standing in the thick of it, much less the implication
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they'd been on the field at the Camps when I'd opened the gate into
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Arcadia and dropped a lake on the crusaders. \emph{Someone to keep an
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eye on}, I decided. Survive enough scraps by the skin of your teeth,
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these days, and a Name might not be too far ahead.
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``You may rest assured, captain, that when lakes next fall you'll be on
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the side welcoming it,'' I said, tone droll. ``And as it happens, I've
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questions you might have the answer to.''
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``It would be my pleasure, Your Majesty,'' the captain replied with a
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sweeping bow.
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I took a step forward, Akua falling in behind, only to found Captain
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Raphael had offered me their arm. \emph{How long has it been since
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someone tried that?} I wondered, baffled and just a little charmed. I
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took the offered courtesy and we walked towards the closest watchtower,
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where a brazier was being used to roast meat in a way that would have
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seen a legionary of my armies harshly reprimanded for. Fantassins,
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though, had different standards of discipline.
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``I have heard that the White Knight returned,'' I began.
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``Indeed,'' the captain agreed. ``Along with the Valiant Champion and a
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girl from parts unknown.''
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I forced my face to remain calm, my fingers to remain unclenched. The
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Valiant Champion, huh. Hanno was usually cleverer than this when
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bringing strays home -- that I'd not skinned that so-called
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\emph{heroine} alive and made a cloak out of the leather was already
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showing great restraint, as far as I was concerned. The Champion was an
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ally in the fight against Keter, and so would be extended all courtesies
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and privileges that the Truce and Terms required of me. Yet I'd rather
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eat my own hand than offer a thimble more to that woman, and that was
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not an enmity that would ever be buried.
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``And it was Lord Hanno who ordered the use of the warding array?'' I
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asked.
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Raphael nodded and leaned in close, lowering their voice.
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``I am told there was some manner of infiltration by the Dead King,''
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the captain said. ``It was quickly dealt with through use of the sorcery
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that lies at the heart of the camps, though that section still remains
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closed.''
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``Casualties?'' I bluntly asked.
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It wasn't that Neshamah wasn't capable of subtlety: he was, and often
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the costs of missing his quieter schemes were the stuff nightmares were
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made of. On the other hand, even if Hanno had ridden in with providence
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at his back to unmask the Hidden Horror's latest ploy this seemed too
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sloppy of an attempt to feasibly have lasted on the long term. Which
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meant this wasn't an infiltration attempt, it was strapping goblinfire
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to a sapper's back and sending him running at a gate. The Dead King was
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always willing to trade lives or resources for corpses, even at
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seemingly ruinous rates.
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``I know not, Your Majesty,'' Captain Raphael said. ``Though I was told
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the central camp was closed by the Deadhand's order, so your man ought
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to have the answers you seek.''
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He usually did, truth be told. I'd come to sincerely believe that the
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Empire's occupation of my homeland might have led to widespread chaos
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and rebellion within a few years, if Scribe hadn't been at my father's
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side. Like Black, who'd never settled in a Callowan city to rule the
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kingdom from, I'd been forced to discharge a great many responsibilities
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from a glum succession of army camps, small towns and fortresses --
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without Hakram keeping everything organized even as we moved, it would
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have all gone to shit with remarkable haste. Even now, he tended to know
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more about what was going on in the camp than I did.
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``Then I will seek him in turn,'' I said. ``I thank you for the
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conversation, Captain Raphael.''
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Taking the hint, they adroitly extricated their arm from mine and
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offered another gallant bow.
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``Until fate deigns to reunite us, Black Queen,'' the mercenary smoothly
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replied.
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While I wasn't always the, uh, sharpest when it came to picking up on
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this sort of thing I was pretty sure I was being flirted with. One hand,
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well, \emph{Alamans}. They'd try to seduce the Choir of Contrition, if
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the angels showed enough leg. On the other hand, it was kind of
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flattering. It'd been a while since someone without a Name had tried
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their hand at that with me, even so superficially. It put the slightest
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of springs to my step as I left the fantassin captain behind. Akua did
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not say a word, though she did begin walking at my side instead of
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remaining a step behind as we headed deeper into camp.
