1069 lines
48 KiB
TeX
1069 lines
48 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-north-iii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: North III}\label{interlude-north-iii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-north-iii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: North III}
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\epigraph{``The diplomat's victory is to let the opponent win on your
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terms.''}{Prince Fernando of Salamans}
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Hakram hadn't put armour on.
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A loose shirt, trousers and boots were all he wore as he held his axe
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loosely in his grasp, watching his opponent move. Dag Clawtoe had
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laughed off the challenge at first, thinking it a jest, but the laughter
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had gone away when Hakram failed to join in. The older orc was taking
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the duel seriously and had come in champion's garb: helm, mail and
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greaves. Dag kept his shield up and his sword raised, circling as
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warriors pounded the ground around them. The jemmek was liked by his
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clan and their allies, but orcs liked a good fight even more.
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``I'll end it without killing you,'' Dag Clawtoe growled.
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Hakram did not answer. It was one of his weaknesses as a champion -- the
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way his people saw it -- that he had no taste for that sort of banter.
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The rough edge of his tongue he reserved only for people he was going to
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kill. The tall orc took a step forward on the black earth and without
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missing a beat Dag attacked as he moved. A short push forward, shield
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steady as the blade thrust up towards his armpit. A smooth movement,
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well practised, and Hakram's limbs of steel were not as quick as those
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of flesh had been. It didn't matter, because he'd been waiting for the
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strike: the moment his foot touched the ground he was already pivoting,
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carrying his momentum forward as Dag's thrust passed him by.
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His elbow smashed into the other orc's helmeted forehead, slamming him
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to the floor.
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Warriors roared in approval as Dag cursed and rolled away, slapping away
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Hakram's light swing with his shield before rising into a crouch. He'd
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lost his helmet, as Hakram had wanted. The leather strap had snapped and
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the helm fallen into the grass, shaking free Dag's hair -- a long black
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braid going from his forehead to his back. Hakram almost rubbed at the
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elbow that'd struck the helm, but he knew he was imagining the ache.
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Steel did not grow tender from striking at steel. Hakram rolled his
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shoulder, loosening it, and waited for the wary jemmek to come for him
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again. Dag hesitated, but he would be jeered at by his own warriors if
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he looked afraid of the fight.
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So he came, measured this time. A feint to the left, trying to draw
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Hakram's blade, but when it passed without answer the other orc shot
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forward. Surprised, Hakram took a step back that saved him from being
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swept entirely off his feet when Dag's shield bashed into his chest. His
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footing slipped but he backed away again, only to earn another bash --
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at the head, but he was ready this time. Hakram's axe came down and
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though he'd misjudged the distance it still came down on the shield arm
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Dag had exposed by striking. Instead of the axe-head against mail it was
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the shoulder that found its mark, a clean blow that had the jemmek
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shouting in pain.
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The arm wasn't quite broken but it was hurt. Dag was no greenhorn,
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though, and pain didn't stop him. Hakram was hit in the shoulder by the
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shield, forcing him in a backwards stumble, and in a discreet thrust
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under that cover the jemmek's sword came for his belly. That he caught
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with fingers of bone, steel scraping the pale, but the other orc used
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the grip to tackle him. Hakram rocked backwards, swallowing a curse --
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if he was pushed to the ground this was lost -- as Dag smashed their
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foreheads together with a hellish scream. He dropped his axe, useless so
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close anyway, but even pushing back he found that Dag had the advantage
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on him. Hakram growled and tried to smash their foreheads again, but Dag
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put the shield in the way. Inspiration. Steel fingers closed around the
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rim of the shield, yanking it down. The other orc roared in pain, his
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wounded arm twisted, and fangs flashed as he ripped through his own
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shield straps to break free.
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That'd been a mistake.
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Hakram arm rose and he bashed Dag's head in with the freed shield. Dag
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drew back, yelping, but it wasn't enough. One, two, three more hits to
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the head and down Dag Clawtoe went. Eyes wide and unseeing he dropped
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onto the black earth, only barely conscious. It was done. Hakram
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breathed out, tossing away the shield. Howls and shouts of approval
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erupted around them, dragging back Dag to some semblance of wakefulness.
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He rose to his knees, expression still dazed.
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``Why?'' the other orc asked, quietly enough he was barely heard beneath
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the shouts. ``I'm not the chief, Deadhand. What would you take from me,
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being \emph{camp-leader}?''
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Hakram shook his head.
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``They backed you,'' he said, gesturing at the warriors around them.
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``And they still will.''
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Dag scowled, confused.
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``They back you,'' Hakram calmly said, ``only now \emph{you} back
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\emph{me}.''
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Confusion turned to anger but the other orc did not argue. It was not
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the place of the defeated to argue terms with the victor. Yet there was
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still an argument ahead of him, Hakram thought as he left the duelling
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circle and traded backslaps with cheering warriors. Further back Oghuz
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the Lame, chief of the Red Shields and the other leading light of the
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alliance, was waiting with a few of his warriors at his side. The old
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orc snorted when Hakram approached.
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``You're not a Red Shield,'' Oghuz said. ``Unlike Dag I don't owe you
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the courtesy of accepting a challenge.''
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``It's not a fight I'm looking for,'' Hakram said.
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``Isn't it?'' Oghuz scoffed, but after a moment he sighed.
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He barked as his warriors to give him space, room enough that the two of
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them would be able to speak without being overheard.
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``That was a mistake,'' Oghuz said, gesturing at the duelling grounds.
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``Dag had weaknesses as a man to front for but you have even more. You
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think we'll just let ourselves be pressed into Callow's service in,
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Named or not? It's a worthy queen you're serving, Deadhand, but she's
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not one of ours.''
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Hakram did not bother to answer that. It was a pit of an argument, one
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he wouldn't be able to climb out of should he fall. So he took another
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path.
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``The duel,'' Hakram said. ``What did you think of it?''
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``You're more used to using a shield with that axe,'' Oghuz replied.
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``And you still cover for the metal like it's flesh when you don't think
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about it.''
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Hakram waited a moment, knowing the old champion would have more to say.
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``It was unkind to Dag to stretch it out,'' the older orc added. ``You
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could have knocked him half dead with that first elbow strike.''
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The tall orc smiled without showing teeth.
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``No,'' he said, ``I could not have.''
