822 lines
36 KiB
TeX
822 lines
36 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-15-pull}{%
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\chapter{Pull}\label{chapter-15-pull}}
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\epigraph{``Only a child pretends there is value in defeat. Fool they who
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praise a bleeding wound.''}{Dread Empress Massacre}
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Since we'd come crashing down into this godforsaken region three days
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ago, we had lost one thousand six hundred and thirty-two soldiers.
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The last count came in from the Dominion midmorning, as they were less
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used to counting their dead. The Levantines had borne the brunt of those
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losses, almost a quarter of the men they'd brought east now dead. In the
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exchange we'd killed maybe a quarter of that number in enemy soldiers,
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mostly through skirmishes that had gone our way. The best that could be
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said of the last few days was that we'd avoided a rout, not that this
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narrow avoidance meant our situation was anything less than terrible.
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We'd camped near the northern shore of Nioqe Lake, beyond the long
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shadows cast by the Jini Plateau, and while we were somewhat safe at the
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moment our strategic situation had taken a sharp turn for the worse.
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The mood was grim when our war council assembled. The usual few slunk
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their way into the tent: Vivienne and Brandon Talbot, Juniper and Aisha,
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Zola Osei. Of the two lordlings only one showed today, Razin Tanja.
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Aquiline was attending to their captains, who were not pleased with the
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way this campaign was going. It'd not escaped anyone's attention that
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the Legions of Terror seemed to be focusing their efforts on the
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Dominion, which had brought old tensions to the fore -- there was some
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talk in Levantine ranks of my Praesi legionaries being traitors, of
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there being some conspiracy afoot, and it needed to be stamped out.
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Aquiline tended to be more popular with their warriors, so it was only
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natural that we'd ended up with Razin.
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``It is no longer feasible to take back our camp,'' General Zola crisply
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said. ``I can only argue in favour of retreat now, west to the half-road
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and then further north to grounds less at our disadvantage.''
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``That marches us straight into the Gale Ribbon,'' Aisha said, shaking
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her head. ``Even with wards prepared we'll take losses.''
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``We could attempt to take the burned camp in Moule Hills for our own,''
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Brandon Talbot suggested.
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``They'll have mined that,'' I grunted. ``If not worse.''
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It was against Legion regulations to use devils but I wasn't sure how
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closely followed a rule that would be without my father around to
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enforce it. A lot of high-placed officers had shared his opinion, but
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many of those were now dead. I wasn't sure the Black Knight would push
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back if Malicia insisted, which she might. The Empress would prefer
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burning contracts to losing men, at this stage of the war.
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``And even if we swing wide away from Kala Hills to avoid giving battle,
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there is nothing to stop her from simply marching down and getting into
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a position to flanks us,'' Aisha said. ``Lady Black has made it clear
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that she will not let us entrench.''
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``Is a ramp to access the plateau feasible?'' Razin asked. ``We could
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avoid the valley that so troubles us entirely by accessing the
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heights.''
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Looks were shared. That was the closest thing to a good idea we'd heard
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so far.
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``I'll consult with Sapper-General Pickler,'' I said.
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``Even if it is something our sappers can accomplish,'' General Zola
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began, ``Marshal Nim will not leave us to build that ramp unmolested. We
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would need to stake out a more defensible position.''
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I glanced at Juniper, who sat at the other end of the table in silence.
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She had been following the conversation attentively, but there was a
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peculiar look on her face. She had not once opened her mouth to give an
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opinion this entire council and did not break the streak to answer Zola.
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``Send out riders to find one,'' I ordered the general. ``Even if
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Pickler says it can't be done, it'll be useful information to have under
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our belt.''
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``I will see to the roster,'' Aisha volunteered, smoothly rising to her
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feet.
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She threw a worried glanced at Juniper, who did not meet her eyes. The
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council ended without much ceremony, the tent emptying until there were
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only three people left: Vivienne, me and the still-silent Hellhound.
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Brushing back a strand that'd slipped her braid, the princess was the
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first to speak up.
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``You haven't said a word all morning,'' Vivienne stated.
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Juniper let out a long breath, chair creaking under her.
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``I haven't,'' she said.
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A moment passed. She did not continue.
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``We've had setbacks before,'' I finally said. ``And we're far from
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defeated, we just-''
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``I should resign,'' the Hellhound interrupted me. ``I can't, I know it
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would be a bad look in the middle of a campaign, but I should. Command
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should informally be passed to Zola regardless.''
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I balked.
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``That's not even slightly a good idea,'' I said. ``Zola's solid, but
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she doesn't have the spark. Nim will eat her alive.''
