700 lines
33 KiB
TeX
700 lines
33 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-17-aim}{%
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\chapter{Aim}\label{chapter-17-aim}}
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\epigraph{``To be great one must stand on the shoulders of others. The
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difference between rule and tyranny is whether they raised or you
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stepped on them.''}{King Edward Alban of Callow, best known for annexing the Kingdom of
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Liesse}
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I'd not seen that many dead and dying horses since the Graveyard.
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Casualties were a haphazard game, when one tried to count them in the
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wake of a bloody melee in the dark, but I trusted my eyes. At least half
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the force of three thousand that'd proudly thundered down the road now
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lay dead in the dust, torn through like parchment by Callowan lances.
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The rest had fled, panicking as my knights butchered their way through
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the tightly packed column, and there'd be no more fighting out of them
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tonight. It'd been a massacre: we'd caught them flat-footed and in the
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wrong formation. Even after the casualties the Order of Broken Bells had
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taken, I suspected we now had more cavalry left than the Black Knight.
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That meant we'd killed at least three horsemen for every lost knight,
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the kind of exchange rate utter routs were made of.
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Yet as the stink of blood and shit filled my nostrils, as the death
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cries of men and horses joined in a strange elegy, my eyes stayed on the
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horizon. The Order had not pursued the fleeing horsemen, Talbot had
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known that it was a fool's errand and it'd put us as risk of running
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into an enemy trap. The orders given had instead been to send away the
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few prisoners taken, execute the dying and change mounts in anticipation
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of another ride. It seemed, though that there would be no need to send
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my knights into another melee. Marshal Nim, from her perch, had decided
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she did not like the growing shape of the battle. Too many risks,
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especially now that her horse had routed in the dark and the Army of
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Callow's reinforcements were marching unhindered.
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If my vanguard tried to take her fortifications in the plains with the
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support of the Order, she might face an outright defeat here. Her forces
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were still split and I was the one with the cavalry advantage now. So
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the Black Knight did the smart thing, the prudent thing. What the Legion
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doctrine she'd helped write would have advised: she retreated.
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The assault on Sepulchral's soldiers in the heights was called off and
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the Seventh prudently moved to reinforce the two legions already
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gathering to face my army by the trench. Marshal Nim wouldn't attack,
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though, and neither would I. Taking trenches, even only half-finished
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ones, would be messy. Too risky, given the exhaustion of our armies and
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the lack of coordination that came from fighting in the dark. Her
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officers were better than mine, sure, but she wasn't going to bet on the
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same army that'd slugged it out with the Dead King for years being the
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army to break. When the going got rough and the fighting became about
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who had the iron to pull through? There was no beating the Army of
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Callow.
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So instead of a battle, what we were going to get was two armies
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standing in battle array half a mile from each other in the dark for a
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few hours before both retreated. I pulled off my helmet, shaking free my
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wet hair. I wasn't great with a lance, but I'd gotten in close with my
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sword after sowing further panic in the enemy with Night. There was
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blood on my armour that wasn't mine. I looked up at the starry sky,
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breathing out slowly.
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We'd made it through one more night.
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---
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Aisha had thought that following Juniper's plan successfully would shake
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her out of\ldots{} whatever this was, but the following morning I saw
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differently. I'd taken it as a good sign that she had headed out towards
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the frontlines, but it wasn't to our fortifications she went. She didn't
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go to inspect the trenches or the forts. Instead Juniper had headed
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further west, near the half-road that it would take us days to build all
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the way to -- about six, Pickler believed, at our current pace. I found
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my marshal's escort milling about uneasily on the valley floor while
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Juniper herself stood alone beneath a tall sycamore tree. It didn't give
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much shade, its branches skeletal and bare of all leaves.
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The Hellhound was one of the tallest orcs I'd met, taller than any in
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the Army of Callow save Hakram, and she'd always had a presence. Even as
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a cadet, the broad shoulders and ramrod straight way she stood had made
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the military in her visible to even a casual glance. I tended to have a
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hard time placing the age of orcs that were between their twenties and
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forties -- before or after, the signs were pretty distinctive -- but I'd
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known Juniper for years. Seen her grow as I grew, the lines of her broad
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face harden and her fangs thicken. Her eyes, black like most orcs', were
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deeper set than when we'd first met. The skin around had grown greyer,
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too.
