769 lines
32 KiB
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769 lines
32 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-16-anchor}{%
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\chapter{Anchor}\label{chapter-16-anchor}}
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\epigraph{``To suffer defeat is not to be defeated. One is an occurrence,
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the other a state of mind.''}{Dread Empress Sanguinara, the Shrewd}
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It was as if our armies had played a round of musical chairs.
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The Loyalist Legions had been camped at the tip of Moule Hills, south of
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us, but they'd burned that camp to force us out of our camp in Kala
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Hills. Then we'd gone around those same hills and stolen a march south
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of them, taking Kala Fortress and setting up over their supply lines.
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The final bit of surprise, though, had been when Marshal Nim had marched
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her army south expel us from our new position and instead been forced to
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retreat north: Sepulchral's vanguard had popped up atop Moule Hills,
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threatening to flank her if she gave battle. So now here we were, the
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three of us staring at each other as the afternoon sun pounded down on
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our helmeted heads.
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The vanguard set up shop at Nim's old camp in Moule Hills, in what I
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could only call a fit of irony. Not without paying for the nice campsite
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and half-filled dry moat, though, going by the detonations and screams
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that'd followed the rebel forces moving there. Looked like I'd been
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right to think that the Black Knight had trapped the area with goblin
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munitions before leaving it. We were keeping an eye on both the other
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armies in the region, scouts out and about, but not going on the
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offensive. The unexpected arrival of Sepulchral's three thousand had
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bought us time and we intended to use it to the fullest.
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See, even after having outmanoeuvered the Loyalist Legions none of us
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thought it was anything but stupidity to try to go and attack them in
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their -- formerly our -- fortified camp in northern Kala Hills. And
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given the disparity in our numbers and the fact we'd taken some bruising
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losses, none of us were particularly eager to face Marshal Nim in a fair
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pitched battle either. The chances were high that even if we won the
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costs would make it a strategic defeat. If Juniper had been herself I
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might have risked it, but as she was\ldots{} The Hellhound was still
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largely silent during the war councils she was supposed to be leading.
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On the other hand, we couldn't just let the Black Knight slap us out of
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our superior position either. We could cut off her supply lines from
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here and ensure we wouldn't run out of water. So Sapper-General Pickler
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had given us our solution.
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``We raise a wall,'' she said, leaning over the map. ``Between Moule
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Hills and Kala Hills, at the narrowest part of the valley.''
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And so while half our army had gone in the rest to shade, the rest had
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spread out across the valley. Sappers and regulars were digging
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trenches, going from east to west, while palisades were being raised.
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Our main camp was still next to Kala Fortress, where we could use the
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wells and the walls, but out in the valley two makeshift forts were
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already under construction behind the trench line. The Legions hadn't
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taken that lying down, of course. The auxiliary cavalry had come out in
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force the moment it'd become clear what we were doing, but we'd been
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waiting and ready. It'd not been lightly armed Levantines facing down
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the riders, this time, but a proper shield wall with crossbowmen behind
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it.
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After a hard reminder of the difference in range and power between
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javelins and standard-issue Legion crossbows, the enemy horse had beaten
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a retreat. They kept harassing us all afternoon, though, even as the
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Loyalist Legions mounted their answer to our new stratagem. I was
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standing next to Pickler as it began to play out, sighing.
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``We should have seen that coming, really,'' I admitted.
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She spat to the side.
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``They'll get their fortifications up faster than we will ours,''
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Pickler warned. ``We're outmatched in both sappers and labour.''
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In answer to our containment of them with a trench and wall, the Legions
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of Terror had begun building their own to our north. Not even that far,
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damnably enough. About two hundred feet beyond our furthest crossbow
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range, with their cavalry waiting out in the valley just in case we got
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foolish enough to try a skirmishing war. Pickler was right, I grimly
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thought, as she tended to be when it came to sapper's work. I could
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already see the gap between the capacity of our armies in action: the
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Legions had begun working three hours after us yet already they'd caught
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up to two thirds of our trench length.
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``Theirs are more vulnerable,'' I noted. ``They still have Sepulchral's
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three thousand on the wrong side of the walls.''
