587 lines
27 KiB
TeX
587 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-61-adouber}{%
|
|
\chapter{Adouber}\label{chapter-61-adouber}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``Fear is the prerequisite to any genuine learning; anything that
|
|
can be learnt without questioning the foundations of your world is
|
|
essentially decorative.''}{Dread Emperor Sorcerous}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was easy to forget that the Grey Pilgrim was, for all the power of
|
|
his Name and the favour of the Ophanim, very much mortal. An old man
|
|
with an old man's frailties, whose relentless march towards my camp had
|
|
brought to the brink of collapse. His loose grey robes looked half made
|
|
of dust and even drabber than usual, his rheumy blue were clouded with
|
|
exhaustion. It made me uncomfortable to look at, someone of that
|
|
strength so openly at the end of their rope. His brandy was sipped at
|
|
carefully and he declined my offer of sending for a warm meal, claiming
|
|
that exhausted as he was he'd probably retch it right out. After
|
|
gathering his bearings some, the Peregrine needed no prompting to begin
|
|
speaking.
|
|
|
|
``The campaign went well, at first,'' Tariq said. ``The Enemy's raids
|
|
were heavy and sustained, but we held strong through the days and the
|
|
nights belonged to the Firstborn.''
|
|
|
|
I'd poured myself a cup of brandy as well before dropping back into my
|
|
seat. I had a feeling I was going to need a stiff drink before this
|
|
conversation came to an end, and maybe second when it had.
|
|
|
|
``The last messenger I got from your column told me the army was
|
|
preparing to pass Juvelun,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The Iron Prince's part of the campaign plan had been relatively
|
|
straightforward, when it came down to it. His smaller column --
|
|
fifty-four thousand to my seventy -- had left days earlier than mine
|
|
from one of our defensive strongholds to the east of Neustal, just north
|
|
of the town of Cassain. It'd then quickly advanced north along the old
|
|
mining roads. Our intention had been for Prince Klaus' army to draw the
|
|
undead army at the town of Juvelun into battle, as the town sat over a
|
|
passage through the hills towards the central valley where the capital
|
|
lay, the army holding it also being the undead force closest to said
|
|
capital.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately the army in question had refused to leave Juvelun, instead
|
|
remaining in a dug-in and defensible position that it would be difficult
|
|
for Prince Klaus' numerically inferior army to invest. We'd anticipated
|
|
that was a possibility, though, and planned accordingly. To the north,
|
|
further up the mining road, lay the city of Malmedit. To the Dead King
|
|
it was a place of some strategic importance, as the mine shafts
|
|
surrounding the city had been connected to tunnels he'd had dug through
|
|
the northern hills and he now used Malmedit as a major staging area to
|
|
pour warbands into the lowlands of Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
If the Iron Prince made it to Malmedit he could collapse the tunnels,
|
|
which would be a significant setback for Keter. Knowing that, our
|
|
working assumption had been that if Prince Klaus' army kept marching
|
|
north towards the city the undead army in Juvelun would \emph{have} to
|
|
engage him: the Dead King would just be pissing away his eastern road
|
|
into Hainaut otherwise. Yet we had, it seemed, made a grievous mistake
|
|
along the way.
|
|
|
|
``The plan seemed a success for the first few days of the march on
|
|
Malmedit,'' the Peregrine said. ``Raiding parties began harassing our
|
|
supply lines, and though young Hanno kept them open sword in hand our
|
|
generals believed this to be the prelude to an enemy attack against our
|
|
back.''
|
|
|
|
The old man paused, pressing down an errant tuft of white hair from the
|
|
sparse crown around his head and sipping at his brandy.
|
|
|
|
``Yet the days passed,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, ``and that attack failed
|
|
to take place.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. That'd be the point where I would have smelled a trap, so I
|
|
refused to believe that a commander as experienced as the Prince of
|
|
Hannoven had not.
|
|
|
|
``I'm guessing he ordered a heavy war party forward as reconnaissance,''
|
|
I said.
|
|
|
|
Suspicious as he would be, Prince Klaus wouldn't have turned back at the
|
|
first suspicion. The Dead King could have been bluffing, or simply
|
|
writing off Malmedit as a lost cause while focusing his attention
|
|
elsewhere. In his place I would have encamped relatively close to the
|
|
force I \emph{knew} I could handle in a pitched battle -- the Juvelun
|
|
army -- and sent out a strong contingent to probe the enemy's defenses
|
|
ahead.