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Yet in all these years I'd never really seen her\ldots{} sag like this.
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It was a little subtle, could have been taken as just leaning against
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the tree in someone like Indrani, but to someone who knew her it was
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plain. Her shoulders were hunched, her expression exhausted. She didn't
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greet me after I limped to her side, eyes still on the growing lines of
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fortifications in the distance. Dawn had passed an hour ago, both the
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Legions and my army were back to work in the cool morning air.
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``There are better places to take it in,'' I tried. ``If we go near the
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foot of the hills to the east, we can make out the Aksum camp as well.''
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She did not answer. I waited, at a loss. Juniper had never been one to
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swallow her feelings, so these long silences she'd taken to hiding in
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had me on the back foot.
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``I recognized the plan,'' the Hellhound finally said.
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``You should,'' I said, ``it was yours. And it worked.''
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Not my subtlest of approaches but sometimes blunt was the way to go. A
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surprisingly large amount of the time, really. Yet instead of what I'd
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been looking for, her shoulders further hunched.
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``It wasn't,'' she roughly replied.
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``Juniper, we literally cribbed your notes,'' I flatly said.
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Finally she turned to me, jaw clenched tight and eyes hard.
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``You took my read of the situation and you made it yours,'' the Marshal
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of Callow evenly said, the growl kept low in her throat. ``I predicted
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some decisions Marshal Nim might make, like half our general staff could
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have had they been asked. You took those guesses and made them into a
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functional battle plan.''
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My fingers clenched but I forced myself to stay calm. It was like she
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was trying to be obtuse.
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``Using the Order was-''
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``\emph{I wouldn't have used the Order}, Catherine,'' Juniper angrily
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said. ``I wouldn't have fought at all. I would have moved half the army
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closer to the trenches so that the Black Knight would be forced to do
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the same and it became too much of a risk for her to attack
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Sepulchral.''
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I blinked, then hid my surprise.
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``That would also have worked,'' I pointed out.
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``Your solution was better,'' she growled. ``You won the same prize,
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forcing her to back off from Sepulchral, but the Order's ambush cost her
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half her horse as well. If I had given you advice, if you had taken it,
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it would have been \emph{an inferior result}.''
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I bit on my tongue before I could tell her it would still have been a
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good one, knowing she'd take it as a slap in the face.
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``If you hadn't predicted Marshal Nim was going to attack none of it
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would have been possible,'' I said instead.
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``General Zola believed she would as well,'' Juniper said. ``You simply
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never asked her, because you insist on pretending I am something I'm
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not.''
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I grit my teeth. Why was she insisting on embracing the worst possible
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slant for everything? Fuck, she'd been outplayed by the Black Knight
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only twice -- when had she become so fragile?
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``And what would that be?'' I bit out.
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``A better commander than you,'' the Hellhound gravelled. ``Someone
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whose advice you should be taking.''
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``That's-''
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I almost said ridiculous before biting down on it. Calling her a fool
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wasn't going to achieve anything.
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``- the truth,'' Juniper said. ``When have I ever won a victory, save
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when you were dragging me along?''
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``You beat back Malanza at the Camps,'' I said.
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``I played for time until you could return,'' she replied, ``and would
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have lost if you had not. It's been like that since the start. Three
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Hills was your plan. Marchford, Five Armies and One, Dormer -- all the
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way to the Tenth Crusade. And when I did hold the command with none
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above me, I almost broke the Army of Callow in Iserre.''
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``I handle the Named part of those plans,'' I said. ``The military parts
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were yours, Juniper. In almost all those battles, I went down in the
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ranks and fought. Someone needed to actually command the army and that's
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always been you.''
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``You don't need a Marshal for that,'' Juniper said. ``You need a
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general, and you have plenty already.''
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``I don't agree with that in the slightest,'' I harshly said. ``And
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you're forgetting who built this damned army in the first place,
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Hellhound. It sure as Hells wasn't me.''