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Which might actually be part of the plan, I thought. The Black Knight
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would either bait them down from the hills in an ill-advised attack or
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fortify around them until they became irrelevant. That might explain why
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she wasn't being more aggressive in trying to get us off her supply
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lines. She wasn't digging in to stay so much as putting up defences to
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prevent being flanked before she hammered away at us. From her point of
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view, this battle would be settled long before her stores of food were
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at any risk of running low.
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``I can't speak to that,'' Pickler shrugged. ``You know my interest in
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tactics is limited. What I can tell you, though, is that we'll need our
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best skirmishers in Kala Hills tomorrow.''
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I had to crane my neck more than I wanted to so I could have a look at
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her. She was standing on the side of my missing eye. I felt my fingers
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clench. It was always the little things that got to me.
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``Why's that?'' I frowned.
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``We don't have enough stakes to make a wall the length of the entire
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valley,'' she said. ``And neither do the Legions. So we're going to have
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to cut wood, Catherine, and the only place in the region that has any in
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the quantity needed-''
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``- is Kala Hills,'' I finished.
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Plenty of brushlands in those rocky hills, some proper trees too. With
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this having turned into a war of entrenchments, those bushes and trees
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had just become as precious a commodity as water. We'd begin by cutting
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the wood closest to our camps, of course, but then they'd need to go
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south and we would need to go north. Closer to each other.
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``The moment we both run out of \emph{sudes}, the easiest way to slow
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the other side from building up is to harass the soldiers cutting
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wood,'' I said, rubbing at the bridge of my nose. ``Shit. That's going
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to get \emph{messy}.''
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``That's a word for it,'' Pickler snorted.
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She seemed amused, but her face suddenly stilled. She looked away,
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biting at the inside of her cheek. A long moment passed, a silence I did
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not dare to break. I knew whose memory had struck her like a punch in
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the gut.
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``He would have loved it,'' Pickler finally said. ``The mess. The
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chaos.''
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``The danger,'' I ruefully said.
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She nodded, then returned to silence. Honest emotion was not something
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that came easy to goblins, so I let her choose her words at her own pace
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without sticking my foot in it.
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``After Ratface died,'' Pickler said, ``I thought we were done losing
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them. That we'd paid our due to the Gobbler, that the rest of us would
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make it.''
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``Nauk,'' I quietly said.
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``He was gone long before they killed him,'' she said, shaking her head.
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``The Warlock\ldots{} didn't bring much of him back. Not enough for it
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to count.''
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I did not disagree, keeping my shame to myself. I'd thought, once upon a
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time, that Night might have mended that. These days I was not so sure,
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but I had clutched that hope close in the early days of my return from
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the Everdark.
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``Then they got Hune,'' Pickler continued. ``That was\ldots{}''
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``I didn't think you two were close,'' I said.
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``We weren't. She wasn't the kind that made friends. But she was one of
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\emph{us}, Cat,'' the goblin quietly said.
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Over the years, somewhere along the line the veil that'd once separated
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the Rat Company cadets from the Fifteenth had fallen. There just weren't
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enough of us left for the distinction to matter. With every fresh war I
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dragged us into, every hard stand, another body had dropped. We were a
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dying breed, those few that'd been in it from the start.
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``She was,'' I acknowledged.
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Hune had not been my friend and I had never trusted her entirely. But
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she had been one of us anyway, in that intangible way they only ever
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quite became real when it started feeling like loss.
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``And somehow I still didn't see it coming when Robber died,'' Pickler
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said, tone bitter. ``He used to go around telling us he was invincible,
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that he just couldn't seem to croak-''
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My throat tightened and she stopped herself, looking at the men raising
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walls in the distance.
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``I guess I believed him a little, even when I rolled my eyes. I thought
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that even if we all died, Catherine, he'd be the last one to bite it,''
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she said. ``Somehow. It just never felt real that he could be\ldots{}
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gone.''
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``Sometimes I still feel like he'll pop out from behind a stone,'' I
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admitted. ``Grinning, making fun of us for having gone soft.''
