766 lines
33 KiB
TeX
766 lines
33 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-21-amadeus-plan}{%
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\section{Chapter 21: Amadeus' Plan}\label{chapter-21-amadeus-plan}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Is there not a stark absurdity to what a battle truly is?
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Thousands of strangers on two sides of a field, prepared to slaughter
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each other because half a dozen men on either side told them to.''}
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-- King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand
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\end{quote}
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Seen from the above, it was easy to understand why General Sacker had
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agreed to the cease-fire.
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The Rebel Legions were like a bottled rat, now that the Black Knight had
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called for a retreat of her own army. Juniper had wasted no time
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surrounding their position in the valley, turning all engines on the
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tightly-packed ranks, and Sepulchral's own army had hit them in the back
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even more brutally at my order. Sacker's troops defending her camp had
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collapsed under the combine pressure of mage cadres and Nok wavemen,
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archers who lived up to their sharp reputation. It'd been a bloody
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business, feeding levies into Legion fortifications, but we'd caught the
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rebels unaware and the disparity in numbers had them collapsing in short
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order.
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The camp was ours now, the parts we hadn't torched anyway. That'd left
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the Rebel Legions surrounded between steep hills, stripped of supplies
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and room to maneuver as the noose tightened around them. To annihilate
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Sacker's army, nothing would be required of the Army of Callow save that
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it hold its own palisades while at a generous advantage. All Juniper
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needed to do was wait while Sepulchral hammered at the Rebel Legions
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from behind with her great numbers and fresh troops. The rat would be
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pressed against the bottom of the bottle, squeeze so tightly nothing was
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left but ground flesh and blood. So when the offer had come from
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Juniper, it'd only been natural that General Sacker accepted a
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cease-fire and talks.
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Zombie the Seventh took nothing more than the pressure of my knees to be
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guided into a gentle downwards glide. The creature -- she wasn't a
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hippogriff, not exactly, but given the similarities I was currently
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leaning towards `hippocrow' -- had proved to be eager and obedient after
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I'd raised her, perhaps because the Sisters had taken a personal
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interest in the process. Komena in particular had felt intrigued, enough
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to lend a hand to the process. Regardless, my latest Zombie had proved
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to be a very good girl indeed on top of being even quicker in flight
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than I'd thought she would be. Turns could get a little tricky, mind
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you, but Zombie clearly relied more on Creational laws than magical ones
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when it came to her flight.
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Compared to my last flying mount, anyway.
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The no-man's-land between our position and that of the rebels had been
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cleared for the duration of the talks, legionaries returning to hide
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behind their walls, and the empty space made it all the easier to pick
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out the delegations. Juniper didn't seem to have brought any officers
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with her, but she'd been wise enough to bring Indrani and Alexis as
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bodyguards. There wasn't a lot that'd be able to get past those two.
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Sacker, on the other hand, had with her two men with the painted
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insignias of senior legates on their armour. There were half a dozen
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regulars with them, but they might as well be decorations for what it
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mattered.
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I landed half a hundred feet away, Zombie's arc smoothly turning into a
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run and slowing down as we approached. The Mantle of Woe trailing behind
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me, sword at my hip and yew staff lowered, I brought my mount to a halt
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before the delegations.
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``Marshal Juniper,'' I smiled. ``Congratulations are in order.''
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The Hellhound scoffed, but I could see the pleasure she was badly
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hiding.
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``Could have gone better,'' Juniper said. ``But we can save that talk
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for the camp, Warlord. There are more pressing matters to settle.''
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``So there are,'' I agreed, eye turning to the three top officers of the
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Rebel Legions.
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``Black Queen,'' General Sacker blandly said. ``Greetings.''
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Someone had remembered my warning, I noted. Good. I'd been completely
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serious.
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``Sacker,'' I said.
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``The legates with me are-''
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``Irrelevant,'' I bluntly interrupted.
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The human of the pair, a middle-aged Taghreb, looked furious at that.
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She didn't speak out, though. The orc seemed to take it in stride, which
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raised my esteem by a notch.
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``Either you can speak for your entire set of legions or this
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conversation is pointless,'' I said. ``I did not come here to indulge in
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petty games.''
