557 lines
26 KiB
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557 lines
26 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-4-return}{%
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\chapter{Return}\label{chapter-4-return}}
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\epigraph{``Home is wherever you can order someone drowned and not get any
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odd looks.''}{Dread Emperor Malignant III}
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\emph{He'd found a spot ringed by bushes a little off the road. It must
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have been used by travellers: there were still ashes from the last time
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someone had lit a fire. Gathering wood was a little trickier than usual
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since he had his mother's sword instead of a hatchet, but he'd managed
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without cutting off any of his limbs. No bedroll for him, though his
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cloak was thick enough it would serve just as well -- it wouldn't be his
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first time sleeping out in the wild. He wasn't close enough to the
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Wasteland for the things that roamed the night out there to be an issue,
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thank the Gods Below. There was a rustle in the bushes ahead and the
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green-eyed boy's hand dropped to his sword. Fate was ever fond of its
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little ironies. Still, bandits this close to Satus? Unusual. He'd heard
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the freeholder militia kept the land safe, or at least as safe as land
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could get in the Empire. After a moment a dark-skinned boy around his
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age emerged from the greens, looking a little harried.}
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``\emph{Good evening,'' the stranger said.}
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\emph{His voice was deep and smooth, the kind you could listen to for
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hours even if the conversation was boring. Amadeus' fingers relaxed
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against the hilt of the sword but did not leave it entirely. No point in
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taking any stupid risks.}
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``\emph{Evening,'' he replied cautiously.}
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``\emph{I ask for the shelter of your fire, traveller,'' the other boy
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said, tone ceremonial.}
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``\emph{Granted,'' Amadeus answered, keeping his relief off his face.}
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\emph{He was familiar with the Taghreb custom: the stranger had just
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agreed there would be no violence between them until dawn. The other
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boy's skin was too dark for him to be one of the desert-dwellers, but at
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the moment he wasn't inclined to look a gift horse in the mouth.}
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``\emph{Oh thank the Gods,'' the other traveler said, running a hand
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through his short black hair. ``I was beginning to think I'd have to
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roll up under a tree for the night.''}
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\emph{Amadeus raised an eyebrow.}
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``\emph{You don't know how to make a fire?''}
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\emph{The other boy flashed him a grin, white teeth gleaming in the
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fire's light.}
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``\emph{Not the sort you use in a camp,'' he replied, licks of blue
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flame wreathing his hand for a moment before dissipating into
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nothingness.}
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``\emph{Useful trick,'' the green-eyed boy said. ``Mage?''}
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\emph{The stranger nodded.}
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``\emph{I go by Apprentice. You?''}
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The dream stayed with me long after I woke.
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A warning or an introduction? If I wasn't mistaken the boy who'd come
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out of the bushes had been Warlock, long before he claimed his current
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Name. The vision had been shorter than the glimpses I usually got and,
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well, arguably not as important. The dreams I'd dreamt before had always
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been turning points in Black's life, lessons he learned or taught.
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\emph{Unless this was a turning point.} There was no denying that
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without a mage of the Warlock's calibre on his side much of what Black
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had accomplished would have been beyond his reach. Ultimately, I sighed
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and put the whole thing aside. The meaning would become clear in due
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time, I imagined.
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We were halfway through the month of Taj by the time the Fifteenth got
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to Summerholm. There'd never been any question of our being accommodated
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inside the city-fortress: what remained of the Twelfth took up all the
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available space and then some. Some citizens had apparently been forced
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to quarter soldiers and I could just imagine how well \emph{that} had
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gone over. It hadn't even been a year since the hangings, after all, and
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no one held grudges quite like Callowans. My legion would need to
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trickle through the city and settle in one of the now-abandoned camps on
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the western bank. I'd elected to enter Summerholm ahead of the ranks,
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fully expecting I'd meet with General Afolabi at some point. My weekly
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scrying sessions with Black had me mostly up to date on the state of the
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war but I'd be better to have the perspective of someone with boots on
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the ground. How friendly the general would actually be was still
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unknown, though. Afolabi Magoro was old Soninke nobility, and though I
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doubted anyone so high up the food chain would be affiliated with the
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Truebloods, being a racist asshole didn't exactly disqualify people from
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command in the Legions. That he'd lost almost a quarter of the Twelfth
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to the rebels when they rose up in Marchford wasn't doing much to
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inspire hope in that regard.