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``But he won't,'' Pickler harshly said. ``He \emph{won't}. And there's
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so many things with him I left half done, because I always thought
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there'd be more time. After this battle, that plan, that book. I waited
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until the Gobbler took him because I was too\ldots{} lazy to talk to
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him.''
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``We always think we could have done more, when people die,'' I said.
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``Especially people we loved. It's not fair to either them or us.''
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``What does fair ever matter?'' Pickler tiredly said. `'It won't fix a
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thing. It's not wood and steel, I can't take out what's broken and make
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good again. Instead what I have is regrets and a letter I'm too afraid
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to open.''
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I breathed in sharply. Hakram had told me Robber had left her a letter,
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but I'd not known she had yet to read it.
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``Why?''
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``I know what's in it,'' Pickler said, then snorted. ``Or maybe I don't.
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I don't know which scares me more.''
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Robber had loved her, once. When we'd been little more than children he
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and Nauk had both courted her attentions and fancied each other rivals,
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not that anything ever came of it save bickering. She'd liked the
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attention, but she'd never been all that interested in romance. Besides,
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goblins thought of love differently than humans. It didn't mean the same
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things, didn't carry the same expectations even when it was returned.
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``Did you love him?'' I quietly asked.
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Hesitation.
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``No,'' Pickler replied.
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Then she chuckled bitterly.
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``Maybe,'' she admitted. ``It was\ldots{} messy. I thought he'd want
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more than I wanted to give, so I never let him ask.''
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I breathed out, hand itching for my pipe. I restrained myself.
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``I think you did,'' I murmured. ``At least a little.''
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Her shoulders tightened.
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``After the war,'' Pickler finally said, ``I wanted us to go to the same
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place.''
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It was as close to admitting affection as she would ever get, I thought.
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``I expect we all will, Pickler,'' I softly said. ``He's just gone on
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ahead one more time.''
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She laughed, a little grimly but genuinely. Goblin humour tended to run
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even darker than my people's. There was a reason they got on so well
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with Lycaonese, whose gallows humour was black enough even Callowans
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balked at it.
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``It feels like unfinished business,'' Pickler eventually said. ``That's
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all. And I don't know how to finish it.''
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\emph{Sometimes you don't}, I thought. \emph{You keep walking with that
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weight on your back, knowing one day you'll buckle.} My instinct was to
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lay a hand on her shoulder in comfort, but it would be no such thing to
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a goblin. Instead I gave her the sole courtesy I had to offer: work to
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disappear into.
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``Prepare our builders for skirmish,'' I said. ``Draw on our reserves
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for regulars if you need to.''
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``You're going to hiss at the snake?'' Pickler asked, sounding
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surprised.
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Poke at the bear, I decided, only for the Grey Eyries. It always
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surprised me that even after all these years there were still
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expressions from east of the Wasaliti I'd never heard. In Lower Miezan,
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anyway.
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``Something like that,'' I said. ``I figure that we've got one asset the
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Legions have no answer to, so it's about time to use it.''
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I wasn't going to be sending skirmishers out to fight theirs in the
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space between our trenches, I wasn't that much of a fool. They had
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crossbow companies waiting for that mistake, same as us, and my men were
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a lot more tired than Nim's anyway. The Army of Callow had marched all
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night and not had a full eight hours of sleep since, it was on the
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ragged edge. Instead I sent for two people: Archer and the Silver
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Huntress. My instructions were straightforward.
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``You see these people?'' I asked, pointing north.
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The two of them eyed the enemy legionaries and sappers raising a wall
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and digging a trench, a swarm of ants just outside the range of our
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crossbows.
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``Sure,'' Archer shrugged.
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``I do,'' the Silver Huntress gravely replied.
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``You've got bows and I want corpses,'' I bluntly said. ``Have at it.''
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That got a delighted laugh out of Indrani and a measuring look out of
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Alexis. Neither of them bothered to use the elaborate bows they'd
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received as gifts from the Lady of the Lake, instead stringing good yew
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longbows from Daoine after ensuring they were well provisioned with
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arrows.
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And then, easy as breathing, they began taking lives.
