597 lines
29 KiB
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597 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-52-sortie}{%
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\section{Chapter 52: Sortie}\label{chapter-52-sortie}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Swift wars are long in the making.''}
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-- Stygian Proverb
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\end{quote}
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The army set out from Neustal on a warm, sunny morning.
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I'd been up since before dawn, when our outriders had set out -- the
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Osena and Volignac light horse -- so I was well into my day when the
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columns got moving. The Dominion forces of Razin and Aquiline served as
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our vanguard, an `honour' they'd asked for and few had cared to contest.
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Given how light on their feet Levant infantry could be, raiders at heart
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that they were, my main concern had been that they'd get too far ahead
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of the rest of the army. To ensure otherwise I'd put General Hune and
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her Second Army behind them, since the lordlings were likely to curb
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their enthusiasm if they were leaving her in the dust.
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Behind the Second I put our Alamans forces, the veteran Volignac army
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and the fantassin companies Princess Beatrice had picked in my name.
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With the Firstborn under my Lord of Silent Steps behind them, they made
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up the `centre' of our army on the march. At night I'd let the drow
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loose on my enemies, but during day marches they needed to be protected.
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While beyond the drowsiness around dawn the Firstborn weren't
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\emph{harmed} by daylight, it really was a waste to have them fighting
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by day considering how much more effective they were by night.
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Our rearguard would be the Third Army under General Abigail: if there
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was anyone likely to see an ambush coming a mile away and leave no stone
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unturned looking for it, it was my sole Callowan general.
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The Proceran troops were still filing out of the front gate in a
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semblance of good order -- it looked like Princess Beatrice had spread
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out her own infantry between fantassin companies, using the rhythmic
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pace-setting of her drummers in an attempt at setting a marching beat
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for all Alamans soldiery -- under my watchful eye when Hakram came to
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see me. Not in the stronghold as I'd claimed one of the watchtowers
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overlooking the trenches, half a mile away from Neustal, as a temporary
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base while the army got moving. It was a good vantage, and I'd been
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killing time talking with Pickler when Adjutant arrived.
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There was no real way for him to come up, considering the top of the
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watchtower was accessible only by ladder, so I wove myself a few solid
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tendrils of Night. I anchored them to the edge of the tower rampart and
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went over the edge, guiding them to gently lower me in a landing before
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the orc. The sight was common enough that my escort -- knights of the
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Broken Bells -- did not even visibly react. Night was a lot less
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eldritch a power to their eyes, these days. People could get used to
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anything if it happened regularly enough.
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``Catherine,'' Hakram greeted me. ``Here are the last dispatches before
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we leave.''
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He offered me a few parchments with his skeleton hand and I took them. I
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noticed the Apprentice wasn't around, even though he'd ended up
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accepting her presence as a helper. He must have left her behind for the
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trip.
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``Thanks,'' I replied, folding them open one after another.
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The first was ordinary diplomacy: well wishes from Hasenbach and the
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Highest Assembly in our offensive. The second slightly more important,
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word from the Iron Prince that the dead had begun testing his army with
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large-scale night raids as it went up the mining roads. So far his
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pickets had caught them in time, but Prince Klaus believed it likely
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that his preparedness for a battle was being measured. That was
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promising, considering we quite wanted the undead army holed up in
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Juvelun to come out and fight him.
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The last might be the most important of the three, though it was by far
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the least ornate. Just two sentences scribbled in a familiar
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handwriting: \emph{It went well, the work has begun. I am on my way.} I
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allowed myself a thin smile. Good, that was a load off my back. I passed
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the parchments back to Adjutant.
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``We've sent word to Papenheim we're on the move, right?'' I suddenly
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asked.
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``I handled it this morning, as soon as the first soldier walked out the
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gate,'' he agreed.
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Thank the Gods he'd handled that, it'd entirely slipped my mind. Looking
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at him I began to speak then closed abruptly closed my mouth. My
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conversation with Vivienne last night had been fruitful, including her
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finding a candidate for talks with General Sacker -- the steward I'd
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left to rule Marchford in my name, who was both minor nobility and
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fluent in Mtethwa as well as familiar with goblins from the tribe
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settled in my holdings -- and suggesting the Jacks begin infiltrating
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the deserters' camp. The part that'd surprised me, though, was that
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she'd also been in favour of arms sales to the orc clans rebelling in
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the Steppes.
