746 lines
35 KiB
TeX
746 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-26-junipers-plan}{%
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\section{Chapter 26: Juniper's Plan}\label{chapter-26-junipers-plan}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Never back the Praesi in a corner, son. That's when the
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devil-summoning starts, and it's all downhill from there.''}
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-King Jehan of Callow, addressing the future King Pater the Unheeding
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\end{quote}
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Snatcher had suggested we wait until sundown for the sneak attack, and I
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wasn't inclined to disagree.
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I had a lot of work before me, as it happened. I needed to get a real
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headcount of my remaining cadets, go through our stocks to see what we
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had left munitions-wise and brief my remaining officers on the new plan.
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We were in no danger of being eliminated through officer attrition,
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given that my only missing lieutenant was -- once again -- Ratface but
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I'd already figured out that numbers were the way Juniper was aiming to
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take me out. Wise of her, considering I'd take quite a few legionaries
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to put me down if she cornered me badly enough. My Name was still being
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a temperamental bitch about coughing out power, but I had a feeling that
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if the opposition got too overwhelming it would trigger my Struggle
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aspect again. \emph{Though how much help that would be against a group
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is still up in the air.}
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Though he remained tight-lipped on more general Role lore, I'd managed
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to get some tips on using my own from Black. He'd told me that aspects
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always needed specific conditions to be tapped into, and usually had at
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least one flat limitation. Learn, for example, only applied when I was
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consciously being taught. Trying to pick up a sword trick in the middle
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of a duel would fail every time. As for Struggle, he'd been less helpful
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in puzzling it out: it had not been one of his aspects back when he'd
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been the Squire, and though he'd made a study of Names their powers had
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a way of varying wildly from one Named to another. His guess was that
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the aspect was meant as an equalizer: when I was outclassed, my Name
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would put me on even footing with my opponent for a short amount of
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time. There was no way to be sure whether he was right or not until it
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was put to the test, but his theory had felt\ldots{} right. Like it fit
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in a wider pattern.
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Names were supposed to respond with who you were, and I'd known from the
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moment I'd accepted the Calamity's offer that most of my battles would
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be uphill ones. That my Name had responded to my desire for a way to
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even the playing field made perfect sense to me. I was worrying, though,
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that it would not react the same to multiple opponents. When I'd taken
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Rashid by surprise and stabbed his sorry ass we'd essentially been
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duelling. When I'd jumped over the log in the last war game I'd not been
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tapping into the Struggle, I was pretty sure. Just making use of what
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little power my damaged connection to my Name had made available at the
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time. Would the aspect trigger if I was facing multiple opponents that
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were, strictly speaking, weaker than I? I had my doubts.
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Already I knew that it only reacted to direct threats, or it would have
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reacted when Heiress was outmanoeuvring me in the Tower. I was kind of
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hoping my third aspect would involve a loud alarm blaring in the back of
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my head whenever the Soninke noble was fucking me over, but I doubted it
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would be that easy. There was a sort of twisted duality to my Name and
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hers, one that brought to mind one of the first afternoon lessons with
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my teacher. Most of the time we went over my assigned readings and he
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clarified points or expanded on them, but once in a while he'd strike a
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debate over a subject and the afternoon was spent discussing it. I'd
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learn to both dread and look forward to those particular lessons: I
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always came out having learned something useful, but the conclusions
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could be\ldots{} morally flexible, to put it mildly.
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That time, the subject had been the nature of power. ``Dread Emperor
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Terribilis once said that power is the ability to see your will done,''
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he'd begun. ``Using that as a touchstone, I would classify power in two
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broad types: soft power and hard power.'' Soft power, he'd elaborated,
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was the use of indirect methods and influence. Convincing and coercing
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others to do your bidding through persuasion or social pressure. Though
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I disliked her on a personal level, on an objective one I could see that
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Heiress excelled at that kind of work. She'd managed to turn all the
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other claimants against me back in Summerholm with minimum effort and no
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risk to herself. When we'd met face to face on the Blessed Isle the use
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of force had been a backup plan, not the main thrust of her effort:
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instead she'd offered me something she thought I wanted, in a way that
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would marginalize me as an obstacle to her plans.