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The enemy were maybe seventeen hundred feet away, well out the range of
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even the longbowmen of the Watch. But these two were Named, sharpened to
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a razor's edge in the greatest war of our time, and so they began
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killing their way through the enemy as if were not impossible. Archer
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went for officers, Huntress for the sappers. It took a while before the
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enemy even realized what was happening: they scrambled about looking for
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skirmishers that weren't there, at first. And even when they did
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realize, the response was slow. Archer had killed the people who should
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be shouting orders. Within half an hour the regulars were in a full
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testudo and sappers were either huddling in their trench or gone.
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At the hour's turn the sappers came back having assembled rough
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mantlets, wooden walls on wheels they could bring forward and take cover
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behind. It was a mixed success: the two archer Named first bled the
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regulars that broke cover to put them in place and then ignored them
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entirely, curving their arrows to fall down from above. Those shots
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weren't anywhere as lethal, but they still disrupted the sappers trying
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to get back to work. It was only half an hour after that the situation
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came to a close, when mage lines were sent out to raise shield spells
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around the sappers to protect them entirely. In the distance I recognize
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the woman who led them. Tall, dark of hair and with strange golden eyes.
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Akua looked our way as well, but nothing was spoken.
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It was still too early.
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``We could have at the mages,'' the Silver Huntress said. ``If we start
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using our proper bows and our stock of mage-killing arrows.''
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I shook my head. I might have considered it if they were mfuasa and
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nobles, but these were Legion mages. We did not have enough mage-killer
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arrows for this to be a good trade.
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``Better to let them win now,'' I said. ``Let them feel safe and get
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sloppy.''
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Indrani eyed me amusedly.
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``You're sending us back after nightfall,'' she said.
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My smile was cold.
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``Get some rest, you two,'' I said. ``You have a long night ahead of
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you.''
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And I needed to get back to camp. The fortifications were a good measure
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to take, Pickler had been right to suggest them, but they weren't a
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plan.
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If we were going to win this, we needed one of those.
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---
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Vivienne wasn't alone in her tent when I went to see her. I'd been about
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to enter anyway when I overheard the voice of who she was speaking with.
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The Laure drawl wasn't rare in my army, but I knew the timbre of that
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voice too. I was curious enough about what had brought the Squire to her
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that I decided to\ldots{} actively overhear. It wasn't called
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eavesdropping when it was a queen that did it, there were laws about
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this stuff.
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``-did a number on him,'' Vivienne was saying. ``I know there are parts
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of Callow where he still has a good reputation, but they tend to be the
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ones that saw little of him.''
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``He was chosen by a Choir, I am told,'' Arthur hesitantly said. ``Can
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that truly be a harmful thing?''
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``Angels are a lot of things,'' Vivienne said. ``Most of them are good.
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But do not ever, for a moment, believe them to be harmless. Even their
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kindness has teeth, and Contrition has little other than the teeth to
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offer.''
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``Yet you fought with him,'' the Squire said, voice daring her to deny
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it. ``At his side.''
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``Some of the things we did back then were right,'' Vivienne said, tone
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gone quiet. ``But some of the others\ldots{} we weren't fighting the
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right battles, and not against the right people. Doing good's not always
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the same thing as doing Good.''
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``There's priests who would call that heresy,'' he said.
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``Heard lot of that talk, when I was your age,'' Vivienne said, and I
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could hear the hard smile in her voice. ``Heresy this, blasphemy that.
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What did the Praesi care? Wasn't priests whining that got the Empire to
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leave. Keep to Above of you want, there's nothing wrong with that. But
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like Jehan the Wise said, prayer and a sword work better than prayer
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alone.''
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A sentiment I could get behind. The sword part of it, anyway. Deciding
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I'd eavesdrop- actively overheard for long enough, I made my presence
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known by loudly approaching. Fuck, I thought as I entered the tent, but
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someone was going to have to teach the kid to hide his thoughts better.
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He looked like I'd just caught him with his hand in a honey pot, it was
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painfully obvious he thought he'd been doing something bad. I wasn't too
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worried about talk of the Lone Swordsman, myself. Contrition had been
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trying to hook the Squire from the start, but William was not a great
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angle for them to take. A lot of Callowans hadn't been fond of the man.