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She'd even urged me to discuss the matter more in depth with Hakram
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instead of dismissing it as I had, something that'd weighed on my mind
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since. Vivienne might not have stated it outright, but there'd been more
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than politics behind that piece of advice. Was now really the time,
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though, just as our offensive was beginning? \emph{If I don't make the
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time, I'll never have it}, I chided myself.
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``Adjutant,'' I said. ``When we discussed our options in the Wasteland,
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yesterday-``
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``The decision was made,'' Hakram calmly cut in. ``There is no need to
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revisit it.''
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``Maybe there is,'' I said. ``Put in an hour for it tonight, in my
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schedule. Give me an idea what the monetary costs might be of selling or
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sending armaments.''
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His eyes narrowed.
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``Vivienne is meddling,'' the orc gravelled.
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It wasn't a question.
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``She made a suggestion,'' I shrugged. ``I found worth in it.''
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His face grew very hard to read for a moment.
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``Pity is a poor basis for a queen's decisions,'' Adjutant stiffly said.
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``That's not what this is,'' I sharply said.
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``Have your reasons for choosing differently yesterday become any less
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true?'' Adjutant said. ``No.~Nothing has changed, save that you spoke
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with Vivienne.''
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``I'm not saying I'll do it,'' I bit out, ``I'm saying I might have
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dismissed the possibility too quickly, and I want to know more about
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what would be involved.''
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I was trying to stay calm, but it was like he was \emph{trying} to put
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the worst interpretation possible to anything I tried. I'd had to deal
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with that from others, but coming from Hakram of all -- I made myself
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breathe out. That was kind of the problem, wasn't it? I wasn't used to
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this from Hakram because he'd always made it easy for me. Having this
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conversation with someone else wouldn't have felt nearly as grating. I
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was not sure I liked what that said about either me or him. He studied
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me, face once again unreadable.
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``I'll see to it,'' Adjutant said. ``I have two subordinates in the
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adjunct secretariat capable of making the proposal skilfully. They can
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handle the matter.''
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The tone had gotten challenging by the end of the last sentence. The
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unspoken part was easy enough to parse: \emph{if this is a legitimate
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interest, it won't matter I'm not the one doing the talking.} And if it
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wasn't a legitimate interest, then he wanted nothing to do with it. I
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forced myself to remain expressionless and nodded in agreement.
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``Is there anything else?'' Adjutant asked.
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``No,'' I quietly replied. ``You can go.''
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I shouldn't have listened to Vivienne, I thought. This path was a dead
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end. I couldn't use the authority of the queen to fix the troubles of
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the woman. I clenched my fingers as he wheeled away downslope, towards
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the two phalanges waiting to help him into the litter he used to get
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around where the chair wouldn't work. It was not a pleasant, realizing
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that I had no idea how to even begin to mend this. \emph{If it can be
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mended at all}, a treacherous voice whispered in the back of my mind. No
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amount of gestures would grow his limbs back or change that he'd lost
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them in my service.
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Forcing a calm expression back on my face -- people were watching,
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people were \emph{always} watching -- I pulled on Night and went back up
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the watchtower. I still had a war to fight, and it cared nothing for my
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worries.
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---
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By Noon Bell we were all on the road and the first reports from the
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outriders were trickling back in.
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I'd abandoned the watchtower as soon as the drow were out of Neustal,
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instead taking Zombie on a ride and joining the Second Army. Morale in
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the ranks was high, though considering the backbone of the Second had
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been with me since before the Tenth Crusade I'd expected as much. I
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traded jokes and wild boasts with soldiers as I rode at their side, a
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Taghreb sergeant startling a laugh out of me when he confessed he'd
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promised his wife a mansion in Keter after the war -- his fellows jeered
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it was why he was still here, afraid to come home and face her
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displeasure at failing to deliver -- but eventually moved to ride at
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General Hune's side.
