693 lines
31 KiB
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693 lines
31 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-15-council}{%
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\chapter{Council}\label{chapter-15-council}}
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\epigraph{``If you can't play to your strengths, play to your enemy's
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weaknesses.''
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-Marshal Grem One}{Eye}
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I could feel the eyes of the crowd on us as we strode towards the tent
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Black had told me about.
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Legionaries from the Ninth with the traditional red streak of paint
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across their throat watched us pass, letting whispers bloom in our wake.
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The men and women from the Sixth were friendlier, orcs most of all. Tall
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greenskins with the scrawled iron-grey rib on their armour that served
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as the unofficial symbol of the Ironsides saluted and waved, though most
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of that friendliness was directed towards Juniper. That she was General
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Istrid's daughter had been a mostly well-kept secret back at the
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College, but out here? My teacher had mentioned once that Knightsbane
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tended to boast about her prodigious daughters when she got into her
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cups, and the evidence of that was all around us. Hakram formed the
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third member of our little clique, accompanying us more because of his
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Name than his position. Masego had been extended the same invitation,
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but he'd decline without missing a beat. Something about preferring
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counting ants to inflicting a session of military planning on himself,
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since at least there was some sort of scholarly value to the former. I
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didn't particularly mind: he'd be joining me for dinner with Black and
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Captain anyway, so if anything urgent came up I could brief him then.
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The murmurs of ``Deadhand'' and ``Adjutant'' that usually greeted
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Hakram's appearance in front of legionaries were notably absent, which I
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took to mean Black had clamped down on the rumours here. Unfortunate
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that it in no way meant that word wouldn't reach Heiress, if it hadn't
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already. \emph{A problem for another day, that.} The last I'd heard of
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the prettier of my archnemeses -- was that the word? I found it hard to
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believe that I was the first villain to have multiple sworn enemies,
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there was bound to be a specific term -- she'd landed a mercenary force
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in southern Callow and taken the city of Dormer. That had been two
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months ago, though, and I knew better than to think she'd have remained
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idle that long. Undoubtedly she would soon make an attempt to fuck me
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over in some unexpected way. It was a shame there were no real assassin
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guilds left in the Empire, because with the way my general's pay had
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been stacking up I might actually be able to afford putting a price on
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her head. There was bound to be something possible to arrange from
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Mercantis, but I had no contacts in the City of Bought and Sold.
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Entering the tent first, I pushed aside the cloth and found we were the
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last to arrive.
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General Istrid was already hitting the wine, if the cup in her hand was
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any indication. She still looked like someone had carved an orc out of
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old leather, and that striking scar on her face pulled up her mouth in a
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permanent mocking grin. General Sacker, on the other hand, was seated on
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a high stool. I would have thought the sight of the small wrinkled
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goblin perched on the top of the wooden frame comical, if not for those
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yellow half-lidded eyes that missed nothing. Black was leaning over the
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table, looking over a map, and didn't bother to glance up as I came in.
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My orc bookends followed a heartbeat later and Istrid's face lit up at
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the sight of her daughter.
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``Squire,'' she greeted me almost absent-mindedly, clapping my shoulder
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as she passed me by and fell upon her daughter like a particularly
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affectionate pack of wolves.
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``June,'' she gravelled. ``Look at you, all grown up in the kit. It
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feels like yesterday you were playing knights and legionaries with
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sticks.''
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``\emph{Mother},'' my legate barked, looking mortified.
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I bit my lip and glimpsed the ghost of a smile on my teacher's face.
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Hakram gave the whole thing a wide berth, but from the glint in his eyes
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I knew every Rat Company officer was going to have heard the story
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before morning.
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``Yes, yes, you're a legate now,'' Istrid grunted, smoothing the hair on
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her daughter's head gently. ``Very serious. Have you been eating enough?
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Your cheeks look hollow.''
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They did not, in fact, look hollow in any way. I decided to take pity on
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the Hellhound and cleared my throat.
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``General Istrid,'' I said. ``A pleasure to see you again.''
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I turned to look at Knightsbane's goblin counterpart.
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``General Sacker,'' I added.
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``Foundling,'' the general of the Ninth replied drily. ``Istrid, stop
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fussing over your spawn. You're embarrassing yourself.''
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The scarred orc withdrew, throwing her colleague a dark look.
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``I was doing no such thing,'' she denied.
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The goblin rolled her eyes. ``Legate Juniper, Adjutant, welcome.''