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Hard power, by contrast, was where I lived at. Direct application of
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force to dictate your will on others. The way Black had phrased that
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made me uncomfortable, but there was some truth to his words. In the
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end, I was not above imposing what I thought was right and wrong on
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others at the edge of a sword. Even what could be called my one foray
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into soft power, when I'd decided to use the Lone Swordsman as a way to
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set Callow on fire an advance my cause, had been something I'd managed
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to accomplish by forcefully beating the hero first. I still remembered
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the way every one of the claimants for Squire had gone about things
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differently, almost as if the Name was pitting different methods against
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each other to see which was the most worthy. In that light, I did not
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think it was a coincidence that Heiress and I used fundamentally
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different ways of getting what we wanted. We were in a competition,
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clearly, I just wasn't sure for \emph{what}.
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Not that it changed anything. Heiress had been sharpening knives meant
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for my back before we'd ever met, and I did not think she was done
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interfering in the melee yet. The blood magic delay and my shitty
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starting position felt like her hand at work, but that could not be the
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only string to her bow. The two incidents I suspected she was behind had
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damaged my performance, yes, but so far she'd always gone for more
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thorough plots than that. All the moves she'd made before had the
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potential of taking me entirely out of the equation, which meant there
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was likely a third stroke coming for my neck. \emph{But from where?} So
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far she'd interfered through the College, which made sense: it was an
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old institution, one where her family was likely to have pre-existing
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contacts. Pickler had already killed my initial guess of her bribing one
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of the participating captains, which left\ldots{} outside interference?
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That seemed unlikely, with the way Black was bound to be watching all of
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this like a hawk. Heiress was good, but not good enough to pull the wool
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over the eyes of one of the fucking Calamities. I sighed and put the
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matter aside. It was an unfortunate fact that I had a lot more
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difficulty predicting Heiress than she apparently did predicting me.
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\emph{One who prefers soft power is weak to direct confrontation}, I
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remembered Black murmuring over a cup of wine, \emph{but one who uses
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only hard power is easy to entrap. As in all things, balance is
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paramount.} It didn't matter, I decided as I clenched my fingers
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tightly. However sharp the jaws of the trap my rival would have closing
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on me, I would pry them open and throw the whole bloody contraption at
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her head. Adjusting my sword belt -- it had loosened a bit while running
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away from Wolf Company -- I put my helmet back on and returned to my
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cadets.
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My initial count of seventy-one legionaries had been overly optimistic.
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I had that many cadets present, certainly, but not all of them were in
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fighting shape. Damnably, most of the legionaries unfit to fight were in
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my heavies. Getting trampled by a tenth of ogres was not something you
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recovered from in a day, and though Kilian's mages were fairly talented
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they were nowhere close to the kind of ability you'd need to truly heal
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broken bones. They could put them back into place and patch them up, but
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any hard impact would break them right back -- and make them that much
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harder to heal the second time. Flesh could only soak in so much magic
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before it became saturated, the redheaded lieutenant explained to me.
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Trying to push in sorcery past that point would lead to\ldots{} bad
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things. All in all, I had about fifty-five soldiers in fighting shape.
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Most of my own line, the mage half of Kilian's and miraculously all of
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Pickler's sappers. The goblin lieutenant did have a talent for ducking
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out of the way before trouble reached her, one probably helped along by
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the way her sergeant snuck around and compulsively eavesdropped on
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everything.
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``We don't have the numbers to overwhelm Wolf Company anymore,'' I told
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my remaining officers. ``Not even a surprise attack will change that.''
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``We're going for the officers, then,'' Hakram graveled.
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``Finding them will be the real problem,'' I grunted back. ``Even if we
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manage to penetrate the camp quietly, which isn't a given, we'll only
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have so much time before the alarm is sounded.''
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Pickler gently cleared her throat. ``There shouldn't be a problem,
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Captain. Aisha's sapper line is lacking, so they largely stick to the
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book. Their camp layout is Legion standard.''
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I frowned.
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``I'm not seeing the significance of that,'' I admitted.
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Nauk snorted out a laugh. ``It means their officer tents are in
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designated spots for quick assembly,'' he grinned savagely. ``If we move
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quick enough, we could have all their senior officers out before the
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pack wakes.''
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Well now. I'd been due some good news, and this seemed to qualify.
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``I'll need four other people to sneak in with me,'' I decided. ``One
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per target officer. Any of you have recommendations?''
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``Sergeant Robber,'' Pickler immediately offered, not noticing the
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disgruntled look taking hold of Nauk's face. ``He's good at quiet work,
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and you won't find anyone better at taking out sleeping soldiers.''