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Because he could no longer feel his aspects. Could barely even see his
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Name through the shadow cast by what he might yet become. Oghuz did not
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miss the implication. There weren't a lot of reasons why Hakram would be
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losing his Name, and only one that walked hand in hand with forcing
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himself to the front of the alliance between their two clans. The old
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orc let out a low hiss, worrying his lip.
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``I do not seek service to anyone,'' Hakram said, and like that the
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other man knew it to be true.
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Now it was on Oghuz to decide whether or not Hakram Deadhand was someone
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he could live with as the Warlord of their age. Tension stretched out.
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``Ours are hungry Gods,'' the old orc finally said, leaning on his cane.
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``Best to eat our fill before they catch up.''
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A look up and down.
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``You'll do.''
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A pause, then a calculatingly casual question.
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``Do you get on well with my daughter?''
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Hakram grimaced. That wouldn't be happening. Even if Juniper didn't kill
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him Aisha absolutely would -- and she'd probably get away with it too.
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``Too much woman for me,'' he replied, and the old man laughed.
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That was one alliance behind him then, Hakram thought. Time to visit the
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other.
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---
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He was being watched.
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The twins were already waiting for him when Hakram reached the grounds
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of the Split Tree Clan. Sigvin and Sigvun were easiest to tell apart by
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the ritual scars on their bodies: the latter's looked like woven
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crescent moons, the former's like crisscrossing bite marks. Sigvun had
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once implied he wouldn't mind Hakram getting the sort of closer look at
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those scars his sister had been granting, but the tall orc had turned
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him down. His preferences were well set. The twin had shrugged it off
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and Hakram was on amicable terms with both -- as amicable as one could
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be while trying to have opposite warlords elected, anyway. He might kill
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them, or they him, but it wouldn't be killing done in the red.
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``Back already?'' Sigvin teased.
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Sigvun cocked a hairless brow.
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``Should I speak to our kin about raising a pillar?'' he gravely asked.
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Hakram rolled his eyes. Old-fashioned, the Split Tree. Hardly anyone
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still hung woven crowns on sculpted pillars anymore: weddings were
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family feasts under a shaman nowadays, not ceremonies to attract the
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blessings of spirits.
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``Take me to your chieftain,'' he said.
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Though both kept light expressions, he could see the stiffening in the
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way they stood. Uncertainty in Sigvun's eyes but triumph in Sigvin's.
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\emph{She thinks she has swayed me}, Hakram thought. In a way she had.
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The twins agreed without trouble but the light conversation died and
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they walked the rest of the way in silence. He spent the time
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considering he knew of Hegvor Allspeak, chief of the Split Tree Clan.
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Which was little, for though Hakram could think offhand of half a dozen
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feuds she had mediated and how he did not even know the old woman's age.
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Much about the chief herself was obscured, which he suspected to be on
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purpose.
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He was not made to wait long before being led to a great tent where
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three orcs, by the looks of them none younger than sixty winters, waited
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seated. Introductions were briskly made. The oldest shaman of the clan,
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Bjarte, sat to the right. To the left sat Gulda Hardhead, the most
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honoured champion of the Split Tree, and between them sat a woman of
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long white hair with a hard scar across her nose. Hegvor Allspeak, whose
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eyes were of an unsettlingly pale yellow bordering on green. Hakram was
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invited to sit across from them at a low table, an honour that was not
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granted to the twins. They sat on the ground, near the back of the tent.
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The two were trusted, Hakram thought, but their age meant their
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influence was limited.
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Hegvor pushed across the table a small bowl and cut of dried meat.
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``I offer you meat and drink from my table,'' the chieftain said.
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Brutally salty sheep and hard aragh were what Hakram wolfed down, but
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that was an old and well-known negotiating trick. At least they hadn't
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used Taghreb spices, which would have had him panting for water
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throughout the entire talks.
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``Hail, Hegvor Allspeak,'' he said.
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``Hail, Hakram Deadhead,'' the old woman replied. ``The twins say you
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ask of my time.''
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``I do,'' he said.
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She frowned.
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``Not, I think, for what Sigvin hopes of you,'' Hegvor said. ``So what
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it is you have come for, Deadhand, if not to lend your name to the
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better cause?''
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Hakram's dead fingers laid against the table, its intricate carvings
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dimly felt to his senses. Like a\ldots{} pressure, nothing like what a
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hand of flesh had been. And the pressures were lighter now, for the same
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reason that Hakram thought he would no longer be able to Find something
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he sought.
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``Before I answer that question,'' he said, ``I want to describe
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something to you.''
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The bone fingers drummed against the wood, a sound like a rat gnawing.
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``Within a week the taratoplu will have to disperse because it can no
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longer be fed,'' Hakram said. ``As the pressure mounts on all clans to
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gather behind a banner, the Graven Bone and the Stag-Crowned will cede
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territories to some of the clans bordering them. Those clans will then
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come to support Troke Snaketooth and get him elected as High Lord of the
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Steppes.''
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The Graven Bone and Stag-Crowned were the two strongest supporters of
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Troke, despite being the two largest southern clans after his own,
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because Malicia had also named them lords of the Steppes. They would be
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his natural lieutenants, the highest under him after his election. That
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was well worth territorial concessions to their own rivals, especially
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when this was an offer that the Blackspears themselves could not make --
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if Troke was seen to be weakening his clan to rope in others, he would
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be made into a laughingstock.
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``Dread Empress Malicia will recognize the title and formally charge
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High Lord Troke with putting down the rebelling High Seat of Nok,''
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Hakram said. ``Most clans will fall in line at the prospect of plunder
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and even the Howling Wolves and the Red Shields will join the host.''
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Utter silence from across the table.
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``To secure Troke's position after the sack, the Wolves and the Shields
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will be given the honour of being the first into the breach at Nok,'' he
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calmly continued. ``You'll collude with either Malicia or High Lord
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Dakarai to make their losses crippling, then keep them crippled after
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you withdraw to the Steppes by keeping away returning legionaries.''
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His fingers skittered across the wood still.
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``You keep propping up Troke, after that, but begin looking to the
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future,'' Hakram said. ``Marry a rising name in the Bones or the Stags
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to one of your kin, then lay the grounds for them to be Snaketooth's
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successor. Then you begin pushing for what you actually want.''
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The tall orc showed teeth.