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``Hakram's on board with whatever the White Knight pulled, sounds
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like,'' I murmured.
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Reassuring, that. I'd come to put a surprising degree of trust onto
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Hanno's shoulders, since the Peace of Salia, but it was not the kind of
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trust that went without questioning or disagreement. Adjutant, though, I
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trusted implicitly. I might as well begin questioning my own limbs,
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should I not. If he'd backed this there was a good reason it for it.
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``The Sword of Judgement has proved a capable ally,'' Akua conceded.
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``And unlike some of his more rambunctious colleagues, he is not one to
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resort to collateral damage when there are other approaches to be had.''
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That'd been a pleasant surprise, since while heroes tended to be careful
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with the lives of others they tended to be a great deal less so with
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equipment. Even when that equipment was very, very valuable. It was a
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cold hard truth that there were artefacts and siege machinery in this
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camp that were worth more than soldiers, and though that was an ugly
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thing to face it came with being a professional soldier. I could send
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for reinforcements, if what was lost was lives, but there were only so
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many wardstones to distribute across all the fronts and they were not
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easily replaced.
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``He's a solid one,'' I grunted in agreement.
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I wouldn't have been able to pull off the Terms and Truce without him,
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that much couldn't be denied. There'd been heroes that simply would not
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have been willing to deal with a villain if he'd not leant me the weight
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of his seal of approval, and that would have led to deaths. Even just a
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few of those would have made it seem like I was trying to conscript
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Named into my service, which would have gone\ldots{} badly. Tariq still
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had a lot of pull with heroes he'd helped or saved when they were
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younger, that much couldn't be denied, but as word of my raising him
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from the dead at the Graveyard had spread so had rumours that he was
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somehow under my influence. He was no longer the unquestioned
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grandfatherly fount of wisdom he'd once been to his side, though his
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record over the last two years had certainly begun redeeming the dip in
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his reputation.
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The avenue leading to the heart of the camp was guarded by checkpoints
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at regular intervals and it was not long before we found our first one,
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along with a proper company of my soldiers. The captain commanding it
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knew about as much as Captain Raphael had, which wasn't much, but she
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sent a runner ahead of us along before providing us with a full line in
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escort. I did not need more defending inside my own camp, but twenty
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legionaries at your back did tend to expedite most conversations. We
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continued deeper in, the sparse conversation I'd shared with Akua
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petering out entirely. I spoke with my soldiers instead, learning with
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pleasure that the line's lieutenant was an old hand from the Fifteenth.
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He'd been from the second wave of Callowan recruits, after Three Hills
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and Marchford -- when Black had essentially emptied the Legion training
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camps in the kingdom and tossed all those green men my way.
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``Lost a finger at Dormer,'' Lieutenant Oliver told me almost eagerly.
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``From one of them Immortals critters, after the Hellhound sent us up
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the hill.''
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``They were hard bastards, even for fae,'' I said. ``Summer's finest.''
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``Shit name though, no offence Your Majesty,'' the veteran snorted, and
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I grinned back. ``After Lady Dartwick nicked those banners, they were
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pretty moral when the gobbos from ninth company unloaded. Finger got
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fixed up good anyway, one of them Soninke wizards from Afolabi's legion
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put it right back on.''
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``Not even a scar?'' I teased. ``All the best war stories have scars to
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go with them.''
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``Aye,'' Lieutenant Oliver mourned. ``It tingles a little when there's
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magic in the air, I know it, but these fresh pups from after the Folly
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don't believe me. Say it's all in my head.''
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``Tell them you have me convinced, next time,'' I suggested.
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``That ought to make a few of the little pricks piss their armour,''
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Lieutenant Oliver gleefully said, then remembered who he was speaking
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to. ``Um, Your Majesty.''
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I snorted, clapped the man's shoulder.
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``I've spent more time on a saddle than a throne, soldier,'' I reminded
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him amusedly. ``By all means, make the little pricks piss their
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armour.''
