499 lines
23 KiB
TeX
499 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-15-company}{%
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\chapter{Company}\label{chapter-15-company}}
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\begin{quote}
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``\emph{I've found that the best way to win at shatranj is usually to
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turn into a giant snake and tear my opponent's throat out.''}
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-- Dread Empress Vindictive III
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\end{quote}
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We'd stopped for a late lunch before coming in sight of Ater. Black had
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pushed our usual personal lesson earlier in the day, since the evening
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would likely be spent introducing me at the Imperial Court, and he was
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spending more time talking than dipping his millet bread in the broth
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the Blackguards had put together.
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``Early Praesi Names were divided along ethnic lines,'' the green-eyed
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man spoke as I dug into my own bowl ravenously. ``The Taghreb had the
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likes of the Red Fox -- usually a thief, always clever -- and the Grey
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Lion, often the strongest chief of the time. Soninke Names were
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associated with the rulers of their kingdoms, though some Champion
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derivatives arose during particularly brutal wars.''
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``They're all gone now, though?'' I asked, hastily swallowing my
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mouthful when he raised his eyebrow at me.
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``None have been seen in over a millennia,'' he agreed. ``Roles are
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usually a reflection of the people they spring from, you'll find, and
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it's been a long time since humans inside the Empire have ceased any
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designs of independence. Why settle for ruling a fraction of a realm,
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when you could claim the Tower itself?''
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I could see his point. That was one of the most seductive parts of the
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Imperial philosophy, I'd found: in Old Callow, the throne had only ever
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passed between the various branches of the Fairfax dynasty. It would,
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theoretically, have been possible for one the duchies to topple them --
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and some had wanted to. The Dukes of Liesse, in particular, had never
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quite managed to forget that they'd been kings before the unification of
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Callow. In practice, though, the fact that more often than not the
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kingship came with a Name had seen them rule unchallenged. In Praes,
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though, anybody could claim the Tower if they were clever and ruthless
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enough. The High Lords got a turn in the seat more often than commoners,
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certainly, but the chronicles of the Empire were full of instances where
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a man or a woman with strong powers or a stronger vision had butchered
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their way to power. There was no Imperial dynasty: the longest a family
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had ever managed to claim the Tower was three generations, and they'd
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been wiped out to the last when the third Emperor was overthrown.
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``I don't recall hearing about any greenskin names, not since the
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Declaration of Empire,'' I noted. ``Which is weird, considering some
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ogres got Roles and there's a lot less of them than orcs or goblins.''
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Black set aside his bowl, offering me the full weight of his attention.
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We weren't reconciled, not exactly. I would not forget or forgive the
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day we'd left Summerholm anytime soon, and he'd smelled the rat in the
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way the Lone Swordsman had managed to get away. Still, he spoke and I
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listened. For better or worse, the Calamity was the teacher I'd been
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given and I intended to learn everything I could from him. His
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successes, while ghastly, had still been successes. More than that, I'd
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planted the seeds of a war so I had better be ready to fight it when the
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time came.
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``When it comes to the Clans,'' he said, ``we have the Miezans to blame
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for that. They systematically dismantled every aspect of orc culture.
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They went as far as razing the holy grounds of the Broken Antler Horde,
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the largest city on Callernia at the time. Roles do not come to be in a
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void, Catherine. There needs to be a weight behind them, a cultural
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imperative. Had the Clans broken away from Praes after the Declaration
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we might have seen a rebirth of their old Names, but the first Dread
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Empress managed to keep them in the fold by the skin of her teeth.''
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``That's kind of sad,'' I admitted.
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``Their most common Name was the Warlord,'' Black murmured. ``Mostly
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known for their propensity to put entire villages to the torch and take
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back their inhabitants to the Steppes as thralls.''
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``Not \emph{too} sad, then,'' I mused.
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He chuckled. ``As for the Tribes, it's trickier matter. They were never
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outright conquered by the Miezans, as you know. They knelt after the
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first few defeats and so kept the majority of their holdings.''
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``There's not a lot about goblins, in the books you gave me,'' I told
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him. ``Some stuff about their alchemies and when they started getting
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interested in engineering, but even the explanation about the Matrons
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was a little vague.''
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``That's because there's nearly no reliable literature on them,'' Black
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replied. ``They're frustratingly secretive, not that they haven't been
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given reason to be. Personally, I suspect that they \emph{do} have
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Names.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``And they just what, never stepped out of the Grey
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Eyries? Roles are a little flashier than that.''