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That tended to happen when you carved messages into people's foreheads,
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even when those people were Praesi.
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``If you'd excuse me, Your Grace, Your Majesty,'' Arthur said, bowing.
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I shrugged and Vivienne waved him away. She waited until he was gone
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from the tent to cock an eyebrow at me.
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``So how much did you listen at?''
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I put a hand over my heart, deeply wounded by the implication.
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``How dare you,'' I gravely said, ``and when you started talking about
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the way people remember William.''
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``The end, then,'' Vivienne said. ``Kid's been dreaming, but they're all
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over the place.''
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I frowned.
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``Still the broken sword?''
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I'd broken the Penitent's Blade and good luck to anyone trying to -- no,
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Catherine, that was a good way to get stabbed with pointed irony in a
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few years. Let it simply be said I had been thorough in dispersing the
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shards of the angel's feather.
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``He has a whole array of them,'' Viv replied, shaking her head.
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``Different Squires. He does get the sword dreams, but I'd bet that's
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Contrition trying to nudge him down that road.''
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``Those nosy fuckers,'' I grunted. ``They need to learn when to quit.''
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I wasn't above asking Zeze to look into the practicalities of a pointed
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lesson for those vultures when this was all over. Malicia and Amadeus
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had outlawed the Name of Chancellor, when she climbed the Tower, so
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maybe I should look into outlawing the Hashmallim getting their sticky
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fingers into any of my countrymen.
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``He's not like William was,'' Vivienne frankly said. ``Nowhere enough
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self-loathing. I imagine they'd like him on the throne instead of you or
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me, but he's a lot more interested in knighthood than crowns. That bodes
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well.''
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``He's still a wild card,'' I said. ``Different Squire dreams means he's
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not settled, Viv. No telling what kind of a Knight Name he'll end up
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transitioning into.''
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It sounded a lot to me like the Heavens dangling shiny paths in front of
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their newest Callowan hero to find out what might stick. And there were
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some that I simply wouldn't be able to tolerate. Rebel Knight, for one,
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Eleanor Fairfax's old Name that'd popped up in Callowan history whenever
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a tyrant needed toppling. It irked me how much Name lore about the days
|
|
of the Old Kingdom had been lost. I understood why my father had
|
|
destroyed pretty much all he could -- legacies were dangerous things
|
|
when you'd destroyed the last iteration of them -- but it still left me
|
|
more knowledgeable in the ways of Praesi Named than those of my own
|
|
kingdom.
|
|
|
|
Maybe it was for the best, I told myself. Using old tools and old means
|
|
tended to lead to the same old ends.
|
|
|
|
``Lots of that going around,'' Vivienne admitted. ``Yours is so close I
|
|
can almost taste it, Cat. You're already starting to get the
|
|
coincidences again -- what were the odds of you stumbling into this
|
|
talk?''
|
|
|
|
Low, practically speaking.
|
|
|
|
``I think it'll take shape when we settle the Tower,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
I'd know for sure if I started getting the reflexes again.
|
|
|
|
``You're not far either,'' I said. ``Or he wouldn't have been having
|
|
that talk with you in the first place.''
|
|
|
|
She grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not sure what it is,'' Vivienne said. ``And there's\ldots{}
|
|
something missing, I can't quite put it into words.''
|
|
|
|
``You need something to take you over the top,'' I said, tone clinical.
|
|
``You've got your Role and the will, but you need weight. A story that
|
|
people will talk about.''
|
|
|
|
That famous charge at the Battle of Hainaut had not been quite enough.
|
|
|
|
``I thought you might be angry,'' she admitted. ``I know you wanted
|
|
Callow to be ruled by someone without a Name.''
|
|
|
|
I sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Those provisions of the Accords are essentially dead,'' I said. ``And
|
|
in the end it's not a theoretical candidate I'm entrusting that throne
|
|
to, it's Vivienne Dartwick. I stand by that choice whether it comes with
|
|
a Name attached or not.''
|
|
|
|
Her eyes shone and I looked to the side.
|
|
|
|
``Thanks,'' Vivienne quietly said.
|
|
|
|
I cleared my throat uncomfortably.
