634 lines
28 KiB
TeX
634 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-64-candidate-moves}{%
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\chapter{Candidate Moves}\label{chapter-64-candidate-moves}}
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\epigraph{``To rule is to drag a lion by the whisker.''}{Helikean saying}
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Truth was, even now Masego hadn't found a way to genuinely break the
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rituals that the Dead King used to prevent scrying in the territories he
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held. For two years the Arsenal had tried, after we made it it clear to
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some of the finest magical minds of Calernia that regaining that
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capacity would be militarily invaluable, but no working counter-ritual
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had come of it. We had brought together exceptional people, but our
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enemy was more than just that: he was the Hidden Horror, the exception
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itself. So Hierophant, for all that he'd suffered a god riding his mind
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for most of a year and studied the wards at Lyonceau -- where the Tyrant
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had borrowed from the Dead King's work, among other things -- had not
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been able to overturn the weight of the millennia's bearing down on us.
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Zeze was brilliant, but there were some things beyond brilliance.
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So Hierophant had stolen a mystery from an entity that \emph{could} win.
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The clouds in the sky spun like a whirlpool, swallowed by the great eye
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that our ritual had opened high above. Even for me, the empty howling
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void was an unsettling sight. Sorcery burned loud and bright, the stone
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pillars we'd driven into the ground buzzing like hornets as they fought
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the enchantments that blanketed most of Hainaut and suppressed scrying.
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Hurrying, I limped my way down the rocky slope towards a box of
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burnished bronze and electrum that stood taller than me. Nestled against
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the hill, anchored with enchantments so it would not move so much as a
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hair's breadth, the arcane patterns of electrum on the sides were now
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glimmering with eerie light. The bronze was warm enough that I could
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feel the heat just from passing my hand close, and it would only get
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warmer.
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The front of the box was the most complex part of it: a harsh,
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labyrinthine electrum pattern that usually closed together like a puzzle
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box but had now been carefully pried open. Slender gaps had been bared
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in the pattern by the manipulations, their rims covered with small
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bronze-inscribed runes, and through them I glimpsed that within the box
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there was a cube of pure white marble. Without my noticing it Roland had
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returned from his work on the hill to our east, and now stood by
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Masego's side close to the box. The sight was almost amusing, Hierophant
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being at least a head taller for all that the Rogue Sorcerer's longcoat
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and layers made him seem larger, but the intent focus both displayed had
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me reluctant to disturb them with even a snort.
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``Roland?'' Masego asked, burning eyes on the box.
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``Almost there,'' the Rogue Sorcerer replied, his own gaze on a slender
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baton of obsidian in his hands where I glimpsed a few burning marks.
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``Five, four, three, two-``
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As soon as the Proceran mage got to three Hierophant raised his arm,
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wresting sorcery from a small cube he held in his fist, and a circle of
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golden runes flared around his fingers.
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``Discharge,'' Masego warned.
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Sorcery pulled towards us for half a heartbeat, as if the currents had
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reversed, and the flow was sucked into the box where I saw terrible
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fires bloom before the moment passed and the eye in the sky screamed
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anew. To the west of us, a hill blew up in a thundering rain of rock and
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mud.
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``Our bleed margin is much too high,'' Roland said. ``We won't make it
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to four instances.''
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``Three will be enough,'' Hierophant replied, leaning over the box.
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With his bare hands -- he'd known fires hotter than this, and even now
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their reflection burned in his eyes -- he began to manipulate the top of
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the box, extracting what looked like a large gear before turning it
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briskly. Within the box, the marble cube turned to match and presented a
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fresh and unmarred face to the open gaps. The gear was pushed back down
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after adjustment, and within twenty heartbeats another discharge
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followed. The hill to the east of us blew up, but I had closer perils to
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worry about: the stone pillars anchored on this hill were vibrating so
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quickly and intensely it seemed only a matter of time before they
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shattered.
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``Masego,'' I asked, shouting over the din. ``How safe are we on the
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hill?''