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Her tone seemed to imply that the last part of that sentence had been a
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compliment. \emph{Goblins}. The Tribes had very definite ideas about the
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way wars should be fought, and most of them would have the knights of
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Old Callow sputtering in mortal outrage. Thankfully, I'd never been
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afflicted by that whole chivalrous ethics mess. The Fields of Streges
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had made it very clear which way worked better when it counted, and in
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the end that was all that mattered.
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``That's two,'' I noted. ``Anyone else?''
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``I'll give you Nilin,'' Nauk grunted. ``My line's not gonna be seeing
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action anyway, so he shouldn't be needed.''
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I nodded.
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``Hakram?'' I prompted.
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``I'd go myself,'' my sergeant graveled, ``but someone needs to attend
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our line. Take Nomusa -- not too tall, for a Soninke, and she packs a
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punch.''
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I turned my eyes to Kilian and found her frowning.
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``I'll come,'' she finally said. ``You might need a mage, and I can be
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quiet if I need to.''
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I hesitated before accepting that. Two sergeants, a lieutenant and the
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company's captain were quite a few assets to risk on a strike that might
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very well fail. \emph{On the other hand, if we don't succeed we're
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pretty much fucked anyways. All or nothing, huh? Should I be worried how
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often that ends up being my play?}
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``Nauk, you'll be in command in my absence,'' I ordered, tacitly
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accepting Kilian's offer.
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The orc in question cleared his throat. ``Where do you want Rat Company
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deployed, then?'' he asked. ``Not to get too obvious, but the moment the
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Wolves are out Snatcher no longer needs us.''
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And there lay the thorniest of the thorns in my godsdamned side. Fox
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Company needed us to bolster their ranks on the walls only so long as
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there were two companies besieging them. If there were only Juniper and
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I left, I couldn't be sure Snatcher wouldn't decide to take his chances
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with the Hellhound and backstab Rat Company. As things stood, with most
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of my troops already behind the first wall I was pretty sure I could
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take his fort from him. But there'd be casualties, and then I'd be stuck
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in the same position he'd let me in to avoid: alone on the hill with
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Aisha and Juniper out for my blood. Not a feasible option, especially
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considering there were tunnels connecting to both their camps. The plan
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Snatcher had proposed was that I would strike at the Wolves under the
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cover of night while he made his move against First Company. On the
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surface that seemed to be on the level, but he'd left himself a door.
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He'd have the option of pulling out after Aisha was done and leave me to
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deal with a pissed off Juniper, shutting the tunnels down behind me.
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Something to avoid as much as possible.
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My options were either to leave my survivors inside with him and have
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them ready for a fight in case he betrayed me or to have Rat Company
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bail out the moment I headed into Aisha's camp. I was leaning more
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towards the second: even if this whole thing went south, I'd still have
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enough troops left to find another angle to victory. \emph{And if I
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manage to drop Aisha while leaving the Foxes mostly intact behind their
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pretty little walls? I'm not sure it's me Juniper will be pointing her
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blade at.} That the Hellhound got to work cracking open Fox Company's
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defences while I found a better position for the final confrontation was
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the best outcome I could hope for. Not that there was any chance of me
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getting there \emph{now}, since just by thinking that I'd pretty much
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sent an engraved invitation to the Gods asking them to piss all over my
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plans.
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Still. It was worth a try.
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``Wait fifteen Hails after my team moves out and then take the company
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north,'' I told him after chewing over my options a little longer.
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``Avoid fighting.''
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The large lieutenant shot me a bewildered look.
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``What the Hells are `Hails','' he growled.
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Kilian snorted. ``It's the time it takes to recite one of their fancy
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House of Light hymns,'' she explained, eyeing me amusedly. ``Wrong gods
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for this neck of the woods, Captain.''
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``Right,'' I coughed, somewhat embarrassed. ``I, er, don't know the
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equivalent for the Gods Below.''
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``About six basic line drills,'' the redheaded lieutenant said after
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pausing an instant to close her eyes and think. ``The Hellgods don't
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really go for hymns, as it happens. Probably safer to stick with Legion
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exercises.''
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Clearly I'd need to actually learn those at some point. My lessons had
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been rather sparse in that regard, as it happened. After teaching me the
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bare essentials of fighting as a legionary, Captain and Black had
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focused on other kinds of swordsmanship. I'd never actually seen my
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teacher use a scutum outside of those first few mornings: Black usually
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favoured a smaller kite shield with his short sword and taught me with
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the same.
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``Duly noted,'' I grunted. ``That should be it for the moment, unless
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anyone else has a point to raise?''
