499 lines
26 KiB
TeX
499 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-68-opposition}{%
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\chapter{Opposition}\label{chapter-68-opposition}}
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\epigraph{``No matter how long you glare at the sun, it will not blink
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first.''}{Taghreb saying}
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I missed using a shield.
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It didn't really fit with my fighting style anymore -- digging in when
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you had a bad leg was a good way to trip and stumble into a very stupid
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death -- but there'd been something both comforting and satisfying about
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having a large slab of metal to put between myself and the enemy. Now I
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had to keep my eye on the enemy at all times, to gauge and parry and
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manoeuver without rest. Just taking the hit and then smashing my foes
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had been both simpler and, honesty compelled me to admit, viscerally
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satisfying in a way that all this finesse and calculation wasn't. I knew
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a thing or two about pulling strings, these days, but I suspected that
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deep down it was the lessons of the Pit that'd always stay engraved in
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bones: blood and sinew, the vicious satisfaction of just \emph{decking
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someone in the face}.
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Still, it felt good to engage sword in hand. I slapped aside the
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skeleton's blow -- strong but slow, and so very predictable -- and
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smashed its bare skull with the pommel of my sword, a shiver of Night
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accompanying the crack of bone breaking. The necromancy keeping it
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animate broke and the pile of bones collapsed, leaving me free to cast a
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glance around. The enemy had successfully scaled the wall in the centre
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stretch after making a ramp out of dead, wet ghouls that fireballs
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couldn't touch but the other two attempts at the extremities of the
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Boot's `sole' had failed when the Light of House Insurgent incinerated
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the attempts in a way that magefire could not.
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Now even here, where we'd been taken by surprise, the last of the dead
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were being put down as I watched. It'd not been a major setback, all in
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all, with perhaps only two hundred skeletons and ghouls making it up
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here before they were surrounded and contained, but it'd had the
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potential to turn dangerous. If the enemy had kept pouring troops there,
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it could have turned into a beachhead. Yet I found, even as my soldiers
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began to cheer our temporary victory, that my heart did not lift. My
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eyes remained on the silhouettes in the distance, the utterly still
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ranks of the dead standing just outside of the range of our ballistas.
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Even though this had been a weak foothold, and made in a place where my
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army would have rather sharp teeth in its counterattack -- our defences
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were geared around holding the peninsula first and foremost, since we'd
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known it would likely face the worst of the assaults -- it \emph{had}
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been a foothold. The first the enemy had managed to keep since they'd
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begun their attacks this morning. Yet the enemy general had not
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reinforced his attacking force after sending that first wave of three
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thousand or so, leaving the three prongs to fail and be wiped out. Most
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of the enemy army had never engaged, and was watching us in silence even
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now. Waiting, patient as only the soldiers of the grave could be.
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``What are you up to now?'' I murmured, leaning against my staff.
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The general I was facing this time was canny in the way that the
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intelligence behind the Second Battle of Lauzon's Hollow hadn't been.
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That thing with the ghoul ramps? It'd been an adaptation to the fact
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that, as long as Archer had unravellers to use as arrows, she was a hard
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counter to Keter's usual tactic of using large constructs as siege ramps
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and troop transports. The artefacts were too precious to be used on
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ghouls, especially when they were being used by the hundreds here. In
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fact the only constructs we'd seen used so far had been the great snakes
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that'd beached near the fort, and those had stayed under the water until
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the very last moment.
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\emph{We are being tested}, I thought, eyes watching the rows of the
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dead. Three thousand of the most expendable among the undead gathering
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to face us as Maillac's Boot had just been tossed at my defences like
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scraps off a plate, just to test the strengths and weakness of our
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arrangements. \emph{And you sent a handful of a Revenants out}, I then
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thought, \emph{to probe what kind of Named there are on our side too.}
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It was a good thing, I grimly thought, that I'd always intended to keep
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Masego and Akua back as long as possible. Even just the awareness of
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their presence might have been enough to forewarn my enemy some.