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He turned towards me, offering a boyish grin.
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``Not at all!'' he shouted back, and raised his arm.
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A fresh cube held in his fist, golden runes formed in a circle as Roland
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protested with a shout that the build-up was not yet done.
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``\emph{Discharge},'' Hierophant cackled.
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Cackling wasn't usually a good sign, in my experience, so I wrapped
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myself up in Night the moment before the sorcery could be pulled in. The
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magic blew in, pillars popping as it passed them -- ah, they'd somehow
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been built so the shards would go up instead of all around -- and
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hammered into the cage. Some bits of stone fell on my Night-cloak, but
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nothing I couldn't handle so I risked a glance at Roland. Whose obsidian
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baton was cracking, the burning runes on it going wild.
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``\emph{Oh} \emph{merde},'' I heard him curse, throwing away the baton.
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It blew up in a great gout of flame maybe three feet above his head,
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liquid drops of obsidian hissing against mud and stone as they were
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sprinkled everywhere. Masego, though, ignored it all. He was trying to
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vent the contents of the box, where the fires had somehow gotten caught.
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He opened fresh gaps on two sides before the glimmer of the electrum
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patterns turned into a glare. The tall mage finally stepped back.
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``It's done?'' I called out.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' Zeze calmly noted, continuing to move away.
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``I would recommend taking cover, Catherine.''
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``You little-'' I began, throwing myself behind a jutting stone just in
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time for a great crunching sound to resound.
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Oh dear. That had sounded like the box crumpling inwards. Then there
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were a pulse of flame and metal shrapnel as the box blew up while I hid
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under my cloak. I waited ten full heartbeats before popping out for a
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look, and I saw with a dry swallow that the explosion had outright
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melted the top of the hill. The Grey Pilgrim had gotten off first,
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right? That was, uh, going to be tricky to explain to the Dominion
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otherwise.
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``Anybody dead?'' Roland called out, popping out from behind his own
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rock.
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``A pointless question. It would require necromancy before-'' Masego
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replied.
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``I think everyone's fine,'' I interrupted before he could really get
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started. ``Did it work?''
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``Of course it worked,'' Hierophant said, sounding offended. ``Who do
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you take me for?''
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``Ask me that question again when I don't have melted rock all over my
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nice cloak,'' I grunted. ``You're not fishing for a nice answer
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otherwise.''
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I broke cover, brushing myself off, and the three of us came to look at
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the results. The marble cube was seared on three sides, but it'd not
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just been fire thrown at rock. It'd been a sculpture, in a sense: the
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central valley of Hainaut and some of the outskirts, as seen from the
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sky. Each of the three facets had captured that sight for the blink of
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that great eye above and seen it seared onto the marble. There were
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imprecisions, of course. The Dead King's rituals had muddled it up some.
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But that was the entire point of having several discharges, as there'd
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be very few places on our `map' where the imprecisions had taken all
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three times.
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``So this is what the world looks like through a Choir's eyes,'' I said.
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``Not exactly,'' Roland told me. ``Think of angels as seeing the world
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through a lens. What you can witness seared here is what we mortals
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would see when looking through that same lens.''
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``Humans don't have the parts necessary to observe Creation as a Choir
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would,'' Masego absent-mindedly noted. ``Even soul scaffolding wouldn't
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be sufficient, it would require complete essence reconstruction. As
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Duchess of Moonless Nights we would have been able to replace the marble
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with your mind and allow you to look directly, as the damage would have
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repaired itself, but as you currently are you would not survive the
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experience.''
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I still remembered how much of a pain just stealing Ashkaran from echoes
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in Arcadia had been, so I suspected that he was downplaying the
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difficulties involved when he simply called it `damage'.
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``Good to know,'' I muttered. ``I believe we can work with this, Masego.
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We'll need magnifying glass for some of the details, but I can already
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make out the bare bones.''