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``General Sacker,'' Juniper replied, gathering her verbal footing.
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A wicked glimmer appeared in the goblin's eyes.
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``Whatever happened to ``Auntie Sacks''?'' she asked.
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``\emph{I was four years old!} \emph{It was a hard word to pronounce!}''
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Juniper keened in dismay.
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Gods, I hadn't even known she could blush that green. Hakram leaned in
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close to me.
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``This is the mother lode of blackmail material,'' he whispered, grin
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splitting his face. ``I will never have to suffer a speech about gear
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cleanliness again.''
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Black cleared his throat, and everyone fell silent.
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``Entertaining as this is, we do have a briefing to attend to,'' he
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said.
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Juniper's blush deepened, if anything, and she gave him the bastard
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cousin of a curtsey. I goggled at the sight. A curtsey? From the
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\emph{Hellhound}?
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``Lord Black,'' she murmured.
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My teacher nodded a greeting at Hakram, smiled at me and bid us closer.
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I took a look at the map -- it covered the whole of Callow, though the
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word itself was nowhere in sight. A bronze figure of a knight had been
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placed over Vale, another one where the eastern side of the Hengest lake
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met the Waning Woods and a third on the crossing linking the county of
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Marchford to central Callow. The Silver Spears, unless I was wrong. A
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silver legionary figurine had been placed over Dormer and a pair of the
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same over the rough location of the village we currently stood on,
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north-east of Vale.
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``We've been in contact with the mercenary bands under the employ of the
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Heiress,'' Black announced and I forced down a scowl. ``They intend to
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move on Baroness Dormer's host before the week is done.''
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Reaching for a second victory when I had yet to win my first one.
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Fucking Heiress. Juniper eyed the map pensively.
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``Do we know how many soldiers she's fielding?'' my legate asked.
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``Roughly four thousand,'' General Sacker spoke in that quiet way of
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hers. ``No cavalry. About half is light infantry, Proceran exiles from
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their southern principalities.''
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``And the rest?'' Hakram gravelled.
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``A full Stygian phalanx,'' Black replied.
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``She's using \emph{slaves}?'' I spat out. ``That's illegal under Tower
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law.''
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Sacker's face was inscrutable, but I could see vicious anger lurking in
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the face of all orcs present. Soninke and Taghreb had suffered under the
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Miezan occupation, but they'd never had entire clans clapped in chains
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the way orcs had. When Dread Empress Maleficent had founded the Dread
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Empire, the outlawing of slavery had been one of the things she'd used
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to bring the Clans into the fold -- and even over a thousand years later
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orcs hated slavery with an almost frightening intensity.
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``Technically the territory held by the rebels is not Imperial ground,
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on a legal basis,'' Black noted. ``Regardless, she has ``freed'' them.''
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The disdain he put in the word rang loud and clear. Nominally granting
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the Stygian war-slaves their freedom meant absolutely nothing, when
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they'd been indoctrinated from birth to obey their orders of their
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owners without fail. I resisted the urge to spit on the ground.
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``At least it has to be putting a dent in her coffers,'' I said. ``Even
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if she only pays half of them, keeping two thousand mercenaries on
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payroll has to be draining no matter how rich you are.''
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``It would,'' Sacker croaked out, ``if they were paid entirely in
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wages.''
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``She's allowing them to pillage,'' Juniper cursed. ``Burning fucking
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Hells. That whole corner of Callow will despise the Empire for
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generations.''
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``She can't be doing any of this under an Imperial banner,'' Hakram
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pointed out. ``She's acting as a private citizen in this.''
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``Yeah, like that'll change anything,'' I grunted. ``All the locals will
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remember is that a Soninke was giving the orders. Black, why hasn't the
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Empress reined her in?''
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The green-eyed man's face went blank. ``The political situation back in
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Ater complicates the matter. Malicia has given authorization to
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discipline them if they act out when under shared command, but as long
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as she's on her own her hands are free.''
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Istrid spat to the side, much to my amusement.
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``Politics should stay out of wars,'' she growled.
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So that was where Juniper got it from.
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``Regardless of her undesirable behaviour,'' General Sacker spoke,
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``she's tactically useful, at the moment. Dormer's army can't link up
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with Countess Marchford as long as she's threatening their flank. That
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keeps them to a manageable number.''
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``Twenty thousand, right?'' I frowned. ``At least most of them are
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levies.''