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The cheers washed over me and I painted a smile on my face, raising my
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sword in victory to roars of approval, but the joy did not reach my
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eyes. I wasn't so sure we'd truly gotten the better out of this round,
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not in the way that mattered, and that unsettled me. Still, I could
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hardly bemoan about what looked like a win to most of my soldiers. I
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went around and gave praise and encouragement where they should go,
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limping along the rampart to harden the spine of my soldiers before the
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next assault. Time passed and the sun kept rising in the sky, the hour
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slowly edging away from Morning Bell and towards Noon Bell, and though
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the quiet on the fronts was pleasing to my soldier it had dread slowly
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settling in my stomach.
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We'd been seen through.
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Under the excuse of having a drink of water -- the sun was hammering
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down hard, and we were all baking in our helmets -- I left the wall and
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settled further in, having discreetly sent for General Hune. I stood in
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the shadow cast by the ogre, pulling at a canteen, and wiped my mouth as
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I nodded back to her greetings.
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``They're not attacking,'' I bluntly said.
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I wasn't saying anything she or anyone with eyes didn't already know,
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but the two of us knew the danger represented by that sentence. We'd
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been counting on our enemy hitting us as soon as it could assemble a
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wave, trying to grind us down through constant battle, but instead the
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opposition had called a halt after a single major assault.
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``They must be waiting for the second wave to arrive,'' General Hune
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said. ``That complicates matters, Your Majesty.''
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It fucking well did. For one, we wouldn't be dealing with twenty
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thousand undead and then later that day thirty -- or perhaps even forty
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-- thousand more. The opposition was gathering for a single sweep, an
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overwhelming wave. That was\ldots{} problematic. It wasn't like we'd not
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considered the possibility that the enemy would try to besiege us
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instead of battle on our terms, but we'd never meant to actually stay
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here long enough for it to be an issue. The plan had been to break the
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first two waves and then evacuate before the third could arrive, using
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the pharos device to open a large enough amount of gates for it to be
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feasible, but this changed things. The moment we actually used the
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device, now, \emph{then} the enemy would begin its attack. Whoever the
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leading commander on the other side was, they'd clearly grasped the core
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weakness of my position: an evacuation through the Twilight Ways when
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under assault meant that at least my rearguard was going to get
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slaughtered.
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Facing fifty thousand dead, though, and all the horrors Keter had to
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unleash? Shit, we'd maybe lose a third of the ten thousand soldiers of
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the Second Army on our way out.There'd be a point in the battle where
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three thousand or so soldiers would be trying to squeeze through the
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gates while surrounded on all sides and without the support of the rest
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of the army. Juniper had run war games, and when that tipping point was
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reached what ensued was\ldots{} grim, to say the least. \emph{Fuck}. If
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the dead had been intending on standing there and doing nothing as we
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left I would have waved them on my way out and called it a day, but
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there was no way they'd be willing to do me that favour.
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``Your opinion?'' I asked.
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``We must prepare for a fighting retreat into the ways and use the
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pharos device the moment our forces are in place,'' General Hune replied
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without hesitation. ``Within the hour at most. The second wave will
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begin arriving soon, and it will only get worse from there.''
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I hummed noncommittally. I got from her words that the ogre general was
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seeing this as a choice needing to be made between two fighting
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retreats: one begun now, while the enemy was not yet fully gathered, or
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one begun later when it had. There would be no extracting ourselves from
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this without losing a few fingers. Much as I did not like to consider
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it, I honestly wasn't sure she was wrong. We'd made plans for the enemy
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showing restraint, so it wasn't like we were going into this blind --
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officers had been briefed, we'd even planned out which parts of the
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defences should be abandoned first -- but we'd never really considered
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that the enemy would just toss three thousand expendables at us and then
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just\ldots{} stand there.
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Even our worst case had the enemy pulling out after effective losses of
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half its number, choosing to bolster the second wave rather than waste
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the rest of its numbers on a fruitless assault.
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``We could attempt to break out towards the east,'' I finally said.
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``I will obey that order if it is given,'' General Hune blandly replied.
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I cocked an eyebrow.
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``But,'' I said, invitation implicit.