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``I can speak for our men,'' General Sacker flatly said.
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A look to the legates -- the light caught in her fake eye, reminding me
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I was not the only woman here to have lost one -- served as both a quell
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and confirmation. Neither gainsaid her.
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``Good,'' I smiled.
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``We're willing to surrender,'' the old goblin said, ``under certain
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terms. Guarantees need to be made that no soldiers will be harmed.
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Regular food and water. We're willing to sit out the rest of this war
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if-''
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She was serious, I realized. How many soldiers did she have left of the
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thirteen thousand she'd begun the day with? Couldn't be more than eight,
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after the beating they'd taken. And she still thought she was in a
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position to strongarm me. I'd been too soft on these people, I suddenly
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realize. The Rebel Legions had taken my coin and grain before selling me
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down the river without a second thought, and the way I'd just taken it
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had made them think I was easy pickings. I'd held back, out of a desire
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to maintain the armies of Praes for the greater war and out of respect
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for my father.
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It was long past time I stopped.
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``Archer,'' I said, ``nock an arrow.''
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I heard a chuckle and did not need to turn to know she obeyed. I met
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Sacker's eyes evenly.
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``You seem to have some grave misunderstandings about the nature of your
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situation,'' I said. ``So letme be clear: if I tell Archer to fire that
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arrow eastwards, Sepulchral's army will resume its attack.''
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The goblin scoffed.
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``You'd lose-''
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``I don't give a shit how many of them we lose,'' I coldly said. ``I'll
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spend her entire army if that's what it takes to break you.''
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I harshly laughed.
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``\emph{Terms}?'' I mocked. ``You'll sit out the war \emph{if}? I didn't
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come here to negotiate with you, Sacker. I did that once before and you
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fine fellows me in the back. We're past making deals.''
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I struck my staff against the ground and the sound rippled out, dust
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flying up.
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``You can surrender unconditionally,'' I said. ``Or Archer will shoot
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that arrow and I'll fucking kill you all.''
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Sacker's face tightened, her ever half-closed eyes opening fully. She
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studied my face and whatever she found there had her hesitating. She
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turned to Juniper.
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``And you have nothing to say to this, Marshal of Callow?'' she pressed.
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``Your men will be the ones spent for this madness.''
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Juniper's face hardened and she bared pale fangs.
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``Every sack of grain your soldiers ate, every crate of steel you used,
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could have kept some of my legionaries out west alive,'' the Hellhound
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growled. ``And what did we get for it? Be careful now of calling on
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\emph{sentiment}. You might not like what you let out of the cage.''
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Sacker flinched. Juniper had been as a niece to her, once. Maybe she
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still was in some ways. But personal ties cut both ways. She turned her
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eyes back to me, knowing better than to ask for anything out of the
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likes of Archer and the Huntress. Hells, of the two Alexis would
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probably be the hardliner. She had that traditional heroic disregard for
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the lives of anyone that might be considered to stand under Evil's
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banner.
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``Many officers will balk,'' General Sacker told me. ``If you do not
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offer guarantees-''
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``So let them balk,'' I shrugged. ``We can have this conversation again
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in half a bell, when I've put another few thousand in the ground.''
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The genuine indifference in my voice, I thought, was what got it through
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to her I wasn't bluffing. I absolutely wasn't. I'd just make sure that
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the household troops from Askum and Nok were the vanguard for the
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assault instead of the levies, to keep the casualties of the attack
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where they deserved to be. The goblin sagged.
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``An hour,'' Sacker said. ``Give me an hour to talk the officers into it
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without bloodshed.''
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I glanced at Juniper, who looked like she was biting down on the answer
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she wanted to give but did not have the authority to. No objections
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there, then. I might as well give the rebels a little more rope, lest
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the noose turning into an outright hanging.
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``An hour,'' I agreed. ``If I don't have your formal and unconditional
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surrender by the end of it\ldots{}''
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I did not finish the sentence, or particularly need to. Sacker and the
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legates left, tails between their legs, and returned to their lines.
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I got my surrender before the time had passed.
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---
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``We are now victims of our own success,'' General Zola sadly said.