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``Don't you see how senseless it is?'' Juniper miserably said. ``We had
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a single draw when we were kids and it's all come from that. Every
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office, every honour, every title. I am a child in marshal's stripes
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facing a real marshal of Praes. It can only go one way.''
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There was nothing I could say, I dimly realized. We could be at this all
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day, I could have the silvermost tongue in Creation or the finest
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rhetoric of the Free Cities and it wouldn't move her an inch. She'd
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swallowed the lie, let it settle in her guts. Words wouldn't fix this.
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Fuck, I wasn't sure I \emph{could}. My eye strayed to the sycamore, the
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shifting lay of its shade baring what I had missed: it was dead, inside.
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Through cracks I could see it had gone hollow, dead at the heart and the
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limbs simply too slow to have caught up to the truth. When I looked at
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Juniper she did not meet my eye.
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``I will refuse a resignation if you offer it,'' I curtly said.
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I got back on my horse and left her to her tree.
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---
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The bruising night battle had changed the balance of power in the
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valley.
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We'd shown we had teeth and the Army of Callow had managed to recover
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from the exhausting overnight forced march that'd won us Kala Fortress.
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The Black Knight wasn't as sure she could take us on a field now. So
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both my army and the Black Knight's avoided further fighting, in the
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valley at least. Zola ordered a permanent night watch on the Legions in
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case they made another move on Sepulchral's vanguard, but like us
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Marshal Nim was focusing elsewhere: the valley between the hills of
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Moule and Kala had become a race of fortifications. I sent Archer and
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Huntress out to slow them as I had yesterday, hitting them at different
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places in the line, but even so their advantage in sapper numbers told.
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They caught up to my own sappers and then began to overtake us, though
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not by too large a margin. Across the valley mirrored works were
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emerging: two lines of trenches facing each other, with palisades behind
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them. East to west, the both of us hurrying towards the half-road. We
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even took the same precautions, pulled from the same doctrine. To
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prevent a night attack overwhelming our positions, we raised walled
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camps behind our walls where we could keep protective garrisons.
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It was in Moule Hills that the fighting continued. I needed all my
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sappers down in the valley working on the siege works, which meant I'd
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have to rely on regulars to actually head out into the hills and cut
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wood. Compared to the goblin skirmishers from that would be shaken loose
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to harass us, my legionaries would be at a distinct disadvantage. A
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protective screen had to be sent out, so I sent for the two I believed
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to be the right people for the job. Lord Razin Tanja and Lady Aquiline
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Osena came into my tent an hour past dawn, but it was not an elaborate
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plan I gave them.
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``Kala Hills,'' I said, pointing at the map. ``If it's an enemy and it's
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in it, I want it dead. Keep them off our woodcutters.''
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``The plan?'' Razin politely asked.
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``Pick your men, pick your pace, pick your battles,'' I shrugged.
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``Those hills are yours.''
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Aquiline grinned.
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``You have us an honour war, Black Queen,'' she said, sounding
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delighted.
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``Honour can bite my ass,'' I said. ``Bring me scalps, Osena.''
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The look on her face was somewhere between scandalized and gleeful,
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which actually did wonders for my mood. At least the lordlings could be
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counted on not to fall apart, I thought as I sent them out of the tent.
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By afternoon I had my first reports: the Dominion force was taking to
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the task with fervent enthusiasm, the Malaga contingent in particular.
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Fighting the Champion's Blood in the Alavan hills for centuries had
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ensured they were well versed at fighting in this sort of terrain. It
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was a bloody, tribal fight just the way the goblins and the Levantines
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liked them. Razin himself came back near Afternoon Bell with a fresh
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scar and a pleased look on his face, just in time for Vivienne to ambush
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me as I got a cup of wine in him before sending him off to a healer.
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``The commander of Sepulchral's force sent us a rider,'' she said,
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briskly entering the tent. ``They want to meet.''
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``Finally,'' I grunted. ``You got a name for me?''
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``Isoba Mirembe,'' Vivienne said.
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I let out a low whistle.
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``Sepulchral's heir,'' I told a confused Razin. ``Her grand-nephew.''
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``Does she have no closer relatives?'' he asked, sounding surprised.
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``It used to be her nephew, but we killed him at the Folly,'' I said.