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``It is my opinion that we would find ourselves in the same situation as
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now in a day, only without the fortifications and retreat plan,'' Hune
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said. ``Even going on the offensive and attempting to smash the first
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wave before the second arrives would be a superior option, to my eye. We
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would incur losses, but should we then retreat to our fortifications our
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original plan could then be resumed, if at a disadvantage.''
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I grimaced. Taking a swing at the dead in the swamp wasn't really
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something I wanted to do unless there was no other option: the undead
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would be better at fighting in the muck, and it wasn't like Keter had
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even been shy about poisoning water. No, an attack of my infantry into
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that mire was a dead end. And yet I had some difficulty resigning myself
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to making a decision that would be, in essence, writing off a third of
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the Second Army. The thought had me clenching my fingers, even though
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the cold thing that lay at the heart of me knew that I'd give the order
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if I had to, but I would not bend my neck to this ending before first
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attempting otherwise.
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``We'll attempt to force them into an attack first,'' I said. ``My
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people have been working on a project that might leave them no other
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option -- and even if they manage to withstand it, we'll first be able
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to thin the herd before retreating.''
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General Hune's eyes narrowed.
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``Then Your Majesty agrees that a retreat is in order,'' she said.
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``I do,'' I admitted. ``And you'll need to inform your officer cadres we
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might be headed there. But first I want to see if the dead can be
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strong-armed into wasting themselves on our walls.''
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``And might you do that?'' the ogre skeptically asked.
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``By making it clear it's the least wasteful option left to them,'' I
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replied with a hard smile.
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It was time to for Masego to come out.
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---
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``I've not managed to increase the effective range,'' Hierophant
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admitted, ``not laterally, at least.''
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``Which still leaves vertically,'' I grunted. ``If the Summoner makes a
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flying beast and we strap your platform to the back, can you cast?''
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He mulled over that for a moment.
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``Yes,'' Masego finally said. ``I cannot promise the same degree of
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precision that the solid ground would allow for, however.''
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``If there's one good thing about our situation, Zeze,'' I said, ``it's
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that even if you miss, you'll hit.''
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``That sounds like a blatant logical contradiction,'' he noted, ``but I
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will take your word for it.''
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``Kind of you,'' I drily replied. ``I'll be handling the Summoner, so
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ready your affairs and wait for us on the Boot.''
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The Summoner's reaction to the order was mixed: on one hand, he had
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cowardly tendencies and preferred not to put himself in great danger.
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It'd already spread through the ranks that some of the Scourges were
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here. On the other hand, I'd made it clear that this was a crucial task
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I'd attend to as well and that'd flattered his self-importance. Still,
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there was no arguing with a direct order from me when it came to
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battlefield affairs. The wyvern-construct still had that unearthly glow,
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but it looked much more sharply defined now. I could make out the shift
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of muscles when it moved, and there was an animal cunning in its eyes.
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It was also smart enough to be terrified of Hierophant, which was plain
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good sense.
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The Summoner had warned me that it might get unruly when Masego tied a
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flat circular stone atop its back, but instead the construct did not
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dare move a muscle. It behaved around Hierophant the same way a deer
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would around a lion -- frozen and hoping the predator wasn't hungry
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today. We took flight without much fanfare, to sparse cheers from my
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soldiers. I wove an anchor for my feet on the wyvern's back and added a
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transparent bubble to shield me from the winds. The Summoner led us
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towards the enemy ranks, as I'd asked him to, but stayed high in the
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sky. We'd yet to see buzzards in the area so our flight was not
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contested, though I doubted that would last forever.
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We circled slowly atop the front ranks of the enemy, Masego wresting
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magic from a few spare artifacts so he might steady himself atop the
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circular stone. A bubble rather similar to mine formed around him, and I
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shouted for the Summoner to halt the construct's flight and make it stay
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in place. Long, deft fingers began to trace runes in the air as I risked
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a glance downwards. The dead were splayed out for what must have been
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the better part of a mile but none were paying attention to us at the
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moment. Safety through heights? It \emph{was} true that without buzzards
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around Keter would find it hard to contest our presence up here. We were
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high up enough that neither arrows nor javelins were a worry, and magic
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would be seen long before it became a threat.