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``At a guess? Bringing back the bronze urus as our coinage, a council of
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shamans to mediate clan disputes like in the ancient Hordes and fixed
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yearly gatherings under enforced truce,'' Hakram continued. ``If Troke
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backs you, all the better. If he doesn't, he has an accident and you get
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the prepared successor in power where they will be duly grateful.''
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Hakram's dead hand went still.
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``How close am I?'' he asked.
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A long moment of silence.
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``Only one yearly gathering,'' Barjte said, the shaman smiling. ``We
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would consecrate holy grounds for the first time since the Miezans, our
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High Seat of the Steppes.''
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Good, Hakram thought. They had, without knowing it, come to agree with
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one of his own notions in principle. Now he just needed to survive the
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rest of this conversation. His eyes were on Hegvor, so he was surprised
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when the answer came from behind.
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``I \emph{told} you, grandmother,'' Sigvin erupted. ``We should have
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tried to bring him from the start, it's such a waste that-''
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``Be silent, girl,'' Hagvor peevishly cut in, ``until you stop thinking
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with your snatch.''
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Sigvin's mouth closed with an angry click of fangs. Her grandmother --
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the things you learned, Hakram mused -- turned a cool gaze on him.
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``You're a clever man, Deadhand,'' she said. ``So tell me the reason
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you've come up with that I should let you leave this tent alive.''
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So much for drink and meat from their table, Hakram thought amusedly.
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His people were not the Taghreb, to hold the law of hospitality as
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sacrosanct, but that's been a rather hasty turnabout. Still, there was
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nothing like the threat of death to get a man's blood flowing.
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``It won't work,'' Hakram said. ``Even if you kill me and get away with
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it, even if I say nothing, it won't work.''
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Gulda Hardhead bared her fangs.
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``You think us fools, boy,'' the old champion said. ``Think we haven't
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thought it through, maybe, that since we keep to old ways we're just
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sav-''
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``I think you haven't read reports of the Eyes of the Empire annotated
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by the Scribe,'' Hakram calmly interrupted.
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A start of surprise.
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``You know things I do not,'' he said. ``That I could not learn or did
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not care to. Are you so proud to believe the opposite cannot be true?''
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Because if it were so, if they were a closed door, then he would have to
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kill them all. Something pulsed in his belly at the thought, almost
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eager. A craving not entirely his. He had rustled feathers with the
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brusque answer, but where Gulda was growling and Bjarte looked politely
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skeptical their leader only looked thoughtful. Considering. Examining
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where she, too, might have been wrong. Something like hope bloomed in
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Hakram, chasing away the bloodthirst.
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``Trade,'' Hagvor Allspeak finally said. ``You think trade will bury us,
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even if we restrict it.''
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``You're a decade too late,'' Hakram said. ``The total volume of goods
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traded between the empire and the Steppes is now about three fifths of
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what is traded within the Steppes, by the Tower's estimates.''
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Surprise from all of them, but only the chief and the shaman grasped
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what that implied. Hagvor grimaced.
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``You can't cut the flow of goods without impoverishing and starving too
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many people,'' Hakram said. ``Either Troke turns on you to keep his seat
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or he'll be facing rebellion from half the clans.''
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``An empty tent is an invitation,'' Bjarte quoted.
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They realized it too, then. Their measures were all sensible ones.
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Bronze urus could be minted in the Steppes, there were rich deposits of
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tin and copper barely touched, and it would mean no longer being
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dependent on Praesi coinage. A council to mediate disputes would clamp
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down on internal wars save those sanctioned by the `High Lord', which
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would be used to purge enemies of the throne. Holy grounds bound to the
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title of High Lord would make an effective capital for the Clans that
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could serve as a place of truce and a way for the Split Tree to begin
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their revival of what they considered to be the heart of orcish culture.
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Only none of this could be done if Troke bucked them off or the Clans
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fell into civil war. In Hakram's opinion, Troke cutting them loose to
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keep his seat would likely result in civil war anyway -- without their
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diplomatic support and reputation, he was a much weaker man and their
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people responded only one way to weakness. And while that civil war
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burned, Praes would turn its attention to them. It might be that the
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exiled orc legionaries would return with the Tower's backing or that the
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Empire would raise other lords of the Steppes outside Troke's authority,
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to be honest the exact form didn't matter.
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Whoever held the Tower would not tolerate a troublesome and rebellious
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bloc just like the Tribes existing in the north of the Dread Empire, so
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they'd intervene. Weaken and divide. The end result would likely be what
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the Split Tree were trying to avoid in the first place with their grand
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plan: southern clans tied up with the Legions and permanently at war
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with the fading clans further north. A buffer state the Tower could use
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as manpower for its armies and could never rise to become a threat to
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Ater.
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``We will adapt,'' Hagvor Allspeak finally said, tone weary. ``Change
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our approach. For this chance I thank you, Hakram Deadhand.''
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Hakram hummed. He did not take the implied dismissal.
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``Your answer's not in closing the door,'' he said.
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``It's even less in being eaten by the Tower,'' Hagvor curtly said.
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``It's too late to cut ties to the degree you envisioned,'' he bluntly
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replied. ``It would cost too much to too many people who have no reason
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to listen to you except force. But that's the wrong approach, anyway,
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because distance isn't what you actually want -- it's just the method
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you decided would get you that.''
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``And what would you know of what we want, Adjutant?'' Gulda Hardhead
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scorned.
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Hakram wondered if she truly disliked him or whether this was a ploy.
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One friend, one foe, Hagvor striking the balance. Regardless, there was
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an odd pall on the room after she spoke. Most faces were touched with a
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frown, Bjarte even casting a wary look around. \emph{They can't feel the
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Name anymore}, Hakram realized. \emph{The pressure of it.} The longer
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the conversation had gone on, the more the last wisps of his moonlit
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oath had gone away. Casting the Name in his face rang wrong to their
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ears because he no longer held it. The chieftain considered him with
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wary eyes. He smiled amicably, never showing teeth.