|
|
|
|
``I did come for something,'' I said. ``Your scheme in the Legions?''
|
|
|
|
``Won't work if it looks like we're losing,'' she replied. ``I'm still
|
|
looking into getting in contact. It's ready, I just need my foot in the
|
|
door.''
|
|
|
|
``Hurry it up,'' I asked. ``I'm not sure we'll be getting a decisive
|
|
battle before Sepulchral arrives. If the rest of her army arrives in
|
|
time, I want our finger ready to pull the trigger.''
|
|
|
|
``I'll see it done,'' she firmly replied.
|
|
|
|
I nodded. I was about to take my leave when I saw hesitation on her
|
|
face.
|
|
|
|
``Viv?''
|
|
|
|
She brushed back an errant strand that'd fallen out of her braid. It
|
|
still looked like a crown, her milkmaid's braid, even when she did not
|
|
wear the silver circlet that'd become hers when I formally named her a
|
|
princess of Callow. She bit her lip.
|
|
|
|
``The Name,'' Vivienne quietly said, ``I do not know if it will
|
|
be\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
She trailed off, hesitating again.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think it will be one of Below's,'' she said. ``Cat, I know
|
|
that-''
|
|
|
|
I limped forward a step, leaning over the desk, and even as her eyes
|
|
widened in surprise I pressed a kiss against her forehead. She looked
|
|
up, startled, as I drew back.
|
|
|
|
``I didn't name you my successor so you could keep making my mistakes,''
|
|
I said.
|
|
|
|
There was nothing more to say, as far as I was concerned, and so on
|
|
those words I left her.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara still brewed what was probably my favourite
|
|
tea in the world. Herbal Wasteland stuff, nothing like the horrid
|
|
imported leaves that Hasenbach was so wild about, and I'd yet to ever
|
|
dislike a mug she'd made me. Not that the pleasant taste made what we
|
|
had to talk about any more pleasant.
|
|
|
|
``I've never seen her like this before,'' Aisha said. ``In her first
|
|
year at the College she had moments, before she found her footing, but
|
|
this is different.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``I didn't see it coming,'' I admitted. ``I know Nim pulling one over us
|
|
twice in a row had to be a shock, but we've had hard rides before. What
|
|
makes this different?''
|
|
|
|
Aisha elegantly sipped at her tea, which was the polite Taghreb way of
|
|
gathering's one's thoughts without being uncouth.
|
|
|
|
``It has been coming for some time, I think,'' Aisha finally said.
|
|
``Looking back now. But I am afraid that the tipping point would be
|
|
you.''
|
|
|
|
I froze in my seat a moment, taken aback.
|
|
|
|
``I thought I'd made it clear I still had full trust in her abilities,''
|
|
I slowly said.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' Aisha gently said. ``Which made it sting all the more when she
|
|
failed your trust by being defeated so starkly.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Fuck}, I eloquently thought. Had I been turning the knife without
|
|
even realizing it?
|
|
|
|
``She said things, after you left,'' I began, hesitant to continue.
|
|
|
|
``She's afraid it didn't all come back,'' Aisha murmured. ``Yes, she has
|
|
confided as much in me before.''
|
|
|
|
``The Grey Pilgrim himself said she was all there,'' I told her. ``It
|
|
wrecked her body to extract the commands, the hooks were deep, but the
|
|
weakness is purely physical.''
|
|
|
|
``You trusted the man, which weighs on the scales, but not all of us are
|
|
eager to take the word of the Peregrine for anything at all,'' she
|
|
replied. ``It is doubts, Catherine. She believes she was either lessened
|
|
by Malicia's spells or never on even footing with the Empire's marshal,
|
|
and cannot believe in either without loathing.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha sighed and then, for one of the few times in all the years I'd
|
|
known her, slumped into her seat.
|
|
|
|
``And she loathes the indecision too,'' she continued, ``which makes
|
|
even standing still a defeat. It is\ldots{} tangled, Catherine. And
|
|
perhaps this was a long time coming. We all rose swiftly under you. Some
|
|
might say too quickly.''
|
|
|
|
I sipped at my tea.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not one of those people,'' I said. ``And unless someone else has
|
|
taken to wearing my crown, that's the only trust in need of keeping.''