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No one in the war council -- our usual, save now with the addition of
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General Jeremiah Holt -- argued with that, because it was the honest
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truth. We'd forced the Rebel Legions to surrender and the Loyalist
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Legions to retreat to their camp in northern Kala Hills, but we now had
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fresh problems on our hands. Namely, seven thousand eight hundred and
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seventy-nine prisoners of war that we needed to keep an eye on. And keep
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under a roof, fed and with enough water to live. We were effectively
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being forced to supply a second army of prisoners and our supplies would
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be stretched to a breaking point if we did. Much of the Rebel Legions'
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own foodstuff had been either burned or looted when Sepulchral's forces
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took their camp.
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Some of that I could get back from them, but I didn't want to take too
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much. The Praesi law that undead could not hold noble title meant that
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Abreha Mirembe's hold on her own army was painfully fragile, holding
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mostly because the soldiers from Nok were going to stick around as long
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as it looked like Isobe was still going to inherit Aksum. Otherwise
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those forces would be marching away by now, leaving behind them a
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vicious Aksum civil war. No, I had to leave Sepulchral some of the
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goods. Asking back for half was reasonable, I decided, and I'd set
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Vivienne to arranging it.
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``I prefer the troubles of a great victory to those of a great defeat,''
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the Princess in question snorted. ``We have supplies enough to push back
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the issue for a few days without it denting our reserves too much. We
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can keep our attention on more pressing matters.''
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Juniper cleared her throat.
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``Speaking of,'' the Hellhound said. ``Pickler, what is your timeline on
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the work?''
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After the surrender came and the rebels laid down their weapons, there
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were only a few hours left before sundown. Since it was clear there'd be
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no more fighting for the day, Pickler had taken to bettering our
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position in anticipation of tomorrow. Companies of unarmed prisoners
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had, under the wary eye of our own legionaries, been set to taking down
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the enemy's fortifications: tearing down their palisades and filling
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their trenches.
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``Our palisade will be the only one standing come dark,'' Sapper-General
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Pickler said, ``but the trenches are harder work. Maybe half of it done
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in time, if we're lucky. I gave orders to focus on the road, it'll be
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easier for us to move troops across if we need to go on the offensive.''
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``Can goblin prisoners not be put to work in the dark?'' Brandon Talbot
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asked.
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I grimaced at that and wasn't the only one.
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``They'll run,'' I said. ``And do just that if we're lucky. They've a
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lot more goblins than we do, too, so even if we put our own goblin
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legionaries as overseers it'd be a major risk. Better to just left the
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work unfinished.''
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``Agreed,'' Juniper said. ``It is only a precaution, regardless. I don't
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believe that Marshal Nim will be going on the offensive. Her losses
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appear to have been extensive.''
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I cocked an eyebrow.
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``We got casualties estimates for her too, now?''
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The tall orc nodded. With the casualties taken in the early skirmishes
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around the region, the desertion of the Thirteenth and the mauling the
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Eighth had taken during the night our guess had been that the Black
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Knight had been fielding an army about sixteen to seventeen thousand
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strong. How many were left now, though?
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``At least five thousand and a half dead,'' the Hellhound said.
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``Tentatively we're pegging her current strength at eleven thousand.''
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I let out a low whistle. With the Thirteenth as last moment
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reinforcements, this morning we'd fielded around fifteen thousand men.
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Our butcher's bill had us at twelve thousand eight hundred and twelve
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soldiers now. Almost thirteen thousand strong. Gods, even Sepulchral had
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lost more men than we had: her twenty thousand had, between civil war
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and battle and desertions, tumbled down to maybefifteen thousand now.
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Gods. Our total losses had been less than half of those of every other
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army on the field \emph{individually}, not even put together.
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Juniper had, over the span of an afternoon, not upended the balance of
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power so much as murdered it and buried it in a shallow grave. Weeping
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Heavens. I found my glass of water, emptied it on the ground and leaned
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back my seat to grab a bottle of aragh. I poured myself a finger, then
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found a few grins and cups headed my way. When everyone had their own in
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hand, I solemnly raised my cup.
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``To the Hellhound,'' I said, ``and the Battle of Kala.''