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``You want a unified orc state with strong enough foundations that the
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empire can't absorb it,'' he said. ``You want to avoid the Steppes being
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empty because all the youths went south to the Legions, coming back only
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to live in Legion towns and raise their children to do the same. You
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want to avoid clan weavers abandoning the trade because it's easier to
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|
buy ten baskets from Okoro at a copper each, to avoid storytellers
|
|
reading from Praesi books instead of learning the old sagas by rote. You
|
|
want for there to be someone other than Soninke scholars able to read
|
|
our glyphs in forty years.''
|
|
|
|
Gulda rocked back like he'd just slapped her across the face.
|
|
|
|
``I understand what you want perfectly,'' Hakram Deadhand. ``You're just
|
|
going about it wrong.''
|
|
|
|
His steel hand clasped the edge of the table, making it creak.
|
|
|
|
``You think that by making a few opportunities you'll turn our people
|
|
away from Praes, but you're not looking at the numbers,'' he said.
|
|
``You'll make a standing army at your holy grounds, but how many
|
|
warriors will be able to be part of it? A thousand, five? The Legions
|
|
will take \emph{anyone} and make them rich. And maybe destroying the
|
|
clans with ties to the empire would make room, free land and wealth, but
|
|
it won't work like that in practice. Not unless you slaughter the entire
|
|
clans and none one has the stomach for that so they'll move into the
|
|
Empire, migrate, and then it's the same problem you thought you avoided
|
|
only the border's thirty leagues south. Your fundamental mistake is that
|
|
you are denying opportunities instead of offering better ones.''
|
|
|
|
``We cannot outbid the Dread Empire,'' Hagvor quietly said.
|
|
|
|
``Then stop kneeling to it,'' Hakram flatly replied. ``You are trying to
|
|
mend this from a position of weakness that no one has forced on you but
|
|
yourself.''
|
|
|
|
``There's not enough support for rebellion,'' Gulda Hardhead told him.
|
|
|
|
Her tone was, he noted, significantly warmer than before.
|
|
|
|
``Not for secession, maybe,'' Hakram replied. ``But rebellion? We're
|
|
already rebels just by gathering here. How many clans do you think would
|
|
scream their throats sore in approval, if the proposal was instead to
|
|
march on Ater and cram our terms down the Tower's throat?''
|
|
|
|
``Many,'' Bjarte said. ``But what would that solve, Deadhand? We get
|
|
lenience for a generation, that is all. All the dooms are pushed back,
|
|
not ended.''
|
|
|
|
The white-haired chief hummed at him.
|
|
|
|
``You want to make\ldots{} opportunities,'' she said. ``That rival
|
|
theirs. Only they'll be ours, not the Tower's.''
|
|
|
|
``Trading with Praes, learning from it, being tied to it -- this is the
|
|
trend of the Steppes,'' Hakram said. ``And it cannot be reversed without
|
|
prohibitive costs. But none of these are unhealthy if they don't lead to
|
|
our being digested by the Empire. And the key to that is for us to offer
|
|
another way.''
|
|
|
|
``There is not enough wealth in the Steppes,'' Bjarte said. ``Ours are
|
|
not rich lands, save in grass and frost.''
|
|
|
|
``So why does the Empire care to assimilate us in the first place?''
|
|
Hakram replied. ``Manpower. Warriors. That is what we make that they
|
|
want from us, Praes and Callow both. Orcs soldiers have been the
|
|
backbone of the two most successful armies Calernia has seen since the
|
|
days of Triumphant.''
|
|
|
|
Hagvor caught on first.
|
|
|
|
``Mercenaries are illegal in Praes,'' she pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``Laws change at the end of a sword, in this empire,'' Hakram calmly
|
|
said. ``All the time. Why should it not be ours, for once?''
|
|
|
|
Rumbles of approval from the twins at his back. The older heads needed
|
|
more, though. Could see further.
|
|
|
|
``These armies took more than orcs to be victorious,'' Hagvor said.
|
|
``They make war in a new way. Companies, not warbands.''
|
|
|
|
``Let warbands do the work of warbands and companies the work of
|
|
companies,'' Hakram said. ``If we must raid, let us raid. But battles
|
|
are a soldier's trade and best left to soldiers.''
|
|
|
|
They didn't like hearing it, but that was the reality of it.
|
|
|
|
``Clans can't make an army like that,'' Gulda Hardhead said. ``Not on
|
|
the move. It takes too much training for the drills. You'd need a
|
|
settlement to support it.''
|
|
|
|
``A settlement where the wealth of retiring legionaries could flow,'' he
|
|
replied, ``and be put to use to benefit the Clans instead of unmake
|
|
them.''
|
|
|
|
Many orcs who'd lived in towns and cities for decades would balk at
|
|
returning to tents anyway. They all knew that. A solid roof over one's
|
|
head was a comfort few liked to let go of. And while they didn't like
|
|
the face of it -- a town for Legion orcs, for those who wanted to leave
|
|
the old ways -- they'd already agreed to a city in principle. Their holy
|
|
grounds for the High Lord of the Steppes would have been the same thing,
|
|
only smaller and poorer and badly run.
|
|
|
|
``It might grow to threaten our ways, this settlement,'' Bjarte said.
|
|
``The sole city of the orcs yet not bound to their ways.''
|
|
|
|
``So send shamans and teachers,'' Hakram said. ``And if you worry of the
|
|
Clans being adrift, raise your holy grounds in the Steppes to rival
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
Hagvor's eyes narrowed, the eerie tint of them making them look like
|
|
jewels in the light.
|
|
|
|
``You speak as if this settlement would not be in the Steppes,'' she
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Hakram said, ``it wouldn't be.''
|
|
|
|
A beat as she figured it out.
|
|
|
|
``You mean to keep this fortress,'' she said, sounding a little
|
|
impressed.
|
|
|
|
``If the Dread Empire of Praes would keep us in the fold,'' Hakram
|
|
Deadhand said, ``then let it pay for that privilege. Lands and rights.
|
|
Is that not what all the High Seats rebel over?''
|
|
|
|
Hard smiles all around. He had them, he thought. Only the mirth went
|
|
away.
|
|
|
|
``Troke has made bargains with the Tower,'' Hagvor Allspeak finally
|
|
said. ``They would not pair with the path you describe.''