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``They might not be,'' the Knight said, ``if the culture that spawned
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them values secrecy above all else.''
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Huh. That made a twisted sort of sense, actually. For all we knew, the
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Matrons themselves might have been Named and just never told anyone.
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Roles like Assassin had aspects that allowed them to hide from scrutiny,
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so it wasn't exactly unheard of. I had another question I wanted to ask,
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about the Name of Chancellor and how it had come to be forbidden -- just
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laying claim to it apparently qualified as high treason -- but before I
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could get anything out Scribe popped out of nowhere. More damningly, she
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managed to do it right next to me.
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``Bloody Hells, how do you keep doing that?'' I blurted out. ``We're
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standing in the middle of an open field, Scribe. The only footing here
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is \emph{rocks}.''
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She didn't reply, though I'm pretty sure a glimmer of amusement flashed
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through her eyes.
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``Scribe,'' the green-eyed man frowned. ``You don't usually interrupt
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during lessons.''
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Without a word, she handed him a scroll. It was, I saw, sealed with
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black wax and the official Imperial seal. \emph{That looks serious.}
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Black broke it open and scanned the contents, face turning pale when he
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got halfway through.
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``You're sure?'' he asked her.
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``I have three different witnesses. Reliable,'' the plain-faced woman
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replied.
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``\emph{Fuck},'' the Black Knight cursed, and my eyes widened. It was
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the first time I'd ever heard him curse. ``We have those laws for a
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\emph{reason}, Scribe. Not even Triumphant was fool enough to break the
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Decree and she broke nearly every other law on record.''
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Weeping Heavens, he actually sounded worried.
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``What happened?''
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The pale-skinned man rubbed the bridge of his nose, dropping the scroll
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on his lap.
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``The Tower just received a Red Letter,'' he said, tone grim.
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I burst out laughing. ``Really? The gnomes are knocking at the door? You
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could have at least put a little effort into the punchline.''
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My mirth fell flat when neither of their expressions changed. ``You're
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serious,'' I realized. ``Are you telling me they actually exist?''
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``Yes,'' Black confirmed flatly. ``And that's the second Red Letter the
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Tower received this century. If we receive a third, the consequences
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would be\ldots{} dire.''
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``The gnomes, like the people with the huge metal armours and the flying
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machines that scream? We're talking about those guys?''
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``Have you ever heard of Kerguel, Catherine?'' Black asked.
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I shrugged. ``The lost city that got sunk into the ocean by the Gods.
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There's a great deal of bad poetry about it.''
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``It was a real place,'' the Knight told me. ``One of the most powerful
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nations in the world at a time where the great Baalite cities were a
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collection of mud huts. They had an interest in natural physics and
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pursued it heedlessly, until one day they received a letter in a red
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leather sheath.''
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That wasn't the story as I'd been told it, so I listened in silence.
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``The letter told them to cease their research or face extinction,''
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Black spoke into the quiet of the Wasteland. ``The lords of Kerguel
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laughed and dismissed it as an esoteric joke. They laughed again, when a
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more strongly-worded letter came a month later.''
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He paused, letting out a deep breath.
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``They stopped laughing, when they lost contact with all their colonies.
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It was already too late by then. The Yan Tei have the only surviving
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records on the subject, and they say that the fleet of metal ships that
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came for Kerguel darkened the sky itself -- it could be seen from miles
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away.''
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``You mean they\ldots{}'' I trailed off.
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``They sunk the island into the sea,'' Black said. ``Sorceries Kerguel
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had spent decades refining slid off the ships like water off a duck's
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back. The explosions were larger than anything that's been seen before
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or since. By the time the gnomes were done, there was not a living soul
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left on the barren rocks.''
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I sat there listlessly, watching my teacher's expression turn coldly
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furious.
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``So you can understand how after that farming machine under Nefarious
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got us a Letter, I'm a little irritated that the Hearthmaker tribe was
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\emph{foolish} enough to start playing with powders.''
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``What are you going to do?'' I asked quietly.
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``They need to be purged,'' he sighed. ``Every last one of them, and the
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research destroyed. The Matrons will have a fit, but there's no other
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way.''
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``You could fight them,'' I said. ``If they're threatening you, you must
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have found something they're afraid of.''