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``Abyss and firmament,'' the Hierophant said, and though his voice was
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quiet it \emph{rippled}. ``I take the shape of the star and the depth of
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the pit, borrowing laws high and low.''
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Below us, moving as a single entity, seventeen thousand undead heads
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turned to gaze up at us.
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``That can't be good,'' I muttered.
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``I have woven curses into hymn, stuffed a heart with straw,'' the
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Hierophant called out, voiced cadenced. ``That which is hollow I have
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raised onto the dais, revered as glorious under three skies and revered
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by nine corners.''
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From below a tide of darkness rose, but I realized after a heartbeat
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that it was not a ritual. It was a few thousand curses, thrown at us
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together from as many hands. I clenched my staff closely, hoping to the
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Hells that Masego was done with that incantation soon.
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``Behold,'' the Hierophant said.
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I winced, covering my ears at the horrid grind that lay behind the word.
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The Sisters murmured uneasily in the back of my mind.
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``Behold,'' the Hierophant said, ``all ye with eyes, for I have made a
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god of clay and it is an idol of \textbf{wrath}.''
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The sky screamed. There was no other word for it. The air wavered and
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shrieked and twisted, an alien gleam filling my vision as I pulled down
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my hood to shield my eyes. As if a god had breathed out in front of us,
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the wyvern banked wildly and had to struggle not to fall -- the Summoner
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screamed, voice shrilly -- but after less than a heartbeat the pressure
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was all gone. I first glimpsed Masego, panting as he stood surrounded by
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fading runes, and only after making sure he was fine did I glance down.
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\emph{Gods}, I thought. There was a smoking crater in the swamp, maybe a
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hundred feet wide, and though water was streaking back in it looked like
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the\ldots{} smite had baked the very mud. How many undead had been
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vaporized with that, I wondered. Two, three hundred? Likely more, and a
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great wave was going through the swamp that toppled more than a few
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soldiers. Of the curses that had been rising to hit us, there was no
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trace. Much like, I thought, a child throwing a pebble into the path of
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falling mountain would not be able to pick it out afterwards.
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``Can you do that again?'' I asked, tone calm.
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``I believe so,'' Masego noted. ``Though not many times.''
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``Then do it,'' I ordered with a hard smile.
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Power began to gather again, and below us I found exactly what I'd
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wanted: advancing as one, the dead were headed towards the Second Army.
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\emph{Decisive}, I silently praised the enemy general. The moment they'd
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realized that it was possible we'd just stay up here and hammer them
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into nothing, they'd abandoned the notion of sieging my army and begun
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to close the distance. If the dead were too close to my own troops,
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after all, it'd be risky to keep using this. Still, they weren't out of
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the woods yet. I wove Night over my ears and dug my feet in, as Masego's
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voice swelled in incantation again, wondering how many shots we'd get in
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before he was too exhausted to continue.
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The answer, as it turned out, was six.
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It didn't matter, as by then the enemy was committed to an assault on
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all our defences and all that pulling out would accomplish was allow us
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to smash the undead army as it retreated. We flew back to the Boot, and
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though I was wary the whole way back there was no ambush. Bo buzzards
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came out of nowhere, no Revenants were tossed up in the sky. It made
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sense, I admitted to myself, since we weren't fighting a field army here
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so much as a bunch of warbands and marching columns tossed in our
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direction when we popped out. I supposed it was a testament to how
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fucking unpleasant of an adversary the Dead King was that even when luck
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allowed us to get one over him I still ended up unsure it wasn't a ploy
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on his part.
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``Your service in this campaign has been exemplary,'' I told the
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Summoner after her dismissed his wyvern.
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Much as I disliked the man personally, he'd ended up consistently
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useful. Being unpleasant didn't mean he shouldn't get praised, just that
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it'd irk me to dole it out.
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``I am pleased to have my worth recognized by my queen,'' the Summoner
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replied, smirking. ``I hope to continue to be of service after these
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trifles, of course.''