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``Marchford has only two forces that could match a legion on even
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grounds,'' Black said. ``The core of two thousand dwarven heavy infantry
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in her main force and the Silver Spears.''
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``Never read anything about dwarven troops,'' I grunted. ``Juniper?''
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``The last known skirmish involving the Kingdom Under was when the
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principality of Iserre diverted a river into one of their mining
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operations,'' Juniper spoke in a baritone. ``Contemporary reports are
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unreliable, but they seem to have been more than a match for the
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prince's standing army.''
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Oh, I'd heard about that. The dwarves had retaliated by sinking the Old
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Iserre underground and wiping out the surviving population. It was the
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reason most Calernian nations had laws forbidding provocation of the
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Kingdom Under.
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``That was what, seven hundred years ago?'' Hakram gravelled. ``Nobody's
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scrapped with them since? That information has to be outdated.''
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``The drow in the Everdark have clashed with them on occasion, but any
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information coming out of that rathole is unreliable at best,'' Black
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said. ``Regardless, we should expect their armour, weapons and training
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to be at least a notch above our own.''
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Not to mention they'd be even more physically robust than orcs and at
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least partially resistant to magic. Tough customers.
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``Keeping them paid, on the other hand, must be costing the Principate a
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fortune,'' the Knight smiled viciously. ``Not to mention their\ldots{}
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creative notions regarding private property.''
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Everybody shared a grin at that. Dwarves were of the belief that only
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dwarves could actually own things -- which meant, in essence, that
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taking said things from other people wasn't thievery or in any way
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morally reprehensible. There'd been a famous incident in Callow where a
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Duke of Liesse's family jewels had been taken by a visiting dignitary
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and the Kingdom Under had refused to just give them back. The poor
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bastard had to buy them, emptying half his duchy's coffers in the
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process. If they were camped in the middle of Marchford's army, I hoped
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for her sake she'd locked away the silverware and nailed down anything
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she wanted to keep. Otherwise it was likely to disappear underground
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forever.
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``The dwarves are our problem,'' General Istrid grunted. ``You girls --
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and you, Deadhand -- are going to have to mop up the Silver Spears.''
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Black's fingers drummed against the table's surface.
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``The defensive part of this campaign is over,'' he announced. ``We're
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going on the offensive on all fronts. While Heiress catches their
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attention we'll move on Vale, though I fully expect the Countess to
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retreat when we do. That makes it a priority for you to either wipe out
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or box in the Silver Spears. If the rebels continue their scorched earth
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tactics as they retreat south, our supply train must be secure. We court
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disaster otherwise.''
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``Yes sir,'' I murmured, starting when I realized Juniper had done the
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same.
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``Our last sighting has them in the vicinity of the old ford the city of
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Marchford was named for. They destroyed the bridge a few days after
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declaring their rebellion, so you'll have to secure it to cross,''
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General Sacker spoke mildly.
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``Have we confirmed their numbers?'' I asked.
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``Their run-in with Captain cost them some officers, but their effective
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strength remains the same as the last report I gave you,'' Black
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replied. ``Scribe suspects they have more than one hero in the ranks,
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and our failure to scry them so far suggests they have a priest of some
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talent along. Considering the close ties of the Helikean royal family
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with the House of Light, that is almost a certitude.''
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``I'll keep that in mind,'' I muttered, mind already racing.
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``I want the Fifteenth to occupy Marchford itself, afterwards,'' Black
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continued. ``Having a legion pay a visit to her demesne will turn up the
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pressure on the Countess. She's been careful to avoid meeting us on the
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field so far.''
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``You intend for us to remain and garrison the city?'' Juniper asked.
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Black shook his head. ``After re-establishing Imperial control I want
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you to march back to us as fast as you can. Afolabi will send troops
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after you're gone. Ideally I'd like the Fifteenth to be present when we
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engage the Countess.''
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``Sounds like plan,'' I grunted.
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It wouldn't be that easy, of course. I'd learn to expect complications
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by now. But it was the outline of a course of action, and for now that
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would have to do.
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---
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Dinner was pleasant, but most of us had duties that prevented us from
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lingering. Still, when Black invited me up to his rooms for a
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conversation, I did not decline. We had several conversations long
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overdue, and it would be a while before we were in the same place again.
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There was a fireplace and two armchairs, the one I claimed usually
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occupied by Captain if the size of it was any indication. He poured me a
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cup of wine after doing the same for himself, cool touch of the metal
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contrasting the heat coming off of the fireplace.