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The ogre was not one for small talk but I hardly minded. She wasn't
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Juniper or Aisha, I had no good old days to get misty over when it came
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to Hune Egelsdottir. In a way it was refreshing, the simple clarity of
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our relationship: queen and subordinate, nothing more or less. It was
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with her I entertained the first reports from the outriders. The
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Volignac horsemen had gone east and west, since as natives to these
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lands they knew the grounds better, while the Osena had been sent
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straight ahead up Julienne's Highway. The benefits of the road ensured
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the latter came back first even if they'd gone further out.
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There were few dead ahead, they'd told me. Three different warbands of
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maybe a hundred skeletons had been glimpsed about two hours of riding
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ahead, but no larger force. A band of two hundred riders under a cousin
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of Lady Aquiline had decided to forge further ahead to see how far he
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could go before encountering resistance, though only after swearing once
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more to obey my orders against skirmishing: he'd turn back the moment
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fighting became inevitable. The Beastmaster had kept going with him, so
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I was likely to get a good look ahead out of the venture. The Volignac
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scouts returned later and with uneven timing, bearing equally uneven
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news.
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To the west the lowlands seemed empty save for small undead warbands
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like the Osena outriders had seen, though there'd been half a dozen
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instead there instead of a mere three. The Hainaut lowlands were full of
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small hills and dips, though, and the Dead King a patient foe: it was a
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favourite trick of his to hide small bands like these and then suddenly
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assemble them in a larger army to hit a weak point in our defences. This
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time, though, the threat seemed to be coming from the east. A Volignac
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captain reported seeing a force of two thousand undead, mostly skeletons
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and Binds with a few ghouls, wandering to our northeast.
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``Most likely a force meant to ambush one of our patrols,'' General Hune
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rumbled, and I agreed.
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In a way that was a good sign: the detachment wouldn't be out here if
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Neshamah knew we were coming, as with our numbers and equipment we could
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easily smash it with paltry casualties. The Dead King was not so
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wasteful as to throw away two thousand for no gain, profligate as he was
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with bodies. I asked the captain if the undead had seen his riders.
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``I do not believe so,'' the mustachioed man replied, ``but the Enemy is
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a cunning foe, Your Majesty. I cannot be certain.''
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I wanted the Dead King unaware of our march as long as possible, even
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though it'd been impossible to hide that we were gathering troops in
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Neustal. Part of the reason the army under the Iron Prince had begun to
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march a week before us was to draw the enemy's attention, after all. The
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trouble was that the Hidden Horror could see through the eyes of his
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undead, and the moment he got a look at the army marching up Julienne's
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Highway he was going to send his closest army to halt our advance at the
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natural pass called Lauzon's Hollow.
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We wanted that to happen, as if that army wasn't drawn forward our
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surprise strike at the Cigelin Sisters behind it would likely fail, but
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we wanted it to happen as \emph{late} as possible. We didn't know
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exactly what Neshamah had in reserve, so if he had too long to prepare a
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response it wasn't impossible for him to fortify both Cigelin and the
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Hollow. That wouldn't necessarily make it impossible for us to win, but
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it would make that victory\ldots{} costly, to say the least.
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Fortunately we'd established Neshamah could only `see' through one
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corpse at a time, as it required a focus of his attention. But the
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Arsenal -- more specifically the Repentant Magister and Hunted Magician
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-- had also proven there was a working seeded inside Binds and Revenants
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that allowed them to `call' for the attention of their master if they
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believed it warranted. So the tightrope to walk now was how we could
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wipe out that force of two thousand undead to our northeast
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\emph{without} prompting them to tattle to their master. If we sent too
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large a force they were sure to do so, and if our heavy hitters -- Akua
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or myself -- went out personally the result would be the same.
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We couldn't just ignore it, though, since with Binds in command they
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were sure to scout in our direction sooner or later. A pack of zombies
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or bones could be counted to display staggering stupidity, but Binds
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could actually think. There was a reason it was standard Grand Alliance
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tactics to target them first if we could find them among the horde.