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Such as they were, which was pretty worrying. I limped back and forth
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between the facets, narrowing my eyes at what I saw. If I correctly
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understood where we were, then at the moment we were\ldots{} north-west
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of what had to be the Iron Prince's army. Unfortunately, that put us in
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the wrong place. Ahead of the Prince Klaus' column was a large force of
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undead, but not so large he shouldn't be able to defeat it on the field.
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Behind it, though, was what had to be the missing Luciennerie army. By
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the looks of it it'd divided into three smaller forces: one was headed
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south towards the Cigelin Sisters, but the other two columns were
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marching straight towards where the Iron Prince was going to have to
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give battle.
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That put them square to the south of us, and went some way in explaining
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why this part of Hainaut was swarming with warbands. Worse, it looked
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like my allies had left part of their forces behind: to the west of
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Juvelun there was something that looked like a camp. Hard to tell
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numbers without using something to magnify the details, though, which
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could wait until we'd gotten back to camp. I straightened, casting one
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last lingering look at the marble. For all that what I'd learned had not
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exactly good news, that I knew it at all was a great coup. If we'd gone
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about this blindly, the damage could have been\ldots{} significant.
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``Good work,'' I said. ``Both you.''
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``It was,'' Masego replied, clearly pleased I agreed with his own
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assessment.
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``The Pilgrim and the Artificer will handle wiping all trace of what we
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did here with Light,'' I said. ``As for us, though, we're done here.
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Let's load up our rock on a cart and head back.''
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``I'll be glad to,'' Roland admitted, casting a wary look at the mire.
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``I suspect we're about to have a great deal more company.''
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``Ain't that always the way, with us?'' I snorted. ``It's all about
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staying that one step ahead, Roland.''
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Well, that or you died.
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---
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Adjutant had transcribed seared stone into what looked like a halfway
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decent overview of central Hainaut in less than an hour with only one
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hand to use. A useful reminder that, even when crippled in a wheelchair
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Hakram could do the work of several people in a fraction of the time it
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would have taken them with objectively superior results. Masego was
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making noises that the prosthetics would soon be sufficiently attuned to
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the orc's body for surgery, so he might even be out of that chair soon
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-- though he'd have to learn to walk all over again, and likely keep
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using crutches for months. I'd used the span of time where he worked to
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have a wash in the river we'd camped near in the Twilight Ways, so it
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was feeling quite refreshed that I returned to my tent.
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Our venture of the morning had been rather productive, but now that we
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had the bird's eye view of this campaign it was time to decide exactly
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how we were going to fight it. My initial notion had been to lay an
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ambush for the Luciennerie army, but I wasn't sure how viable that would
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really be at the moment. I had a bottle of wine opened and sent for what
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was definitely not a war council: Indrani, Masego and Akua. Hakram was
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already at my side so there was hardly a need for an engraved invitation
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there. I rather wished Vivienne could have been there, as it'd been too
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long since all of the Woe had gathered, but she had duties of her own.
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Besides, without wanting to sound grim would have been gambling on my
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part to have my successor and I in the same theatre of war.
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``You know, when I blow up mud hills I don't get commended,'' Indrani
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complained the moment she drifted in. ``It's all `that was valuable
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ammunition, Archer', or `stop using our trebuchets outside battles'.''
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``Your point?'' I asked, cocking an eyebrow.
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She slid into a seat on the other side of the table, Akua and Masego
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following her into the tent with long strides, speaking in Mthethwa --
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something about `complexity returns', whatever those were -- and
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settling further down, Zeze taking the place at Indrani's side as if it
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were his natural one. I hid a smile.
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``It's favoritism, is my point,'' Indrani said, jabbing an accusing
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finger at me.
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``You're right,'' I admitted.
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The surprise on her face was quite delightful.
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``I \emph{do} like him better than you,'' I breezily added.
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She gasped in half-genuine offence.
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``Hakram, jot that down,'' I mused. ``We can look into having it made a
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royal decree.''