|
|
|
|
``Six thousand horse,'' Tariq agreed. ``With the Witch of the Woods as
|
|
magical muscle and two champions to escort her. One day shy of Malmedit
|
|
itself they ran into the enemy's own vanguard.''
|
|
|
|
I drank from my cup, fingers tight around the silver. With horses and
|
|
that calibre of sorcery on their side, they would have gotten away
|
|
mostly clean. It was the strategic situation being described that had me
|
|
aghast. The Grey Pilgrim had earlier intimated that the army two hundred
|
|
thousand we'd thought in the far north of the principality had been the
|
|
one waiting for our eastern column in Malmedit, which meant pressing an
|
|
attack forward against it would have been suicide. The Iron Prince would
|
|
suddenly have found himself stuck between a massive force to the north
|
|
and a smaller one to the southwest, the latter even being able to cut
|
|
his supply lines if it was willing to bleed for it -- and when was Keter
|
|
ever unwilling to bleed?
|
|
|
|
``How bad was it?'' I grimly asked.
|
|
|
|
``Even using the Twilight Ways, the war party only returned quickly
|
|
enough to give us two days of forewarning,'' the old man said.
|
|
|
|
Which sounded like a lot, if you'd never commanded an army. But I had
|
|
and so I knew they were ungainly, lumbering things. Especially when
|
|
being made to turn around.
|
|
|
|
``You retreated, I assume,'' I slowly said.
|
|
|
|
``That was our intent,'' Tariq said. ``Until the Young Slayer and the
|
|
Harrowed Witch found an enemy raiding party to our south yet strangely
|
|
heading away from the army, further south. They followed it down and-``
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed. The pieces were falling into place.
|
|
|
|
``- found the dead dismantling the mining road,'' I finished quietly.
|
|
|
|
The old man nodded. So that'd been Neshamah's game: by ripping up the
|
|
road, he was making sure that even if the Iron Prince's army tried to
|
|
march back to our defensive lines it'd be slowed enough that his large
|
|
ambush army marching south from Malmedit would be able to catch up to
|
|
it. That left only the Twilight Ways as a way out, but even that
|
|
was\ldots{} risky. Not on a tactical level, I meant. With two days of
|
|
warning, an evacuation would be quite possible: so long as he wasn't
|
|
under attack, with a pharos device Prince Klaus should be able to shift
|
|
his entire army into the Ways in a few hours. On a strategic level,
|
|
though, his disappearance could lead to a disaster.
|
|
|
|
If the Iron Prince bailed on the eastern theatre of our campaign
|
|
entirely, there would be nothing standing between a massive army of two
|
|
hundred thousand -- maybe even three hundred thousand, if the army in
|
|
Juvelun joined forces when it passed near -- and our dangerously bare
|
|
defensive lines. Our reserve was already marching on the Cigelin
|
|
Sisters, meaning all that was left there was the reinforcements from
|
|
Daoine under Vivienne and a fresh wave of Proceran conscripts. Klaus
|
|
could instead take his army back to our defensive lines, but if he did
|
|
then he was leaving my column out to hang: all enemy armies would
|
|
converge on my army and even with the Ways there was no possible way for
|
|
him to reinforce me in time.
|
|
|
|
\emph{He read us like a book}, I admitted to myself. The Dead King had
|
|
seen us coming and now we were being made to bleed for it. I couldn't
|
|
even claim that at least that fucking surprise army in Malmedit had
|
|
flushed out Keter's hidden hand: we'd found \emph{that} missing force,
|
|
sure, but only after the \emph{other} force of one hundred and fifty
|
|
thousand in Luciennerie had vanished into thin air. The wily old monster
|
|
had managed to keep the story of his `hidden threat' going even after
|
|
revealing another hidden threat -- he'd baked a second cake while eating
|
|
the first one, so he quite literally got to eat his cake and have it
|
|
too. Gods but I hated fighting the fucking Dead King.
|
|
|
|
Tariq had kept silently sipping at his drink, letting me wrestle my
|
|
thoughts into place, but when he saw my attention fully return to him he
|
|
set the cup down.
|
|
|
|
``And after?'' I simply asked.