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Hakram had been right when he'd warned I should temper my expectations
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of Zola Osei, as he often was. Hune's replacement was not her equal,
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much less Juniper's. She was the kind of commander that made for a
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respectable general but fell short of marshal talents.
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``Nim is eating \emph{me} alive, in case you hadn't noticed,'' Juniper
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barked out. ``How many times are you going to make excuses for me,
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Catherine? \emph{I'm losing}.''
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``I'm not making excuses,'' I flatly replied. ``We've made some mistakes
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and paid for them but-''
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``I should have asked you to send Named out in the hills, not just
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scouts,'' Juniper growled. ``The Eleventh wouldn't have caught us out.
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The Order should have been out near the vanguard, not near the supply
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wagons -- they could have chased Nim's horse \emph{before} they shredded
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the Levantines.''
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``You're not an \emph{oracle}, Juniper,'' I bit out. ``We'd be having a
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very different conversation if she'd sent the horse after the wagons
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instead, and she might have attacked the moment we flushed out the
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Eleventh so-''
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``I am not,'' Juniper of the Red Shields quietly said, ``equal to this
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task.''
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I slammed my open palm onto the table.
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``What the fuck is this?'' I snarled. ``She played her cards better,
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Juniper. We lost a few hands. So what? The goddamned pot is still on the
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table for anyone to take.''
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I heard her hands creak as large fingers tightened into fists.
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``I'm not sure it all came back,'' Juniper hoarsely said. ``After
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Malicia pulled her hooks. That I'm still \emph{all} of me.''
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And just for that look in my friend's eyes, I wished I could kill Alaya
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of Satus twice.
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``It did,'' I flatly said.
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The Pilgrim had told me as much and I had no reason to doubt him.
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There'd been physical scars it would take her years to overcome, but her
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mind was fine.
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``I will not be another orc cripple for you to lug about, Catherine,''
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Juniper hissed. ``Don't you see it's even worse if it's all there? It
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just means I was never in the same league. If I'm no longer fit, if I
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ever was in the first place, and-''
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``Do you genuinely believe I wouldn't have advocated your removal if I
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believed you unfit for your office?''
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Vivienne's voice cut through our rising anger like a knife. Juniper
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rocked back like she'd been slapped, but she was listening.
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``Catherine loves you like family,'' Vivienne calmly continued. ``She
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might excuse weakness out of sentiment. Would I, Hellhound? We have an
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understanding, but we both know I would not put you above Callowan
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lives.''
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``You're not a general,'' Juniper replied, but it was weak and by the
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tone of her voice she knew it.
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She just wasn't convinced. Didn't want to be, maybe couldn't be. I grit
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my teeth. Though I was not unfamiliar with the flagellant's whip, this
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was not the time for my marshal to indulge in it. We were already in
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deep enough trouble without losing our finest military mind halfway
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through a campaign.
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``Neither are you, at the moment,'' Vivienne evenly replied. ``Perhaps
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you should attend to those duties before further defeat ensues, Marshal
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Juniper.''
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The orc's voice was stilted as she excused herself, almost fleeing the
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tent. I slumped back into my seat. Vivienne rose to pour two glasses of
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wine, pressing one into my hand.
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``Fuck,'' I eloquently said.
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It'd not been good in the first place, but I suspected I might have made
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it worse.
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``I can't fix this,'' Vivienne told me. ``It's not who we are to each
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other. She doesn't call me Warlord, or ever will.''
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I drank, biting down on my first answer. It was bitter enough on my
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tongue it almost spoiled the wine.
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``I'm not sure how to fix this either,'' I said. ``Winning? If we could
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beat Nim so easily we'd already be doing it.''
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``There are some who agree with her, you know,'' Vivienne murmured.
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``Not just our countrymen, who sometimes mutter for the wrong reasons.
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Officers that were brought in from the Legions. They say she came up too
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quick, more out of closeness to you than merit. That a few College
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tricks and being Istrid Knightsbane's daughter aren't enough to warrant
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her being raised so high.''
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I scoffed.
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``I didn't pick her name out of a hat, Viv,'' I said. ``Just yesterday
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she saved us a rout. How many officers would have figured out the Order
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needed to be sent to relieve us before the enemy cavalry even came out?
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It's not her that's the problem, it's that we're fighting the Legions of
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Terror on their picked grounds with the deck stacked in the favour. This
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was never going to be \emph{easy}.''
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I'd ridden Legion war doctrine like a warhorse over the back of half the
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fucking continent. It wasn't going to stop being effective just because
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I wasn't the only one on the field using it.
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``I know that,'' Vivienne said. ``So do most people who matter.''
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My heiress paused, offering me a wan smile.
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``Does Juniper?''