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``If we wait after nightfall the drow can wipe them out cleanly,''
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General Hune suggested.
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``That's rolling the dice,'' I replied. ``There's no guarantee they'll
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wait that long to move towards us, and half the day still lies ahead.''
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The undead did favour night fighting when they had the choice and Binds
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around to make it, since unlike humans the necromancy that allowed them
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to see was not particularly affected by the dark, but it was hardly a
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rule. So far the Dead King should not have been alerted to our advance,
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as riders on the distance were hardly anything new. The Grand Alliance
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fielded regular mounted forays into the territory he held. Yet there was
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always the change he'd notice that a \emph{lot} of his warbands had seen
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quite a cumulatively large amount of outriders today. There was no way
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to tell if that was the case, though, so no real point in worrying about
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it.
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``A Dominion raid, then?'' Hune said.
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Could work, I mused. The Osena elites, the slayers, they were skilled at
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ambushes. And with one of Razin's kin having died in ambush recently,
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Keter might even buy this was just a vengeance raid if we added some of
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his warriors to the force sent out. It thinned our vanguard, though,
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which I didn't like even if the road ahead was supposedly bare. I had
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other tools to use, though.
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``We've got raiders of our own,'' I replied. ``Send for Special Tribune
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Robber, would you? And Sapper-General Pickler as well.''
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Robber's band of marauders was still a mere cohort of two hundred,
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though the audacity of his raids with them meant few of the goblins in
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it were the same as when he'd first been given the command. I wouldn't
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send him alone against two thousand undead, though, especially given
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that ghouls were just as quick on the feet as goblins and a \emph{lot}
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meaner in a fight. It was time we gave Pickler's new copperstone
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ballistas a proper trial in the field -- which Neshamah should buy as a
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reason for a raid north, if he ended up looking in -- but to add a bit
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of muscle I'd throw in regulars backed by Levantines.
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They'd get pissy about honour otherwise, so I might as well borrow a
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warband of two hundred Osena slayers as well as an escort for the
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engines in the form of a cohort of regulars from the Army of Callow.
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That'd mean around nine hundred soldiers, which I was comfortable
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sending out considering they were drawn from several parts of my column
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instead of thinning out one in particular.
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I spoke to my goblins first, Robber proving eager for the task and
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Pickler insisting on going along with her ballistas. I couldn't deny
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having her there would be useful when it came to assessing their
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performance, so I allowed it. Hune detached a cohort of regulars and
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briefed them herself while I went to the Levantines. Aquiline proved
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flattered that I would call on her elites in particular, which meant she
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was disinclined to argue when I requested her officers heed the
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instructions of the senior Army officer on the field -- in theory
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Pickler, though in practice it'd be Robber. The forces were mustered
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within an hour, my Special Tribune running off ahead to pick his
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grounds.
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Eventually the rest of the forces mobilized set out east after him and I
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stayed seated on Zombie, resisting to urge to ride her up in the sky and
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have a quick look. I had another ride with the ranks just to distract me
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with the urge. I missed fighting, I could admit it to myself. I'd
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learned to use other means, as violence had so rarely been enough to get
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me through the kind of messes I stumbled into, but there'd always been
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something viscerally satisfying about smashing your enemy personally.
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Instead I had to wait like a decorative lump as Noon Bell slowly crawled
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towards Afternoon Bell, receiving continuing outrider reports and
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waiting for news of the skirmish in the northeast.
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Robber came back half an hour before Afternoon Bell, dusty but flushed
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with preening malice, and I knew it'd gone well before the little shit
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even opened his mouth.
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``They fell for it, Boss, like Alamans told there's a wine cellar at the
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bottom of the well,'' my Special Tribune cackled.
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It'd gone off without a hitch, he explained. His raiders had harassed
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the dead by snipping at their flanks with a few ambushes, then fled into
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their chosen killing grounds as the enemy ghouls pursued. The Osena
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slayers hidden along the paths had scythed through the ghouls like wet
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parchment, then joined the flight with just enough of a delay that the
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commanding Binds were tempted into committing the entire force to
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pursuit. That brought them to flat grounds where Pickler's waiting
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ballistas pounded them to smoldering dust with their copperstone
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munitions. The regulars came forward to prevent the dead from leaving
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the flat grounds, hitting from the front while the slayers and goblins
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turned to hit the flanks.