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No one did, and they took heed of the implied dismissal. I motioned for
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Kilian to stick around as the others started leaving, not bothering to
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vocalize the order. The pale-skinned girl looked surprised but she sat
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back down without a comment. I waited for the other officers to be at a
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safe distance before clearing my throat.
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``There's a thing I'd like clarified before we head into combat,'' I
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told her. ``I've heard you can be incapacitated if you draw too much on
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magic -- something about creature blood?''
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The lieutenant sighed, fine lashes fluttering over hazel eyes.
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``Hakram?'' she asked in a resigned tone.
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I snorted. ``Surprisingly enough, no. Got it out of Nauk.''
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``Like he's one to talk, the bloody failed berserker,'' she muttered.
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``I don't mean to pry into personal matters,'' I said. Not strictly
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true, but I figured I might as well pretend not to be nosy. ``I just
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want to know how it might affect things.''
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Either she bought that or she was polite enough to pretend to. Pushing
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back a strand of red hair into the sides of her pixie cut, the
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lieutenant took a deep breath.
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``My grandmother was one of the Fae,'' she said.
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I blinked in surprise. ``Like the ones in the Waning Woods, or does that
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mean something different in Praes?''
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She eyed me cautiously. ``I keep forgetting you're Callowan,'' she
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admitted. ``The Fae are\ldots{} not popular around here, even in the
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Green Stretch.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``I mean, they kill Callowans too whenever one's
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stupid enough to go too deep into the forest but it's not exactly a big
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deal. They never wander out and the path to Refuge is supposed to be
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safe.''
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``The benefits of having a former Calamity ruling your city,'' Kilian
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noted. ``The blood's pretty diluted, but I still got some things out of
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it. Mostly the unusual hair and some mage tricks that require control
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beyond what most humans can manage.''
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``I'm not really seeing downsides, so far,'' I pointed out. ``Well,
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besides the racism. But that was kind of given already, what with you
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being Duni.''
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``Isn't it just?'' she replied bitterly. ``You'd think with the fucking
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\emph{Black Knight} being one of us they'd start holding their tongues,
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but it doesn't seem to have changed anything.'' She took another deep
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breath, forcing herself to return to the original subject. ``Anyway.
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You'll note I don't have wings, which Fae are supposed to have. Whenever
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I draw in too much power my body tries to make some, which fucks with my
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head and occasionally makes me lose control over the magic.''
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``That sound bad,'' I contributed helpfully.
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``Pretty bad,'' she agreed with the ghost of a smile.
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``But you know your limits?'' I probed.
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``Learned them the hard way,'' Kilian grimaced.
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``All I needed to know,'' I told her, clapping her shoulder in
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reassurance. ``I'll let you brief your tenth, I need to have a talk with
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Captain Snatcher.''
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She nodded and I rose to my feet, rolling my shoulder under the chain
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mail. Wearing it for so long was killing my muscles, especially without
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a proper aketon under to soften the weight. Legionaries were issued
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something thinner than the padded jacket I was used to, though
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admittedly mine was meant to be worn with mail.
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``Captain,'' Kilian suddenly called out.
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I half-turned to meet her eyes. ``Lieutenant?''
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``Thank you,'' she said, looking away.
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``Any time, Kilian,'' I replied quietly.
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I hated the part of myself that coldly noted she was more loyal to me
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now than ever before, but I did not ignore it. \emph{Guilt is fine.
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Healthy, even. But I will not let it stop me}. Thumb rubbing the hilt of
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my sword, I went to find Snatcher. There were still details to hash out,
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and all of my ambitions would be for naught if I lost today.
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Arranging a meeting ended up a more complicated matter than I would have
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thought. Snatcher was inside the fort, and that meant going across the
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-- possibly -- mined field. I asked one of the sergeants still at the
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wall and he informed me that my fellow captain had left instructions
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that I be escorted to him if I asked. I was guided across on a hilarious
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overcomplicated path by a cadet in what I suspected was far from the
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most efficient route. I did my best to commit it to memory anyway: for
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all I knew, I might need to use it before the melee was done. To my
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surprise, I came to find the goblin captain doing manual labour. The
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wooden platform I'd glimpsed earlier today was being linked to the
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ground by a minimalist ramp: Snatcher was part of a group of half a
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dozen goblins laying the finishing touches on it. He gestured for one of
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the sentries to replace him when he saw me, patting down his clothes to
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get some of the dust out of them.
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``Captain Callow,'' he greeted me. ``I take it you're done briefing your
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officers?''