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---
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``You might as well be asking me to build a ramp to the moon,'' Pickler
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bluntly told me.
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``I'm sure Ol' Sorcerous would appreciate the way down, but my ambitions
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are slightly more grounded,'' I easily replied.
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Well, more or less. I only wanted to bind the entire continent to a
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treaty that would fundamentally change how Named would operate. You
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know, summer fair gift stuff.
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``Funny,'' my Sapper-General said, tone dry as sand. ``I can't do it,
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Catherine, at least not in the time you want it done. We didn't have the
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wood to build a ramp that size in the first place and we lost too many
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of our stakes when we abandoned the camp last night. Unless you want me
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to build it out of stone we cut from the cliffside, it can't be done.''
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I eyed her with alarm. I'd not known our situation was so bad with the
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\emph{sudes}. If we lost too many of the large stakes my legionaries
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carried to easily raise palisades then we'd be dependent on local wood.
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Of which there wasn't much. The most we'd seen was the brushlands in the
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Kala Hills, which the Loyalist Legions now held.
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``We can still raise palisades properly, can't we?'' I asked.
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``Camp size's been reduced. We're toeing the line for sanitation,''
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Pickler admitted. ``If not for the priests we'd be at risk of
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sicknesses.''
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Well, it'd been a day for pleasant surprises so far. Why break that
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lovely trend?
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``We need to do \emph{something}, Pickler,'' I got out.
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``We're not reaching that plateau, Catherine,'' she said, then
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hesitated. ``But I have an\ldots{} idea. I need to look at some things
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first, though. See if it's truly viable.''
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I cocked an eyebrow.
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``You're not going to give me more than that?''
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``No point in raising false hopes,'' Pickler said. ``I'll find you when
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I'm sure.''
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I was inclined to poke at her for at least a few scraps, but she was
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saved by the appearance of a phalange. The young Taghreb informed me
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that Archer was back in camp and she'd brought a package with her, which
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spurred my curiosity. I met with Vivienne as I limped my way back, as
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she'd been sent for too, the pair of us entering the tent together to
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the sight of Archer dumping a large cloth sack on the carved table. I
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paused.
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``Is whatever's in that bag breathing?'' I bluntly asked.
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``I would hope so,'' Vivienne said. ``That's one of the abduction bags
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for the Jacks, if she got blood all over it I'll be cross.''
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Ah, Vivienne. Sometimes she said these things and I acutely felt the
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loss it was for my gender that she was only interested in the other one.
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``Why, hello Archer,'' Indrani brightly said. ``Lovely to see you, how
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did your night go?''
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I raised my staff then poked experimentally at the bag, ignoring her
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entirely.
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``I think it's a person,'' I mused.
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``She might have finally snapped and done in Masego,'' Vivienne
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suggested. ``There's only so many times a woman can have her words
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nitpicked before blood ensues.''
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``If you don't stop I'll put him back where I found him,'' Indrani
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threatened.
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I had to bite down on a `Masego? It'd be a walk, but I suppose you
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could' that very much wanted to wriggle its way past my lips. It was
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rare that I got to gang up on one of the Woe instead of getting ganged
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up on, so it was only with reluctance that I moved on to business.
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``And where would that be?'' I asked.
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Theatrically, Archer opened the bag to reveal the bruised face of an
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unconscious dark-skinned man in what I'd guess to be his early twenties.
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``Kala Fortress,'' Indrani said. ``You're looking at Sokoro Abara, third
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child of Lord Abara of Kala. Caught him while he was serving as a
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go-between between the fortress and the Legions.''
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My brow rose. That was quite the catch. More than enough to make up for
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her absence last night, considering she wouldn't have made much of a
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difference in the fight. I stayed silent a little longer, choosing my
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words.
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``I know that look,'' Indrani accused. ``I did good but you want to
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insult me anyways so you're moving around the sentence.''
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``Of course not,'' I lied.
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``You did good, Archer,'' Vivienne told her with a warm smile.
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Indrani preened.
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``You know,'' my successor casually added, ``for a sullen wench.''
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I grinned even as wails of Callowan treachery began filling up the tent,
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already thinking about all the answers we were going to get out of that
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man.
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---
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Sokoro Abara was going to be a hard nut to crack, I figured.
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Akua had once told me that a lot of Wasteland nobles trained their
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children in methods to resist torture and in my experience Praesi
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aristocrats needed to be made brutally aware that their situation was
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desperate before the veneer of arrogance even began to break. So we did
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the works: put him in a tent enchanted for darkness with the sole
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magelight facing him, had the Concocter feed him something to keep him
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slightly dazed and I handled the interrogation personally with only
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Vivienne at my side. Sokoro Abara woke up, blinking away the sleep, and
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then took in the sight of my being seated across from him and Vivienne
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standing behind me.