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I reined up Zombie ahead of the bridge, more for show than anything
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else. The undead horse responded to my will, not actual physical
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stimulus. Squinting ahead to see who Nauk had picked for my escort
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yielded a pleasant surprise: Nilin was patiently waiting a little
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further ahead, flanked by a pair of lines from his cohort. That Nauk had
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sent his Senior Tribune to escort me was a little surprising given how
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heavily I knew the orc relied on the man's organisational skills, but I
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supposed he'd decided to keep my safety in the family, so to speak.
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While I'd been careful not to show outright favouritism, there was no
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denying I was a lot closer to the officers who'd followed me into the
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Fifteenth from Rat Company. The calm-eyed Soninke saluted when I trotted
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Zombie up to him -- if he was uncomfortable at standing so close to a
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necromantic construct, there was no trace of it on his face. \emph{Then
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again, Praesi don't really get worked up about necromancy.} That made
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sense, in a way: more often than not, if there were undead on the field
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they'd be on the Empire's side.
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``Lady Squire,'' Nilin greeted me.
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``Tribune,'' I replied a tad drily.
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I'd already made my opinion of formality between us perfectly clear, and
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though he acceded to my wishes whenever we went for drinks he defaulted
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to titles whenever we were in public. The dark-skinned man rolled his
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eyes at the unspoken dig.
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``Are you ready to enter the city?'' he asked.
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``Juniper's already handling the marching orders,'' I shrugged. ``Might
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as well bite the blade and get the politics over with.''
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Nilin nodded and whistled sharply. The lines fell behind us in good
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order, the Tribune himself keeping pace with my horse's gait with little
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effort. I cast a pensive look at the legionaries following us, idly
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rubbing a thumb against the hilt of my sword. Soon I'd need to assemble
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a retinue of my own, my personal equivalent to my teacher's Blackguards.
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I'd been given no limit on the size of it, though given that I'd have to
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feed and equip them from my own pocket I'd have to keep it manageable. I
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was currently getting paid the equivalent of a general's salary, an
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income that made the savings I'd brought from Callow with me laughable
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in comparison. By Laurean standards I had the means of a merchant from
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the upper crust, though I still fell way short of most landed nobles.
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I'd have to be careful who I took in, though. My retinue would serve to
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handle the matters I couldn't pursue through the Fifteenth as well as my
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personal security, which made me reluctant to involve Praesi. \emph{Not
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an urgent matter yet}, I decided. While I'd been lost in my own thoughts
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Nilin had apparently turned his attention to the bridge we were
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crossing, seemingly fascinated with the construction.
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``I'm not seeing much here but stone,'' I told him, shaking him out of
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his own introspection.
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The dark-skinned man cleared his throat, mildly embarrassed. ``I have
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something of an interest in architecture,'' he admitted. ``The way
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Callowans adapted Miezan engineering is completely different than ours
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-- the style is purely local, but the underlying principles are the
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same.''
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I cocked my head to the side. ``A good bridge, then?''
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``It won't last as long as the structures on the Blessed Isle, but I'd
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consider it vastly superior to anything else in Callow. Or even some
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parts of Praes, to be honest.''
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I filed that away for further reference, though I was more interested in
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this previously-unseen aspect of the tribune.
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``I hadn't pegged you for the scholarly type,'' I informed him.
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The Soninke shrugged. ``I was on the Imperial ticket before the War
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College,'' he replied. ``I considered taking the sapper classes before
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falling in with Nauk, but the command track had better career
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prospects.''
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I blinked in surprise. ``You attended one of the Imperial schools? I
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think you're the first student from there I met. I honestly still have a
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hard time believing the Tower funds free education.''
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Nilin chuckled, the sound halfway between bitter and amused.
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``Free is a bit of a stretch, Lady Squire,'' he told me. ``Students
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might not need to pay in gold, but we are bound to serve the Tower for
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time equivalent to the span of our education -- either as public
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servants or soldiers.''
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I grimaced. That \emph{did} sound a little more like the Empire I knew.
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``So how'd you end up in the College from there?'' I asked. ``Don't get
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me wrong, I'm glad you're under my command but the War College isn't
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exactly a scholarly institution.''