|
|
|
|
I'd been able to make decent guesses as to what the Iron Prince would
|
|
have done until then, with the benefit of multiple sources of
|
|
information and insight, but now we were out in the wilds. I'd never
|
|
fought the old prince on the field, and records of his campaigns against
|
|
the ratlings and the dead were near nonexistent -- Lycaonese marked only
|
|
victories, defeats and tallies of the dead. Anything else was considered
|
|
pettily boastful. And while the Iron Prince's victories during the Great
|
|
War were much better known, they'd been won waging a very different sort
|
|
of war. I wasn't sure what \emph{I} would have done in his place, much
|
|
less what would have gone through the Prince of Hannoven's mind at that
|
|
crossroads.
|
|
|
|
``A war council was called,'' Tariq said. ``And after some debate, it
|
|
was agreed on that the wisest course would be to attack the enemy army
|
|
in Juvelun to break through.''
|
|
|
|
My brow rose and I forced myself to think. I could see the sense in it,
|
|
squinting a bit, from his point of view. Assuming my column broke
|
|
through with swift victories at the Cigelin Sisters and Lauzon's Hollow,
|
|
seizing Juvelun would allow us to link our armies in the central valley
|
|
of Hainaut. The undead army from Malmedit would still be able to march
|
|
south on our defences, but at that point our unified force could answer
|
|
by leaving a strong garrison at Cigelin and then outmarch that army of
|
|
the dead through the Ways. A neat trick, turning the destruction of the
|
|
mining road against those who'd done it. Sure he'd take losses taking
|
|
Juvelun from pushing out the dead, an uncomfortable amount of them, but
|
|
it would salvage the strategic situation.
|
|
|
|
The problem was that Klaus Papenheim didn't know that the army in
|
|
Luciennerie had disappeared: I'd tried to send messengers, but I very
|
|
much doubted they'd made it through the gauntlet the Grey Pilgrim had
|
|
described. Another army had vanished into thin air, and rubies to
|
|
piglets that it was going to reappear near the capital around the time
|
|
we finally took the Sisters. You know, right between a bloodied
|
|
Papenheim and my own forces as the even larger Malmedit army marched on
|
|
the Iron Prince's back. That was going to turn into a bloody, ruinous
|
|
mess.
|
|
|
|
``You were there for the battle?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``I left before,'' Tariq said. ``Of all our Bestowed it was agreed I had
|
|
the best chance of making it to you unharmed and in good time, so the
|
|
duty fell to me. The battle for Juvelun will have taken place by now,
|
|
but the outcome is known to neither myself nor the Ophanim.''
|
|
|
|
I slowly nodded.
|
|
|
|
``You arrived in time,'' I admitted. ``What you just told me will
|
|
influence our pace quite a bit: I can no longer afford to take my time
|
|
wiping out the remains of the enemy here and reducing the Sisters if the
|
|
other column is in danger of a wipeout. We'll have to hurry forward.''
|
|
|
|
Which was compounding risks with risk, I grimly thought. Already the
|
|
Iron Prince had rolled the dice on taking Juvelun, and now I was going
|
|
to have to rush taking Cigelin or his efforts might be in vain. The
|
|
illusion of control we'd had when this campaign had begun, that bold
|
|
armada of plans and schemes, was now dead and buried. We'd gained
|
|
tactical victories but we were headed towards a strategic disaster. The
|
|
only way to salvage this now was to push forward and through. \emph{If
|
|
we don't, all that's left is measuring the scale of the losses we'll
|
|
incur.} I drained the rest of my cup, letting the warmth pour down my
|
|
throat, and set the silver down.
|
|
|
|
Gods, silver. Who would have thought I'd end up drinking in that one
|
|
day, when I'd first started sneaking sips of beer at the- I froze. Oh,
|
|
\emph{oh}. Fuck me, I'd had the clues all along hadn't I? I knew the
|
|
movements, I even knew how the enemy thought of us. I'd just not put
|
|
them together, taken that last step.
|
|
|
|
``It's a rat trap,'' I murmured.
|
|
|
|
Limpid blue eyes narrowed at me, the exhausted old man turning back into
|
|
the Peregrine in a heartbeat. The marks of bone-deep weariness were
|
|
still there, but the flame had lit again.
|
|
|
|
``Explain,'' Tariq demanded.