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``They'll be read when the time comes,'' I agreed. ``Just one last thing
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to go over with you -- I'll be taking a small team through the tunnels,
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not the entire company. Lieutenant Nauk will be taking most of my cadets
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north while I'm targeting Aisha's officers.''
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I did not phrase it as a request because it was not up for debate.
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Snatcher studied me with a calm face.
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``Fair enough,'' he conceded. ``I'll notify my officers. One of my
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cadets has volunteered to guide you through the tunnels.'' He paused.
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``If I may say so, Captain Callow, you're a rather quick study. It has
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been a pleasure to work with you.''
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``The same to you,'' I replied, somewhat surprised to find I meant it.
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Snatcher was a pleasant enough sort, and by far the politest goblin I'd
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ever come across. Talking with General Sacker had been like having a
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knife at my throat the whole time, I couldn't help but think that
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Pickler was only ever half-listening when I spoke and the less said
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about Robber the better. I enjoyed the malevolent little sergeant, true,
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but if he ever met politeness in a dark alley he'd knife it and rob the
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corpse.
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``All of the Deoraithe attending the College show promise,'' the other
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captain noted. ``It's a shame so few of you actually serve in the
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Legions afterwards.''
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I'd had no idea whatsoever that there were any of the People around, but
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I kept my surprise off of my face. \emph{Why the Hells would Deoraithe
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go through a Praesi officer school?}
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``You're the first Praesi I've heard referring to them as anything other
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than Wallerspawn,'' I replied instead, subtly steering the subject away
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from my ignorance.
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Snatcher shrugged.
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``The Grey Eyries are a long way from the Wall,'' he replied. ``Unlike
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the Clans, the Tribes have no bloody history with the Duchy of Daoine
|
|
and no grudge to go along with it.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded slowly. That was good to know. It was hard to break the habit
|
|
of thinking of the Empire as a monolithic entity: even now that I'd
|
|
learned of the different forces at work inside of it I still had a
|
|
tendency to assume general opinions remained the same regardless of
|
|
ethnicity. I considered leaving the conversation at that, but my eyes
|
|
flicked to the platform and I decided to push my luck.
|
|
|
|
``If you don't mind my asking,'' I spoke, ``what is that thing for? I've
|
|
been wondering since Rat Company first set camp.''
|
|
|
|
Snatcher smiled a tad nastily, though the nastiness did not feel like it
|
|
was directed at me.
|
|
|
|
``My little surprise for Juniper,'' he replied. ``Did you pay attention
|
|
to the stocks?''
|
|
|
|
I nodded. ``Though I don't recall anything shedding light on this.''
|
|
|
|
``It's a common mistake to only keep track of the munitions,'' the
|
|
goblin said. ``It leads people to miss things like my requesting a large
|
|
bowstring, nails and iron plate.''
|
|
|
|
A large bowstring? What would he use that for? I frowned. Fox Company
|
|
was, at its core, a sapper company. The function of the sappers in the
|
|
broader Legion was the use of goblin munitions, the building of
|
|
fortifications and\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``I thought siege weaponry was forbidden,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Bringing one is forbidden,'' Snatcher corrected me. ``The regulations
|
|
say nothing about \emph{building} one.''
|
|
|
|
Another detail fell into place.
|
|
|
|
``So that's why my scouts found tracks coming from the woods. You were
|
|
bringing back materials to work with.''
|
|
|
|
``It was a gamble,'' Snatcher admitted. ``There was no way of telling
|
|
whether or not our battlefield would have lumber on it, and I must admit
|
|
the ballista we've cobbled together is rather crude.''
|
|
|
|
A \emph{ballista}. Weeping Heavens, and to think I'd believed his
|
|
company would be the easiest to deal with. And since the better part of
|
|
his company was goblins, starting bombardment during night time would
|
|
make no difference to him. He interpreted my silence as worry, and to be
|
|
honest he wasn't entirely wrong -- I really hoped Juniper was the one
|
|
who ended up having to take this fort, because I didn't think my own men
|
|
could pull it off.
|
|
|
|
``No cause for alarm,'' he assured me. ``We'll only begin firing after
|
|
either you've taken out Wolf Company or conspicuously failed in doing
|
|
so.''
|
|
|
|
``Very kind of you,'' I faintly replied.
|
|
|
|
Thanks all the Hells I hadn't stuck to my original deal with Aisha: it
|
|
would have been a bloody rout.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I already knew all of my team except for Nomusa.