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``I placed among the first five students of my year, so I was offered a
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full scholarship for the College,'' Nilin explained. ``Not where I
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thought I'd end up, but it beat ending up as a tax collector in
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Callow.''
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``I'm sure you would have been a splendidly efficient tax collector,'' I
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replied loyally, though I couldn't quite hide the twitch of my lips.
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``No doubt,'' the Soninke replied dryly. ``Still, it would have been a
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shame to miss all this excitement. Nauk's been rather eager to sink his
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teeth into a real battle and I must admit the enthusiasm is
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contagious.''
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I raised an eyebrow: neither his face nor his tone had been in any way
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affected by this supposed enthusiasm, though I supposed that was kind of
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Nilin's way. When the Rat Company veterans went drinking, he was the
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only one who never got rowdy when drunk -- the most affected I'd ever
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seen him was when he'd spent half a bell lecturing Robber on why it was
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exceedingly rude to insinuate people from Wolof still practiced mass
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sacrifice in the Maze of Kilns. We spent the rest of the walk across the
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bridge in idle chit chat, a pleasant distraction from what lay ahead of
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me. Still, soon enough we arrived at the gates. The tall bronze-forged
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doors were wide open and it seemed like General Afolabi had been
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expecting me. A line of legionaries was waiting by the sentries,
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standing ramrod straight now that I'd come into view. The officer among
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them came forward and I was pleasantly surprised to note she was a
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Senior Tribune: Afolabi could have gotten away with sending me someone
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lower in rank as a greeter. That he'd bothered sending someone that
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high-ranking was a good sign.
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``Ma'am,'' the woman welcomed me with a sharp salute. ``Welcome to
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Summerholm. The General sends his compliments on making such good
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time.''
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``Very kind of him,'' I replied easily. ``Your name, soldier?''
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``Senior Tribune Fadia,'' she introduced herself. ``I'm to be your
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escort in the city.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``I wasn't aware the situation in Summerholm
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warranted an additional line to complement my own guard.''
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The Senior Tribune's lips thinned. ``I've been instructed to answer all
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your questions until the general can meet you,'' she replied. ``But, if
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I may, this is not the kind of conversation that should be had in the
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open. Rooms have been made available to you in the Comital Palace for
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rest and refreshments.''
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\emph{Very cagey}, I decided. But not disrespectful, so there was no
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need to burn goodwill by pressing the matter here. What exactly was
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going on in Summerholm? The city was far enough away from the frontlines
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of the Liesse Rebellion that there shouldn't be any risk of assault. Not
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to mention that attacking a place as heavily fortified as this one would
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be bald idiocy. Was this relating to Warlock? The Calamity was, as far
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as I knew, still in the city.
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``Lead on, then, Senior Tribune,'' I finally replied.
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One of these days, I was going to manage a Summerholm visit where nobody
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tried to kill me. \emph{But odds are it isn't going to be this one.}
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---
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The Comital Palace was remarkably austere, compared to its equivalent in
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Laure.
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It wasn't an entirely unexpected development. The Counts of Summerholm
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had always been the martial sorts, even back when they'd ruled a petty
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kingdom of their own before the founding of Callow. The room I'd been
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given was smaller than the one Black had set aside for me in his own
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Ater estate but it was comfortable nonetheless: the furniture was
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expensive imported Liessen wood and freshly polished. The tapestries
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adorning the walls depicted hunts or battles, and if the amount of
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Imperial defeats showing was any indication nobody had bothered to
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change them since the Conquest. A carafe of cooled wine was waiting for
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me on the antechamber's table when I entered, flanked by a pair of
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glasses. It was a little early in the day to start drinking, but the sun
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had been out in force and I'd worked up a thirst -- I poured myself a
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glass and offered the same to Nilin, though my minion declined. Senior
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Tribune Fadia stood uncomfortably as I claimed a seat with a little sigh
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of pleasure, my own Senior Tribune coming to stand at my right like an
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unflappable gargoyle.
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``The information I'm about to share is considered restricted,'' Fadia
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spoke, too polite to outright say she'd like me to send Nilin out of the
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room.
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Well bully for her, because he wasn't going anywhere. I'd already made
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as much of a concession as I intended to make by keeping my legionaries
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out in the corridors.
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``I wouldn't have brought Senior Tribune Nilin at all if I didn't trust
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him,'' I replied flatly. ``Now what exactly is going on here, soldier?