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Black smiled mirthlessly. ``In the grander scheme of things, Catherine,
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I'm the petty warlord of a backwater kingdom. The only nation on our
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continent that can be considered something other than a regional power
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is the Kingdom Under. When one of the \emph{real} world powers tells the
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Empire to do something, we do it. I will not face destruction in the
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name of pride.''
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Well, shit. When someone with my teacher's usual level of
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self-confidence told you someone was out of their league, they weren't
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likely to be wrong. Would the gnomes also destroy Callow, if they came?
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It was part of the Empire, at the moment. \emph{Hopefully I'll never
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have to find out.}
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``We're going to Foramen, then?''
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Black frowned. ``You aren't. It's still too early for you to deal with
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the Matrons.''
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I scoffed. ``Can't know if we don't try, can we?''
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``Spoken like someone who's never been in the same room as those cunning
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old bats,'' my teacher replied, faintly amused. ``No, you'll be going to
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the Academy until I'm done.''
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Funny how these things went, wasn't it? A month ago that had been the
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plan, and now it looked like I'd get what I'd wanted.
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``Scribe,'' the dark-haired man spoke. ``Is there a company with a
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missing officer?''
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The plain-faced woman replied immediately. ``Rat Company. Lacking a
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lieutenant as of last week, still waiting on a transfer. They're
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beginning war games at Spite Valley tonight.''
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Black hummed thoughtfully. ``Sink or swim. Fitting. Can you have a
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legionary's kit brought to her on the way?''
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Scribe inclined her head by an inch. ``Already sent the runner.''
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The Knight chuckled. ``What would I do without you?''
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``The same things,'' Scribe replied blandly. ``Just not as well.''
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He turned his eyes to me and I shrugged in agreement. Wasn't like I had
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anything else planned this week.
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---
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The War College was the only officer's school in the Empire, meaning
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that every officer wanting to make a career in the Legions of Terror was
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expected to have graduated from those hallowed halls. There were other
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training camps scattered among the Empire for legionaries, of course,
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but anyone who wanted to enrol straight into the commissioned ranks went
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through the College. The institution had existed in one form or another
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since the founding of the Empire, though until recently admission had
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been restricted to the children of Imperial aristocracy -- and in even
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earlier times, only to the boys among those. Dread Empress Terribilia
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the First had put a swift end to that particular brand of stupidity by
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using the Headmaster as ammunition for her latest catapults, much in the
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same way that my own teacher defenestrated the last Headmistress when
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she'd refused to allow ``filthy greenskins'' in her classrooms.
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The College itself was situated on the outskirts of Ater, a large
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two-story stone hall made up mostly of classrooms, but the cadet
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barracks and training fields took up the entire city district known as
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the Five Swords Lanes. Towards the end of Dread Emperor Nefarious' reign
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-- which could more accurately be called the beginning of Dread Empress
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Malicia's -- the reform and rapid expansion of the Empire's military had
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forced the Legions to set up a handful of semi-permanent camps outside
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Ater where the vast majority of the cadets actually slept. The old
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College barracks were reserved for students in their final year,
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nowadays, and the more practical classes were taught out in the
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Wasteland instead of in a classroom.
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Within a week of joining, students were assigned to a company of a
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hundred other cadets that would serve as their mother unit for the rest
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of their time at the College. Given that there were around a thousand
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cadets in attendance, the student body was divided along the lines of
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ten companies. Each company had a name and a standard, typically an
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animal from the Wasteland, except for the company at the head of the
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monthly rankings: they were called only the First Company, and the
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competition to hold that title was nothing short of brutal. While
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individual cadet marks in the theoretical classes did affect company
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standing, the real way to rise in the rankings was to win the war games
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held every week in Spite Valley.
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There was an old fort in the valley the Blackguards escorted me to, a
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leftover from the days where the Order of the White Hand had
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occasionally crusaded their way east to Ater itself. After the Conquest
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it had stopped being garrisoned and become the main site for the
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College's war games. The most basic scenarios were favoured: typically
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an attack and defence simulation between to randomly drawn companies,
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though the Headmaster was known to occasionally pit several companies
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against each other in wider games. The valley itself was half a day's
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march away from the capital and large enough that armies in the
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thousands could have gone through. The fort itself was situated on a
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hill guarding the way to Ater, sloping down into the deeper valley where
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a lone watchtower overlooked deep woods and a handful of streams. After
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a long walk the slope rose again, leading to a circle of hills backed by
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a veritable forest of rocky outcroppings: that was where Rat Company had
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elected to make camp, among the hills. I'd been able to see the smoke
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from the campfires long before the company itself.