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Hakram quietly agreed, ``it is true that Troke Snaketooth cannot
|
|
deliver this to you.''
|
|
|
|
And he said nothing else, only meeting her eerie eyes with his own
|
|
unflinching stare. Silence stood, stretched, stayed. Like a physical
|
|
force, strong enough to cut with a knife. Until the white-haired
|
|
chieftain rose to her feet, limbs cracking and back bent. Hakram did not
|
|
look away.
|
|
|
|
Risen, she knelt.
|
|
|
|
``Warlord,'' Hagvor Allspeak swore, and so it was true.
|
|
|
|
Hakram breathed in as every other in the tent knelt the same, letting
|
|
the feeling settle over him. The claim. Already he could feel his
|
|
rivals. One the south, distant and faded. An old claim, long set aside
|
|
but not quite gone. Grem One-Eye still stood with few equals in the eyes
|
|
of his people. And another one, closer and sharper and just as aware of
|
|
him as Hakram was aware of them. Troke Snaketooth had been further along
|
|
his path than anyone else dreamed of.
|
|
|
|
And so, Hakram thought, it would end in red.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Within the hour Troke Snaketooth gave answer.
|
|
|
|
With unfortunately characteristic cunning, the chief struck where no one
|
|
had expected him to. Four fires erupted across the camp, which was not
|
|
unusual given the loose approach of some clans to precautions against
|
|
this, but these were no accidents. They burned down three of the largest
|
|
repositories of dried meat in the great camp surrounding Chagoro and the
|
|
largest tent of the Brazen Bird Clan -- whose territories near seaside
|
|
salt flats made the main trader of salt in the Steppes and the sole clan
|
|
to have brought a large amount of it to the taratoplu. Troke had burned
|
|
the food reserves and the ingredient needed to preserve butchered
|
|
animals. Clans would now live on the cattle they could butcher, which
|
|
would not last a week. Three, four days at best.
|
|
|
|
Now that a rival had appeared Troke meant to force a vote while he still
|
|
had numbers and the wind in his sail.
|
|
|
|
It was a good strategy, Hakram was forced to admit. The chief of the
|
|
Blackspears tried to summon the clans into the fortress barely an hour
|
|
after the fires, claiming they needed discussion, which would make
|
|
things even worse. It would deny Hakram time to grow his support: the
|
|
Split Tree were mustering like-minded clans in his behalf, but those
|
|
talks would take time. Two hours was not long enough. It was Oghuz who
|
|
found a solution: he ordered some of his warriors to terrify their own
|
|
clan's herds and let the cattle loose, resulting into a stampede away
|
|
from the camp. The Red Shield refused the summons, as they urgently
|
|
needed to gather back their sheep and pigs.
|
|
|
|
Oghuz's champions then loudly implied that this scattering was no
|
|
accident and that all of Troke's opponents might come to face the same
|
|
troubles, which had enough clans wary of the Blackspears the Snaketooth
|
|
had to push back the talks until sundown.
|
|
|
|
Torches lit up the great hall of the fortress of Chagoro, which in truth
|
|
had been the mess hall before being made into gathering grounds for the
|
|
Clans. No more than three heads could enter by clan, which still meant
|
|
more than six hundred orcs packed tight between the walls. Each
|
|
chieftain came with a painted shield, their vote to cast, though
|
|
counting them could get\ldots{} combative. Accusations of miscounting or
|
|
lies were common and usually settled in blood -- every chief had come
|
|
tonight with a champion among their three. The Blackspears and their
|
|
allies had come first, at least an hour early, so they had the back of
|
|
the hall to themselves and an imposing position. They looked many and
|
|
strong, which mattered more than most like to admit.
|
|
|
|
Hakram would make Troke rue that trick before all said and done.
|
|
|
|
He came as one of the three for the Howling Wolves, standing with the
|
|
clans of his birth as the shaman whose day it was to officiate -- a
|
|
woman from the Arrant Axes, a Blackspear ally -- sang one of the old
|
|
songs of praise to the Hungry Gods and reiterated these to be truce
|
|
grounds. Only duels would be allowed here, no red fights.
|
|
Unsurprisingly, though half a dozen chiefs clamoured to be the first to
|
|
speak it was Troke who was chosen by the shaman. The chieftain of the
|
|
Blackspears was a tall and well-formed orc, with short choppy hair and
|
|
three golden rings in each cheek that made the pale scars on his face
|
|
stand out. He was not built as thickly as some orcs, but as a warrior he
|
|
was second in his clan only to his husband.
|
|
|
|
Skarod Longaxe, the envoy that had come to Wolof and now stood at his
|
|
husband's side with cold eyes. Hakram would rather avoid fighting that
|
|
one. There were a lot of dirty jokes about the reason for that wedding
|
|
being that Skarod should have been called Longspear instead, but the
|
|
champion was one of the finest killers in the Steppes. He'd killed three
|
|
dozen warriors in duels without taking a wound, it was said, and only
|
|
gotten better since. Hakram was not certain he would win should they
|
|
fight.
|
|
|
|
``We're about to go hungry,'' Troke Snaketooth said.
|
|
|
|
His speaking voice was smooth and carried clearly. That'd been
|
|
practised, Hakram was sure of it. The man had always been ambitious.
|
|
There were murmurs among the assembled orcs, but no great exclamation of
|
|
disagreement or surprise. Most chiefs had either put it together or made
|
|
a friend who had, by now, though only the two larger alliances would
|
|
have a decent idea of the days left before it happened.
|
|
|
|
``Three days, my shamans say,'' Troke revealed. ``Three days before we'd
|
|
forced to leave behind this fortress and the choice we're meant to make
|
|
here.''
|
|
|
|
He swept the hall with his gaze.
|
|
|
|
``Shame,'' Troke Snaketooth snarled. ``Shame on you, on \emph{us}. How
|
|
long are we going to stand here quibbling when Praes lies open to our
|
|
south? Are we going to have to skulk back to the Steppes with our tails
|
|
between our legs because we couldn't agree on how to swallow the meat in
|
|
our maws?''
|
|
|
|
A chief from the far north took offence to that and was given turn to
|
|
speak by the shaman, but though the man was right that High Lord of the
|
|
Steppes was a larger choice than what Troke pretended it was not a
|
|
popular refrain with the hall. Seeing that, the man turned insulting and
|
|
that was a mistake. Challenges were traded and Skarod Longaxe stepped
|
|
forward. The chief's two warriors were slain and his own leg crippled as
|
|
Skarod forced three duels back-to-back. It was a statement, meant to cow
|
|
smaller clans, but Hakram thought it a mistake. Skarod had taken no
|
|
wound and tiredness would pass, but if Troke sent out his husband on his
|
|
behalf too often he'd look like a coward.