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My eyes narrowed. The little shit had been born and raised and Procer,
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as far as I knew, but he had been insisting he was Callowan for some
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time. The offer of `continued service' was pretty straightforward,
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meaning he wanted to settle in Callow after the war and probably
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expected a lordship to be tacked on to sweeten the deal. Considering he
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wasn't all that difficult to deal with and his ambitions seemed
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relatively limited, I wasn't necessarily opposed to that. So long as it
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was a court title with no lands attached. Mind you, that wasn't my
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decision alone to make. I wasn't foisting him off on Vivienne without
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giving her a say in the matter.
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``I look forward to it,'' I mildly said, ``and will pass along your
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sentiments to Lady Dartwick.''
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``It would be an honour,'' the Summoner said, ``to make her
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acquaintance.''
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Yeah, that one definitely wanted to settle in Callow after the war. I
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wasn't sure I could blame him, considering short of Praes it'd probably
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end up one of the nations that least minded villains. So long as he
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stayed loyal to crown and country, it was not an inaccurate assessment
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for him to figure he'd not only be tolerate but actively protected. If
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he was loyal then he would be considered as an asset, and Vivienne was
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of a practical bent when it came to protecting Callowan interests. Some
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of the decisions I had made she would not ever repeat, but that did not
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meant she was naïve -- just that she was not as good as ignoring the
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whispers of her conscience.
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I escorted Masego to a healer's tent so he might rest, ignoring his
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protests, and only then went to join the battle. His exhaustion was not
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a threat to his health, but the healers were unlikely to let him out of
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a bed in his state and Zeze's fathers had drilled into him the paramount
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importance of not ignoring what your healer told you. It'd been with the
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addendum that priests were fumbling ignorant cheats and this rule mostly
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applied to mage healers, but I liked to think the years had mostly
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weaned Masego out of that instilled disdain.
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There was no lack of enemies for me to fight anywhere along the
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defensive lines, but it was on the Boot that I stayed. Even as swarms of
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skeletons and ghouls assaulted the walls and my soldiers stubbornly held
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on the walls, retreating only when officers pulled on their whistles and
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fresh troops were rotated in, I smothered a smile. This was hard
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fighting, but it was also a victory of sorts: the enemy and I had stared
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each other down across this swamp, and with Masego's help it had been
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the enemy that blinked first. Now it was bleeding away its strength
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failing to take our walls, and though it was not without casualties on
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our side the advantage was decisively ours.
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For every soldier we lost they lost four, and our wounded weren't left
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to die -- they were pulled back, brought to the healer tents. I moved
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along the wall, sticking to wherever the fight was hardest, and through
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thrice the enemy earned a foothold atop the wall thrice that foothold
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was clawed back. As the time passed, though, the lack of Revenants
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entering the fray began to weigh on me. The opposing general was keeping
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its trump cards away from us, unwilling to risk them before what was
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likely to be the decisive stretch: the assault of the second wave.
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Still, this round went well for us. When it became undeniable than any
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more lingering would lead to a complete wipeout the enemy broke away,
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limping back into the swamps under the fire of our mages and the House
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Insurgent.
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I headed towards my general's tent when the last of the dead walked out
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of range, intent on hearing casualty reports. Though the official
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reports were still incomplete, Hune already had estimates when I found
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her: at least five hundred dead and seven hundred wounded. Even for a
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well-prepared defensive action, I found the numbers astonishing and told
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her as much. Her general staff preened, but she was unmoved.
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``It is only initial reports, Your Majesty,'' General Hune said. ``We
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will see if the real figures remain so flattering.''
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``I expect they will,'' I said. ``The Second Army had yet to fail a
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single expectation I set out for it.''
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|
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|
Not that I'd set out many, but a little praise could go a long way.