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I didn't go quite as far as jokingly offer Masego to blow up any hill he
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liked, because I was worried he might actually take me up on that offer.
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And, like, I \emph{did} have a lot of hills in my demesne in Marchford
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but they weren't exactly a renewable resource so while I wasn't outright
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saying `never blow up my hills' I'd at least want a \emph{reason} first.
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I felt like that was a justifiable stance to take, all things
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considered.
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``I'll see about having the list ranking us in the order you like most
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made official,'' Hakram idly said.
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There was a heartbeat of silence.
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``She doesn't have that,'' Indrani said, narrowing her eyes at me.
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``Of course I don't, number si- I mean, Indrani,'' I replied with a
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smile.
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I winked, botching it just because I knew it being half-assed would piss
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her off even more.
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``\emph{Come on},'' Archer complained. ``There's no way I'm last.''
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``That you think that is why you are, my dear,'' Akua gently smiled.
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I did admire how genuinely benign she could look while purposefully
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turning the knife in the wound, it was pretty impressive,
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``That sounds very useful,'' Masego said, sounding approving. ``Could I
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have a transcript, along with the criteria for ranking?''
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``I'll think about,'' I lied.
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Adjutant cleared his throat, a call to order before this ended up into a
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pleasant waste of several hours. Archer avenged herself on me by pouring
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herself a cup of wine and filling it up to the rim, like a
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\emph{savage}, while Akua considered me with golden eyes. A dress in red
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and white today, which while unable to decide whether it was a ballroom
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gown or a tabard remained quite flattering no matter the attached
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interpretation.
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``I heard through the grapevine that your adventure back on Creation was
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a success,'' Akua said.
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``Heh,'' Archer snickered, elbowing Zeze. ``She called you a plant.''
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``It was a metaphor,'' he revealed to her. ``\ldots{} I think. I don't
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believe even Wolof ever got the spell to work for a living person.''
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``They haven't,'' Akua assured him. ``Corpses only. Am I to take it,
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then, that this is to be a council of strategy?''
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It was a rhetorical question, we both knew, but one that'd push us into
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the meat of this meeting. She did like to provide these helpful light
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touches, though when Hakram was there she was much more careful about
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their use -- I got the feeling she was being exceedingly careful about
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never stepping on his toes. Likely she figured that trying to step into
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the position of my right hand was a fool's errand, which to be frank it
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was. Akua was a lot of things, many of which were technically curses,
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but socially blind wasn't one of them.
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``We have a bit of trouble,'' I said. ``The Iron Prince is a long way
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from shore, and the tide's getting rowdy.''
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``Have even ever been on a boat?'' Indrani skeptically asked.
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``A fishing boat, yes,'' I smugly replied.
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Only when it'd been docked and to get handsy with a boy, but she didn't
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need to know that.
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``By custom she's also high admiral of Callow unless the title is
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otherwise assigned,'' Hakram noted. ``Which makes her the finest sailor
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of all assembled here by far.''
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``I've helmed sailing ships on the Wasaliti at least twice a summer ever
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since I was-'' Akua began, tone irritated, then her face blanked and
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cleared her throat. ``Yet I believe there will be no ships involved here
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beyond the metaphorical, so-``
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I met Indrani's eyes across the table, sharing triumphant grins. It was
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always a rare treat to bait out of her a genuine reaction. Back when
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we'd started she'd often fake those to fit in better, but these days
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when she tried we could usually tell.
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``Why are we here, then?'' Masego asked me, cutting through Akua's
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verbal retreat. ``Most of us don't have military training, or at least
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not military officer training. Would you not be served better by a war
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council of your highest commanders?''
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``I already know what needs to be done,'' I honestly said. ``Might have
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to move the numbers around a bit, but there's not a lot of room for
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manoeuver when it comes down to it.''
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I leaned forward over the `map' Hakram had put together from the seared
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stone, tapping a finger on the representation of Klaus Papenheim's army.