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It was with rowdy cheer my toast was taken up, drinks going down and
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being poured anew. I met Juniper's eyes and grinned, enjoying the dark
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flush to her cheeks. Aisha even talked her into a cup of her own. I laid
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back into my seat, enjoying the warmth of the tent, and breathed out
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weeks of worry. They could be put to rest, for a few hours. We'd earned
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it.
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After all, for all the troubles of victory I'd rather be in this tent
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tonight than any of the other three.
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---
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With morning came the time to make the difficult decisions.
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The Black Knight still had a sizeable army holed up in Kala Hills, but
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so long as Sepulchral remained on our side the threat was mitigated.
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None of my general staff had an appetite for trying to force that camp
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immediately, especially not when leaving the Legions in it would make
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them wither on the vine. We'd poisoned Nioqe Lake and Nim herself had
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poisoned the main wells in the region, so in at most a week their water
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situation was going to start getting dangerous. Only the scale of the
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losses they'd taken in battle would prevent it from being an issue even
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earlier. Taking into consideration our numerical advantage -- we had the
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Loyalist Legions outnumbered almost three to one -- and our
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fortifications in the valley, it would be suicide for the Black Knight
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to attack us. That meant we had enough breathing room to handle our own
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internal troubles. The most urgent of them was, unsurprisingly, what to
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do with the several thousand prisoners we'd taken.
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``We can't handle feeding them for the rest of the campaign,'' Aisha
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said. ``And even if we could, we need to begin marching on Ater soon.
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There is no practical way to bring that many prisoners with us on the
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march.''
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``We should keep the officers of tribune rank and give the Fourth's
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Justice to the rest,'' Brandon Talbot advised.
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Gods, that stupid name. It was what some of my men had taken to calling
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the punishment I'd given the Helikean cataphracts after capturing them
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back in Iserre: broken fingers and being stripped of equipment.
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``This is a wild land,'' Aquiline said. ``It would be kinder to simply
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kill those warriors than to maim and release them. The sword will hurt
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less than claws.''
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``It would be a death sentence to release them like that,'' Vivienne
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agreed. ``Ideally we would ransom them instead, but they've managed to
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burn every bridge they have. There's no one left who'd pay for them.''
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``Amadeus might,'' I objected.
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``He can't afford the price,'' she frankly replied.
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``We should seek to recruit soldiers instead,'' General Jeremiah said.
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``It would make up for our losses, and the Army of Callow has expertise
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in assimilating legions.''
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I rather admired the entirely unashamed way he said.
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``That was my thought was well,'' I admitted, ``and Juniper's too. How
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did that go?''
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The Hellhound sighed.
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``Malicia poisoned the well,'' she said. ``Most of the rank and file are
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convinced we assassinated two of their three generals just before making
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common cause with Sepulchral after a coup failed. Maybe three hundred
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volunteers, and I wouldn't trust them right off.''
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Fucking Malicia. I might have given the order to kill Mok, sure, but I
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wouldn't have been sloppy enough not get blamed for it afterwards.
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``They might not be willing to fight for us,'' Vivienne said, ``but they
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might be willing to fight \emph{against} the Black Knight.''
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She paused, choosing her words.
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``We could offer some of the soldiers freedom in exchange for serving as
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the first wave of an attack against the camp in the hills.''
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I chewed on that for a moment. Juniper looked on the fence, but the idea
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appealed to me. Sure it'd be putting troops we didn't trust all that
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much in our order of battle, but it'd also soak up casualties that would
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otherwise thin my own ranks. And, even better, I wouldn't be expected to
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keep feeding those soldiers after they went their own way.
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``We'd have to limit the numbers,'' I said. ``Else we're just releasing
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an army into the wilds.''
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``Organization will be tricky,'' Juniper said. ``I'll want to position
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them so if they turn against us it won't lead to disaster.''
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That wasn't a no, and after a round of debate the idea was adopted.
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Aisha left the tent to begin organizing it. That didn't entirely solve
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our prisoner problem, though, since two thousand at most was what I was
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comfortable arming again. The arguments went in a circle. No one thought
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we should feed the prisoners or keep them with us, but most of the
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measures that'd make them no longer a problem for the rest of this
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campaign also effectively consigned to death by Wasteland. Everyone
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agreed, at least, that we should keep the high-ranking officers as
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prisoners. Execution was floated as an option -- by Talbot -- but even
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those that didn't balk at killing prisoners thought it might lead to
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mass unrest among the imprisoned soldiers.