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``On the subject of your paramour,'' Black said, settling into his seat.
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I snorted. ``I think the word you're looking for is ``girlfriend'','' I
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told him.
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The dark-haired man wrinkled his nose. ``No, I'm quite sure it wasn't.
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Regardless of semantics, I'm sure you suspect I had people dig into the
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lives of all the people you work closest with.''
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``I thought that was pretty much a given, yeah,'' I admitted.
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There'd been a time where the concept of my teacher invading the privacy
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of my friends would have irked me, but I'd left that kind of naiveté
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behind. My enemies had deep pockets and they were out for blood: having
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someone like Black watching out for liabilities was almost reassuring.
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While we'd never had a conversation on the subject before, none of my
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officers had suddenly disappeared into the night. I took that to mean
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they were reliable, or at least without open motive to betray me.
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``Your cadre of senior officers has an unusually high loyalty index,''
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he noted. ``Juniper's family ties make her a given. Senior Sapper
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Pickler is the daughter of the matron for the High Ridge tribe but they
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are estranged. Hasan Qara, who you know as Ratface, is openly feuding
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with his father -- a member in good standing of the Truebloods. Aisha
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Bishara is fifth in line for a lordship sworn to Kahtan but she's had no
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real contact with dangerous elements. We have little hard knowledge on
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Commander Hune, but ogres typically stay out of politics. Still, someone
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to watch. Commander Nauk has made several\ldots{} \emph{enthusiastic}
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public statements in your support, though about half were made when
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inebriated. He's also wanted for murder in Thalassina.''
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I blinked. ``Murder? \emph{Shit}. What happened?''
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It wasn't like he could be arrested anymore -- enrolment in the Legions
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wiped your criminal record clean, even allowed you to change your name
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like Ratface had -- but it distressed me I hadn't even suspected.
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``An altercation with a Taghreb merchant,'' Black replied. ``The man
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struck him and your own went into the Red Rage.''
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I grimaced. ``He must have been young. He doesn't lost control like that
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anymore.''
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The green-eyed villain hummed in disagreement. ``Emotional states are
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more likely to trigger an episode than physical pain. It's one of the
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reasons berserkers can force themselves into the state. That flaw makes
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him unreliable as an officer. You'll have to be careful how you deploy
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him on the field.''
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I grunted, not quite willing to agree out loud even if he was probably
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right. Nauk had been in my corner since the beginning, in one way or
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another, so thinking of him that way rankled. As for the murder\ldots{}
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I'd been on the receiving end of some of the more racist leanings of
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Wastelanders, so I while I was unwilling to excuse the act I could
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understand where he was coming from. That he'd had no real control over
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himself after going into the Rage was an objective fact, and that the
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merchant had apparently resorted to physical violence first blurred the
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lines a bit. And yet. \emph{Murderer, huh.} Most of the time I got along
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with orcs better than humans: the way they looked at Creation wasn't
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simpler, not exactly, but it was \emph{clearer}. Less cluttered. It was
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all too easy to forget it was also brutal. All in all, it might not be a
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bad thing to have my teacher hand me a reminder of that.
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``Hakram?'' I probed.
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``An oddity, that one,'' Black replied. ``Howling Wolves clan, one of
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the students sent to the College on Imperial scholarship. Average grades
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except in Old Miezan, where he failed repeatedly -- and yet some of the
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best marks on record when it comes to practical exercises. Noted by his
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teachers to have exceptional organisational abilities.''
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``All stuff I already knew,'' I pointed out.
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Or had suspected, anyway. His record since the creation of the Fifteenth
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spoke for itself. Black waved a hand in irritation.
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``No real political affiliations to speak of, not even in his clan. He
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did spend a lot of time in the College socializing with officers from
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other companies, which should come in useful for you down the road.''
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I'd been aware since the beginning that one of the War College's
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functions was to forge connections in the people meant to become the
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next generation of the Empire's military leaders, but I'd never found it
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in me to play that game. Oh, I'd drawn most of Rat Company into the fold
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and managed to establish an understanding with Juniper's crowd but the
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bulk of the cadets had still been strangers to me by the time I'd
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stopped attending. Part of me regretted the lost opportunity, but I'd
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had bigger fish to fry. None of them would be in a position to be useful
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to my purposes for a few years anyhow, though Hakram having made
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contacts was a pleasant surprise. \emph{They might not have authority,
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but even as junior officers they'll have access to information.}
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``Keeping the best for last?'' I prompted.