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|
Officers gossiped with officers, and that gossip had a way of trickling
|
|
down to the ranks. After that, though, I headed to my own tent. I'd been
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|
fighting sporadically since early morning and drawing on Night
|
|
regularly, so I was damn exhausted. Since Archer was keeping an eye out
|
|
for necromantic constructs, still on her perch, it was one of the
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|
phalanges that helped me out of my armour. It was now almost an hour
|
|
past Noon Bell, I learned, and I recalled that we believed the second
|
|
wave would begin arriving slightly before Afternoon Bell. That still
|
|
left me at least an hour and change to nap, which I hoped would refresh
|
|
me when the next round of fighting came.
|
|
|
|
Gods knew that my leg ached like a bloody wound, at the moment, and
|
|
staying on my feet would only make it worse. I crawled into bed with
|
|
strict instructions to wake me if there was another assault, but
|
|
otherwise leave me to my slumber for at least an hour. Clutching a
|
|
blanket, I spent the first few moments wondering what my enemy's plan
|
|
were and if I would find sleep at all, but before I knew it exhaustion
|
|
had triumphed over worry: I fell into a deep, dark slumber.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I woke up tasting my sweat against the roof of my mouth, likely stinking
|
|
all the way up to the Heavens. Most of my affairs were already packed,
|
|
in deference to the rapidly approaching need to evacuate this place, but
|
|
there was still a bowl of water for me to rinse myself up a little. It
|
|
was hardly a wash, but what would be the point? I was headed back into
|
|
the thick of it anyway, and the afternoon soon would be no more kind
|
|
than the morning one had been. I'd woken before any of the phalanges
|
|
could wake me, and found a pair of them standing guard outside my tent.
|
|
|
|
``I'll need one of you to help me back into my armour,'' I said. ``And
|
|
reports, meanwhile.''
|
|
|
|
As it turned out, during my hour of sleep I'd missed little. The enemy
|
|
had pulled back even further than before, and while General Hune
|
|
believed that the vanguard of the second wave might have begun to arrive
|
|
early there'd been no way to be sure. Sending scouts into that swamp,
|
|
even our nimblest goblins, would just be throwing away lives. I decided
|
|
to speak with Hune before returning to the fronts, to get a read on when
|
|
she believed we should pull the trigger on the pharos device, and
|
|
inquired as to her whereabouts as I fastened the Mantle of Woe over my
|
|
armour.
|
|
|
|
``She is in her tent, Your Majesty,'' the young phalange told me.
|
|
``Speaking with her staff tribune, I believe.''
|
|
|
|
Good, at least I knew the way. Though my limp was not quick it was
|
|
steady, and with my sword back on my belt I made my way to the tent. I
|
|
was a mere thirty feet away from it when a splash of red in the sky to
|
|
the south caught my attention. A signal spell, I thought. An attack on
|
|
the palisade? An assault would have been seen coming, though, and I
|
|
would have heard of it. Unless it was a strike by Revenants, I thought,
|
|
but it seemed a bold and unnecessary gambled on the enemy general's
|
|
part. Perhaps a force had been snuck out under an obfuscation spell.
|
|
Regardless, with the Grey Pilgrim there and reinforcements no doubt
|
|
already on their way I had little to worry about.
|
|
|
|
Two guards were standing outside of Hune's tent, but their stances were
|
|
natural. It wasn't that that gave it away. It was the \emph{scent}. I'd
|
|
known enough battlefields that I would recognize the scent of fresh
|
|
blood anywhere. Stomach dropping I hurried forward, tapping one of the
|
|
guards gently with my staff only to see the armoured orc topple --
|
|
already dead, just propped up to look as if still alive. The scent of
|
|
blood was even thicker inside the tent, I smelled as I forced open the
|
|
flap, but it was my ears that I was relying on and it saved my life. I
|
|
heard the spin of the throwing knife that should have buried itself in
|
|
my left eye and hastily ducked down, just in time to see a grey-cloaked
|
|
figure turn away from me.
|
|
|
|
The Varlet. I'd recognize the cloak anywhere.
|
|
|
|
And just as I drew on Night, spinning up a work, I saw the Varlet dance
|
|
around a blow of the tall, roaring Hune -- made silent by some aspect,
|
|
for all her shouting -- and flicker forward to carve open my general's
|
|
throat.
|