|
|
|
|
She met my eye, then slowly nodded. Aisha had always been hard to read,
|
|
her lovely heart-shaped face ever showing anything she did not want it
|
|
to.
|
|
|
|
``I am proud, you know,'' Aisha quietly said. ``Of the army we built,
|
|
all of us. The kingdom. It was bitter and often thankless work,
|
|
Catherine, but you did not pretend otherwise when you asked us to follow
|
|
you. And looking at all we have done, even after all it cost us, I am
|
|
deeply proud.''
|
|
|
|
She slid a finger around the rim of her cup.
|
|
|
|
``I would not let that legacy bury us,'' Aisha said. ``Juniper\ldots{}
|
|
if she fails you here, it will haunt her to her grave.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know how to make her eager for the fight again,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
I'd never had to, before. Never learned to.
|
|
|
|
``I might,'' she said. ``I looked through her papers as she slept.''
|
|
|
|
My eye narrowed but I did not interrupt.
|
|
|
|
``She has been sketching out theories,'' Aisha said. ``And one stood
|
|
out. I would have us show her, Catherine, that she is not blind and
|
|
lost.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm listening,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
And we planned, the two of us, how to follow the plan my Marshal hadn't
|
|
given me.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
For a bit, it looked like we'd accidentally started a night battle.
|
|
|
|
Archer and Huntress had come out to reap another harvest of lives, but
|
|
when they began shooting at the legionaries sleeping in forts exactly
|
|
like those we'd raised -- it was the same damned pattern both sides used
|
|
-- it looked like we'd kicked a hornet's nest. Not only did goblins and
|
|
regulars come out in force, but so did a large force we hadn't
|
|
anticipated. The entire Eighth Legion had left the camp in Kala Hills
|
|
and begun marching towards the trenches. Our watches and horns did their
|
|
job properly, calling for a brisk assembly, but it was clear that we'd
|
|
not get to our fortifications in force before the enemy did. Not that it
|
|
mattered, I thought, because the Eighth wasn't actually there to attack
|
|
us. Juniper had believed it would be two legions, but she'd written that
|
|
a delaying force at least one strong would march our way.
|
|
|
|
Now there were two more of her predictions left to come true.
|
|
|
|
The first came true within a quarter bell. In perfect marching order,
|
|
the Eleventh and Fourteenth Legion crossed the valley to begin an
|
|
assault on the camp in Moule Hills where Sepulchral's vanguard was now
|
|
beginning to wake in a panic. Eight thousand legionaries marching
|
|
against the three thousand mixed force of household troops and cavalry.
|
|
If the Black Knight closed in before they were ready, and she would, it
|
|
would be a slaughter. I was rather proud of how quickly the Army of
|
|
Callow began gathering in the valley facing the Legions. By the time the
|
|
Eighth finished living up to their cognomen of Trailblazers and took
|
|
over the Legion fortifications facing ours, our own vanguard of three
|
|
thousand was on its way to our side of the trenches.
|
|
|
|
``I think we took them by surprise with the harassment by Archer and
|
|
Huntress,'' I mused. ``At a guess, because of the dark they thought it
|
|
was an attack on their position.''
|
|
|
|
``Then why did the Eighth march out so quickly?'' Vivienne asked with a
|
|
frown.
|
|
|
|
``Dedicated response force,'' I said. ``Nim had them waiting for
|
|
something like this. Which is why there's only one other legion marching
|
|
to reinforce them.''
|
|
|
|
I pointed in the distance, where the Thirteenth was marching to bolster
|
|
the Eighth in their defensive position. The Black Knight's own legion,
|
|
the Seventh, was staying back. Serving as a reserve, most likely.
|
|
|
|
``And now the Legions gamble on our being too slow to stop them from
|
|
wiping out the Askum troops,'' Vivienne muttered. ``Isn't Marshal Nim
|
|
afraid we'll overwhelm the eight thousand she's putting in our way?
|
|
Sepulchral sent household troops, not the sort of men who die quickly.
|
|
If we gather enough soldiers here, we could break the two legions in our
|
|
way and perhaps even defeat her army while it's divided.''