|
|
|
|
The next challenge he'd have to field himself, Hakram thought, or take a
|
|
hit to his reputation.
|
|
|
|
Other chiefs stepped forward to accuse Troke of using the situation to
|
|
grab power, but all toed the line and their accusations weren't winning
|
|
the hall so they petered out. No one wanted to fight the Blackspears if
|
|
it won them no support. It wasn't going to be that easy to call for a
|
|
vote, though. A chieftain from the east, baring her teeth wildly, tossed
|
|
out a different sort of challenge.
|
|
|
|
``You speak for you and yours, Troke, but there are others,'' she said.
|
|
``Other claims. Will Dag Clawtoe not speak up, if he seeks to be our
|
|
Warlord?''
|
|
|
|
That hadn't been arranged, though if it took much longer Hegvor had seen
|
|
to it someone else would speak along the same lines. Chiefs just liked
|
|
seeing bears fight in the pit, so many were willing to get that fight
|
|
started themselves if need be. Only this time it was Hakram who stepped
|
|
forward, axe at his hip. He could feel Troke's stare on him, the
|
|
recognition of the claim. The hatred from him and soon his husband.
|
|
They'd not know for sure until now, then.
|
|
|
|
``Dag Clawtoe is not who we would we acclaim for Warlord,'' Hakram said.
|
|
``I am.''
|
|
|
|
Surprise, some laughter -- he was a cripple, after all -- but more
|
|
murmurs. After the initial beat, though, the sound of blades on shields.
|
|
All save three of the clans that'd supported Dag for Warlord were making
|
|
known their support of him. Fools had listened to the nose, Hakram knew,
|
|
but the clever had been counting shields. The shaman called for silence,
|
|
then reluctantly granted him the right to address the hall.
|
|
|
|
``You've heard of me,'' he said, without false humility. ``I've fought
|
|
more battles than anyone in this hall, led armies to victory in the
|
|
west. I've killed fae and Revenants, monsters and Named. I've been to
|
|
Arcadia and back, walked beneath the gates of Keter and seen the First
|
|
Prince of Procer kneel. I'm Hakram Deadhand.''
|
|
|
|
He stared down the hall.
|
|
|
|
``You've heard of me,'' he gravelled.
|
|
|
|
Blades on shields, not only from his allies this time. His people did
|
|
like a good boast. It didn't mean votes, but it meant he was being
|
|
heard.
|
|
|
|
``I stand for Warlord by the weight of my deeds,'' he said, using the
|
|
old turn of phrase. ``Let them raise or bury me.''
|
|
|
|
A voice finally cut through, belatedly given right to speak by the
|
|
shaman.
|
|
|
|
``You're one of the Black Queen's,'' a chief shouted. ``Are we going to
|
|
kneel to Callow? \emph{Fuck} that.''
|
|
|
|
``That oath came to an end,'' Hakram said. ``I am the Adjutant no
|
|
longer.''
|
|
|
|
A beat of silence, an idea.
|
|
|
|
``Do you not agree, Snaketooth?'' he added.
|
|
|
|
Troke looked unpleasantly surprised at being called on, hesitating at
|
|
the answer\emph{. I win whatever you do}, Hakram thought. Either the
|
|
Blackspear would lie and deny their shared claim, an action that would
|
|
weight on any confrontation between them afterwards -- a finger on the
|
|
scales, Catherine would put it -- or Hakram would be vouched for by his
|
|
strongest rival. A word none would gainsay.
|
|
|
|
``He's not the Adjutant,'' Troke said, and tried to speak but shouting
|
|
drowned him out.
|
|
|
|
The shaman called for silence.
|
|
|
|
``He's not the Adjutant,'' Troke repeated, ``but he's worse. You're a
|
|
\emph{guest}, Hakram Deadhand. You left for the Legions and now you come
|
|
back for the crown Callow can't give you. What would you know of the
|
|
Steppes?''
|
|
|
|
Rumbles of approval. Particularly the northern clans, from the Lesser
|
|
Steppes or close. Some of those thought it suspicious when orcs even
|
|
talked to humans, much less fought at their side.
|
|
|
|
``I am an orc,'' Hakram laughed. ``What more do I need to know?''
|
|
|
|
That landed too, to Troke's visible distaste. Orcs were not so united in
|
|
their answers about what it meant to be one of their kind that everyone
|
|
-- or even most -- in this hall would agree with what Snaketooth would
|
|
mean by it.
|
|
|
|
``Funny, though, that making war west would make my scalp less green in
|
|
your eyes,'' he continued. ``Do you enjoy killing other orcs so very
|
|
much, Troke?''
|
|
|
|
Blades on shields. The Blackspears were not beloved even if they were on
|
|
the rise. They'd crossed many of the clans closest to them over the
|
|
years, some under Troke himself. The Snaketooth was wise enough not to
|
|
engage in that, which left room for another chief to speak up and keep
|
|
questioning whether Hakram was a Callowan spy or not. The woman insulted
|
|
him quite bluntly, obviously looking for a duel, but Hakram wouldn't
|
|
fight her himself. Her clan was too small for that and she was likely
|
|
looking to make a name through this. He looked back, and though Dag was
|
|
visibly eager to be called on Hakram spoke another name.
|
|
|
|
``Oghuz.''
|
|
|
|
The old orc laughed, appreciative. Oghuz the Lame's blade stayed in its
|
|
sheath as he walked up to fight Chieftain Sarai of the Drifting Leaves.
|
|
In front of a crowd of hundreds, the old champion brutally beat to death
|
|
the challenger with his blackwood cane. All it cost him was a cut on his
|
|
bared arm, which some in the hall would recognize as a habit from his
|
|
old champion days: there was one such scar on his arm for every kill
|
|
he'd made duelling. It was not a statement as bold as Troke's, but it
|
|
served as a stark warning for anyone trying to make a name off of
|
|
fighting him: try it and you might be remembered as a figure of fun
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
The right to speak was spread around after that, the shaman granting it
|
|
to every chieftain trying to drum up support for their own candidature
|
|
as Warlord -- or High Lord of the Steppes, as some took a page from
|
|
Troke's book instead. Neither Hakram not the Blackspears spoke up again,
|
|
not openly anyway. The alliances behind both of them sent people to
|
|
speak with other clans at the back of the hall, trying to buy support of
|
|
their own more quietly. For all that many oaths had been given outside
|
|
this hall, there was a long tradition of deciding which horse to eat
|
|
only at the very last moment.