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``Even arming half of them would be a mistake,'' General Zola argued.
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``With that many soldiers, which we agreed would be needed to survive
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the Wasteland, they have enough men to begin seizing the private
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armories of nobles and towns. They would rearm and pursue us.''
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``We don't know for certain that they would,'' Juniper grunted. ``But I
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take your point. I don't want to leave that force at our back either.''
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And that was the crux of the issue, really. We all wanted to march on
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Ater, where the war on Praes would be brought to an end, but we needed
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to clean up house first. That would mean dealing with the Sepulchral
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situation, later today, but also tying up all our other loose ends.
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Marshal Nim's army needed to be decisively broken or made to surrender,
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and after that was done I didn't want Sacker's army nipping at our our
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heels when we moved south. Hells, to be frank I didn't want them
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involved in that siege at all. They'd not proved to be trustworthy
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enough to be allowed to, and they'd failed to be victorious enough to
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force the issue their way. I could just see them stumbling into us at
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the last moment and fuc- wait, no.
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``We're looking at this wrong,'' I said. ``Juniper, how long do you
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expect operations in Ater to last?''
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``Two months at most,'' she said.
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Longer than that and we'd be forced to make a deal anyway. Procer was
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already buckling, if we wanted there to still be a west by the time we
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returned we couldn't tarry.
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``So we strand them,'' I said. ``We keep the officers and arm enough
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they should be able to survive the Wasteland, but we take all their
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mages. If they don't have any access to the Ways\ldots{}''
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``Even at their fastest possible pace, they'll arrive along after the
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dust is settled in Ater,'' Juniper finished, tone considering.
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``Best we end things with the Black Knight before that,'' General
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Jeremiah pragmatically advised. ``Still, seems a sound enough plan.''
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Not the most elegant way to deal with prisoners, but we didn't have time
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for elegance. A round of agreements, some more enthusiastic than others,
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saw the matter settled.
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``We'll be receiving Sepulchral this afternoon,'' I said, ``to confirm
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the terms of our cooperation. Once she agrees to lend her aid to an
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assault on the Loyalist Legions, I believe we should begin preparing for
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an attack.''
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|
``Agreed,'' Juniper growled. ``We have the numbers to properly squeeze
|
|
her now. I want to swing part of our force out east around Kala Hills
|
|
and encircle her. The same paths they used to ambush us there can be
|
|
turned against them now.''
|
|
|
|
The discussion grew animated after that, commanders pitching in for a
|
|
plan to either force a surrender out of Nim or crush her army
|
|
irreparably, but I excused myself eventually and Vivienne did the same.
|
|
We needed to get moving if we were to be ready to receive Sepulchral.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Abreha Mirembe wasn't exactly my creature.
|
|
|
|
You could barely tell even she was dead, since it was poison that'd done
|
|
her in and she'd been pretty ghoulish even before biting it. I'd raised
|
|
the would-be empress as undead through use of the Night, but that didn't
|
|
exactly give me control over her. I could move her limbs, sure, and
|
|
inflict pain on her soul. But I couldn't control her mind, save through
|
|
coercion. She'd showed me deference since her raising, but that wasn't
|
|
the effect of the Night so much as the knowledge that I could send her
|
|
back to the grave with a snap of my fingers. I was uncomfortably aware
|
|
that the ties binding me to her were not meaningfully all that different
|
|
from those binding Malicia to Sargon Sahelian.
|
|
|
|
I'd soulboxed a High Seat too, it just happened that said box was their
|
|
own corpse.
|
|
|
|
We kept the audience private, as small as it could be. That meant two
|
|
people on our side, Vivienne and myself, and three on hers. High Lady
|
|
Abreha herself, her designated heir Isobe and the niece that'd tried to
|
|
usurp his place, Sanaa. Considering the only reason Sanaa was still
|
|
alive was that she had enough supporters among Aksum's army and vassals
|
|
that her death would caused armed reprisals, I expected relations
|
|
between her and her aunt to be frosty. To my surprise, Sepulchral now
|
|
seemed to be favouring her over Isobe and takin no pains to hide it.