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Hiking my way through the camp with the legionary garb I'd put on hours
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earlier, I blessed the fact that there'd been a primer on the Legions
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inside the pile of books from Black -- Heavens knew how confusing all
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the terms would have been otherwise.
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The war game was being run between a pair of companies, which meant the
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hundred cadets on each side answered to a single captain. Under the
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captain there would be five lieutenants in charge of a ``line'' of
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twenty soldiers, and under each lieutenant a sergeant. Lines were
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expected to be able to split into two ``tenths'' if the battlefield
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required it, in which case the sergeant would end up in command of the
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second tenth. I felt uncomfortable in my standard-issue chain mail after
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having spent so long wearing a better-fitting armour, but that gear had
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belonged to Squire -- I was `Lieutenant Callow' as long as I attended
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the College, and she wasn't supposed to have access to those kind of
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resources. I found my assigned line milling around a half-built
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campfire, digging into their rations gloomily. My sergeant was easy
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enough to spot, thankfully: a tall orc with the single red stripe of his
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rank sown into his shoulder pad, his skin closer to brown than green. He
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was talking with a particularly skinny goblin sporting the same
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insignia, I saw as I drew closer -- they stopped as soon as they noticed
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me coming, the orc pushing himself up to snap a salute while the goblin
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merely afforded me a curious glance. ``Sergeant Hakram?'' I checked.
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``That would be me,'' the orc said in a gravelly voice. ``You're our new
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lieutenant, then?''
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``Lieutenant Callow,'' I agreed, offering my arm.
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Hakram let out a pleased rumble at the gesture and clasped my forearm.
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``The little pipsqueak next to me is Sergeant Robber, from the Fourth
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line.''
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``Pleasure to meet you, Lieutenant,'' the goblin greeted me. ``I should
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get back to my men before Pickler realizes I'm gone. Luck in battle,
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Hakram.''
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``Wade in their blood, Robber,'' her sergeant replied in one of the most
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common orc forms of farewell. The goblin scuttled away around the hill
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after offering me an amusingly sloppy salute.
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``So which company did you transfer from, Lieutenant?'' Hakram asked.
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``I'm new,'' I replied. ``Never been in any before.''
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``Gods be kind,'' Hakram cursed. ``The Captain's going to have a fit.
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We're already at the bottom of the rankings and now we get a greenie?''
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The orc paused before shooting me an almost apologetic look. ``No
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offence meant, it's just that a seasoned Lieutenant might have made a
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difference tomorrow,'' he continued. ``We're up against First Company,
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and they get to be on defence too.''\textless{}
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``None taken,'' I replied, a little bemused. ``First Company's that
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good?''
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``They haven't lost a single game,'' Hakram grimaced. ``Captain
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Juniper's called the Hellhound for a reason.''
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``They're pitting the best company against the worst?'' I mused. ``That
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hardly seems fair.''
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``Luck of the draw,'' the sergeant offered ruefully. ``Ratface's been
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cursing his heart out since the moment he pulled our number.''
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``The Captain's name is \emph{Ratface}?'' I grinned, letting out a
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startled laugh. I knew that anyone who enrolled in the Legions could do
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it under the name of their choice, but who in the Hundred Hells would
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choose the name Ratface? Hakram grinned back, the sight made more than a
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little intimidating by his razor-sharp teeth.
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``I heard the instructors assigned him to Rat Company just for the
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irony,'' the orc said. ``You should probably head out to the officer's
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meeting, Lieutenant. I'll take care of the watch rotations for the
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night.''
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``The command tent's on the other side of the hill, right?''
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``It's got a standard with rat skulls hanging off it,'' Hakram grinned.
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``Can't miss it.''
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I offered the orc a salute he mirrored crisply and took the dirt trail
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up the hill. The legionary armour felt surprisingly light on my
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shoulders, after a month of traipsing around in plate, even with the
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thick rectangular shield strapped on my back. I missed my own sword
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already, but I supposed to keep a low profile while at the College and
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carrying around anything but standard-issue stock was a sure way to draw
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unwanted questions. Unlike some of the legionaries I'd read about, Rat
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Company didn't seem equipped with the lever-action crossbows. They were
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probably meant to be an assault company, then.