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It'd been a massacre.
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Maybe two hundred skeletons led by the last Bind had fled but they were
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being pursued even now and bones were slower on the feet than even tired
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goblins. The entire affair had cost us fewer than forty casualties,
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making it a remarkably one-sided beating. When word spread through the
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ranks, I thought, it would raise morale significantly. There was nothing
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like an early win to make soldiers eager for further battles.
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``I guess you get to eat with people instead of the horses this week,
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then,'' I mused. ``Congratulations on the victory, Robber.''
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``I was going to what now?'' the Special Tribune said, sounding alarmed.
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``Don't worry about it,'' I winked. ``I'm sure your right to eat
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anything other than oats is not at all contingent on bringing me more
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victories.''
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I winked again, just to piss him off, and ignored his increasingly loud
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attempts to question me over what he'd done to warrant this treatment.
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Verbally stepping on him put me in as good of a mood as the victory
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itself. It really was the little things in life, wasn't it? I didn't
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bother sending someone to ask Pickler for a report on the performance of
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the copperstones, as to be frank I'd be getting one whether I wanted to
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or not. The smile stayed with me until I got a visit from the Silver
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Huntress.
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``There are dead on the horizon, Your Majesty,'' the Huntress said in
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that startlingly girlish voice of hers.
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I cocked a brow. Like Indrani she had an aspect related to sight over
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long distances, but I'd kept the two of them close to the van to sniff
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out ambushed instead of sending them out too far. For the first day, at
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least, I considered that a better use. So how had she seen something no
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other Named -- or myself -- had?
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``You saw them?'' I asked.
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``Word from Beastmaster,'' Alexis replied, shaking her head. ``He sent a
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falcon.''
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``Ah,'' I hummed. ``In that case, if you'd elaborate?''
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She pointed a finger upwards. To the sky. \emph{Shit.}
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``Buzzards or vulture?'' I asked.
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The former weren't much of an issue, just large undead birds the Dead
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King liked to use as scouts. A `vulture' was a necromantic construct,
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though, and though much smaller than a wyrm we'd seen a lot more of
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those on the Hainaut front. For their size -- none was smaller than a
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house -- they were damned quick, and hard to put down. Usually Keter
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used them to pick off patrols or strike behind our defensive lines, but
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on occasion they could serve as a sort of heavily armoured scout.
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``One vulture,'' the Huntress said, ``with a flock of buzzards around
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it. Headed straight towards us down Julienne's Highway, he says.''
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And there went my good mood. The Dead King \emph{had} noticed something
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was up, then, and he wanted to confirm the nature of threat with eyes up
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in the sky. I closed my eyes and thought. Those couldn't be allowed to
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come too close, but at least the Huntress had warned us with time to
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spare. If we smashed the flock and vulture we'd still keep Keter from
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having direct eyes on us. Our overall campaign plan wasn't threatened, I
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thought. Even if the Hidden Horror knew my force was going up the
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highway, it wouldn't take away the strategic threat that was Prince
|
|
Klaus' host taking Malmedit out east and collapsing the tunnels there.
|
|
|
|
Now that Neshamah had caught on to my own army's advance, though it was
|
|
effectively impossible to beat his own force to Lauzon's Hollow. The
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force Keter had stationed between Cigelin and the Hollow was under a
|
|
hundred thousand, we believed, but it was a mere three days' march
|
|
between those two fortresses and the dead could walk through the night.