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That got a howl of laughter out of the lot of them, and it was in a
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better mood that I hit the second checkpoint. Where, looming tall above
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Osena sworn swords, I found the key to getting answers about what had
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happened in the camp tonight. No amount of polish would ever remove the
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scorch marks Summer flame had left on Adjutant's plate, though as time
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passed he'd come to like the look. It was distinctive, as was his height
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even among his own kind. The black, fur-like hair nowadays going down to
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his jaw on the sides was another distinction, as it was far longer than
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either Legion or Army regulations would allow. Still, there was a reason
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he was not known as the Blacksteel: the most distinctive part of all was
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the fleshless hands, one of sheer bone and the other cast in pale
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spectral light. Hakram Deadhand had earned his sobriquet twice over, and
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\emph{Dead the Hand} remained a favourite to sing among my soldiers.
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A few lines had even been added after his scrap with the Baron of
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Thorns, as his brutal dismantling of the Revenant while reciting orc
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poetry had made something of an impression. Hakram strode through the
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Levantine armsmen, either not noticing or caring how a few of them had
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to hastily move out of the way or been bowled over. His broad face
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looked relieved.
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``Catherine,'' he greeted me, arm taking arm in a legionary's salute.
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``I'd wondered if you were ambushed. Beastmaster knew little, but it
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seemed likely.''
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``We were,'' I darkly replied.
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Good mood gone the way of mist under morning sun, I fixed a calm look on
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my face before dismissing my legionary escort with a few kind words. By
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the considering look on Hakram's face, he'd picked up on the general
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vicinity of how badly my night had gone.
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``So were we,'' Adjutant added in a low voice as we passed through the
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checkpoint.
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He settled at my right side, so naturally I almost didn't notice, while
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Akua took my left. Not an unapt summation of the last two years, I
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thought.
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``What happened?'' I quietly asked. ``Our defences shouldn't allow for
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infiltration, Hakram. We've put the stones in every gate, any
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enchantment he hits our people with should be disrupted.''
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``Ghouls slipped in,'' the tall orc told me. ``A new kind, that can-''
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``Shapeshift,'' Akua murmured.
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Hakram shot her a considering look and she offered back a slight nod.
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``Your escort,'' Adjutant told me, and it was not a question.
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``We have the bodies in the Night,'' I said.
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A halfwit would have put one and one together, given that much to go on,
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and Hakram was the very opposite.
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``I'm sorry,'' he said. ``Beastmaster said he was just a boy.''
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My finger clenched around my staff until the knuckles turned white.
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``Sometimes we just lose,'' I softly replied, through teeth I did not
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remember clenching.
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It fit, though. I felt like my entire body was clenching every time I
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thought of the kid I'd had to put down because of my own sloppiness.
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``I'll be seeing what duties I can shake loose, to avoid repeating the
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mistakes that led do that loss,'' I forced out.
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As if by coincidence, his flank leaned against mine. It was the most
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comfort either of us would allow him to give me in public but, trivial
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as it might seem, I was shamefully grateful for it.
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``The presage boxes should have caught them,'' I said, and if my voice
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was a little choked all three of us pretended not to have heard it.
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``We've found a weakness in our defences,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``The
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Order of Broken Bells.''
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Akua caught on before me, somewhat unsurprisingly. Generations of her
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forbears had cut their teeth on this very obstacle, after all.
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``Their armour,'' the golden-eyed shade said. ``The same hymn carvings
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that disrupt active sorcery prevented the ghouls from triggering the
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boxes.''
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought. The weakness we could fix, the corpses we could
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not. I'd lost even more knights, by the sounds of it.
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``Talbot?'' I asked.
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Losing him would be a setback. Not only was he the highest-ranking noble
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officer in my armies, the man had essentially put the Broken Bells
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together from scratch. In both politics and war, his death would be a
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loss keenly felt.