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My patience is running thin.''
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The woman cleared her throat. ``We have reason to suspect there are
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heroes in the city.''
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I closed my eyes and leaned back in my seat, rubbing the bridge of my
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nose. ``Of course that fucker decided to make an appearance,'' I
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complained. ``Clearly, the situation wasn't volatile enough already --
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and wait, did you say \emph{heroes}?''
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It'd taken me a moment to notice the plural.
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``Our assessment is at least two,'' Fadia said. ``Likely more.''
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``Whatever happened to the \emph{Lone} in Lone Swordsman?'' I griped.
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``This is unacceptable. Do you see Black prancing about in white robes?
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It's called a Name, not a Suggestion.''
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The woman made a noncommittal noise, face blank and eyes just a little
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too wide.
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``The Lady Squire isn't one to blame the messenger, Senior Tribune,''
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Nilin spoke calmly. ``There is no need to fear for your life.''
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Fadia let out a ragged breath. Huh. Had that been why she'd been so
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nervous around me? I supposed I could see where she was coming from. For
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all that my teacher and his associates were the practical sorts, they
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were just the latest generation in a long tradition of villainy. I'd
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read enough about past Tyrants to know that killing the bearers of bad
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news had been one of the milder vices they'd displayed. I'd have to go a
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long way to ever top forcing a High Lord to build an alligator pit at
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their own expense just to push them into it.
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``Has the general been able to identify any of the heroes?'' I asked.
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The Senior Tribune nodded. ``We know a Thief is currently active in the
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city. A recent theft fits the pattern she displayed when she was last in
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Summerholm.''
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I cocked my head to the side. ``What did she steal?''
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``Keys,'' Fadia replied. ``Several sets, most of them giving access to
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military infrastructure.''
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I frowned. ``I have a hard time believing a Thief would need keys to --
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\emph{ah}. There's enough of them they expect to be operating at
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multiple places simultaneously.''
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``That is General Afolabi's conclusion as well,'' she nodded. ``Lord
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Warlock has set up defensive wards over key positions, but he's informed
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us that they have counter-measures blocking his scrying.''
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``Then they have either a priest or a mage of some talent,'' Nilin
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contributed quietly. ``This is not a probe, they're here for a specific
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reason.''
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I frowned. Had my old buddy the Swordsman come to settle our
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disagreement? It would be a break in pattern for him to gather other
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heroes just for the purpose of taking me out. How much help they'd be
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was debatable, anyway: in the end, it would come down to the two of us.
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\emph{Unless he's trying to kill me on our second encounter.} That
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seemed\ldots{} unusually flexible of him, though. I wasn't buying it.
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``How is order in the city?'' I asked the Senior Tribune.
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The woman smiled thinly. ``There was some rioting after the Hanging at
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Marchford, but things quieted down when Lord Warlock entered the city.
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There's been no widespread resistance since, but we've been losing men
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for the last few fortnights.''
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``Patrols are getting hit?'' I asked.
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``Assassinations,'' Fadia corrected quietly. ``Every morning we find an
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officer carved up in the streets.''
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I hissed out a curse in Kharsum. ``They're \emph{torturing} soldiers?''
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``Someone's taking a knife to their face to cut up a message,'' she
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admitted. ``It's always the same words.''
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I stared her down until she continued.
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``\emph{No truce with the Enemy},'' she quoted. She hesitated a moment
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before continuing. ``Our healers say that the wound pattern means
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they're still alive when the message is carved.''
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Well, shit. That wasn't even anti-hero behaviour, it was downright
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villainous. The Lone Swordsman had always had that gritty edge to him,
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but this was\ldots{} \emph{And we know whose fault this is, don't we
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Catherine? Turns out letting angry vicious heroes loose on Creation can
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have consequences. Who would have thought?} Fuck, I might as well have
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wielded the knife myself. \emph{You can have a self-flagellation session
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later}, I told myself. \emph{Business first.}
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``How many people know?'' I asked tiredly.
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``The first corpse was found in the Court of Swords,'' the Senior
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Tribune grimaced. ``The whole \emph{city} knows.''
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I resisted the urge to curse again. So much for keeping a lid on this.
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``And you say there's been no resistance?'' I repeated in a sceptical
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tone.