|
|
|
|
``Good instinct,'' I praised. ``She's very much afraid of that. It's why
|
|
she's kept her own legion as a reserve, it keeps her options open. That
|
|
way she can either use the Seventh to shore up the defences in the
|
|
valley or to give second breath to the assault on Sepulchral should it
|
|
stall out.''
|
|
|
|
``It still seems risky, especially trying it at night,'' Vivienne said.
|
|
``What if we gather quicker than she anticipated?''
|
|
|
|
``Here's where it gets interesting,'' I mused. ``See, what we sent to
|
|
reinforce our trench was our readied troops. Night watch, soldiers on
|
|
duty. It was a pretty solid number for an army our size. But the second
|
|
wave of our soldiers is going to come slower. They'll need to wake, put
|
|
on armour, find their officers and muster before marching out. There's
|
|
going to be a beat between the two waves.''
|
|
|
|
``So she attacks us when she still has more soldiers on the fronts than
|
|
we do?'' Vivienne guessed.
|
|
|
|
``That'd be a blunder,'' I said. ``If she tries to overwhelm our
|
|
trenches, she risks our people holding and her men being out of
|
|
formation when our second wave does arrive. That could go \emph{really}
|
|
badly for her, the kind of disaster you were talking about earlier.''
|
|
|
|
``So what does she do?'' the sole princess of Callow asked. ``Why are we
|
|
here, Catherine?''
|
|
|
|
``Because the Hellhound believes that Marshal Nim is going to make use
|
|
of that beat between the waves,'' I said. ``Not to overwhelm our
|
|
position in the valley, no, but to delay the reinforcements. To make
|
|
sure that we can't threaten to overwhelm \emph{her} position in the
|
|
valley while she deals with the Askum camp.''
|
|
|
|
``And how would she do that?'' Vivienne asked.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't the one who answered her. It was, instead, the thunder of
|
|
thousands of hooves against the half-road. Three thousand auxiliary
|
|
horse rode down the sole road of the valley, well to the west of the
|
|
standoff between the Eighth and our vanguard. They weren't heading there
|
|
in slightest, after all: they were going to continue doing the road
|
|
before taking a brisk turn east towards Kala Fortress, to strike at my
|
|
soldiers before they could properly form up into a second wave. They'd
|
|
retreat soon enough, light horse couldn't handle the Army of Callow in a
|
|
lasting fight, but all they had to do was sow enough chaos and death to
|
|
slow us down before running away.
|
|
|
|
It would buy the Black Knight long enough to do achieve what she was
|
|
after, removing Sepulchral's vanguard from the board.
|
|
|
|
Of course, there was just one little bit of trouble with that. Three
|
|
thousand light cavalry, packed in a tight column so they could make the
|
|
best use possible of the road, were a fearsome force. But also a fragile
|
|
one. So I wanted until they were in deep, too late to easily leave, and
|
|
then I turned to Grandmaster Brandon Talbot. He'd been waiting all this
|
|
time, listening with an eager look on his face.
|
|
|
|
``I'm going to pull down the veil,'' I said. ``Ready?''
|
|
|
|
``At your word, Your Majesty,'' he replied.
|
|
|
|
It'd been a pain to get Masego to anchor the Night-working in a stone
|
|
and meant it had been a pretty basic illusion, but it'd allowed me to
|
|
get around that little trick of Akua's with the red light circle. The
|
|
Legions had gotten too dependent on that for sniffing me out, they
|
|
really ought to have known better. With a murmured prayer I tore the
|
|
Night out of the stone, feeling it crumbled to dust in my hand, and
|
|
suddenly the moon shone pale above the glinting ranks of the Order of
|
|
the Broken Bells. Lances down, shields up, the knights were in broad
|
|
flanking positions just ahead of the largest cavalry force left in the
|
|
Wasteland. I glanced at Vivienne, grinning and gesturing at our foes.
|
|
She grinned back.
|
|
|
|
``KNIGHTS OF CALLOW,'' she shouted. ``FORWARD!''
|
|
|
|
Once, twice, thrice the horn sounded.
|
|
|
|
Death followed.
|