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The part of it on the march, at least.
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``We need to reinforce those as they give battle to the undead ahead of
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them,'' I said.
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``No need to explain this for my benefit,'' Masego frankly said. ``I
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will only pretend to listen to regardless.''
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Well, at least he was being honest about it.
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``\emph{I} want to know,'' Indrani piously said. ``Because I care about
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you, and I'm a good friend.''
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``A valiant effort, number six,'' Akua murmured. ``If stunningly
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transparent.''
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``That's rich coming from you, Shifty Spectre,'' Archer muttered back.
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``I bet if I shone Light at you it'd go straight through.''
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``Since Indrani requests it, a quick summary,'' I said.
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I glanced at Hakram, who kicked Zeze under the table. Good man.
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``This,'' I said, as I put down my finger on the Iron Prince's army,
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``is the other Grand Alliance army in Hainaut. We want to save it,
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because if we don't we're fucked for the year -- if not for much longer
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than that.''
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I moved my finger slightly west on the map, maybe a day's march away
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from Klaus' army.
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``This is an undead force, which has to be at least twenty thousand and
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probably more,'' I said. ``The Iron Prince is marching on it, and will
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probably beat it in an open battle, but it represents a trap.''
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I moved even further west, still at the same height. There three forces
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could be made out, but I ignored the one headed south towards the
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Cigelin Sisters. That one was General Abigail's problem, or if she got
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lucky her prey: should the Sisters fall before those reinforcements
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arrive, Abigail of Summerholm would be in a very good position to simply
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smash that army when it arrived before her. It was always pleasant to be
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reminded that, for all his advantages over us, the Dead King had limits
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to his sight as well.
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``This is an army that used to be far to the west, in Luciennerie, but
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marched east to surprise us here in the valley,'' I said. ``It's large,
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at least a hundred thousand, and odds are it's going to hit the Iron
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Prince's army just the day after it fought a battle against the undead
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force I mentioned previously. That would be \emph{bad}.''
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Not only had the Prince of Hannoven left part of his army behind, which
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meant he'd be understrength -- I was guessing casualties had been rough
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taking Juvelun so he'd been forced to leave behind troops to protect a
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large amount of wounded -- but the dead would strike after our very
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mortal enemy had finished fighting another battle, with all the
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casualties and exhaustion that involved. No, if the Luciennerie columns
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actually reached Prince Klaus' army then it would be a disaster.
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``We are here, more or less,'' I finished, pointing to a spot on the
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map.
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Northwest of the Iron Prince and the undead he would soon fight, north
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of the Luciennerie columns. I'd hoped the Twilight Ways would allow us
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to steal the march on those, but the Dead King hadn't kept a sedate
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pace. Splitting into several columns would weaken him against an ambush,
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but it had also allowed the large army to march quicker. When you had
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the kind of numbers Keter could boast of, often timing was more
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important than formations.
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``That does not seem like the right place to be,'' Masego assessed. ``We
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should perhaps move towards the Iron Prince, who we are meant to save.''
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A conclusion I'd not dragged him towards, though I had perhaps gently
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taken him by the hand and walked him there.
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``Which we'll do,'' I said. ``But it can't be only that. If we just
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reinforce Prince Klaus with all we have, the advancing columns will hit
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us not long afterwards. That's not a battle I want to give, not right
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now.''
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If we got there in time to reinforce our allies, which it was a coin
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toss we would, then we'd have numbers on our side for the first battle.
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We'd still take losses, though, and tire our men. Then for the battle
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that followed we \emph{wouldn't} have the numbers, and we'd have all the
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damage done by our first fight weighing us down. I honestly believed
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we'd be able to win that battle too, but the costs would be hard to
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bear. We'd want to have that fight when we were prepared and
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well-rested, not buried in blood and dust. As it happened I knew exactly
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where I wanted to fight that decisive battle: the city of Hainaut, the
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very capital of the principality.