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|
It'd take them a day at most to move to one to the other from their
|
|
current camp, hence why I'd wanted surprise on our side: even after
|
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today's march, our quickest possible pace on Creation would take us
|
|
another six days getting to Lauzon's Hollow.
|
|
|
|
That was not truly a setback: that Keter would find my army had been a
|
|
given, even if this was \emph{much} quicker than I preferred. You
|
|
couldn't walk seventy thousand people up a road and expect them to go
|
|
unseen. By swatting the birds out of the sky we could still keep our
|
|
numbers somewhat obscured, anyway. And strategically speaking my entire
|
|
army was bait, in a sense, since the first blow in the offensive would
|
|
actually come from our reserve sallying from the Twilight Ways and
|
|
taking the Cigelin Sisters while my host drew the defensive army into
|
|
Lauzon's Hollow.
|
|
|
|
Nothing had truly been lost, I knew, save that the Hidden Horror had
|
|
more time to prepare his defences than I'd wanted to give him. So why
|
|
did I feel so uneasy?
|
|
|
|
``Go find the Summoner,'' I finally said, opening my eyes. ``And tell
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him I have need of his services: something that can fly and carry two
|
|
people.''
|
|
|
|
The Silver Huntress slowly nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Am I to go with him and destroy the dead?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
She seemed rather pleased at the thought of combat, if not the company.
|
|
|
|
``Not alone,'' I replied. ``They'd see you coming from miles away and
|
|
scatter.''
|
|
|
|
She cocked her head to the side, waiting for me to continue speaking,
|
|
and I was startled with how closely it resembled the way Archer did it.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be going as well, to weave an illusion that'll hide us,'' I said.
|
|
``Archer will share my mount.''
|
|
|
|
If the Dead King was going to learn something was headed his way no
|
|
matter what, I grimly thought, I might as well give him something to
|
|
\emph{really} worry about.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
All my affairs had been packed off for the road, so I had no tent to
|
|
use.
|
|
|
|
I rode up to one of two wagons holding my affairs, though, and asked the
|
|
phalange handling the reins to slow for a bit. I made my way inside,
|
|
waking the magelight and going through my clothes. I no longer wore
|
|
plate, these days, but I'd not forgotten my growing fragility: I dug out
|
|
a plain steel breastplate and a helmet from a coffer. The helm was a
|
|
nice bit of smithing, open-faced in the legionary manner but worked to
|
|
have subtle golden inlays above my head evoking a crown. It'd also been
|
|
forged to accommodate a ponytail, since I wasn't going to be fighting
|
|
anyone with loose hair.
|
|
|
|
The wagon was shaky even at the reduced pace and armour was always
|
|
tricky to put on alone, so I waited for Indrani join me -- I'd sent for
|
|
her before coming here -- and instead grabbed something else from the
|
|
coffer: a sword belt, with a sheathed blade on it. I slid the goblin
|
|
steel out an inch, fingers tightening around the longsword's grip.
|
|
Well-weighted, made especially for me. I'd refused a sword once, in
|
|
Liesse-Become-Twilight, and I would not walk back that choice. But this
|
|
was war, and sometimes a staff and a prayer were not enough. I slid it
|
|
back into the sheath and was tightening the belt around my hips when
|
|
Indrani entered.
|
|
|
|
She cocked a brow at the sight.
|
|
|
|
``So it's a fight, then,'' Archer grinned.
|
|
|
|
``Help me put my armour on,'' I replied after hesitating a beat.
|
|
|
|
I'd almost not gotten the words out. It was not her, who usually helped
|
|
me with this. Perhaps sensing she was treading tender grounds, Indrani
|
|
was efficient about it. The breastplate settled comfortably over my
|
|
torso, and after I tightened the clasps on my helmet she made sure the
|
|
ponytail went out through the proper furrow at the back of my neck.
|
|
|
|
``War boots,'' Indrani reminded me after.
|
|
|
|
I'd still been debating that, as it happened. I'd never been a splendid
|
|
rider and I was more comfortable in the saddle without steel on my
|
|
boots, but then Zombie was not a difficult mount. Might as well. I sat
|
|
on a trunk and reached into the pack by the side of it, only to freeze
|
|
in surprised. There were my old campaign boots there, those I'd been
|
|
dragging with me since I'd emerged from the Everdark, but also another
|
|
pair. New, by the look of the leather, but pressing on them with my
|
|
hands it was clear they'd been broken in. \emph{Scribe}, I thought. It'd
|
|
been idle talk when I'd mentioned the detail to her, but details were
|
|
her trade.