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There was a pregnant pause.
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``I'll tell you anything you want to know,'' he swore.
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Well. I was feeling a little cheated, but there was a saying about gift
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horses. The young noble was quite frank about how he was not even
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slightly interested in dying or being tortured for his family's sake,
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and instead offered information quite freely when asked. His position as
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the envoy between the fortress and Legions -- he informed us quite
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bitterly that such a task had of course been \emph{beneath} his elder
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half-siblings -- and his confessed tendency to open sealed scrolls to
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read them meant he'd been in a good position to learn about the
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unfolding debacle.
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``The Eleventh was in the hills for two days before you marched there,''
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he told us. ``They went through Risas, using the shepherd paths. The
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Black Knight wanted them in position to strike at your army from behind
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should you fight in the valley.''
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It was an odd feeling to know that our disastrous vanguard action had
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still been better than the likely alternative: picking a fight with
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Marshal Nim in the valley and getting smashed in the back by a full
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legion. Though it'd been a costly thing to learn that General Lucretia
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was hiding in the hills, better we learn it now than when a battle was
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on the line. He also had actionably useful information, of the recent
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kind.
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``Lady Black ordered that the wells to both the east and west of the
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Kala Hills should be poisoned today,'' Sokoro told us. ``She had to ask
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us permission first, as it is still father's land, but he bent over
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backwards to agree. Lady Warlock has offered to broker entering under
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Wolof's protection on very favourable terms, so there's little he won't
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do to please her.''
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My lips thinned. I could deduce why Marshal Nim would give the order
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easily enough. She wanted us to be stuck near Nioqe Lake, knowing that
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if we strayed too far from those shores we'd have no water source to
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draw from. Now that the Black Knight had put us in a corner, she meant
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for us to stay there.
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``What do you know of Marshal Nim's plans?'' Vivienne asked.
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``Not much,'' Sokoro admitted. ``She was raised under the Carrion Lord,
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you know. Like all his old soldiers she has high-handed manners even in
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the lands of her betters.''
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I doubted this man was Nim's better in any possible sense of the word --
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except passing through small doorways, maybe? -- but I'd gain nothing
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from telling him that.
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``Not much is still \emph{something},'' I smiled.
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He smiled back and asked for assurances about his captivity. I
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guaranteed him absence of torture and fair treatment if he talked --
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which he already had, but apparently did not know -- yet when I offered
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right of ransom he scoffed.
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``Father won't pay,'' Sokoro said. ``I'd rather you promise wine
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instead, I imagine being a prisoner will be dreadfully dull.''
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``We can arrange that,'' Vivienne promised.
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`Not much' hadn't been him playing coy, unfortunately. He'd overheard
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useful bits but no plan. Nim's legionaries were apparently convinced
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that she wanted to avoid giving us a pitched battle, which I had no
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trouble believing. The most interesting morsel was that apparently
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General Wheeler had been asked about raising field fortifications that
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would hem in the Army of Callow around Nioqe Lake. It was not a sure
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thing, but in my opinion it seemed likely she actually intended to try.
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Malicia did not want to wreck my army, just put me in a position where I
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was forced to negotiate. Bottled up against the shores of the lake with
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a larger force or impassable terrain encircling me as my supplies ran
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out would achieve that.
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The best possible outcome of being forced into that corner was managing
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a stalemate until Sepulchral and the Rebel Legions arrived, but I had my
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doubts we'd manage as much. Besides, if it was the fight Marshal Nim was
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after then it was the last one we wanted to give her. Which meant moving
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before we got cornered.
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Time to see if Pickler had a way for us to slip the noose before it got
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tightened.
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---
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``I told you that I can't get us on that plateau,'' Pickler hissed out
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in irritation.
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``But you have something else,'' I pressed.
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``It's a gamble,'' my Sapper-General admitted. ``But I believe it'll
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work.''
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She showed me to the inside of a tent where a tenth of sappers were
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chattering away as they worked, cutting away at wood and hammering in
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nails. It took me a moment to realize what I was looking at: one of our
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supply wagons, stripped of its wheels and bound tighter. Was that wax I
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was smelling?
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``I can't get you on the plateau,'' Pickler repeated, standing at my
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side. ``But there's another way east. Nioqe Lake.''
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``You want to make a pontoon bridge across,'' I realized, then frowned.
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``We have enough wood?''
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``If we use every supply wagon,'' she replied. ``And a significant
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portion of our stakes.''