|
|
\emph{Praesi.} Abreha must have decided that a closely-fought coup was a
|
|
sign of talent and begun to reconsider succession. Isobe was displeased
|
|
by that undercurrent, by these talks and most of all by me.
|
|
|
|
``Rumour in the camp is that he blames you for this,'' Vivienne murmured
|
|
into my ear.
|
|
|
|
I blinked at her.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Why}?''
|
|
|
|
``He lost a lot of face in front of vassal lords and household troops
|
|
when you and Lord Tanja humiliated him,'' the Princess said. ``He's been
|
|
saying that if not for that more would have stuck with him instead of
|
|
turning to Sanaa's camp.''
|
|
|
|
That might be partially true, I thought, though ironically enough Razin
|
|
had probably done more damage than I did. It was a little much to blame
|
|
me for his own failure to gather a solid core of supporters, though,
|
|
especially when he'd been the one starting with a -- oh Gods, I'd been
|
|
spending too much time with Praesi if the decisions of someone like
|
|
Abreha Mirembe were beginning to make sense to me. Best get this over
|
|
with. After half-hearted courtesies we got to the meat of the talks,
|
|
which was defining what Sepulchral's position would be going forward.
|
|
|
|
``I want you to formally renounce your claim on the Tower,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``That cause is lost,'' Abreha conceded. ``Yet renouncing it will have
|
|
costs for my supporters. I'll not lay down arms only to have a puppet
|
|
ruler installed in Aksum.''
|
|
|
|
``We can understand that concern,'' Vivienne diplomatically said. ``I
|
|
assure you, neither Callow nor the Grand Alliance intends to intervene
|
|
in your matters of succession.''
|
|
|
|
The old woman laughed.
|
|
|
|
``A nothing promise,'' she said. ``You will have to do better than that.
|
|
You want my army for your siege of Ater, and I want sturdier assurances
|
|
in return.''
|
|
|
|
``We could always offer our services to Malicia instead, should you-''
|
|
|
|
Sepulchral's hand slapped Sanaa across the face. I hadn't even made her
|
|
do that, so I cocked an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Count this a favour, girl,'' Abreha said. ``There are some people you
|
|
don't threaten unless you've made the decision to go through with it.
|
|
They'll just kill you if you do.''
|
|
|
|
Sanaa liked furious and humiliated, but to her honour she appeared to be
|
|
listening. Huh. Maybe I \emph{wouldn't} be having a little conversation
|
|
with Scribe about her, after all. I had no intention of leaving the High
|
|
Seat closest to the border of Callow in hostile hands, but if she could
|
|
learn that made drastic steps unnecessary. Vivienne cleared her throat.
|
|
|
|
``Assurances of what nature?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``I want it confirmed by whoever climbs the Tower that I'll legally keep
|
|
my title until the end of the war against Keter,'' High Lady Abreha
|
|
said, ``with all attached rights, including that to designate my own
|
|
successor.''
|
|
|
|
I traded a look with Vivienne, who nodded.
|
|
|
|
``That could be arranged,'' I said. ``I take it it's a formal Grand
|
|
Alliance demand you're looking for.''
|
|
|
|
The old woman grinned.
|
|
|
|
``I want it written in the treaty that settles this dance,'' she
|
|
confirmed.
|
|
|
|
She really was an old fox, I thought. That way no matter how ended up
|
|
ruling the Dread Empire they couldn't actually try to oust her
|
|
afterwards without bringing down the Grand Alliance on their head. She
|
|
was using a continent-spanning coalition as the guarantor of her
|
|
succession. If nothing else, I had to be impressed by the sheer gall.
|
|
|
|
``I can't formally agree to that without speaking with Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach, though I expect agreement on her part,'' I said. ``That said,
|
|
I have half the Majilis of Levant in my camp at the moment and they'll
|
|
back those terms so I'm comfortable giving you a provisional approval.''
|
|
|
|
They were amenable to helping us against Marshal Nim with just that, so
|
|
it was brisk business afterwards. They departed some hours after and I
|
|
caught Abreha as she left, away from the others so we could have a quiet
|
|
conversation.