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``Nothing open, if anything that's more worrying,'' the woman said.
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``Ma'am, Summerholm is a boiling pot about to tip over. If things
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continue like this, the general thinks we'll be facing a full-scale
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uprising before the end of the month.''
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I grit my teeth. ``And what has the Warlock been doing about this?''
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``Besides the wards? Nothing. He's been holed up in the western bastion
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with his son since he arrived,'' Fadia replied with poorly-masked
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resentment. ``Requests for his intervention have been systematically
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ignored.''
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\emph{What the Hells is going on here?} I wondered. The man was a
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Calamity, he'd been part of the crew to conquer Callow in the first
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place. Why wasn't he stepping in before things got out of control?
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Weeping Heavens, why wasn't Black ordering him to intervene? I knew for
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a fact they were in contact. Some part of me was wondering whether this
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was another test, but I'd gotten to know my teacher better than that --
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he wouldn't allow a situation like this to fester without a damned good
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reason, and seeing whether or not I had it in me to put down rioting
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Callowans hardly qualified. It would be\ldots{} wasteful, and Black was
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anything but.
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``Nilin,'' I spoke up. ``Send a runner to Juniper. We're walking into a
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shed full of sharpers, and someone just stole a matchbox.''
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The Soninke nodded and made for the corridor to see it done. I returned
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my attention to the other Senior Tribune, forcing my face into a mask of
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equanimity.
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``Is there anything else I should know?''
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``General Afolabi invites you and your senior officers to sup with him
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tonight,'' she replied. ``Lord Warlock has asked that you come see him
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as soon as feasible.''
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I smiled sharply. ``That's nice. I need to have a good, long talk with
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the man anyway.''
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Fadia looked mildly embarrassed, then cleared her throat again. ``The
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general has also respectfully requested that, uh, you not bring
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goblinfire stocks within city limits.''
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I closed my eyes and let out a deep sigh, ignoring the choking noise
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that was Nilin trying not to laugh. ``That won't be a problem,'' I
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replied, getting up to my feet.
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Time to find Hakram: I had a few questions to ask the Sovereign of the
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Red Skies, and he'd better have some good godsdamned answers.
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---
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``Morale has hit the bottom of the barrel,'' Hakram informed me as we
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made our way to the western bastion. ``The Legions weren't designed to
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suppress civilian unrest and it's been showing.''
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I grunted in agreement. There was a reason the Empire had kept most of
|
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the Kingdom's civilian infrastructure intact after the Conquest. Putting
|
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aside how the dismantling of major Callowan institutions would have been
|
|
a headache and a half to implement, the Legions of Terror were not a
|
|
peacekeeping organisation. Legionaries were trained to solve their
|
|
problems through efficient application of violence, but putting all
|
|
malcontents to the noose would just have been adding fuel to the fire.
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|
\emph{And the Empire wants very, very badly to avoid being in a position
|
|
where they have to stamp down open flames.} I wondered if Black had lost
|
|
credibility when the Liesse Rebellion had broken out: he had, after all,
|
|
been the closest thing Callow had to a ruler in the last twenty years.
|
|
Imperial Governors were ultimately answerable only to the Tower, but as
|
|
Malicia's mandated right hand my teacher had been straight above them in
|
|
the pecking order. Or would this reflect badly on the Empress?
|
|
|
|
``What's the word on General Afolabi?'' I asked, deciding to table the
|
|
train of thought for the moment.
|
|
|
|
I'd bring it up to Aisha later: she was the closest thing to a political
|
|
adviser I had in the Fifteenth. Hakram hummed thoughtfully, gathering
|
|
his thought before he answered my question. My adjutant had spent the
|
|
last half-bell mingling with the rank and file of the Twelfth Legion,
|
|
getting an idea of where their mind set was at. That I hadn't even
|
|
needed to ask him to do it was yet another mark in the orc's favour:
|
|
Hakram had a way of putting the finger on problems before I even noticed
|
|
they existed and setting out to fix them.