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``Kilian of Mashamba. Her grandmother rode with the Wild Hunt until
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encountering her grandfather. Specifics are sparse on how she died, but
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the fae rarely last when too far from Arcadia. Joined the College on the
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Imperial ticket after qualifying at the local school. In the top twenty
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students for the mage track, though her lacking endurance disqualified
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her from more advanced spellcasting classes.''
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I frowned. ``The wing thing, you mean. That's not entirely fair. She
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can't shove as much magic into her spells but she's got much better
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control than any other mage I've seen.''
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Black raised an eyebrow. ``That was not a criticism of her abilities. It
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simply means she has a ceiling she cannot overcome when it comes to
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heavier spellcasting: she'll never be able to change the course of a
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battle like Wekesa or Masego can.''
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Not entirely accurate -- if she could call down a lightning bolt on an
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enemy general that would certainly affect the course of a fight -- but I
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grasped his meaning. Kilian wasn't the kind of mage who'd ever be able
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to wipe out an enemy battalion with a single spell.
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``So there's no red flags in her background?'' I insisted.
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``Her family is poor,'' Black noted. ``She's arranged for half her pay
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to be sent to them on a permanent basis. There's possible leverage
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there, though there has been no sudden uptick in their financial
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situation: if she's been bribed, she's been careful about it. Her
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parents have been subject to less discrimination by local authorities
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recently, but that might simply be a result of having sent a child to
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the War College. It's being looked into regardless.''
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``That's a no, then,'' I replied.
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``Nothing as of now,'' the dark-haired man conceded.
|
|
|
|
He poured himself a second cup of wine, offering me the same when he saw
|
|
mine was mostly empty. I nodded -- I didn't have anything else planned
|
|
for the night, nothing wrong with having another few. He took a sip of
|
|
the sour red, humming in appreciation at the taste.
|
|
|
|
``Your involvement puts her in a great deal of danger,'' he finally
|
|
said. ``Any villain or more pragmatically-inclined hero will make a
|
|
point of targeting her to get to you.
|
|
|
|
``I know,'' I sighed. ``But at this point pretty much everyone I'm close
|
|
to is on someone's kill list. Let's not pretend Heiress wouldn't see all
|
|
my senior officers dead in a heartbeat if she could manage it.''
|
|
|
|
``Allowing your enemy to dictate how you live your life is unwise,''
|
|
Black agreed. ``Yet awareness of the danger is not enough. If you don't
|
|
take concrete steps to mitigate the threat awareness means nothing.''
|
|
|
|
``I've had people watching over Hakram,'' I told him. ``I'm thinking of
|
|
making that guard permanent. Extending that to Kilian shouldn't be a
|
|
problem.''
|
|
|
|
``Forming your own personal guard so that they can handle security
|
|
details should be a priority,'' the green-eyed man said. ``But that is a
|
|
purely reactive way of thinking.''
|
|
|
|
``We're in the middle of a war,'' I replied flatly. ``I can't just take
|
|
back the Fifteenth to Praes and start kicking down Trueblood doors.''
|
|
|
|
``It's a pattern broader in scope than just this particular situation,''
|
|
Black said. ``Look at your tactics dealing with the heroes in
|
|
Summerholm. While I will not gainsay your results, from the outset you
|
|
ceded the initiative to the enemy.''
|
|
|
|
``They were already set up for an ambush when I arrived,'' I pointed
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
``Interrupting the plans of your opponents is almost always better than
|
|
letting them interfere with yours,'' the Knight spoke. ``I understand
|
|
that making quick, improvised decisions is one of your strengths and
|
|
that the unpredictability it lends you has come in useful, but in the
|
|
long term that will not be enough. You need to start anticipating
|
|
problems instead of merely solving them.''
|
|
|
|
I grunted. ``I get what you're saying, sir, but I'm not like you. I'm
|
|
not a\ldots{} mastermind, or whatever you want to call it. I see things
|
|
that need to be done and I do them.''
|
|
|
|
``Learn to be,'' Black replied bluntly. ``If you ever want to rise high
|
|
enough to accomplish what you intend, you'll need better than you
|
|
currently are. A ruler must be more than someone who stamps down flames
|
|
wherever they flare up.''
|
|
|
|
He sipped at his cup.
|
|
|
|
``If you keep concerning yourself with symptoms instead of causes,
|
|
eventually an opponent will land an unexpected blow -- and you'll lose
|
|
someone dear to you to grasp the same point I am trying to get across.''