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|
|
``Getting his eye fixed by the White Knight's fresh helper,'' Hakram
|
|
replied. ``The ghouls were caught out before they could finish what
|
|
they'd been sent for.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed, relief at the Grandmaster of the Broken Bells
|
|
surviving being shoved at the back of my mind.
|
|
|
|
``Assassinations, but that's nothing new,'' I said. ``Wouldn't have been
|
|
worth revealing another breed of ghouls for. They went after the
|
|
wardstones.''
|
|
|
|
``They meant to contaminate the lesser array in the Third Army camp,''
|
|
the orc confirmed. ``They were caught out by the White Knight, but the
|
|
alarm being rung only made them strike out aggressively.''
|
|
|
|
``Losses?'' Akua asked.
|
|
|
|
``Light,'' Adjutant said. ``Twenty dead, half again that wounded. They
|
|
aimed for high-ranking officers but got caught before getting to them.
|
|
The wardstones from the Third's camp were hit with some sort of sorcery
|
|
that Senior Mage Dastardly called `poisonous'. He had some difficulty
|
|
elaborating on this, but was adamant it was a problem.''
|
|
|
|
I felt Akua gaze's fall on me.
|
|
|
|
``Go,'' I said. ``I'll want a damage assessment as soon as you can
|
|
deliver.''
|
|
|
|
She bowed, more for the eyes peeled on us than anything else, and
|
|
without another word melted into the nearest shadows.
|
|
|
|
``So the array purge was used to flush out the `poison','' I said, then
|
|
flicked a glance at the lights in the distance.
|
|
|
|
It'd take more than one purge to have that much sorcerous aftermath left
|
|
behind.
|
|
|
|
``Whatever shapeshifting trick it is the ghouls use, it is of a nature
|
|
similar to enchantment,'' Hakram replied.
|
|
|
|
And the sorcery sent flowing out by a purge screwed with enchantments,
|
|
which was why I disliked using those in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``It unmasked them,'' I mused. ``Clever.''
|
|
|
|
Sounded like Hanno, too. He preferred helping people help themselves
|
|
rather than sweeping in on a white horse and fixing everything before
|
|
disappearing into the sunset. Hopefully that hadn't cost us a few months
|
|
of vulnerability to the Dead King's tricks, though. Gods, the vermin
|
|
wards better be fucking holding at least. The atrocities Neshamah could
|
|
commit with undead rats and bugs were not something I ever intended to
|
|
suffer through again.
|
|
|
|
``I ordered the central camp closed as soon as we learned, but they were
|
|
already inside,'' Hakram told me. ``They eat and impersonate people at a
|
|
distressing rate, Catherine. We think the Barrow Sword and the White
|
|
Knight's followers cleared them out, but we're keeping the camp closed
|
|
until everyone with access to the stones has been cleared with both
|
|
Light and sorcery.''
|
|
|
|
I grunted in approval.
|
|
|
|
``Full audit of the ranks come morning,'' I said. ``I don't care if they
|
|
grumble, there'll be no risks taken with something that dangerous. And
|
|
for the Order-''
|
|
|
|
``Talbot already offered that every knight should dismount and submit to
|
|
testing by Light whenever they enter camp,'' Hakram told me.
|
|
|
|
``We'll see if something less clumsy can be arranged,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
I had clever enough people in my employ, and if nothing else I could
|
|
have Razin and Aquiline cut their teeth on the logistics of it. After I
|
|
shoved them back into the Pilgrim's tender embrace, they'd hold their
|
|
commands without my looking over their shoulder. They needed to be
|
|
prepared to deal with situations like this on their own. This deep in
|
|
the camp and with Adjutant at my side, we went through the last
|
|
checkpoints without anyone trying to stop us. Even though the situation
|
|
had, in principle, already been handled I still wanted to at least speak
|
|
with Hanno. Besides, since he'd brought in another Named I would prefer
|
|
having a look at them before too long. Best not to have one of those
|
|
wandering camp without being able to put a Name and face to them, even
|
|
if a name wasn't always forthcoming. The last ring of defences was
|
|
manned entirely by the Army of Callow, which did tend to end up with
|
|
those duties by virtue of both being my personal army and the best
|
|
organized of the troops. When the Iron Prince's own troops were around
|
|
it was another story, but Prince Klaus was far from here, holding the
|
|
northern defence line in our absence.