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She'd not been underselling it when she'd called that a gamble, then. If
|
|
the enemy sunk that bridge, or even just prevented us from recovering it
|
|
after we crossed, we'd be in heaps of trouble. As in, might seriously
|
|
have to consider cutting a deal trouble: without wagons to carry our
|
|
supplies we'd slow to a crawl even using roads. Out there on wild land,
|
|
where there weren't any, we'd be snails to the Black Knight's hawk.
|
|
|
|
``How long would it take you to get it done?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``We made a pattern, so I could have it ready for deployment by sundown
|
|
if you don't steal any of my sappers,'' Pickler said. ``Trouble is,
|
|
Catherine, I don't have a way to prevent \emph{them} seeing us make
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
Which would allow Nim to contest the crossing, the last thing I wanted.
|
|
I clenched my fingers then unclenched them. There was a way. I didn't
|
|
like using it as a ploy, it felt disrespectful, but I'd do it anyway.
|
|
The question was, then whether it was truly our way out. Sure, it'd get
|
|
us out of Marshal Nim's planned encirclement and on the other side of
|
|
the lake if things went fine. What would we \emph{do} once there,
|
|
though? Taking a gamble to flee blindly was exactly the kind of mistake
|
|
the Black Knight was waiting to capitalize on. She'd pushed her army
|
|
hard, striking at us repeatedly over the same day and night, because she
|
|
knew that our officer corps and general staff were of lesser quality
|
|
than hers. We were, as an army, simply more prone to making mistakes
|
|
when time grew short.
|
|
|
|
That was the difference training made.
|
|
|
|
The way I saw it, the point of crossing Nioqe Lake would be marching
|
|
south afterwards. I'd been Juniper's original plan to do as much, if
|
|
from a significantly better position, and I still believed it was a
|
|
sound notion. The problem now was Kala Fortress. It was a certainty the
|
|
Loyalist Legions would move to cover it faster than we could get there
|
|
-- needing to fish out and rebuild our supply wagons ensured as much --
|
|
so Nim was likely to entrench by the walls. That'd been true in the
|
|
original iteration of the Hellhound's plan as well, but our answer to
|
|
that had simply been going around the Legions by marching further east
|
|
before cutting south. That was no longer an option, because as I'd
|
|
recently learned from our prisoner the Black Knight had ordered all the
|
|
wells east of Kala Hills \emph{poisoned}.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't sure how far that order would be applied in practice but given
|
|
that Nim had light cavalry to spare I wouldn't bet on it being a small
|
|
slice of land. We could last maybe two weeks without refreshing our
|
|
water supplies if we began rationing immediately and nothing went wrong,
|
|
which made risking an eastern march rolling the dice. If we got lucky it
|
|
might rain and be the drinkable kind of rain instead of the brimstone
|
|
kind that burned -- a legitimate worry in these parts, Aisha had
|
|
informed me -- but that was a large \emph{if}. Especially when the mage
|
|
cadres of the Loyalist Legions had shown they were capable of
|
|
large-scale weather manipulation rituals. Even if rainstorms gathered,
|
|
there was nothing to prevent the Legions from just dispersing them.
|
|
|
|
No, the reliable water was south and down the half-road. And there was a
|
|
set of fortifications on top of that road: Kala Fortress. If we could
|
|
take it before Nim got there, we'd be in a very defensible position and
|
|
sitting over \emph{her} supply line. We'd be putting her in a corner
|
|
instead of the other way around. I could maybe sneak a small force to
|
|
that keep before the Black Knight got there, I finally thought, but
|
|
nowhere large enough to actually take a well-defended castle. Which
|
|
meant I needed to figure out how to bust open that lock before we got
|
|
started on this plan.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine?'' Pickler hesitantly asked.
|
|
|
|
I \emph{had} gone silent for a long while, I supposed. I clenched my
|
|
fingers, then unclenched them. Taking Kala Fortress wasn't really the
|
|
issue, was it? As in, it did not need to be in the Army of Callow's
|
|
possession. I just needed it not to be in the hands of the Loyalist
|
|
Legions. And \emph{that} was something I might just have the tool to
|
|
achieve.
|
|
|
|
``Get started on the work,'' I said, then bit my tongue. ``Talk to
|
|
Juniper and General Zola first, but you have my full backing for this.
|
|
Unless they object stridently, it's happening.''
|
|
|
|
Leaving her quite bemused at the sudden turn, I set to talking around
|
|
the key to the lock.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Sokoro Abara widely smiled, showing slightly yellowing teeth. His breath
|
|
smelled like the wine we'd promised him and Vivienne had evidently
|
|
delivered on.
|
|
|
|
``I do have some friends behind the walls, Your Majesty,'' he said.