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Like my sergeant had said, the command tent was impossible to miss. It
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was twice as large as anyone else's, for a start, and even if I'd
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somehow managed to miss the standard next to it the War College's
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crossed silver swords were sown into the fabric on every side. There was
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a pair of legionaries standing guard by the entrance but after a cursory
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glance at the twin red stripes on my shoulder they let me through
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without a word. Four armoured legionaries were crouched by a crate
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someone had nailed a map to, most of them looking up at the sound of my
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coming in. I glanced through the room, noting that only half of the
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lieutenants attending were human. The only attending goblin was still
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tracing something on the edge of the map with her crooked fingers,
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looking almost comically small next to the thick, muscled orc at her
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side. A strikingly handsome boy with grey eyes and olive skin gave me a
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brief once-over before letting out a displeased grunt.
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``You'd be Lieutenant Callow, I expect?'' he asked.
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``Reporting for duty, Captain\ldots{}'' I trailed off, wondering if I
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should actually call him by the name I'd been given. It had seemed
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amusing when talking with Hakram, but now it was turning out more along
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the lines of awkward.
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\begin{quote}
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``Ratface,'' the captain finished curtly. ``You weren't in the College
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rolls before being assigned to Rat Company. Would I be correct in
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assuming you're a greenhorn?''
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\end{quote}
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``I've seen combat before,'' I replied. ``And not with blunted swords
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either.''
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``Have you now?'' Ratface smiled, looking anything but friendly. ``Good
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for you. Unfortunately that's worth shit to me, Lieutenant. I don't care
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if you castrated an ogre in single combat, you're still a godsdamned
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greenie legionary they saddled me with on the day before an exercise
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with the First Company.''
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I took a deep breath, wondering if punching my superior officer in his
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fat sneering face on the first day of my assignment would leave a black
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mark on my record. It probably would, so I forced my anger down for the
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moment. Let him whine all he wanted, I'd show what I was worth on the
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battlefield.
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``More dead weight,'' the large greenskin lieutenant cursed softly in
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Kharsum. ``Just what we needed.''
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My eyes flashed with quicksilver anger. I only had so much patience to
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spend. ``You're awfully mouthy for an unblooded boy,'' I replied in the
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same language. ``Looking for a fight?''
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The orc barked out a laugh. ``Hard words,'' he grinned dangerously.
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``Keep a lid on it, greenie, it'd be a shame if I had to knock those
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pretty little human teeth out.''
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The captain sighed, passing a hand through his short curls.
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``Nauk, stop flirting with the rookie,'' he said in Mthethwa, ``we've
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got more pressing matters on our hands. Take a seat, Lieutenant. I
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suppose it's not your fault you were assigned to us.''
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Accepting the tacit apology, I gave a nod in response and went to crouch
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over the map with the others. The parchment laid out the cluster of
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hills Rat Company was camping in with the rocky outcroppings at our back
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as well as the valley separating us from the old fort I'd passed by
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earlier.
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``Juniper will have the valley between us full of scouts,'' Ratface
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announced, ``but our best chance is still hitting them tonight. If we
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try a night assault tomorrow it's a sure bet they'll have had time to
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set up an ambush. Kilian, what did your men see when they got a look
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earlier?''
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A short red-haired lieutenant cleared her throat and pointed out the
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watchtower in the middle of the valley. ``There were at least two lines
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there setting up bonfires,'' the girl murmured. ``If we manage to take
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them out without too many losses we might actually have a shot at taking
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the fort.''
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``My sappers have enough smokers to clog up a whole wall,'' the goblin
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lieutenant said. ``The melee for the rampart will be messy after we land
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the ladders, but if the lieutenant holding the wall panics we have a
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decent shot at punching through to the standard.''
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``Nauk,'' Ratface addressed the orc. ``Your men will take the first wave
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of the assault. Callow, you'll be right behind him.''
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``Understood,'' I replied.
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``Sergeant Hakram knows his business. Frankly, I'd rather have him as
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lieutenant for your line but life is ever full of disappointments,'' the
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captain continued. ``If he tells you you're doing something stupid,
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\emph{listen} to him.'' After a last lingering look at the map, Ratface
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spat in the dirt and raised his head to look us in the eyes. ``We'll get
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moving two hours before dawn,'' he informed the assembled officers.
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``Keep your lines on half-watch, I want our soldiers as rested as they
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can be for the fight. I'll see you all in a few hours.'' We rose and
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saluted, exiting the tent one by one and leaving the captain to his map.
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