|
|
|
|
``Back when I worked in a tavern,'' I said, ``the owner would make these
|
|
little rectangular boxes with the front almost open and bread at the
|
|
end. It'd have a `door' angled like this-``
|
|
|
|
I formed a roof with one palm, and angled another palm inwards to
|
|
represent the door.
|
|
|
|
``- so that the rats would go after the bread and push the door up a
|
|
bit. Only when they were inside the box-``
|
|
|
|
``They found the `door' couldn't be pushed to let them out, as the wood
|
|
only bent one way,'' the Grey Pilgrim quietly interrupted. ``I've seen
|
|
their like before, they are used in Levant as well.''
|
|
|
|
``That bridge up north is our bread,'' I said. ``It's not fake, I
|
|
wouldn't think. If it does get built we're in a load of trouble, and we
|
|
might actually lose this war the regular way. But that's not why the
|
|
Dead King built it.''
|
|
|
|
``He wanted us to enter the trap,'' Tariq said.
|
|
|
|
He wasn't getting it, though, I could hear it in his voice. A trap was a
|
|
trap, to him, and it'd never been in doubt we'd fallen for one. I
|
|
spelled it out more bluntly for him.
|
|
|
|
``You don't make a rat trap to protect the bread, Pilgrim,'' I said.
|
|
``You make it to \emph{kill the rat}.''
|
|
|
|
The old man frowned.
|
|
|
|
``He means to destroy our armies,'' the Grey Pilgrim slowly said. ``The
|
|
battles, the bridge, even the capital -- none of it means anything to
|
|
him. Even if he loses all of Hainaut, so long as our armies are
|
|
destroyed he doesn't care.''
|
|
|
|
``It's all expendable,'' I agreed. ``The army that disappeared from
|
|
Luciennerie could be assaulting our defence lines around now, with an
|
|
even larger army headed down the mining road to attack the eastern
|
|
strongholds -- with our own armies so far, and kept in the dark by lack
|
|
of scrying, he might actually have had a shot at breaking through and
|
|
into Brabant. But he didn't even try, because what he wants is to trap
|
|
us in the central valley and annihilate us. Not in one big battle where
|
|
the odds are so utterly stacked against him-``
|
|
|
|
Which we'd probably win, given the amount of heroes in our ranks.
|
|
|
|
``- but in smaller engagements that will bleed us dry, be they victories
|
|
or defeats,'' Tariq muttered.
|
|
|
|
He didn't disagree with my assessment, finger circling the rim of his
|
|
cup.
|
|
|
|
``But why the sudden obsession with the armies in Hainaut?'' he finally
|
|
asked. ``What changed?''
|
|
|
|
I'd been wondering the same thing.
|
|
|
|
``The Gigantes came up on our side,'' I tried.
|
|
|
|
``Not in force,'' Tariq said. ``They commit to help, not alliance.''
|
|
|
|
``He might not know that,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Might is a thin foundation to build on,'' the Peregrine said.
|
|
``Perhaps the Hierophant's work in the Arsenal?''
|
|
|
|
``It might spook him into coming after us this hard,'' I admitted.
|
|
``Masego knows a lot more about him than can be comfortable for the
|
|
likes of the Dead King. But the secrecy around Quartered Seasons was
|
|
well-kept, Tariq. We were paranoid, and there's been breaches but I
|
|
don't believe Malicia got through and so he should still be largely
|
|
blind.''
|
|
|
|
The Peregrine smiled sadly.
|
|
|
|
``You fight the Bard, Catherine,'' he said. ``Neither walls nor locks
|
|
nor oaths are enough to keep her from learning secrets if she wishes to
|
|
know them.''
|
|
|
|
I blinked.
|
|
|
|
``You think she sold us out to the Dead King?'' I skeptically said. ``If
|
|
there's one person I'd buy she \emph{wouldn't} sell us out to, it'd be
|
|
him. What would she even-``
|
|
|
|
I froze the dreadful thought that came all too soon. The Grey Pilgrim
|
|
sighed.
|
|
|
|
``So he comes after us with his entire hateful might,'' Tariq said. ``So
|
|
we suffer a stinging defeat at his hands and, like children in the dark,
|
|
we pray for deliverance by our own guardian angel.''
|
|
|
|
I rose to pour myself a second goddamn drink, and when the Pilgrim
|
|
silently extended his own empty cup I filled it without qualms.