|
|
|
|
I recognized her from my line when she met us at the head of the tunnel,
|
|
but we'd never actually talked before. She was Soninke, like Hakram had
|
|
said, and only a head taller than me -- which qualified as short by the
|
|
standards of her people. She was missing a finger and there was a nasty
|
|
burn mark in the hollow of her cheek I decided not to ask about. Nilin I
|
|
already knew, having shared drinks with him in the aftermath of the last
|
|
game, and smiled at him when he arrived. Robber had already been there
|
|
when I'd arrived, skulking around and managing to look suspicious
|
|
without actually doing anything concrete. It was a skill he'd perfected
|
|
through years of hard work, or so he'd informed me cheerfully. Kilian
|
|
was the last to show up, slightly out of breath. When she fell behind me
|
|
in silence our guide for the night finally opened his eyes and rose to
|
|
his feet.
|
|
|
|
``My name is Hatcher,'' he informed us curtly. ``I see none of you
|
|
brought your scutum, which is good -- the tunnel is tight enough without
|
|
dragging along a shield. It'll be dark in there, so keep close to me.''
|
|
|
|
Without further ado he scuttled into the hole in the ground. I was the
|
|
first to follow and a short drop later I was on solid ground again,
|
|
crawling on my knees. For once in my life I was glad of my height: even
|
|
Nilin would find the tunnel a tight fit, and Hakram wouldn't have
|
|
managed more than a few feet before getting stuck. We waited until
|
|
everyone dropped and so began our wriggling in the dark. Progress was
|
|
damnably slow and the air felt thin, but after an eternity of making
|
|
like worms the tunnel broadened a bit and Hatcher told us to take a
|
|
break.
|
|
|
|
``We've passed the first wall,'' he told me. ``Only a bit further now.''
|
|
|
|
``Do you know where in the camp we'll be coming out?'' I muttered back.
|
|
|
|
``The tunnel splits around there in four different directions,'' he
|
|
replied. ``Most are close to the middle, but you'll be going in blind.''
|
|
|
|
``Lucky us,'' I grunted.
|
|
|
|
Without my Name I would not have seen him glare at me in the dark. Soon
|
|
after we resumed the crawl, and around what I estimated to be the tenth
|
|
Hail the tunnel broadened again, splitting in the directions as he'd
|
|
mentioned. Hatcher tapped a hand against the wall of the centre one.
|
|
|
|
``That one's the best situated,'' he spoke. ``You should send two people
|
|
there, split the others.''
|
|
|
|
``You heard the man,'' I murmured. ``Nilin and Kilian, take that one.''
|
|
|
|
``The rightmost tunnel goes a bit further,'' Hatcher told me. ``I'll
|
|
show you the way.''
|
|
|
|
Presumptuous of him to assume I'd take that one, but I saw no point in
|
|
arguing. Robber and Nomusa headed into theirs while I followed the Fox
|
|
Company legionary. The tunnel tightened again, much to my dismay, and
|
|
our progress slowed. I peered over Hatcher's soldier and my blood ran
|
|
cold when I saw that up ahead was a dead end. \emph{Trap. Shit.}
|
|
|
|
``Just a moment,'' Hatcher spoke. ``Something wrong with the ceiling
|
|
here, I need to have a closer look.''
|
|
|
|
His hand slowly moved towards a small hole in the wall ground under him,
|
|
where I glimpsed clay balls. My hand went for my sword and slowly,
|
|
silently, I unsheathed it.
|
|
|
|
``You ever been to Summerholm, Captain?'' Hatcher asked.
|
|
|
|
``Only the once,'' I replied, shifting around to get a better angle to
|
|
strike.
|
|
|
|
``Never been, myself,'' he casually spoke. ``But my cousin did. She
|
|
never came back, Squ-''
|
|
|
|
I rammed the pommel of my sword into the back of his head before he
|
|
could finish the monologue covering his motivation. \emph{Amateur}. He
|
|
yelped but the angle had been awkward and he wasn't knocked out. He
|
|
dropped the sharper though, and that was what mattered. He threw himself
|
|
at me but I was ready -- releasing my sword I caught his hands and
|
|
forced him down. Hissing furiously, he bared his teeth and tried for my
|
|
throat but I head-butted him violently. His nose broke and I did it
|
|
again, twice as hard. He screamed but his struggling weakened,
|
|
eventually ceasing entirely.
|
|
|
|
``I'm guessing you're talking about Chider,'' I spoke quietly.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Murderer},'' he garbled out.
|
|
|
|
``The hero was the one to kill her, actually,'' I replied. ``Though I
|
|
won't deny I would have done it myself if it came down to it.''