|
|
|
|
``Cat?'' Indrani asked.
|
|
|
|
They were just boots, I told myself. And still I took the old ones.
|
|
|
|
``Give me a moment,'' I replied. ``As soon as we've got these on, we'll
|
|
gather our war party and head out.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Summoner was a backbiting, entitled prick but he did have a lot of
|
|
combat utility.
|
|
|
|
Masego had been fascinated by his magic -- said the man had, in a sense,
|
|
failed so badly at both diabolism and fae-binding that he'd ended up
|
|
making something entirely different from both -- but also added it'd be
|
|
effectively impossible for anyone but a dedicated apprentice to learn,
|
|
so the man had stayed on the front instead of heading to the Arsenal.
|
|
His `summoning' was effectively shaping creatures out of magic that had
|
|
limited sentience, with those summoned repeatedly gaining greater
|
|
substance and intelligence as they `hardened'.
|
|
|
|
It didn't sound like much, until you realized that given access to
|
|
enough time and magic the man could make effectively any kind of
|
|
creature he could think of. We'd later learned he had limits to the
|
|
quantity of magic he could actually sink into a summoning, which did set
|
|
a ceiling to the possible size of the summoned creature. His bigger ones
|
|
tended to be highly unstable, too, so it was often better to aim below
|
|
the ceiling and end up with something of better quality. Considering the
|
|
man was whiny and grasping but not particularly violent, I might have
|
|
ended up halfway fond of the Summoner if he'd not also kept insisting he
|
|
was Callowan. What he \emph{actually} was, though, was the son of a
|
|
nobleman gone into exile and a Proceran lady. He'd never even set foot
|
|
in Callow.
|
|
|
|
All his hinting that as a Callowan villain he should be my favourite
|
|
achieved was increasingly strain my patience. Today, though, I had good
|
|
reason to cut through the stupidity without coming across as overly
|
|
high-handed. His summon, a wyvern-like creature without scales and
|
|
imbued of a ghostly glow, was eerily. Not one he'd used often, then. I
|
|
cast a curious look at it, then at the villain who'd crafted it and the
|
|
Silver Huntress by his side. I reined in Zombie by their side, Archer in
|
|
the saddle behind me. She waved at the Silver Huntress, whose face
|
|
tightened in reply, and I elbowed her sharply.
|
|
|
|
It didn't do shit through her mail, but the message was received anyway,
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' the Summoner smiled. ``I am pleased that you found use
|
|
in my-``
|
|
|
|
``There will be time for courtesies later, Summoner,'' I said. ``The
|
|
enemy is on the move, and we do not have the time to spare. I need you
|
|
and Lady Alexis on the back of your creation, and close to me: I will
|
|
weave an illusion with Night that will obscure our approach.''
|
|
|
|
Indrani snickered behind me, not all that subtly, but the look on my
|
|
face clearly did not brook argument. They climbed the creature, the
|
|
Summoner nestling close to the neck and the Silver Huntress further
|
|
back. Zombie eyed the other mount involved with disdain, horrible little
|
|
snob that she was. I spurred her to get closer and she obeyed even as I
|
|
began to pull heavily on the Night.
|
|
|
|
``I have tread black stone and halls grown cold, freed of restraint by
|
|
the blessing of my patron,'' I murmured in Crepuscular, weaving the
|
|
Night around us, ``Though feeble, I have devoured might. Though
|
|
listless, I have stolen the wind. I call on you, Andronike, to veil eyes
|
|
and ears so that I might triumph in your name.''
|
|
|
|
The Night pulsed with approval, and I felt a breath around the back of
|
|
my neck as the eldest of the Sisters leant her touch to the blessing.
|
|
The air in a wide sphere around us, at least forty feet in diameter,
|
|
grew hazy and smoky. The Summoner let out a little gasp.
|
|
|
|
``Stay close and don't leave the sphere,'' I ordered. ``It won't last
|
|
forever, so let's get moving.''
|
|
|
|
Zombie's wings opened with a flourish, the wyvern-thing hastily
|
|
imitating her, and with a gallop she began our rise upwards into the
|
|
afternoon sky.
|