|
|
``Though it behooves me to ask why I should introduce them to you. I am,
|
|
after all, a prisoner.''
|
|
|
|
``You misunderstand me,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
He flinched, as if preparing for a blow, but none followed.
|
|
|
|
``There would be no need for an introduction, as you would be the one
|
|
speaking to them,'' I idly continued.
|
|
|
|
His eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``You'd release me?'' he asked.
|
|
|
|
``Release is a strong word,'' I thinly smiled. ``Tell me, Sokoro, how
|
|
would you like to be Lord of Kala?''
|
|
|
|
He stayed silent a moment, considering. If the Army of Callow put him in
|
|
that seat Malicia might take offence in the aftermath should she beat
|
|
us, but that was a relatively distant concern. He could place himself
|
|
under a High Seat's protection should he grow too worried of
|
|
retribution.
|
|
|
|
``Part of the castle and the soldiers would back me over my siblings,''
|
|
Sokoro finally said, tone even. ``Not over my father. He is a
|
|
well-respected man. I also have\ldots{} concerns about my mother's
|
|
safety.''
|
|
|
|
``Your father is an eminently mortal man,'' I said. ``And we can whisk
|
|
away your mother before we strike.''
|
|
|
|
Scribe had gotten to make her latest Assassin. We'd use it. The
|
|
dark-skinned man's eyes brightened at my words. It was what he'd wanted
|
|
to hear. Wasn't like he was ever going to rise high except through my
|
|
good graces: everything he'd said about his half-siblings implied a
|
|
degree of enmity. He might get cast out after the death of Lord Abara,
|
|
and that was assuming none in the castle decided to\ldots{} err on the
|
|
side of caution.
|
|
|
|
``And what would you have of me in return?'' he asked.
|
|
|
|
``All I want is a friend ruling that fortress,'' I smiled. ``Perhaps
|
|
your help in learning the lay of the land. Nothing onerous.''
|
|
|
|
He looked hesitant. Right, Praesi. I'd get more trust out of him if I
|
|
bled him some.
|
|
|
|
``Full use of your water is what I want most, of course,'' I said.
|
|
``I'll not require your soldiers to fight by the side of the Army of
|
|
Callow.''
|
|
|
|
``I might be amenable to such an arrangement,'' Sokoro Abara lightly
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' I smiled, and to his alarm the darkness began thickening
|
|
around us.
|
|
|
|
Faint sounds could be heard, almost like cawing, and my smiled
|
|
broadened.
|
|
|
|
``I'll want an oath out of you, my friend,'' I said. ``Just in case, you
|
|
see. Trust is hard come by in these troubled times.''
|
|
|
|
``It is only natural,'' he stiffly replied. ``On what would you have me
|
|
swear?''
|
|
|
|
Night began filling the room, Sve Noc granting this a sliver of their
|
|
attention, and I answered him.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
In a ring outside our camp, one thousand six hundred and thirty-two
|
|
corpses were dragged out on the plains and assembled in great piles.
|
|
Mages came out in lines, setting fire to them with what little wood we
|
|
could spare for this -- which wasn't much. As a result they had to stay
|
|
and keep feeding more mageflame to the dead bodies, which took powerful
|
|
flames to burn. The result was plumes of thick, guttering smoke that
|
|
rose up into the afternoon sky. Enough of them that it was as if a
|
|
curtain had been pulled in front of the camp.
|
|
|
|
Pickler's sappers had their cover.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile I set about giving the enemy something to react to, instead of
|
|
leaving them to operate unhindered. I first picked a place on open
|
|
grounds with a good view at the Black Knight's fortified camp.
|
|
Hierophant came with me, in expectation of the enemy's answer, and the
|
|
two of us stood out like black-plumed birds out on the rocky plains. A
|
|
bodyguard of twenty knights had ridden with us, but I'd refused more.
|
|
There would be no point. I took the lead, pulling down my hood and
|
|
beginning to murmur under the pounding sun. Night was like a lazy brat
|
|
refusing to get up, but I had time to spare. I coaxed it out properly
|
|
and the Sisters helped me with the alignment. Zeze could have done it
|
|
through the Observatory, but I wanted him free to act.
|
|
|
|
The same ring of red light as last night appeared over our heads, but
|
|
I'd told Masego to leave it. No need to warn the enemy of his presence
|
|
too early. Once I'd gathered the power to me, though, I told him to get
|
|
ready.
|
|
|
|
``I am all eyes, Catherine,'' he replied.
|
|
|
|
High above the enemy camp I ripped open a gate into Arcadia. There was a
|
|
reason we'd not tried to keep moving through the faerie realm after
|
|
being stranded: out here it was a nightmarish mirror of the Wasteland.