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``They have a time for me, Vivienne?''
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``Half-past Afternoon Bell,'' she said. ``South of Moule Hills.''
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I grimaced. Would have to saddle up soon, then. And since the young man
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-- he was nineteen, I vaguely recalled, or thereabouts -- was
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technically heir to both Askum and her claim on the Tower I'd have to
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bring enough high-ranking people it wasn't an insult. There weren't
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really many I could spare, though. Then I shot a considering look at
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Razin, who was noble.
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``Finish that cup, lordling,'' I said. ``And get that wound looked at.
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We're going for a ride.''
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Might as well pick up the other kids, I thought. Sapan would be pissy at
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leaving Masego's side -- or more realistically his grimoires -- but it
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would be good for her and Arthur to get a proper look at Wasteland high
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nobility. Besides, even though I didn't believe the call to be a trap
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that hardly meant I trusted the Mirembe. Two more Named would be a
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useful precaution. Razin Tanja set down his empty cup on my carved
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table, standing up, and that was the sound of us getting a move on.
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---
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Isoba Mirembe looked a lot like I'd expected Sargon Sahelian to. Tall
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and with slender muscles, his face a perfect symmetry of high cheekbones
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under cold golden eyes. He was beautiful, but almost more like a statue
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than a man. It reminded me uncomfortably of the Exiled Prince, who might
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as well have been cut out of marble. This one, though, did not have a
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Name. How many potions and spells had it taken for his dark skin not to
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have the slightest of imperfections on it? The armour he wore was
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practical, at least, if incrusted with enough jewels to arm an entire
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company of legionaries. My escort of knights was a match in numbers for
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his retinue, but instead of the handful of nobles he'd brought I instead
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had two Named and a ruler of the Blood.
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``Black Queen, I greet you in the name of Dread Empress Sepulchral,''
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Isoba said, breaking the silence, ``and give you her thanks for your
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intervention last night.''
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``The Black Queen greets her back,'' I drily said. ``You know who I am.
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With me ride Lord Razin Tanja of the Grim Binder's Blood, the Apprentice
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and the Squire. And, of course, twenty of the same knights that ran down
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the Legion horse last night.''
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The last part was a break in manners, but I regretted it not the
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slightest when I saw the backs of my knights straighten. They'd earned
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the praise, as far as I was concerned. Isoba introduced only the nobles
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he'd brought, each a ruling lord or lady in their own right. He'd not
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skimped on the rank of those he brought, at least, which was a good
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sign. With that out of the way, we got to business.
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``A truce between our forces would be only natural,'' Isoba suggested.
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``Neither Aksum nor the true empress have any quarrel with the Grand
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Alliance.''
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``A truce is a start,'' I said, ``but it's just delaying the trouble. We
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need to strike at the Black Knight together.''
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``My aunt would welcome the official backing of the Grand Alliance as
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ruler of Praes,'' Isoba easily replied, smiling without a speck of joy.
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``On such terms an alliance could be made.''
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``You're not getting that,'' I bluntly said. ``And you lending a hand to
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the business of keeping your hides from being tanned is hardly worth
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that asking price. Poorly bargained.''
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``Why would we pay for what you offer freely?'' the young man laughed.
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``It is in your interest to keep our force from being overwhelmed, lest
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you find yourself fighting the Legions alone.''
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``You're standing on quicksand, Mirembe,'' I warned. ``I'm not going to
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keep pulling you out of the fire if you're of no use to me. Better then
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to let the Black Knight bloody her forces killing you all.''
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That got his attention.
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``Bluster,'' he dismissed, but his eyes had sharpened.
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I sighed. There was no point to this if he had no grasp on the precarity
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of his situation.
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``This is why children shouldn't be sent to negotiate,'' I said.
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``You've wasted my time.''
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He looked like I'd slapped him, which to be fair I pretty much had. His
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gaggle of nobles were studying him for a hint of his thoughts -- or of
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weakness -- but he wasn't going to walk back his words after I'd
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insulted him. We'd have this talk again after Marshal Nim put some
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proper fear in his belly, or she killed them all. Either way, it was no
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trouble of mine. So long as the vanguard had a proper standing fight
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instead of being slaughtered half asleep, I figured they could cost the
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Legions at least two thousand men going down. It'd make the Black
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Knight's force somewhat more manageable.