|
|
|
|
I got to hit three birds with one stone when the captain in command
|
|
informed me that the White Knight was currently in the same tent where
|
|
Grandmaster Brandon Talbot was being healed, supervising the work being
|
|
done by the healer he'd brought in. It wasn't a long walk from there,
|
|
and I knew my way around the camp well: a few moments later I was
|
|
parting open the tent flap and passing it to Hakram before slipping into
|
|
the tent. Within a heartbeat of that I saw a half-naked Brandon Talbot
|
|
try to rise to his feet, to the vocal if inarticulate protest of the two
|
|
heroes in the tent, but he only stopped when I sharply gestured for him
|
|
to sit.
|
|
|
|
``Don't blind yourself on my account,'' I said. ``My queenly honour will
|
|
withstand your staying seated.''
|
|
|
|
``Much obliged, Your Majesty,'' Grandmaster Talbot replied.
|
|
|
|
He was careful not to move his head this time, having been levied a
|
|
heavy frown by the healer in front of him.
|
|
|
|
``The nerves were almost healed,'' said young girl mourned. ``We'll have
|
|
to start over, Sir Brandon. Please remain still, if it pleases you.''
|
|
|
|
The tent flap closed behind Hakram, who had to bend his neck the
|
|
slightest bit to avoid his head touching the ceiling of it.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' the White Knight greeted me with a smile.
|
|
|
|
``Hanno,'' I replied, feeling my lips quirk the slightest bit.
|
|
|
|
It really was good to have him back. Even just sitting on a crate in a
|
|
leather jerking, keeping an eye on his duckling, the dark-skinned man
|
|
felt like an island of calm in a chaotic sea.
|
|
|
|
``I would greet you properly, Your Majesty, but I cannot stay my hand,''
|
|
the young girl apologized without turning.
|
|
|
|
And she was \emph{young}, I saw. Scrawny and that dirty tunic she wore
|
|
had seen better days, but for all that there was no denying the pulsing
|
|
potency of the Light she was wielding to help my knight.
|
|
|
|
``You do me more courtesy by healing Brandon Talbot than a hundred
|
|
curtsies would scrape together,'' I said. ``White Knight?''
|
|
|
|
``Introductions can be seen to when her attention is not elsewhere
|
|
demanded,'' Hanno said. ``Though I wager you've other questions. I've
|
|
news to give you, regardless.''
|
|
|
|
``Do you now?'' Hakram gravelled from behind me.
|
|
|
|
``Not so urgent as to need an intermediary, Adjutant,'' the White Knight
|
|
told my second, unmoved.
|
|
|
|
The relationship between those two was best described as cordial
|
|
dislike, though I'd never quite managed to put a finger on the source of
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
``What happened, Hanno?'' I asked, cutting through the tension.
|
|
|
|
``After stumbling across one of the ghouls, I did what was necessary to
|
|
flush out those in hiding before major damage could be done,'' he said.
|
|
``Yet this was part of a greater scheme, Catherine. I've been speaking
|
|
with Prince Klaus, and before coming here I met with the Peregrine.''
|
|
|
|
My brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``Tell me,'' I ordered.
|
|
|
|
``The Order of the Red Lion confirmed that the dead were massing for an
|
|
offensive until an hour ago,'' he said. ``And now I fully understand why
|
|
they gathered, and now no longer do.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't suppose you intend to share at some point?'' I drily replied.
|
|
|
|
He shot me an amused look.
|
|
|
|
``I found Pascale here,'' he said, gesturing towards the young girl,
|
|
``with the help of the Valiant Champion after following up on a rumour
|
|
that Tariq had been seen in the region.''
|
|
|
|
I'd already made plain my feelings on that woman to the hero, so I saw
|
|
no need to belabor the point by expressing the again now. Talk of the
|
|
Pilgrim, though, sparked my interest. The Peregrine had lent his hand to
|
|
none of the fronts, instead staying true to the roots of his Name and
|
|
journeying wherever the Choir of Mercy deemed him to be most needed. If
|
|
he'd really come here, then either we'd narrowly avoided a disaster or
|
|
we were about to have one on our hands.