|
|
|
|
``They haven't lost faith in him, not exactly,'' the orc replied. ``He
|
|
wasn't in command at Marchford and nobody expects him to be able to deal
|
|
with heroes on his own. But this is the second bloody nose the Twelfth
|
|
has gotten in two months, and they need to blame \emph{someone}.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. So in bad position but not yet desperate. I'd have to take
|
|
care of the situation before it ever got to that part: I had no
|
|
intention whatsoever of allowing legionaries to put down riots by the
|
|
sword. The whole reason I'd become the Squire in the first place was to
|
|
stop the likes of this, and I couldn't quite ignore the guilty itch in
|
|
the back of my head that whispered I was directly responsible for this
|
|
mess in the first place. Besides, a civilian massacre would have
|
|
consequences in the rest of Callow. The centre and the north were still
|
|
under control but if the Empire starting killing people in the streets,
|
|
unrest would flare up.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Nothing exists in a vacuum, Catherine}, Black's voice reminded me.
|
|
\emph{Not Names, not thrones, not armies. Pull the thread and something
|
|
will always give.}
|
|
|
|
``And the Imperial Governor?'' I wondered. ``I'd expected to get a
|
|
message from them by now.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram snorted. ``That'd be quite the feat. The man's dead -- he bought
|
|
it in the first batch of assassinations. Summerholm's been under martial
|
|
law since.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm starting to think the Swordsman has a fetish for killing those,''
|
|
I grunted in displeasure. ``That's two he got rid of in the span of a
|
|
year.''
|
|
|
|
``Different folk, different strokes,'' Hakram mused and I snorted.
|
|
|
|
Before the conversation could further get off track we arrived at the
|
|
bastion's entrance, such as it was. The squat tower in front of us was
|
|
one of the several that dotted the outer ring of the city, overlooking
|
|
the streets under it with a wide top designed to accommodate bowmen and
|
|
siege engines. Should an army manage to make it past the outer walls,
|
|
Summerholm had been built to bleed them dry. A handful of legionaries
|
|
stood in the alcoves flanking the gates to the bastion itself, but there
|
|
was no sign of any Legion activity up above. Had the Calamity claimed an
|
|
entire defensive structure for himself? I laid a hand on the wooden
|
|
doors but immediately drew it back.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine?'' Hakram asked.
|
|
|
|
``Magic,'' I replied. ``Powerful stuff.''
|
|
|
|
``Lord Warlock has been said to have put wards out in the city,'' the
|
|
orc noted. ``It would have been stranger if there \emph{wasn't} one over
|
|
his lodgings.''
|
|
|
|
``That's not a defensive ward,'' I spoke with a frown. ``I know what
|
|
those feel like, Black taught me to recognize them. This is\ldots{}
|
|
weird. Like the entire bastion is some sort of spell.''
|
|
|
|
``Is it harmful?'' my adjutant questioned.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think so,'' I admitted after a heartbeat. ``It feels prickly
|
|
when there's an active pattern. This is passive, if anything.''
|
|
|
|
Whatever it was, it was also kept working by a gargantuan amount of
|
|
power. Maybe not as large as the old sorcery laid in the Tower's stones,
|
|
but much larger than anything else I'd seen. Taking a deep breath, I
|
|
pushed the doors open and stepped through the threshold. I felt
|
|
something wash over my skin, but nothing else happened. I cast a look
|
|
around only to see that the ground floor was empty. It was supposed to
|
|
serve as a common room, but besides benches and tables there was nothing
|
|
of note. Ignoring the uneasy feeling settling in my stomach I pressed
|
|
forward to the stairs in the back of the room, Hakram following suit in
|
|
silence. The second floor served as guard quarters but I didn't stick
|
|
around to explore: there was a glow filtering through the stairs leading
|
|
to the third floor. \emph{Would it have killed you to send someone to
|
|
greet us instead of letting us wander through the creepy empty bastion?}
|
|
|
|
The creepiness got pushed up a rung up the ladder when we set foot on
|
|
the last floor. The stone here was completely different than anything
|
|
else in the bastion, veined with blue that seemed to shift around if you
|
|
looked too long at it. More than that, the floor was larger than it had
|
|
any business being: the parlour where we stood alone was as wide as the
|
|
bastion had looked from the outside and there were corridors leading
|
|
away. Across from us a pair of large tinted glass windows allowed a
|
|
glimpse into what seemed to be a workshop, and I could hear people
|
|
talking through the closed door. The voices suddenly rose in volume and
|
|
I stepped closer to the glass.
|
|
|
|
``- got out again!''
|
|
|
|
I barely managed to raise my shield before the glass exploded.
|