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``Back to camp,'' I told my people, pulling at Zombie's reins.
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My eye found that Razin, though, was looking at the other young man with
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an odd look on his face.
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``Since I was a child I have been told of the cunning of the Praesi high
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lords,'' the Lord of Malaga said. ``And \emph{this} is the truth of your
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blood? This is a bitter disappointment.''
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``What would a savage from the edge of the world know of anything?''
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Isoba mocked. ``The Mirembe could wipe out your misbegotten bloodline as
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easy as-''
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``I have been on that horse, once upon a time,'' Razin said, eyeing the
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other lord. ``So I am not without sympathy for your position, for it is
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not pleasant. Yet even a savage from the edge of the world knew it was
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better to swallow pride than perish like a fool. Where is the cunning
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and power that your people so often boast of? All I see is an arrogant
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child who would kill himself and all with him out of wounded pride.''
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Eyes, amber and dark, studied them both coolly. The nobles were
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listening.
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``You know \emph{nothing},'' Isoba hissed. ``Either of cunning or death.
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If the Legions come, they will be cowed.''
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``If the Legions come, you will die,'' Razin slowly said, as if speaking
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to a half-wit. ``I am Blood, Isoba Mirembe. I understand honour, the
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pride of defiance. But that pride must be rooted in something more than
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fantasy, else you have saddled a dead horse. When the Black Knight comes
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you will be slaughtered to the last, and you are breaking off talks with
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the sole woman who can prevent this. This is \emph{senseless}.''
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Huh. Isoba was looking at him like he wanted to skin him alive and boil
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him. Shit, now I was almost hoping the heir to Aksum would live just so
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he'd have to keep remembering that little speech. The nobles had watched
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it all, and I saw now that looks were being traded. They had come to a
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decision.
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``It was not known to us that Marshal Nim had become the Black Knight,''
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one of them idly said. ``The situation has changed. Named are not to be
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underestimated.''
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``Perhaps talks should be had, after all,'' another said, smiling
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pleasantly.
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Neither were looking at us. All of them, amber-eyed vultures, were
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looking at Isoba Mirembe. I saw it sink in, the truth that if he did not
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bargain Sepulchral would have another heir by nightfall. And it was hard
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pill to swallow, but still better than dying, so he turned to us with a
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mild smile and talks began anew. I sent Razin a fond look. Sat in that
|
|
horse before, had he? Sarcella had not been so long ago, and still it
|
|
felt like a lifetime. What did the man I was looking at now have to do
|
|
with the boy I'd fought in that city?
|
|
|
|
So very little.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Isoba Mirembe would not concede to joining us in battle unless his
|
|
position was assailed, and on that the nobles seemed to back him. Orders
|
|
from Sepulchral herself, I suspected. We did strike a bargain, though:
|
|
he would harass the Legions from behind, slowing their works, and in
|
|
return I promised to intervene of the Black Knight tried to wipe him out
|
|
again. It wasn't what I'd wanted from him, but it was still better than
|
|
them staying holed up in Moule Hills twiddling their thumbs. The second
|
|
day rose to much the same arrangements as the first: in the valley walls
|
|
raced east, while in the hills trees fell and blood spilled.
|
|
|
|
It was all ambushes and raids in there, not a single standing fight to
|
|
be found. War parties came back with trophies or never at all. The
|
|
Dominion was better up close and with javelins, it became clear from
|
|
casualty reports, but the Legion skirmishers were hardened veterans with
|
|
full stocks of goblin munitions. We pushed them back far north by
|
|
afternoon, but it led the Levantines into a series of vicious ambushes
|
|
on mined grounds that forced them into full retreat. Aquiline captured a
|
|
prisoner that shed light on the turnabout: the Legions had sent for
|
|
volunteers from Risas, the town by the lake, so that they might have
|
|
native guides in the hills. The losses earlier in the day had been bait
|
|
for the trap.