|
|
|
|
``It was a Revenant behind all of this,'' Hanno told me. ``We named her
|
|
the Plague-Maker, though besides her Praesi origins and talent in
|
|
sorcery we know little of her.''
|
|
|
|
``You found plague seeds as well,'' I breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``It was a scheme in two parts, as far as we can tell,'' the White
|
|
Knight said. ``First, after slipping through our defensive lines-''
|
|
|
|
``Which she shouldn't have fucking been able to do, Revenant or not,'' I
|
|
bluntly said. ``That's the reason we send the Augur all our oracles, so
|
|
that she can warn us about shit like this.''
|
|
|
|
``There was demonic taint on her,'' he told me. ``Absence, Tariq
|
|
believes, which might be why she blindsided us. I do not know when the
|
|
Dead King might have found such a Named-''
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' I replied. ``And if it's from when I believe, she's not the
|
|
last one he'll have in store.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia herself had once told me that Dread Empress Maleficent II had
|
|
used demons of absence to avert the disastrous consequences of the three
|
|
Secret Wars, for after failed invasions of the Serenity a
|
|
counter-invasion of Ater by hellgate had been imminent. I couldn't know
|
|
how many people the general who'd later become Dread Empress had throw
|
|
to the dogs to avert utter calamity, but considering how ruthless
|
|
Maleficent the Second had ended up being as a ruler I doubted that it'd
|
|
be a small number. Hells, considering half the continent was fighting
|
|
Keter these days and we were still slowly losing I couldn't even blame
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
``A discussion to be had later, then,'' the White Knight said.
|
|
``Regardless, the undead plagues were meant to draw a significant
|
|
fighting force south. A large force of zombies was massed around the
|
|
Plague-Maker, hidden in the wilds, which I believe was meant to attack
|
|
this very camp.''
|
|
|
|
``The new ghouls were meant to hit our wards and leadership right
|
|
before,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Exactly,'' Hanno nodded. ``And, as a precaution, even if we won that
|
|
battle handily we would be kept occupied by massive breakouts of the
|
|
seeded plague in Brabant.''
|
|
|
|
``Which we'd have to move to suppress, even as his armies took a swing
|
|
at the northern defence line,'' I muttered.
|
|
|
|
It'd been, I thought, a pretty good plan. And it ought to have scrapped
|
|
this summer as a season for an offensive war even if it didn't go
|
|
entirely his way, all at the price of at most a single Revenant.
|
|
|
|
``You caught the Plague-Maker first, I take it,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Tariq found her in a western crossroads town, seeding refugee caravans
|
|
passing through,'' Hanno said. ``Rafaella and I caught up with him just
|
|
as the confrontation began.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes flicked to the young girl who was, by the looks of it, checking
|
|
on Talbot's eye one last time before declaring him healed.
|
|
|
|
``That is where we found Pascale,'' Hanno agreed. ``She'd caught on to
|
|
the Plague-Maker's work.''
|
|
|
|
I felt my hackles raise, though I wasn't quite sure why.
|
|
|
|
``Hale as you might hope to be, Sir Brandon,'' the girl -- Pascale,
|
|
apparently -- smiled. ``I am finished, if it pleases you.''
|
|
|
|
``You have my most sincere thanks, Lady Apostle,'' the Grandmaster
|
|
replied, rising to his feet. ``If there is anything I can do to repay
|
|
you-''
|
|
|
|
``I have already been repaid,'' the girl said, ``in the only way that
|
|
matters.''
|
|
|
|
He bowed to her anyway, for he was a decent man, and offered to give me
|
|
a report even as he put on a shirt before I bluntly told him to sleep
|
|
off his healing and find me on the morrow. My shoulders were still
|
|
tense, and I was not quite sure why. Hakram hovered close behind me,
|
|
having picked up on my discomfort but being as confused as to the source
|
|
of it as I was.