|
|
Impossible storms that toppled mountains, landslides that charged like
|
|
armies and rains that drew furrows in the ground. That was without even
|
|
getting into the\ldots{} fauna. Maybe a few Named could slip through,
|
|
but entire companies? It'd be madness to even try. There was no lack of
|
|
water, though, and that was what I'd been after. After a few heartbeats
|
|
a flood began pouring, just in time for power to begin rising in the
|
|
enemy camp.
|
|
|
|
Time to see what Akua had cooked up to handle my signature trick. I let
|
|
out a startled snort when, instead of some fancy spell, what appeared
|
|
was instead another gate. About the same size and placed below mine,
|
|
like a bucket for the flood to be poured into. Well, that was certainly
|
|
a solution. Nice sorcery, it'd be a shame if something happened to it.
|
|
|
|
``Zeze?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Wrest},'' Hierophant replied, and the world rippled.
|
|
|
|
The enemy gate rippled but did not break. I saw Masego frown and dimly
|
|
felt power bloom in the distance again.
|
|
|
|
``Clever mage,'' Hierophant murmured. ``They are feeding the gate
|
|
further magic so that I cannot fully wrest it-''
|
|
|
|
``Keep them stuck, then,'' I grunted.
|
|
|
|
I was not without tricks of my own. My gate began to pull together, like
|
|
a ball of twine being rolled up, and the flood of water ended. But with
|
|
a grunt of effort I dragged the `twine' to the side and down, only to
|
|
begin unfolding it again. Sweat soaked my back and the gate was
|
|
noticeably smaller than my first, but before long the flood began
|
|
pouring again. About a hundred feet above Loyalist Legion camp, it hit
|
|
transparent panes of sorcery. They buckled but held. Water began sliding
|
|
down, revealing the broad shape of a dome. Masego tutted.
|
|
|
|
``The structure is too simple, Sahelian,'' he said. ``Here is why we
|
|
want more intricate escapements.''
|
|
|
|
His hand whipped out, the ripples of his aspect strengthening, and the
|
|
enemy gate blew up in blinding flash of light. The air thrummed with
|
|
power as there was a sound of thunder, the enchantment protecting the
|
|
camp shivering -- and, in patches, failing. I'd kept my gate opened, and
|
|
like an avalanche of bricks the water fell down on the enemy through a
|
|
doze holes. Mages patched up the hole quick enough with shields, but not
|
|
before we did some damage. I kept the gate open as long as I could,
|
|
Hierophant swatting down a few other attempts to block it, but their
|
|
mages were focusing on protection so there was no further break.
|
|
|
|
Didn't matter. I'd got what I came for: I'd rattled their cage and
|
|
something else they'd not notice until it was too late.
|
|
|
|
``The angle for your adjusted gate was far from the best you could have
|
|
used,'' Masego noted. ``Too much to the east of the camp.''
|
|
|
|
``I aimed at what I wanted, don't you worry about it,'' I smiled.
|
|
|
|
I'd emptied half a lake on the eastern part of the camp, and though it'd
|
|
rolled off the dome the important part was \emph{where} it'd rolled off.
|
|
Into Kala Hills, into the same paths the Eleventh had used to attack us
|
|
last night. The same that Nim might be tempted to use as a shortcut to
|
|
attack us when we crossed the lake.
|
|
|
|
Now they were a mess of mud and water, impossible to march an army
|
|
through for at least a few days.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
We launched a night attack.
|
|
|
|
It was the best way to cover our crossing, General Zola said. Marshal
|
|
Juniper did not object. Five thousand of the Army of Callow and a
|
|
thousand Levantine skirmishers marched out, every Named at hand save for
|
|
me going with them. They were to shake the enemy and then retreat,
|
|
actually fighting as little as possible. I even poured Night into a
|
|
trinket and left it for Hierophant to wield: that ring of red light was
|
|
a good way to feign my presence where I wasn't. The Loyalist Legions
|
|
would be \emph{very} wary of attacking me after dark now that I'd had
|
|
some time to prepare.
|
|
|
|
It was nerve-wracking to watch them march out without going with them,
|
|
but I had other duties. Sokoro Abara was put on a horse and we kept our
|
|
most mobile force in reserve: the moment the pontoon bridge was
|
|
finished, the Order of the Broken Bells would ride across in full force.
|
|
The knights were our change to get to Kala Fortress before the Black
|
|
Knight could, much as they might be needed in the small battle about to
|
|
take place in the plains.
|
|
|
|
It took hours, to my rising restlessness, before the bridge was done. We
|
|
didn't wait until it was; as soon as Pickler told me they'd reached the
|
|
shallows on the other side, I saddled up and led the Order across.