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Which meant I had to prevent the Luciennerie columns from reaching that
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battlefield, and there honestly weren't twenty ways to do that.
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``Which is why-``
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``I see,'' Masego sagely nodded.
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I paused. Was he just going to say that at regular intervals in the hope
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I'd figure that meant he was listening? I glanced at Archer, who offered
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me winsome smile. Ugh. She hadn't been listening either, had she? Gods,
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those two had gotten even worse now that they were together. It was like
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they'd crossbred their character flaws into one single great malevolent
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chimera.
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``Hakram,'' I sighed.
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Masego yelped as he was kicked under the table, and though Indrani
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smiled mockingly and tried to move back her chair she found that shadows
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had mysteriously kept it stuck where it was. She glared at Akua.
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``Praesi treache- \emph{ow}, Hakram that was my knee you prick!''
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``I've no idea what you could possibly mean, darling,'' Akua smiled,
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sipping at a wine glass she'd never poured.
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``Which is why we will be fighting a holding action against the enemy
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columns,'' I said, ``while the majority of our army reinforces Prince
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Klaus. At the moment, I'm inclined to field only the Order and the
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Second Army. We'll take a few Named as well, but once more the majority
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will be headed towards the Iron Prince.''
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``Ah,'' Masego frowned, ``I must have missed something. Or is the plan
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truly to fight the largest enemy army with the small force you
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mentioned, while the rest all gathers to fight together a smaller army
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that the Prince of Hannoven could likely beat alone?''
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``No,'' I mused, ``that's a fairly apt summation actually.''
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He frowned further.
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``How many bottles have you \emph{had}?'' Zeze severely asked.
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Indrani cackled in laughter, while even Hakram cracked a smile. Only
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loyal -- treacherous -- reliable -- well, relatively speaking -- Akua
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did not descend into opportunistic mockery.
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``We slow the enemy by a day, perhaps two, and then retreat as the
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Prince of Hannoven will during the time we bought him,'' she noted. ``It
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seems achievable. Where is it that you intend to make our stand
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afterwards, Catherine?''
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I tapped a finger on the capital, meeting her eyes.
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``Bold,'' Akua noted.
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``Symbolic,'' I said. ``And, aside from that kind of consideration, it's
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finest set of fortifications in the valley. Our best bet by far.''
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Abigail would have the Cigelin Sisters secured by then, taking the
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pressure off of our defensive line, and from behind city walls we'd be
|
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able to supply ourselves through the Twilight Ways. If not necessarily
|
|
for long, given the difficulties of feeding so many people by convoys.
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Neshamah was after our extermination, so he'd come for us in Hainaut
|
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sure as dawn -- he might not ever again get this good an opportunity to
|
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wipe out our full forces in this front. The great army that'd chased
|
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after Prince Klaus from Malmedit would be drawn into this as well, and
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at the capital of the fallen principality we would roll the dice on the
|
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outcome of this campaign.
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``It's a delaying action we'll be fighting, Zeze,'' I added for his
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|
sake. ``The objective here isn't to win the battle, it's to slow down
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the enemy while losing as few people as possible and making it away
|
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safely.''
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``I see,'' Masego said, and I narrowed my eyes.
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It seemed like he meant it this time, though, so I let it go.
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``I am still unsure why you gathered us here,'' he then admitted.
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``'cause we're all going to be with her in that scrap,'' Indrani
|
|
casually said. ``So she wants to hear us first. What we need, which
|
|
Named we want to keep. That about right?''
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|
``It is,'' I said. ``I've an idea or two to slow down the enemy while
|
|
avoiding a bloody fight, but I'll be relying on all of you. I'll likely
|
|
be on the field, which means Hakram will be holding command over our
|
|
Named in my absence while General Hune and Grandmaster Talbot will
|
|
handle the manoeuvering.''
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``How many Named do we get to keep?'' Indrani asked.
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|
``Four, five tops,'' I said. ``Aside from the people here, of course.''