|
|
|
|
In the valley the Legions were still ahead of us, but Isoba had been
|
|
true to his word: he sent out his horse to harass the enemy. Quick
|
|
hit-and-run attacks on companies between Marshal Nim's camp and the
|
|
walls, burning a few carts and killing a few isolated tenths. He
|
|
retreated immediately when the Legions sent out their own cavalry,
|
|
returning to the safety of the camp. The Black Knight hadn't made it a
|
|
priority to bottle up the Askum troops before, but that changed with
|
|
them making it clear they were willing to go on the attack. Sappers were
|
|
pulled from the valley to begin raising a ring of forts near the foot of
|
|
the hills where Isoba was encamped.
|
|
|
|
Good, it'd slow the Legions where it mattered.
|
|
|
|
On the third day, the situation in the valley and hills stabilized. In
|
|
Kala Hills, the chastened Levantines established a cautious stalemate
|
|
slightly to the north of the lines of fortifications. It left the
|
|
greater part of the Kala Hills and its wooden bounty in Legion hands,
|
|
but the Aquiline had sent her slayers to secure a few hidden glades to
|
|
the east that kept us sufficiently provisioned in wood. Considering the
|
|
disparity in numbers, I was more than satisfied with the performance of
|
|
the Dominion forces and made that plain to both lordlings. It was in the
|
|
valley that we pulled slightly ahead, our wall and trench passing the
|
|
Black Knight's. The Legions had carts full of what I believed to be
|
|
siege engines brought to the front, though, and I ordered the same of my
|
|
men.
|
|
|
|
No battle ensued, though. When trouble came it came from elsewhere.
|
|
Scribe found me near Afternoon Bell and led me to a tent where two men
|
|
were bound and gagged under guard.
|
|
|
|
``Who am I looking at?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Trusted servants of Lord Sokoro Abara,'' Eudokia said. ``I've been
|
|
keeping an eye on him. They were sent to take the long way around Moule
|
|
Hills and get in touch with Marshal Nim. Some information would be
|
|
passed as a gesture of goodwill, ties established.''
|
|
|
|
Well, he hadn't struck me as a particularly trustworthy man. Hadn't
|
|
expected him to try to play both sides so quick, though.
|
|
|
|
``What kind of information?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Minor,'' Scribe said. ``Troop numbers, camp gossip.''
|
|
|
|
Mhm. So nothing too drastic. He'd wanted to establish credentials, not
|
|
outright jump ship. Not yet.
|
|
|
|
``He's still got his half-brother in a cell?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
Scribe nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Take him out,'' I decided. ``Stash him somewhere in our camp.''
|
|
|
|
``And these two?''
|
|
|
|
I eyed them.
|
|
|
|
``Put their heads on his bed,'' I said. ``With a written note: \emph{no
|
|
second chances}.''
|
|
|
|
That should remind him in whose hands his leash was. It better, I had
|
|
plans for tomorrow and wanted no distraction from them.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On the fourth day, I decided it was time to try to kill Marshal Nim.
|
|
|
|
Not here and now, unfortunately. I was unlikely to succeed with a
|
|
nascent pattern of three nudging coincidence in her favour. But I could,
|
|
at least, solidify that pattern. The veil over that knife was to be the
|
|
Army of Callow going on the offensive: we were only two days away from
|
|
our trench reaching the road, half the valley's length already
|
|
fortified, so the time had come to test the enemy's defences. The
|
|
Legions had mounted their siege engines, as had the Army of Callow, but
|
|
neither side had begun firing. We'd not wanted to begin that slugging
|
|
match too early. Until now.
|
|
|
|
My ballistae began hammering at the enemy palisade at the turn of
|
|
Morning Bell. Within eighty heartbeats, the enemy returned fire.
|
|
|
|
They had us beat in numbers for traditional Legion siege weapons like
|
|
ballistae and scorpions, but by doctrine a legion didn't usually carry
|
|
trebuchets unless an actual siege was planned. That gave us an edge in
|
|
range and power with the three we had, but as the sky filled with stones
|
|
I saw the margin was much thinner than I would have liked. On both sides
|
|
mages had been brought to the fore, using shields to prop up our
|
|
palisades so they wouldn't break under hits, but the enemy's superior
|
|
volume of fire was hammering harder at us. We had fewer mages, too. I
|
|
had an answer to that, fortunately: Archer and the Silver Huntress began
|
|
using their proper bows.