|
|
|
|
``I thought you trusted her,'' I finally said.
|
|
|
|
``I did,'' Tariq tiredly said. ``And now I don't. If you live long
|
|
enough, Catherine, you will find that time warps even the bonds you
|
|
believed unshakable. And that we are never so wise as we think, even
|
|
when we believe ourselves to be fools.''
|
|
|
|
I held my tongue, even though it would have been pretty easy to stick a
|
|
dagger or two in him now considering how badly we'd butted heads over
|
|
the Intercessor over the years. It'd been a rough year for everyone, and
|
|
there was no need for allies to make it worse.
|
|
|
|
``I got the shivers when you said that,'' I finally said, ``and it makes
|
|
me sick to even consider. So I'd tend to think you read this right. But
|
|
he's not coming at us with his full might, Tariq. I've seen the battles
|
|
up north he wages against the drow, and they're\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
I blew out a breath. In the back of my mind old words came to me as a
|
|
harsh refrain. \emph{Where are the devils, Catherine?} the Intercessor
|
|
had once asked me\emph{. Where are the hosts that darken the skies, and
|
|
the demons he has kept leashed for centuries? Where are the rituals that
|
|
poison the land and the sorceries never before seen?}
|
|
|
|
``Well, he's pulling out tricks there we haven't seen down here,'' I
|
|
said. ``And I know he has more: we haven't seen either devils or demons
|
|
yet, for one, and he's perfectly capable of calling on both.''
|
|
|
|
The old man shook his head.
|
|
|
|
``He cannot use either,'' Tariq said. ``It would represent too steep an
|
|
increase in strength on his side of the scales, Catherine. Providence
|
|
would allow us to bridge the gap, and the last thing the Dead King wants
|
|
is a war of equals with such power in play: it would put his forces at a
|
|
genuine risk of annihilation.''
|
|
|
|
The Grey Pilgrim leaned back into his seat.
|
|
|
|
``He has been most careful to limit his efforts to grinding us into dust
|
|
by attrition for good reason,'' Tariq continued. ``It is a method of
|
|
victory that involves very little risk for him and has proved difficult
|
|
to handle.''
|
|
|
|
I frowned. That\ldots{} held up somewhat, I supposed. I honestly wasn't
|
|
sure what providence would be able to spit out to even the odds, but
|
|
arguably that was rather the point. I'd known for a long time there was
|
|
a risk to villains winning by too large or obvious a margin --
|
|
invincibility as a prelude to failure, my father had once phrase it --
|
|
but I'd not considered that on the scale the Pilgrim had. It was the
|
|
crusading mindset, I supposed. It was not only battles and Named that
|
|
had a story, but the crusade itself. It was what I knew of the Dead
|
|
King's rise to power that had me inclined to believe the Peregrine:
|
|
carefulness had always been his priority back then, even if it meant
|
|
slowing his advance.
|
|
|
|
He'd always preferred giving his enemies no opening to swift victories.
|
|
|
|
``This changes things,'' I finally said.
|
|
|
|
He wetted his lips, sipping at the brandy.
|
|
|
|
``Does it?'' the Peregrine asked. ``Retreating serves no purpose. We are
|
|
committed to war, even knowing his intentions are different than we'd
|
|
expected.''
|
|
|
|
I went rifling through my pockets for my pipe, the long shaft of
|
|
dragonbone that Masego had gifted me years ago comforting to the touch.
|
|
A packet of wakeleaf, still from the White Knight's gift, was carefully
|
|
stuffed and I lit the leaf by tapping a finger against the rim and
|
|
letting black flames slither in. I breathed in deep, the acrid smoke
|
|
filling my lungs before I breathed out a long stream of it upwards.
|
|
|
|
``If it's our armies that are in his sights, it means he's gotten sloppy
|
|
elsewhere,'' I said. ``His resources aren't unlimited, and while it
|
|
might seem like this trap has been years in the making I'd wager it's a
|
|
lot more hastily assembled than that.''
|
|
|
|
``The Intercessor would not have wanted him to win cleanly, that is
|
|
true,'' the Pilgrim mused. ``The more costly the victory to him the
|
|
better, in her eyes, and that means a warning as late as she could
|
|
feasibly give it.''