|
|
|
|
The green-eyed man smiled thinly.
|
|
|
|
``I learned that lesson the hard way,'' he told me. ``I would prefer
|
|
that you did not have to.''
|
|
|
|
Sentences like that were why it was so hard to dislike Black. When the
|
|
priests in the House of Light had spoken of how seductive the Dark could
|
|
be, I'd always thought they meant ambition and greed. Lust, even, given
|
|
how good-looking villains could be. Maybe the honest affection that
|
|
sometimes showed behind my teacher's words would have failed to take in
|
|
a better person, but at the end of the day I was not that girl. I'd gone
|
|
my whole life without and father or mother figures and while Black
|
|
certainly didn't fit the bill for either, I'd underestimated how easy it
|
|
would be to become attached to a mentor. Someone who looked out for me,
|
|
who genuinely wanted me to live up to my potential. Oh, what he wanted
|
|
for me was a terrible thing. There was no denying that truth. But it
|
|
also had the glint of greatness to it, and there was something horribly
|
|
tempting about that.
|
|
|
|
``You ever been in love, Black?'' I asked suddenly.
|
|
|
|
``I hope you're not implying your infatuation with the mage is anything
|
|
of the sort,'' he replied with a raised eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``You're not going to give a ``love is weakness'' speech, are you?'' I
|
|
frowned.
|
|
|
|
``I am not in the habit of preaching things I do not believe,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
I leaned back in my seat, enjoying the warmth of the fire.
|
|
|
|
``I know I'm not in love with Kilian,'' I admitted. ``I don't think I've
|
|
ever been with anyone. Not the kind of love the songs speak about,
|
|
anyway. That's the problem, I guess. It feels selfish to put her in
|
|
danger for something this\ldots{} shallow.''
|
|
|
|
``She's a grown woman,'' Black said. ``She can make her own decisions.''
|
|
|
|
``You're the one who just told me a ruler needs to be \emph{more},'' I
|
|
replied. ``I know she's not coming into this blind, but there's a part
|
|
of me that feels like I should make the decision for her own good
|
|
anyway.''
|
|
|
|
He chuckled and I turned to glare at him but found his finger pointing
|
|
at me. He poked my forehead gently.
|
|
|
|
``Human,'' he reminded me. ``Villain, but still human. It's all right to
|
|
want things for yourself, Catherine.''
|
|
|
|
``Even if it hurts other people?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Everyone hurts,'' he replied. ``That is the nature of human condition.
|
|
Thousands die all over Creation with every breath we take, and nothing
|
|
either you or I can do will change that. All we are is what we do with
|
|
that truth.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't want to be the kind of person who hurts others for her own
|
|
sake,'' I admitted quietly.
|
|
|
|
``There's nothing righteous about martyrdom,'' Black spoke, tone thick
|
|
with distaste. ``How gloriously they die on their pyres, those blessed
|
|
few who think themselves above all of\ldots{} \emph{this}. And yet what
|
|
do they really accomplish? Refusing to accept reality for what it is
|
|
instead of what you think it should be is not being high-minded, it is
|
|
cowardice. I take no guidance from someone whose crowning achievement is
|
|
their own death. Sacrifice solves nothing on its own. It is no
|
|
substitute for the labour needed to change things, just an easy way
|
|
out.''
|
|
|
|
I'd never seen Black like this before. There wasn't a trace of the
|
|
easy-going, sardonic mask he liked to affect, but the cold monster of
|
|
logic I'd glimpsed in Summerholm was nowhere in sight either. There was
|
|
a quiet intensity to him, the weight of genuine belief. And some parts
|
|
of what he'd said resonated with me. Wasn't that the core of my
|
|
disagreement with the Lone Swordsman? He believed that people should be
|
|
willing to die for a kingdom, where I believed a kingdom should be
|
|
willing to die for its people. But there was something missing here. The
|
|
string that would keep all that barren cynicism together.
|
|
|
|
``There is such a thing as the greater good,'' I replied. ``It's an ugly
|
|
ideal, I'll grant you that. Means there is such a thing as accepting
|
|
lesser evils for a purpose that goes beyond them, and I've always found
|
|
that a bitter pill to swallow. But there are things worth sacrifice --
|
|
yours and other people's both. Heroes are wrong, I think. I'm worth just
|
|
as much as everybody else. My losses matter just as much as anybody
|
|
else's. But villains aren't right -- we don't matter \emph{more}, just
|
|
because of who we are.''