|
|
|
|
Maybe an hour passed and people were getting restless. Dag came to him
|
|
as Hakram listened to the chief and shaman of the Ice Eaters, who was
|
|
promising that he knew a ritual involving bathing in human blood that
|
|
would give magic to all orcs should he be chosen as Warlord. Well, he
|
|
was definitely standing out from the others.
|
|
|
|
``We're up to fifty-four,'' Dag told him. ``Troke's nearing on ninety,
|
|
we think.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram nodded, thinking.
|
|
|
|
``Call a vote,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
Dag looked confused but nodded anyway. An allied chief asked for the
|
|
right to speak after the Ice Eaters chief left in sullen silence and
|
|
used it to call for an acclamation, a demand the hall took up with
|
|
relish. It was rare for an assembly to last so long without a vote being
|
|
called, often one was asked at the very start, to make it plain where
|
|
everyone stood before the talks began. Troke smelled something was
|
|
wrong, Hakram thought, because otherwise it would not have been wariness
|
|
on his face. All those who would stand for Warlord or High Lord strode
|
|
out, and without further ceremony shields began to be tossed as their
|
|
feet. Troke and Hakram's supporters threw their shields quickly, already
|
|
convinced, but most of the hall did not. A handful of other chiefs
|
|
earned about thirty shields between them, but most clans were holding
|
|
off to see what happened to the leading candidates.
|
|
|
|
That patience was rewarded when the Split Tree Clan and its seventeen
|
|
closest allies walked right past Troke to throw their shields at
|
|
Hakram's feet. They moved to stand with the alliance after, to roars of
|
|
surprise in the hall. Hakram almost smiled, because suddenly the back of
|
|
the hall that Troke had claimed and filled no longer looked like a solid
|
|
wall of support. It looked a little empty while staying very, very
|
|
visible. \emph{Didn't I say I'd make you rue that trick?} The final
|
|
counts were hard to be certain of, but Hakram trusted his eyes:
|
|
seventy-two to eighty-one. Troke had received more support than expected
|
|
but the gap had closed.
|
|
|
|
Now everyone in the hall knew that this ended with one of them the
|
|
victor, so the real fight began.
|
|
|
|
Champions first. It was a roughly even trade of victories and defeats,
|
|
with little unexpected save that Dag distinguished himself by winning
|
|
thrice -- though, unlike Skarod Longaxe, not in consecutive duels. The
|
|
first few duels were without rancour, but by the seventh the tone had
|
|
changed. Champions went for kills, not blood, and enmities were made.
|
|
Without a clear victor in the violence, the fight was passed on and so
|
|
Hakram stepped out of the crowd as Troke did. Armed, both of them, but
|
|
it wouldn't begin with steel.
|
|
|
|
``Deadhand,'' Troke Snaketooth said, enunciating every syllable.
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``Pretty name. How did you get it again?''
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``When I faced a hero and lived,'' Hakram replied. ``Without a Name of
|
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my own.''
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``When you lost a hand to a hero,'' Troke said. ``Only you've lost more
|
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than that since. How much orc is there left in you, Deadhand?''
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It'd been a certainty the man would bring up the crippling, but Hakram
|
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still had to push down a grimace. He was past doubting himself over what
|
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he had lost, but his kind had poor opinions of the crippled. Having
|
|
borne a Name -- still having a Name, for those who did not understand
|
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the details and there would be many -- made up for it some, as such
|
|
things were forgiven in the renowned. Grem famously lacked an eye and
|
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was not held in contempt for it. But that was only an eye. Hakram had
|
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lost three limbs, nearly a quarter of his body was steel and bone.
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|
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Even among those who supported him, many faces agreed.
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|
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``\emph{All} orc, where it matters,'' a woman's voice called out.
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Hungry Gods, was that Sigvin? Whoever it'd been there was a gale of
|
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laughter as Troke bit down on a scowl. That was one way to disarm the
|
|
line of argument, Hakram supposed.
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|
|
``You like to talk about who I am,'' Hakram noted. ``Who you are.''
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``Because I don't know you, Deadhand,'' Troke said. ``Who here does? You
|
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boast you've fought in many wars, but what I hear is that you've fought
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for everyone but us.''
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Hakram snorted.
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``Us, Troke?'' he said. ``Who's that? How many of the clans in this hall
|
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get to be called \emph{us}?''
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``We're orcs,'' Troke scoffed. ``We get-''
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|
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``We're \emph{nothing},'' Hakram cut through.
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|
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Something like glee passed through Snaketooth's eyes as rumbles of anger
|
|
passed through the hall. Troke kept silent, all the better to give
|
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Hakram enough rope to hang himself with. The tall orc cast a long look
|
|
around, unmoved by the anger.
|
|
|
|
``You don't like hearing that?'' he said. ``Good, you shouldn't. It
|
|
doesn't make it untrue.''
|
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|
|
He gestured around them.
|
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|
|
``Look at us, huddling in a Soninke fortress arguing which Praesi city
|
|
we should sack before we run back to the Steppes,'' Hakram scorned.
|
|
``Half the armies on Calernia are fighting the greatest war this
|
|
continent has ever seen and what does Troke Snaketooth offer you --
|
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\emph{Nok}?''
|
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|
|
He laughed, sharp and mocking.
|
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|
|
``The least of the High Seats, and after the Ashurans already looted
|
|
it,'' Hakram said. ``For that privilege we're supposed to lick the
|
|
Tower's hands like loyal hounds?''
|
|
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|
``So you want us to lick Procer's arse instead,'' Troke said. ``Is that
|
|
what you're getting at? We ought to sign up with the Grand Alliance and
|
|
go die for some fucking idiot princes in some nowhere out west? So much
|
|
for the fucking War College.''
|
|
|
|
Laughter and blades on shields. The War College was disliked by some,
|
|
Procer by nearly all. Callow was respected, in a way, but the
|
|
Principate? It was the decadent idiot of orc stories, the avatar of
|
|
excess and cupidity. There was not a thimble of esteem for the
|
|
Principate of Procer to be gathered in this entire hall.