|
|
|
|
I grunted in agreement, pulling at my pipe and blowing out a ring of
|
|
smoke.
|
|
|
|
``We thought he'd guard that bridge up north like it was his own baby,''
|
|
I said, ``but I'd wager it's been stripped clean. Sure we still can't
|
|
account for the Luciennerie army, but it can't \emph{teleport} --
|
|
there's no way it could have gone all the way up there so quickly.''
|
|
|
|
``You're suggesting a raid,'' Tariq said, sounding genuinely surprised.
|
|
|
|
``I am,'' I replied. ``First we'll need to reunite with Prince Klaus'
|
|
army, but when do I believe we need to send at least one band of five up
|
|
north to demolish that bridge. We won't get that opportunity twice.''
|
|
|
|
``You suggest sending away five Bestowed, and they would have to be
|
|
among our most powerful to have a real chance of succeeding, before a
|
|
series of battle that promise to be the decisive clash of this war,''
|
|
the Pilgrim slowly said. ``That is\ldots{} bold.''
|
|
|
|
Which meant he'd wanted to say foolish, I amusedly thought, but my
|
|
favourable record against him had earned a more diplomatic phrasing.
|
|
|
|
``We can argue the point later,'' I dismissed, ``but I'd be a mistake to
|
|
find out at this late hour we lack the stomach to take opportunities
|
|
when they are afforded us. Regardless, we now need to move forward as
|
|
quickly as we can and link with Prince Klaus' column. If you rest
|
|
through the rest of the day, will you be fighting fit tomorrow?''
|
|
|
|
``A few hours will have me back on my feet,'' Tariq hesitatingly said.
|
|
``I have never needed much sleep, and less so after I was blessed with
|
|
the friendship of the Ophanim.''
|
|
|
|
He kept hesitating, so I cocked an eyebrow at him. It finally moved him
|
|
to speak.
|
|
|
|
``You seem\ldots{} invigorated,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, and raised a
|
|
hand as if to ward off a protest. ``I mean no ill by it, only that a
|
|
conversation that would have set others to despair seems instead to have
|
|
lit a fire in you.''
|
|
|
|
Had it? I pulled at my pipe, considering it, then ultimately shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``This is the most confident I've felt about this campaign since it
|
|
started,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
The old man started in surprise.
|
|
|
|
``I take it you're not making sport of me,'' Tariq said.
|
|
|
|
I nodded and, to my own surprise, he snorted.
|
|
|
|
``Ashen Gods, \emph{why}?'' he asked. ``I do not believe this will end
|
|
in tears, though many will be shed along the way, but little of the news
|
|
I brought you strike me as sources of confidence. The Enemy has fooled
|
|
us and led us into great peril.''
|
|
|
|
``It was always going to get ugly,'' I frankly said. ``But now we knew
|
|
the forces in motion, Pilgrim. We know -- or have a good guess, at the
|
|
very least -- why the Dead King is acting now, what it is he is after
|
|
and where all those things sit in the greater tapestry of the war. For
|
|
the first time since our armies went marching north, we are no longer
|
|
blind. We can finally find a way to win, and I mean \emph{properly} win.
|
|
Not just survive by the skin of our teeth or settle for a bloody draw.''
|
|
|
|
My fingers were already itching for ink and paper as well as a quiet
|
|
place to think. Oh, we were in the pit for sure. I was pretty sure the
|
|
Iron Prince was about to get stuck between two large armies while I
|
|
caught up, and if either of us made a mistake then this could turn into
|
|
the single worst military defeat the Grand Alliance had suffered since
|
|
the beginning of the war. Hells, it could turn into the kind of defeat
|
|
it was simply impossible to recover from by sheer dint of lives and
|
|
resources lost. But this pit, it was an old friend. I'd been here
|
|
before, through my own mistakes and the machinations of others, and the
|
|
feeling of the bottom of the barrel under my feet did not scare me.
|
|
|
|
I grinned at the Grey Pilgrim, baring my teeth ferally.
|
|
|
|
``It's the eleventh hour, Peregrine,'' I said. ``Midnight Bell is on the
|
|
verge, and when it rings we'll all have to pay our dues, but the song
|
|
isn't over. Not yet.''
|
|
|
|
``You have a plan, then?'' Tariq Fleetfoot asked.