|
|
|
|
Javelin-sized arrows began killing the siege crews and breaking the
|
|
engines, our own ballista fire forcing their mage lines to stay and
|
|
protect the palisades instead of covering them. The Black Knight had
|
|
other mages to call on, though, and they intervened before my Named
|
|
could do too much damage. A whirling wind formed over the enemy position
|
|
and I grimaced. That looked simple and easy to maintain, which was bad,
|
|
but worse was that neither my archer Named could land an arrow through
|
|
that. Magic like shields they had arrows that could go through, but not
|
|
wind. And it was exactly that, just magically induced.
|
|
|
|
Time to gamble, then. This might turn around on us if we didn't. I gave
|
|
the order and the signals went up. In the Kala Hills to the east,
|
|
through a path the Levantines had found, a strike force of a thousand
|
|
emerged past the enemy defence line. There was a fort in the way, the
|
|
Legions had known of the path's existence, but suddenly the wind in the
|
|
sky stopped whirling and instead formed into a great spear. It hammered
|
|
down into the fort, killing an entire company in a moment as Hierophant
|
|
reminded everyone on the field why people avoided fighting mage Named of
|
|
his calibre.
|
|
|
|
The legionaries rushed past the wreckage, heading straight for the enemy
|
|
engines with two silhouettes at their head: Squire and Apprentice.
|
|
\emph{Come on, Black Knight}, I thought. \emph{You need to keep those
|
|
engines, otherwise digging out the vanguard in the hills will get a lot
|
|
more complicated. It's only a thousand, and you can handle a mere Squire
|
|
can't you? Take your swing.} \emph{Come on.} A surge of power in the
|
|
distance reminded me why I wasn't with the assault, a ball of poisonous
|
|
green clouds beginning to form above my own siege engines.
|
|
|
|
``Hello, Akua,'' I coldly smiled, and unleashed the Night I'd spent an
|
|
hour gathering.
|
|
|
|
My work was here. I'd asked Masego to keep the kids alive if this went
|
|
south, it would have to do. And it was looking pretty good. The force
|
|
with the Squire got to the engines and set two on fire in quick
|
|
succession while I maintained a stalemate with the mage nobility and
|
|
arrow fire began picking off Legion mages. Only the Black Knight wasn't
|
|
showing. Not even in a possessed body. Shit, she wasn't taking the bait.
|
|
Worse, even as my attack force began running into entrenched opposition
|
|
and was forced back I found out where the Black Knight actually was:
|
|
there was smoke coming from the Aksum camp. Had she hit them with an
|
|
ogre line like she'd done our camp near Wolof?
|
|
|
|
Sepulchral's men didn't make fortified camps like the Legions and the
|
|
Army did, a raid like that would go\ldots{} badly for them.
|
|
|
|
Cursing, I have the order for a retreat. We'd broken at least half of
|
|
the enemy siege engines, those deployed here at least, but it'd been
|
|
costly. Even with Hierophant covering the retreat, we lost a little over
|
|
half the thousand we'd sent. And Marshal Nim had not shown. I'd not
|
|
finessed fate into killing her before the campaign was over. How had she
|
|
known not to show? My fingers clenched, then unclenched. Akua, had to
|
|
be. But why would she tell the Black Knight? If she was going to make a
|
|
play for the Legions, and she must if she was to attempt to overthrow
|
|
Malicia, she could not keep Marshal Nim alive. The Black Knight was a
|
|
loyalist, the marshal that'd stayed true.
|
|
|
|
So what was her game?
|
|
|
|
It was beginning to slip out of my hands, I realized. I'd thought I had
|
|
a handle on the path Akua would take, and I still believed that I did,
|
|
but I had to wonder\ldots{} I pushed aside the worries, attending to the
|
|
here and now. With our retreat, siege fire petered out on both sides and
|
|
ended entirely by Afternoon Bell. Sappers on both sides began repairing
|
|
the chunks of palisade that'd been blown away, and that strange air of
|
|
truce fell over the valley again. There was no more killing over the
|
|
fourth day, not even in the hills.