|
|
|
|
``Procer's not my trouble,'' Hakram dismissed. ``But this kind of talk,
|
|
Troke? It's why I called us nothing.''
|
|
|
|
The Snaketooth had a wary glint in his eye. Last time that utterance had
|
|
not burned Hakram like the other orc had thought it would. The tall orc
|
|
instead turned to the chiefs around them, the clans.
|
|
|
|
``In five hundred years, when they talk of the fall of Keter, the war to
|
|
end all wars -- what will they say of the orcs?'' Hakram asked the hall.
|
|
``Where will the Clans be in that story?''
|
|
|
|
He sneered.
|
|
|
|
``Knifing each other over a few dozen chest of loot while the real
|
|
powers of Calernia carve the land up into great realms, the empires of
|
|
the coming age. That's what it gets you, playing the Tower's game.''
|
|
|
|
``So you want us to rebel, like Callow-''
|
|
|
|
``You talk more of Callow than I do, Troke,'' Hakram cuttingly replied.
|
|
``Do you need a recommendation to enrol in its army?''
|
|
|
|
Hard laughter, not kind to the chieftain of the Blackspears. It put the
|
|
man on the back foot long enough for Hakram to keep speaking.
|
|
|
|
``We became part of the Dread Empire of Praes because of the promises
|
|
made under the Declaration,'' he said. ``Do you think those promises
|
|
were kept?''
|
|
|
|
Rumbles of approval.
|
|
|
|
``Well?'' Hakram challenged. ``\emph{Do you}?''
|
|
|
|
Shouts, some harder to parse than others, but the screams of \emph{NO}
|
|
were clear.
|
|
|
|
``If the Praesi don't keep their end of the bargain, then why are we
|
|
still on our knees?''
|
|
|
|
Blades on shields. Troke's face darkened. He was losing the hall and
|
|
knew it.
|
|
|
|
``High Lord of the Steppes,'' Hakram scorned. ``What a way to call
|
|
burying your head in the sand. Troke offers you Nok and Malicia's
|
|
blessing, do you want to know what \emph{I} offer?
|
|
|
|
\emph{YES}, the assembly shouted.
|
|
|
|
``I give you Ater and all the Tower owes us,'' Hakram said.
|
|
|
|
A roar.
|
|
|
|
``I give you \emph{Keter}, riches and glory for a hundred years,''
|
|
Hakram said.
|
|
|
|
The roar grew.
|
|
|
|
``And when we come home at last, we'll raise a city from the stones we
|
|
took from theirs,'' Hakram Deadhand thundered. ``One great enough that
|
|
even in a thousand years they will tremble at the return of our Horde!''
|
|
|
|
The roar drowned out everything, and as it rose something grew within
|
|
Hakram. Sharpened, refined it. And, the tall orc thought as he met Troke
|
|
Snaketooth's eyes, the same thing was weakening inside his rival. The
|
|
tide was turning, and that meant there was only one way for Troke to win
|
|
now. The chieftain of the Blackspears slowly unsheathed his sword as the
|
|
roar finally died down.
|
|
|
|
``Castles in the sky,'' Troke Snaketooth bit out. ``Their fall will kill
|
|
us all. Answer for that, Deadhand, with a blade.''
|
|
|
|
``If you champion nothing, Troke,'' Hakram replied as he took his axe in
|
|
hand, ``that is the sole prize you can win.''
|
|
|
|
The other orc was quick. Quicker than he should be, even as tall as he
|
|
was. There was an unnatural swiftness to his limbs, the kind that came
|
|
from a claim settled into one's bones. Hakram was fresher to his own,
|
|
but he knew Names in a way that Troke did not. The chieftain's slash
|
|
found only steel as Hakram turned and let his arm take it, while he
|
|
continued to pivot and swung at the man's head. Troke dropped below the
|
|
blow before the arc had even begun and Hakram bared his teeth. He knew
|
|
how to win. They broke and circled each other as feet stomped against
|
|
stone and blades against shields, their steps careful until Hakram went
|
|
on the offensive.
|
|
|
|
A wild chop, cutting down with the beginnings of Name strength, but
|
|
Troke caught the haft of the axe with the side of his blade and
|
|
withstood it. Hakram drew back and the chieftain's footing shifted as he
|
|
gathered momentum, preparing for a throat that would go through Hakram's
|
|
throat. But then the tall orc took a hand off his axe, his bone one, and
|
|
slapped at the side of Troke's head. It was a blow that'd hurt but not
|
|
kill. Catherine would have taken it and finished the thrust, Indrani
|
|
would already be wrenching her swords of his eyes. But Troke had not yet
|
|
learned to set aside the instincts of a Name, and so he went to block
|
|
the slap with his sword instead of finishing the thrust. He'd begun to
|
|
move before his mind could catch up to the choice.
|
|
|
|
And so Hakram caught the blade in his dead hand and smiled. He squeezed,
|
|
steel grinding against bone with a horrid sound, and then the sword
|
|
\emph{broke}. Troke's eyes widened and he was pulling away, but the man
|
|
found the head of Hakram's axe resting against the side of his neck.
|
|
Someone let out a hoarse shout behind them. The Snaketooth's gaze did
|
|
not waver.
|
|
|
|
``I knew it might end this way,'' Troke said, grinning ruefully. ``But I
|
|
was \emph{hungry}, Deadhand.''
|
|
|
|
He breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``No regrets. Finish it.''
|
|
|
|
That was the way, wasn't it? The red, blood and rage and victory all in
|
|
one. But he'd never had the red in his blood before, so why start?
|
|
Hakram's axe drew back and he swung, Troke's eyes closing as the flat
|
|
side of the axe head came to rest against his neck.
|
|
|
|
``It is finished,'' Hakram said.
|
|
|
|
The man's eyes opened in startled surprise.
|
|
|
|
``I have a use for you, Troke Snaketooth,'' the Warlord said.
|
|
|
|
All around them shields were cast down and orcs knelt. The shaman had
|
|
not called for acclamation, but some things were beyond ceremony. Two
|
|
hundred shields fell at his feet, as inevitable as the coming of dawn.
|
|
It was done. The Warlord thought of a moonlit oath, then, and part of
|
|
him felt like weeping.
|
|
|
|
But it was done, raised and buried.
|