|
|
|
|
``So what is it you're actually after?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
She looked surprised, like she had no idea what I might possibly be
|
|
implying. It was just a little too smooth to be believable. I cocked an
|
|
eyebrow and she smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Who knows how long you war will last?'' she said. ``It might be a
|
|
different empire, by the time the dust settles.''
|
|
|
|
``All about staying in the game, huh,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Abreha Mirembe cackled.
|
|
|
|
``It's the very thing, Black Queen,'' Sepulchral said. ``Perhaps even
|
|
the \emph{only} thing.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
We spent three days recovering and planning our offensive against the
|
|
Black Knight, whose army had further fortified its position in Kala
|
|
Hills but not since moved. There was some trouble with the prisoners,
|
|
people trying to flee in the night, but we'd disarmed them and the
|
|
Wasteland was not kind. Those that got out did not get far, and bringing
|
|
back the mangled corpses to display them soured the appetite for that
|
|
kind of adventure. Our count of recruits rose to around four hundred but
|
|
came to a hard stop after that, with further efforts yield nothing.
|
|
Aisha's efforts to make `volunteer companies' that would fight against
|
|
Nim were more successful, though, reaching close to the two thousand
|
|
that I'd been willing to allow.
|
|
|
|
The rebels might despise us but they were scarcely fonder of the Black
|
|
Knight, who had spurned their offer of joining forces in favour of
|
|
remaining loyal to the Tower, and many found freedom in arms in the wake
|
|
of fighting `Malicia's dogs' a rough but fair deal. Juniper and the
|
|
general staff were putting the finishing touches on our plan to break
|
|
the Legions with as few losses as possible to us, aiming to push the
|
|
deaths on Sepulchral and the volunteers as much as we could without
|
|
being too obvious about it, but I flitted in and out of those meetings.
|
|
Most of my time was spent with Scribe and Vivienne, scrambling to get a
|
|
read on the situation in the rest of Praes.
|
|
|
|
We still couldn't scry properly, but that was a regional effect. Sending
|
|
mages further out and then arranging messages being carried by horse
|
|
worked, well enough that Cordelia was able to send her assent to High
|
|
Lady Abreha's terms and secure her alliance to us. I enjoyed the
|
|
relative light demands made by this on my time, but the relative sense
|
|
of safety was ripped out of my grasp without warning on the morning of
|
|
the fourth day after the Battle of Kala. Even if Masego hadn't
|
|
immediately come for me I would have known something was up: the amount
|
|
of power I could feel coming out of the Black Knight's camp was like a
|
|
lit beacon to my senses.
|
|
|
|
``War ritual?'' I bluntly asked.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Hierophant immediately ritual. ``And it is two rituals. One of
|
|
them, the smaller, is making a gate into the Ways.''
|
|
|
|
I blinked.
|
|
|
|
``You told me the Ways wouldn't be usable for a few days still,'' I
|
|
slowly said. ``That they were still too fragile for large troop
|
|
movements.''
|
|
|
|
``They are,'' Masego said. ``Which is why I believe the other ritual is
|
|
meant to stabilize them in some way, or at least accelerate the process
|
|
of that recovery.''
|
|
|
|
``That can be done?''
|
|
|
|
``I cannot,'' Hierophant reluctantly admitted. ``At least, I have not
|
|
yet grasped how it might be done. It is possible that either Akua or
|
|
other talented mages have found such a solution, however.''
|
|
|
|
``So they're trying to slip away into the Ways,'' I pressed.
|
|
|
|
``That seems likely,'' he agreed.
|
|
|
|
Fuck. And that would mean facing this same army again, only holed up
|
|
behind the walls of Ater. I could think of few things I wanted less.
|
|
Juniper was of the same opinion and we hastily mobilized. Hierophant
|
|
probed with spells and figured out the stabilizing ritual would need to
|
|
finish before they could begin moving out, so we had a few hours to
|
|
spare at least. Enough that we arranged for the volunteer companies to
|
|
be armed and put in front while Sepulchral's army deployed on the plains
|
|
below the enemy camp. It all took long enough that Masego confirmed the
|
|
stabilizing ritual was done by the time we began to march in battle
|
|
formations, which meant I was now fighting the Battle of Maillac's Boot
|
|
again only from the other side.