|
|
|
|
All knew better than to believe it would last.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On the fifth day, Scribe brought news.
|
|
|
|
``Sepulchral's army is getting close,'' she told the war council. ``If
|
|
she keeps up the current pace, by evening in six days she will reach
|
|
Moule Hills.''
|
|
|
|
Opinions were divided on how we should react to that.
|
|
|
|
``We should delay until the greater army arrives,'' General Zola
|
|
pragmatically advised. ``Sepulchral will likely attempt to use us to
|
|
destroy the Legions at the least cost to herself possible, but she will
|
|
still broadly be on our side.''
|
|
|
|
``Or she could sit it out entirely, waiting for someone's supplies to
|
|
run out and desperate decisions start getting made,'' Aisha pointed out.
|
|
``We should not assume cooperation of Abreha Mirembe, she is well aware
|
|
that we do not wish her to climb the Tower.''
|
|
|
|
``Even if we do want to finish off the Legions before Sepulchral arrive,
|
|
\emph{can} we?'' Vivienne asked.
|
|
|
|
``If her vanguard helps, I believe it's possible to win a field
|
|
battle,'' I said, then hesitated. ``I'm not sure how decisive a victory
|
|
it would be, however.''
|
|
|
|
``That would strengthen the position of the pretender empress when she
|
|
arrives,'' Lady Aquiline said. ``Give her power in bargaining with us.''
|
|
|
|
She wasn't wrong, I admitted. If Army of Callow and the Loyalist Legions
|
|
bloodied each other just before Sepulchral arrived with her fresh force,
|
|
it swung the balance in her favour. On the other hand, should we really
|
|
wait six days just for this to still be true only with her camped in the
|
|
hills over the battle? Aisha wasn't wrong either, when she'd said that
|
|
Sepulchral might just try to live up to the vulture on her banner. No
|
|
decision was made, in the end, though I knew one would have to be soon.
|
|
If we were going to attack, it would have to be somewhere over the next
|
|
three days. Otherwise the margin to rest and regroup before the
|
|
empress-claimant arrived would be risky.
|
|
|
|
The trenches and palisades in the valley kept steadily stretching east,
|
|
and by tomorrow Pickler was certain we'd reach the half-road.
|
|
Fortifications were not, unfortunately, a goddamned plan. That was our
|
|
trouble here: we didn't have a plan to beat the Black Knight, even if we
|
|
could force her into a pitched battle. Which was looking less and less
|
|
likely by the day.
|
|
|
|
Both sides extended their defences to the road on the sixth day, the
|
|
skirmishes beginning again in earnest in Kala Hills. Weather blew in
|
|
from the north-east that forced everyone to retreat by early afternoon,
|
|
though with the warm morning sun being covered by clouds as the air
|
|
cooled. What begin as a hard rain that sent everyone running to fill
|
|
water barrels turned into something altogether less pleasant before the
|
|
hour was out: rain turned to snow, and then the kind of hard hail I
|
|
would never have expected of the Wasteland. Everyone was stuck in tents
|
|
for the rest of the day, until the storm passed halfway through the
|
|
night.
|
|
|
|
When the seventh morning rose it was to still-wet ground, the hail
|
|
having melted overnight, but also to General Zola bringing me a worrying
|
|
report. Two lines of scouts send to the south of Moule Hills were hours
|
|
late in reporting. We hadn't seen movement from the enemy, but the Black
|
|
Knight might have moved troops under cover of the hail.
|
|
|
|
``Battle formations,'' I ordered Zola. ``And prepare a force to handle
|
|
our eastern flank in case they went around Moule Hills unseen.''
|
|
|
|
Yet I learned, not even an hour later, that I'd been wrong. It was not
|
|
the Legions that had caught our scouts. Well, in a sense I supposed it
|
|
actually had been. In the middle stretch of Moule Hills, well to the
|
|
south of Sepulchral's camp and about the height of the mirroring
|
|
fortified lines, banners had been raised. Legion banners: the Second,
|
|
Third and Ninth.
|
|
|
|
The Rebel Legions had arrived before Sepulchral could, and the balance
|
|
hadn't swung against us so much as swung down on our heads.
|