|
|
|
|
Blue eyes in a tanned face met my gaze, and in there I found a light
|
|
that was not Light -- no, that one was entirely his own. It was cold and
|
|
patient and ruthless in a way that even some of my kind would blanch at,
|
|
qualities that a lifetime of service to the Choir of Mercy had sharpened
|
|
into a razor's edge. There wasn't a lot a man like the Grey Pilgrim
|
|
wouldn't do, for the sake of the world. Looking into those eyes, I
|
|
wondered if there was really anything at all.
|
|
|
|
``I have the bare bones of one,'' I said. ``It begins by taking back the
|
|
initiative.''
|
|
|
|
``There are still enemies ahead of you,'' Tariq said. ``The remnant of
|
|
the army that held Lauzon's Hollow, as I understand it, now heading
|
|
towards the Cigelin Sisters.''
|
|
|
|
``And that force needs to be destroyed,'' I agreed, ``but I don't need
|
|
our entire army to do that. Not when our reserve under General Pallas
|
|
will be joining the fray as well.''
|
|
|
|
``You would split your host in two,'' the Pilgrim said. ``And then take
|
|
half to relieve the Iron Prince?''
|
|
|
|
``We're going to do better than that, Tariq,'' I said, rising to my
|
|
feet.
|
|
|
|
I went looking through my desk, opening drawers until I found what I
|
|
wanted: a small scroll, inked by Scribe's own hand. It was a neat,
|
|
lovely map of the Principality of Hainaut whose accuracy meant it was
|
|
probably worth as much a herd of horses. I unfolded it across the table,
|
|
gesturing for the Pilgrim to come closer as I set down a bottle on one
|
|
corner to keep it down and an empty inkwell on the other.
|
|
|
|
``If Prince Klaus won the battle for Juvelun,'' I said, tapping the town
|
|
with a finger, ``then right now he's marching into the central valley of
|
|
Hainaut, what the locals call the highlands.''
|
|
|
|
``And you believe an enemy army, the one that was once in Luciennerie,
|
|
will have travelled unseen to strike him by surprise there,'' the
|
|
Pilgrim said.
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' I said. ``But I also think that the Dead King believes us more
|
|
conservative in our attack than we actually have been: there's nothing
|
|
about the way his troops are moving that even hints at his being aware
|
|
that the Cigelin Sisters are about to be attacked by General Pallas. So
|
|
from his point of view, even if a hero likes you manages to bring word
|
|
about what happened to the Prince Klaus' column I'll still be stuck here
|
|
clearing out the dead heading towards the Sisters.''
|
|
|
|
It actually shed some light on why the army defending Lauzon's Hollow
|
|
had been so willing to retreat, even considering the bloody nose I'd
|
|
given it. At this point holding the Hollow was no longer a strategic
|
|
priority for him, it was a lot more important to tie down my army for a
|
|
few more days while he finished mopping up Klaus Papenheim's column. And
|
|
the worse was that the Dead King wasn't even wrong about my needing to
|
|
clear out the dead ahead of us. It wasn't a force that I could afford
|
|
leaving at my back while taking the Ways to reinforce the Iron Prince.
|
|
If I did, I would then be stuck with a massive army behind enemy lines
|
|
and with no supply lines. Hells, at that point he would barely even need
|
|
to fight: he could just keep harassing us and let starvation do the work
|
|
for him.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, General Pallas was still in the wind and about to make her
|
|
bite felt.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be leaving behind the Third Army and half the Firstborn along
|
|
with some of the Proceran fantassins, but most of my army will be
|
|
headed\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
I trailed off, leaning forward and squinting at the map before finally
|
|
laying a finger at the height of halfway up the stretch of Julienne's
|
|
Highway connecting the Sisters to the capital, but a little to the east.
|
|
|
|
``There,'' I finished.
|
|
|
|
The old man's gaze followed my finger, taking in the map as he
|
|
considered it all in silence.
|
|
|
|
``And what is it that you intend to do in the middle of nowhere?'' the
|
|
Grey Pilgrim finally asked.
|
|
|
|
I breathed in deep of the wakeleaf, enjoying the burn and taking my time
|
|
before spewing out a stream of grey smoke. I smiled coldly at the
|
|
Peregrine.
|
|
|
|
``Why, Tariq, but we're going to ambush the force about to ambush the
|
|
Iron Prince.''
|