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|
``Then we should bring the Blessed Artificer,'' Archer bluntly said. ``I
|
|
know she's not exactly the favourite of anyone at this table, but-``
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|
|
``Large-scale workings, even in something as limited as Light, will be
|
|
of great use,'' Masego calmly interrupted. ``I agree. I would request
|
|
the Summoner, myself. His branch of sorcery is highly flexible, and
|
|
unlike Roland there would be no complications in wresting his magic for
|
|
use of my own should there be need.''
|
|
|
|
Why was it that the most useful Named so often ended up being the most
|
|
unpleasant ones? Still, just because I personally disliked both people
|
|
mentioned did not mean they'd not been brought up for good reasons. The
|
|
Summoner, in particular, was someone I'd been inclined to bring in.
|
|
While tiresome he wasn't too difficult to handle, he really was just
|
|
that damned useful to have around.
|
|
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|
``Who will be leading the Named reinforcing Prince Klaus?'' Akua asked.
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|
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|
``Unless one of you requests him, it will be Roland,'' I said.
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|
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|
The shade cocked her head to the side.
|
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|
|
``Not the Grey Pilgrim,'' she observed.
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|
|
|
``I have a use for him, as it happens,'' I smiled. ``Unless one of you
|
|
objects?''
|
|
|
|
None did. I doubted Tariq would be hard to talk into it, if he needed to
|
|
be convinced at all. This sort of stand was right up his alley, and
|
|
while the Forsworn Healer brought similar strength in healing --
|
|
superior when it came to groups actually -- to the table, there were few
|
|
Named who could boast of sharper bite than the Peregrine. That made
|
|
three down, so we still had room for some. I glanced at Hakram.
|
|
|
|
``I would keep the Apprentice,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``She has been of
|
|
use, and I have a particular idea in mind.''
|
|
|
|
That had a promising ring to it. Both this talk of idea and Hakram no
|
|
longer talking of having the young girl along through his teeth.
|
|
|
|
``Do you now?'' I muttered. ``Done, then. I'll look forward to it.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes moved to Akua, who had laid her chin on her palm and seemed deep
|
|
in thought. She worked differently than I did, I'd noticed, when it came
|
|
to laying schemes. I preferred to have someone to speak with, as I'd
|
|
found that the back-and-forth and other set of eyes usually helped me
|
|
find angles, but silence was her own way. I sometimes wondered how much
|
|
of that had been that, as a girl, there simply would have been no one
|
|
she could afford to trust with her thoughts.
|
|
|
|
``I take it you do not have a precise role in mind for me already?''
|
|
Akua asked.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I said. ``I expect I'll be moving between places putting out
|
|
fires, and I had a thought you might be the solution to my inability to
|
|
be in two places at once, but that's not set in stone. If you have a
|
|
proposal, I'm all ears.''
|
|
|
|
``Very forward,'' Indrani said, not disapprovingly.
|
|
|
|
I ignored her.
|
|
|
|
``I have a notion, perhaps,'' the shade mused. ``It have been
|
|
considering the nature of our enemy, and how best it might be struck
|
|
at.''
|
|
|
|
``So you have someone in mind,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' Akua Sahelian smiled. ``I've a use for the Rapacious
|
|
Troubadour, my heart.''
|
|
|
|
I blinked. That, uh, had not been the name -- Name -- I was expecting.
|
|
But that actually made it easier to claim five Named, since neither the
|
|
Apprentice nor the Troubadour were considered major battlefield assets.
|
|
\emph{Mind you, if the Doom of Liesse has a use for a singer I doubt
|
|
it'll be because she has a hankering for a tune}, I thought.
|
|
|
|
``You have him, then,'' I said. ``Which makes five.''
|
|
|
|
We had our roster, our plan and our enemy. There'd be a war council
|
|
later to hammer all the details together, but as far as I was concerned
|
|
the essentials were settled.
|
|
|
|
And just like that, to war we went.
|