|
|
|
|
``I take it the Grey Pilgrim did as the Grey Pilgrim does,'' I said,
|
|
getting the conversation going again.
|
|
|
|
``He stepped in to protect me, when I tried to heal the plague,''
|
|
Pascale happily told me. ``My Choosing had already happened, but it is
|
|
not suited to strife and I was most distressed.''
|
|
|
|
``He drove the Revenant off and we caught her as she tried to escape,''
|
|
Hanno elaborated. ``She called on the undead she'd been gathering, but
|
|
we held them off long enough for the pilgrim's star to shine.''
|
|
|
|
Meaning Tariq had smote into the ground what must have been at least a
|
|
few hundred zombies but most likely had been a few thousand. It was easy
|
|
to forget how fucking terrifying Tariq Fleetfoot could be, when he had
|
|
the right story had his back.
|
|
|
|
``Lucky us you'd learned enough of the Light by then to pick up on the
|
|
plague,'' I warmly told the girl.
|
|
|
|
She blushed.
|
|
|
|
``I had not, Your Majesty,'' she admitted. ``My father was a wizard, who
|
|
taught me of the Three Tells and the Seven Essences. Yet even so, magic
|
|
would have failed. Yet my prayers were answered by Above, in our hour of
|
|
need.''
|
|
|
|
``You are,'' I slowly said, ``a mage.''
|
|
|
|
``I was,'' the young girl told me with an elated smile. ``When I became
|
|
the Stalwart Apostle the sorcery vanished from my veins, and the Light
|
|
finally answered my prayers.''
|
|
|
|
A crack resounded in the room. It had, I dimly realized, come from my
|
|
staff. My grip had been too tight around it.
|
|
|
|
``Did they listen to you?'' I quietly asked. ``When you warned them
|
|
about the plague?''
|
|
|
|
I felt the White Knight's heavy gaze on me but did not meet in. I looked
|
|
only at this slip of a girl, who was so smilingly alive where the boy
|
|
was dead.
|
|
|
|
``They did not,'' Pascale sadly said. ``But the Heavens did, when I
|
|
knelt and asked for guidance. And through the Light, I found the way to
|
|
dissolve the plague.''
|
|
|
|
This was, I told myself, nothing I should not have expected. A Named --
|
|
or close enough -- in the service of Evil, had been sowing death and
|
|
preparing to bring about a great woe. It was only natural for the
|
|
Heavens to put together a Named meant to end those designs, as the girl
|
|
clearly had been.
|
|
|
|
``Ninety-nine times out of a hundred,'' I said, voice cold, ``nine
|
|
hundred and ninety-nine times out of a thousand, that \emph{act of
|
|
faith} would have killed dozens of thousands.''
|
|
|
|
The girl looked like I'd struck her.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' the White Knight warned me.
|
|
|
|
My fingers clenched tighter still around the staff of yew, death made
|
|
into a marching stick. He'd been a wretched boy, Tancred, but he'd not
|
|
been \emph{wrong}. To act instead of pray, to trust his the ugly work of
|
|
his hands rather than the silent Heavens. How many thousands, hundreds
|
|
of thousands, \emph{millions} had stood in this girl's place over the
|
|
centuries and seen their faith rewarded only by a grisly death? No, the
|
|
Scorched Apostate had not been wrong. He'd not been Chosen either, he'd
|
|
done his own choosing. And the Heavens had damned him for it, so damn
|
|
the presumptuous fucks for that in turn. Hakram's hand warmed my
|
|
shoulder and I closed my eyes for a long moment.
|
|
|
|
``It's been a long day,'' I finally said. ``We'll speak tomorrow.''
|
|
|
|
There was a reason I was more than halfway fond of Hanno of Arwad: he
|
|
looked at me for a heartbeat the nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Tomorrow,'' the White Knight softly agreed, eyes considering.
|
|
|
|
I walked out of the tent and into the night, Hakram hastening to catch
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
Tancred had not been wrong, I thought, shoulders tight and teeth
|
|
gritted.
|
|
|
|
But what did that matter, when he was dead?
|