|
|
|
|
``They'll get you,'' he sneered through the blood. ``Sooner or later,
|
|
someone will. Little Callowan playing the Squire. You're a joke and
|
|
everyone knows it.''
|
|
|
|
``Let me guess,'' I sighed. ``You got the information through an
|
|
anonymous source right before the beginning of the melee?''
|
|
|
|
A flicker of doubt went through his eyes but, as desperate sorts are
|
|
wont to do, he doubled down instead of folding.
|
|
|
|
``No idea what you're talking about,'' he mocked.
|
|
|
|
How many other knives had Heiress pointed at me this way, I wondered?
|
|
How many other legionaries in the melee were out to kill me if they
|
|
could? I'd need to watch my back very, very closely.
|
|
|
|
``The part that confuses me is how you thought you'd get away with
|
|
this,'' I admitted. ``The College is scrying this whole thing as it
|
|
happens.''
|
|
|
|
``Can't scry underground, you ignorant sow,'' he spat.
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' I said softly. ``That changes things.''
|
|
|
|
There was a look in the goblin's eyes I recognized from the Pit. The one
|
|
sore losers got, the kind of opponents who knew they'd lost the fight
|
|
but were already thinking of the next one. He wasn't going to stop. He'd
|
|
come for me again. Not tonight, not even tomorrow but one day he would
|
|
try his luck a second time.
|
|
|
|
``You know, the first night I met him, he told me it didn't get
|
|
easier,'' I told the goblin softly.
|
|
|
|
A trickle of power ran through me as my Name stirred, strengthening my
|
|
grip. Hand moving with swift purpose, I broke Hatcher's neck.
|
|
|
|
``It was,'' I decided, ``a very kind lie.''
|
|
|
|
Softly, I closed the cadet's eyes and let out a long breath. I picked up
|
|
my sword and sheathed it, turning around to crawl back the way I'd come
|
|
from. I still had a game to win. And no time to think about what a
|
|
stupid, meaningless way it had been for that cadet to die.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I surfaced after having taken the tunnel I'd sent Nilin and Kilian
|
|
through, the one closest to the centre of the camp.
|
|
|
|
The exit was hidden behind a stone much too large to move easily,
|
|
covered so it wouldn't be seen at a casual glance. I pushed myself out
|
|
and knelt in the dirt, holding my breath to hear there were any sentries
|
|
close by. A few heartbeats later, satisfied there were none, I rose up
|
|
to a half-crouch and took a better look at my surroundings. I was a
|
|
little to the south of where I needed to be, if I remembered Pickler's
|
|
drawing correctly. The captain's tent was supposed to be in the very
|
|
centre of the camp, where the two main avenues crossed. Aisha had been
|
|
the target I'd chosen for myself, as she was the most likely to have
|
|
guards around her -- I had a few trump cards at my disposal that the
|
|
rest of my team didn't if things got out of control. Admittedly the
|
|
cards were fickle and still rather displeased with me at the moment, but
|
|
they were still nominally in my hand.
|
|
|
|
Wolf Company seemed to be largely asleep and there shouldn't be any
|
|
sentries this deep inside the camp, but I still moved carefully. I
|
|
passed by two rows of tents nestled close to each other, pausing when I
|
|
saw torchlight lighting up the space ahead. I peered around the corner
|
|
of a tent and grimaced when I saw that there was still light in what
|
|
looked like Aisha's tent. Worse, there was a pair of legionaries
|
|
standing next to the entry flaps -- orcs, and not small ones either.
|
|
Would it be worth it to circle around and try my way by the back? The
|
|
longer I waited the higher the chance of getting caught, of course, but
|
|
it might be wiser to take a chance than go for the noisy front assault.
|
|
I was late already, thanks to Hatcher's failed assassination plot, but I
|
|
shouldn't be a problem as long as -- I tensed, waiting for the alarm to
|
|
ring. Silence.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Huh}, I mused. \emph{This might actually go as planned}.
|
|
|
|
A horn sounded a heartbeat later and I decided that if I ever came face
|
|
to face with a god I was going to stab it somewhere painful. Casually I
|
|
started walking in the direction of Bishara's tent, not quite hurrying
|
|
but definitely not slowly. The guards had snapped to full attention the
|
|
moment the horn sounded, and \emph{fuck} had one of my legionaries
|
|
failed? This wouldn't work if we didn't get all of the senior officers.