|
|
|
|
Black smiled strangely, still staring into the fire.
|
|
|
|
``I am the wrong person to debate matters of morality, I think,'' he
|
|
replied. ``The truth of it is that I am the most selfish man you'll ever
|
|
meet, and I've yet to lose so much as a night's sleep over it. But you
|
|
asked me a question.''
|
|
|
|
He let out a long breath.
|
|
|
|
``Yes. Once.''
|
|
|
|
``How did it end?'' I asked softly.
|
|
|
|
``It has yet to,'' he smiled. ``She is\ldots{} an exceptional woman, in
|
|
many ways. I wish I could see her more often.''
|
|
|
|
I hummed. ``And you've never been worried your enemies would try to get
|
|
to you through her?''
|
|
|
|
He bared his teeth in a jackal's grin.
|
|
|
|
``I pity anyone fool enough to try.''
|
|
|
|
I polished off the rest of my cup, letting the taste linger in my mouth.
|
|
Silence stayed between us for some time as we simply let the heat of the
|
|
fire wash over us. I opened my mouth, then closed it. What I wanted to
|
|
say wasn't wise, exactly. But my instincts were telling me I should, and
|
|
they'd seen me through all the messes in my life so far.
|
|
|
|
``I had a talk with Warlock, in Summerholm.''
|
|
|
|
``Not a pleasant one, I suspect,'' he murmured.
|
|
|
|
I snorted, though the amusement was short-lived.
|
|
|
|
``The Empress summoned me to the Tower before I left Ater.''
|
|
|
|
``And?''
|
|
|
|
He seemed rather unconcerned by the prospect, which shouldn't have
|
|
surprised me. He and Malicia were supposed to be thick as thieves, and
|
|
though I'd started to notice fractures in that relationship there were
|
|
still decades of trust to back it.
|
|
|
|
``It occurs to me,'' I finally said, ``that I don't actually know what
|
|
you want.''
|
|
|
|
He smiled mirthlessly.
|
|
|
|
``That,'' he said, ``is a complicated question.''
|
|
|
|
Wry amusement quirked my lips. I'd replied the same thing to Malicia,
|
|
when she'd asked me the same question. Maybe there was something to
|
|
those supposed similarities everyone kept yammering about. He rose to
|
|
his feet and I frowned.
|
|
|
|
``Going somewhere?''
|
|
|
|
He shook his head, heading for the trunk next to his bed and popping it
|
|
open. He dug around the inside for a moment before fishing out a pair of
|
|
books. Not, not books -- journals, I saw. Neither of them had a title on
|
|
the spine, but they were well-worn. He handed them to me.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think the answer is something you could understand, right
|
|
now,'' he told me.
|
|
|
|
It would have sounded condescending if not for the fact that he seemed
|
|
to genuinely believe what he said.
|
|
|
|
``And those are?'' I asked, raising the journals.
|
|
|
|
``Information I compiled when I was three years older than you are now,
|
|
shortly after I became the Black Knight and gained access to the
|
|
Imperial archives,'' he replied.
|
|
|
|
``Everybody with permission from the bureaucrats can access those,'' I
|
|
frowned.
|
|
|
|
``The real archives,'' he specified. ``The ones in the underground
|
|
levels of the Tower.''
|
|
|
|
Of course there were secret archives. I rubbed the bridge of my nose in
|
|
exasperation. I really should have seen that coming. I thumbed one open,
|
|
seeing columns of numbers and names stretching down the page. Census
|
|
population numbers, crossed with reigning Tyrants and some other measure
|
|
I didn't recognize. The other one seemed to be a children's book,
|
|
transcribed in my teacher's handwriting. There were notes in the
|
|
margins, though I didn't bother to look at them right now. I'd take my
|
|
time doing it later, a cursory reading wouldn't give me much. Still, I
|
|
had to ask.
|
|
|
|
``Children's tales?'' I questioned.
|
|
|
|
``The most important part of any culture's literature,'' Black murmured.
|
|
``The lessons you are taught when you are young are those you carry with
|
|
you the rest of your life.''
|
|
|
|
He leaned against the back of his armchair, eyes drawn to the flame
|
|
again.
|
|
|
|
``You should get back to the Fifteenth, Catherine,'' he said. ``Dawn
|
|
always comes sooner than we think.''
|