|
|
There'd been no news about the battle in the plains yet. We rode through
|
|
the shallow water and then up the beach, the townsfolk of Risas barring
|
|
their gates and hiding as we rode past. After that, the hasty ride in
|
|
the dark was surprisingly boring. Sometimes a horse fell and a knight
|
|
had to pull back and change their mount, but otherwise we went
|
|
untroubled.
|
|
|
|
We rode down the eastern length of the Kala Hills, then swung around
|
|
west to approach the keep itself. We rested the horses before coming
|
|
into sight, not only to allow the beasts to catch their breath. Scribe
|
|
and her almost-Named had come through for me: waiting for us in a fold
|
|
of the rocks was Sokoro Abara's mother, as I'd promised. I gave him a
|
|
moment to reassure her -- and confirm through someone he trusted we
|
|
truly had assassinated his father -- and then we saddled up again.
|
|
|
|
Kala Fortress was a grim old thing propped up against the side of the
|
|
eponymous hills, with tall and thick wall of stones surrounding the
|
|
small town at the bottom of a squat castle. Sokoro went in ahead with
|
|
Assassin secretly shadowing him and contacted his partisans. There was
|
|
some violence before they seized control of the outer gates, but once
|
|
they were swung open my knights flooded into the town. We struck quick
|
|
enough the castle gates were overridden before they could be closed, and
|
|
with Sokoro serving as our emissary a surrender was not overly difficult
|
|
to secure.
|
|
|
|
I had to blow up his sister's head, she was the fight-to-the-end type,
|
|
but the sight of that cooled ardours among the hardliners. Within the
|
|
hour he was Lord Sokoro Abara and his half-brother in a cell, which was
|
|
when I finally left out a breath of relief. Our part of this, at least,
|
|
had gone well. It was past Early Bell, but we'd taken the fortress. Now
|
|
all we could do was \emph{wait}.
|
|
|
|
I got the news in waves. The first rider was sent by Juniper once the
|
|
force we'd sent to stir up Nim had begun to retreat. The skirmishing had
|
|
gone well and it looked like the Black Knight had preferred marching out
|
|
with her full strength arrayed rather than pursuing us half-baked. She
|
|
must have thought we were baiting her into a trap. The second rider
|
|
informed me that the Loyalist Legions had sent out their entire horse to
|
|
harass us when they'd realized we had raised a pontoon bridge but that
|
|
our rearguard was holding. The crossing had begun and it was expected
|
|
that the Army of Callow would be across before the enemy infantry
|
|
arrived.
|
|
|
|
The third rider wasn't from Juniper at all, it was from the Black
|
|
Knight. We caught the man and killed him, but all it'd do was slow the
|
|
realization that we were now at her back. The fourth rider brought
|
|
harsher news: the enemy cavalry had set fire to the pontoon bridge
|
|
before the last of my men crossed, leaving three companies stranded on
|
|
the wrong side of the lake. General Zola had ordered them to surrender,
|
|
which they had. The rest of the Army of Callow, however, had crossed. A
|
|
detachment would stay to try to salvage as much of the bridge as
|
|
possible, but the march to Kala had begun. The Black Knight sent a pair
|
|
of companies to check the fortress, in the hours after, but I sallied
|
|
with the Order and rode them down.
|
|
|
|
There were no survivors and Marshal Nim did not try us again.
|
|
|
|
By dawn my army was camped beneath the walls of Kala Fortress, the few
|
|
sappers Pickler had been able to spare looking into setting up defensive
|
|
positions. By Morning Bell our supplies had caught up. By Noon Bell
|
|
horns sounded to call the beleaguered Army of Callow to fighting
|
|
positions, because our forward elements had brought word: the Loyalist
|
|
Legions had formed a battle line in the valley and were now beginning to
|
|
march towards us. Lady Black had decided she'd rather fight than let
|
|
herself be cornered.
|
|
|
|
An hour past Noon Bell, as I sat on Zombie's back, I looked at the
|
|
retreating Loyalist Legions and laughed until my belly hurt. It wasn't
|
|
us that'd given them pause, no. We were in good battle order, ready to
|
|
receive them, but it was a banner that'd done the trick. Atop Moule
|
|
Hills, on Nim's left flank, a banner had been raised: a vulture cradling
|
|
a white skull, with green and yellow lines emanating from it. And under
|
|
the colours horse and infantry stood, poised on the heights and looking
|
|
down at us.
|
|
|
|
Sepulchral's vanguard had arrived even earlier than expected, and now
|
|
everyone's plans were merrily burning under the afternoon sun.
|