|
|
I saw the closest orc glance at me and then to something in the distance
|
|
-- \emph{that's right, nothing to see here, just one of your legionaries
|
|
assembling} -- but the gaze snapped back.
|
|
|
|
``INTRUDER!'' she yelled, but I was already running. ``TO THE CAPTAIN!''
|
|
|
|
She barely had the time to bring her shield up before I bodily slammed
|
|
into it, knocking her back. The other guard tried to strike my neck but
|
|
I angled my head and it bounced off my helmet. The hit still hurt, but I
|
|
gritted my teeth and stumbled through the flaps to the tent. Aisha was
|
|
inside, tightening her sword belt without having even bothered to put on
|
|
a shirt.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Callow}?'' she squawked. ``What the-``
|
|
|
|
The flat of my blade, swung two-handed, struck her on the temple before
|
|
she could reach for her sword. A moment later someone struck me in the
|
|
back and I was thrown to the ground, rolling to get to my feet as a very
|
|
angry orc tried to bash my head in with their shield. I ducked behind
|
|
Aisha's cot, sneaking a look at Wolf Company's captain while a pair of
|
|
furious orcs turned the wooden frame to kindling. She was out like a
|
|
light, most likely concussed.
|
|
|
|
``This has been great,'' I told the legionaries, backing away to the
|
|
edge of the tent, ``but this is getting a little serious for me. I'm not
|
|
sure I'm ready for that kind of commitment.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm going to take this out of your hide, \emph{Rat},'' the male orc
|
|
spoke in a surprisingly mellow voice.
|
|
|
|
And that was my cue to make a daring escape. I kicked the tent pole I'd
|
|
managed to position myself next to. It did not fall.
|
|
|
|
``Dug into the ground, huh,'' I spoke into the incredulous silence.
|
|
``Bummer.''
|
|
|
|
Well, what was going to follow was not going to be pleasant. I could
|
|
already hear reinforcements closing in. Actually, I could hear them
|
|
screaming. In dismay.
|
|
|
|
``I don't suppose one of you could check the sky?'' I asked. ``I
|
|
think-``
|
|
|
|
Thunder rumbled. Sheathing my sword, I raised my hands up in surrender
|
|
and carefully walked back out of the tent -- one of the orcs shouldered
|
|
me as I went by, but I was a magnanimous winner and so allowed it to
|
|
pass without comment. The night sky was streaked with the beautiful
|
|
image of Wolf Company's standard, a red streak across it. The sweet
|
|
taste of victory was a little harder to enjoy with a crowd of hostile
|
|
legionaries gathering around me, but after a moment Nilin pushed his way
|
|
through them and to me with a wide grin on his face.
|
|
|
|
``Captain,'' he said, sounding almost disbelieving. ``We did it. I mean,
|
|
I thought maybe we could pull it off, but we \emph{actually pulled it
|
|
off}.''
|
|
|
|
His babbling was actually somewhat endearing. I clapped his shoulder
|
|
with a smile of my own.
|
|
|
|
``We should have one Hell of a spectacle starting soon, sergeant,'' I
|
|
told him. ``Captain Snatcher's minions made a ballista, and by now they
|
|
should be ready to bombard First Company.''
|
|
|
|
``So that's what the platform was for,'' he mused. ``I'd been
|
|
wondering.''
|
|
|
|
Kilian came around a corner and I waved her over, ignoring the multitude
|
|
of glares coming in my direction. She put a spring to her step and
|
|
joined us, Wolf Company parting for her as they started dispersing.
|
|
|
|
``Lieutenant Kilian,'' I grinned. ``Come on, we need to find a good
|
|
vantage point.''
|
|
|
|
She raised an eyebrow. ``Why would we-''
|
|
|
|
Thunder rumbled. \emph{What?} I looked up, and next to the red-slashed
|
|
wolf a fox glared back down on me. Ignoring my legionaries, I headed for
|
|
the peak of the hill Wolf Company had built their camp on. First
|
|
Company's camp looked untouched, the few fires surrounded by tents in it
|
|
slowly dying down. What had happened? Snatcher hadn't so much as thrown
|
|
a stone. \emph{Wait, where are the sentries?} Not a single legionary was
|
|
patrolling the perimeter. There should have been someone, if only
|
|
because of the ruckus my team had made hitting the Wolves. Slowly I felt
|
|
my stomach sinking and I turned my eyes to Fox Company's walls. In the
|
|
distance, over the fort's ramparts, a standard bearing crossed silver
|
|
swords flapped lazily in the night breeze.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' I said. ``That's going to be a problem.
|