|
|
|
|
We couldn't even muster our whole army for the attack, since at least
|
|
three thousand had needed to stay behind to keep an eye on the
|
|
prisoners, so this was going to get \emph{messy}. Taking a fortified
|
|
uphill Legion camp with only hasty preparations? We sent the rebels and
|
|
the volunteer companies as the first wave. To my distaste, I saw that
|
|
Abreha had sent in her levies first. I could understand the sense in
|
|
that, professional soldiers didn't grow on trees, but it would be a
|
|
slaughter. Still, horns and trumpets sounded. There would be blood.
|
|
Soldiers marched up the hill, and atop it a thin crest of legionaries
|
|
formed a shield wall of their own. Steel glittered under the sun, a sea
|
|
of it.
|
|
|
|
It was an accident when it happened. They began singing, on one side and
|
|
the other, with just a few beats of difference.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``Boot goes up and boot goes down --}
|
|
|
|
\emph{There goes their callow crown.''}
|
|
|
|
The Legionary's Song, most people knew it as. Some called it
|
|
\emph{Swallow the World} instead, but they were fewer. The legionaries
|
|
which had been named rebels began to sing it, moments before the
|
|
legionaries that had been deemed loyal did the same. There was a beat of
|
|
hesitation, steps slowing, and the songs melded.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``And no matter how high the walls}
|
|
|
|
\emph{We're all gonna make them fall.''}
|
|
|
|
The couplet ended to the sight of the legionaries that'd been climbing
|
|
the hill stopping. No arrows followed, no devastating barrage of spells
|
|
or munitions.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``They can send us their pretty Knight,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Their killer all decked in white,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Only now we've got one too --}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And he always gets his due}
|
|
|
|
.
|
|
|
|
\emph{They got a wizard in the West}
|
|
|
|
\emph{But now matter how he's blessed}
|
|
|
|
\emph{We got a Warlock in the Tower}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Who'll use his bones for flour}
|
|
|
|
.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Let them keep their priestly king}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Cause no matter how sweet he sings}
|
|
|
|
\emph{We've got an Empress black as sin}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Who'll take his throne with a grin.''}
|
|
|
|
It was a happy song, or at least meant to be. And yet somehow the tune
|
|
that the wind carried all the way to me was mournful. A lament.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``We're the Legion and the Terror}
|
|
|
|
\emph{They're in the right but we're meaner}
|
|
|
|
\emph{So pray hard boy, and pay your toll --}
|
|
|
|
\emph{We're gonna swallow the world whole.''}
|
|
|
|
Atop the hill, legionaries looked at legionaries down it. And someone,
|
|
some faceless man or woman, threw their shield on the ground. Their
|
|
sword. And something hung in the air, a weight, as armies that had been
|
|
savaging each other for weeks looked at each other. Someone in the
|
|
volunteer companies threw down their own shield, and then it was like
|
|
floodgates had opened. Shields and swords and helmets fell to the
|
|
ground. And then, in the most damning of silences, the soldiers left.
|
|
Nim's, the rebels, even some of mine -- the Thirteenth most of all, but
|
|
had I not devoured legions before? The Army of Callow spat back out some
|
|
of those sons and daughters.
|
|
|
|
Even some of the levies bolted, melting into the river of deserters.
|
|
|
|
``-Majesty, Your Majesty,'' Brandon Talbot called.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at him.
|
|
|
|
``What should we do?''
|
|
|
|
I looked atop the hill. How many of her men had Nim lost? I couldn't
|
|
tell, but it was not few. Same for us, and somehow I knew that when I
|
|
returned to camp prisoners would have joined the flood as well. We'd all
|
|
brought armies here, waved banners and played games. Won and lost. And
|
|
after two weeks of brutality, an army was walking away. Could I really
|
|
blame them? What were any of the people here fighting \emph{for}? Even
|
|
those of us with causes had dragged them through so much dust they could
|
|
hardly be recognized.
|
|
|
|
``Nothing,'' I finally said. ``Nothing. Let them go.''
|
|
|
|
Even the Black Knight what few had left to flee with. We would meet
|
|
again in Ater, to end it all.
|
|
|
|
A song and then silence: so ended the Battle of Kala.
|