454 lines
19 KiB
TeX
454 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-28-prelude}{%
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\chapter{Prelude}\label{chapter-28-prelude}}
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\epigraph{``Look, if he didn't want to be fed to my acid-spewing crocodiles
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he shouldn't have brought me bad news.''}{Dread Emperor Malignant II, the Particularly Petty}
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It'd been a while since I'd had a proper Callowan breakfast.
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Eggs, sausage and black pudding with a generous portion of buttered
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bread. The accompanying pot of tea was poor fare compared to the fancy
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brews my officers -- Aisha in particular, who carried a stash imported
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from across the sea even on campaign -- but the taste was pleasantly
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familiar. Tea wasn't grown in Callow: it had to be imported from the
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Free Cities and Ashur, the cheap stuff from Nicae being most popular.
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Mercantis was said to hitch up the price on the way north, but no less
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should be expected from the City of Bought and Sold. I'd woken before
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dawn and gotten out of room the very moment I could, slipping away from
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the personal guard that attempted to follow me without a second thought.
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Tired of Legion fare I'd sought a Callowan inn and ignored the scared
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looks the innkeeper kept shooting me as I ordered.
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Service was prompt and the fare hearty, though I was starting to get
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irritated at the skittishness of the innkeeper and her husband. They
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didn't seem to recognize me, at least, which was refreshing. People had
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this unpleasant tendency to get deferential around me, these days, but
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the distance here was because of my Legion armour and not my station.
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The only local who didn't jump at my every twitch was a young
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dark-haired girl who couldn't be more than seven, peeking curiously at
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me from behind tables. Her parents had yet to notice her, apparently. I
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smiled at her while sipping at my mug of tea and she trotted up to me,
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sliding on the bench across the table.
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``I'm Lily,'' she gabbled.
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``Hello, Lily,'' I replied with a smile. ``I'm Cat.''
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She nodded seriously, then scrunched up her nose. ``Are you a
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Deoraithe?''
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``\emph{Lily},'' the innkeeper suddenly barked. ``Get off that bench
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right this instant!''
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``It's all right,'' I said, waving away the objection. ``It's a quiet
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morning. I wouldn't mind a little company.''
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Lily glared. ``I'm not \emph{little}, I'm six,'' she informed me.
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I smothered a grin. Her mother seemed rather horrified at the idea of
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the child talking with me, but she seemed even more afraid to offend me
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by yanking Lily away from the table and hiding her away. She ended up
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hovering around the table before taking a seat next to her daughter
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after seeking wordless permission from me, clutching her offspring
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tightly. Lily tried to wiggle out to no avail.
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``I'm half-blooded, I think,'' I told the little girl. ``I'm a little
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too pale for both my parents having been from the People.''
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The child blinked. ``How can you not know?''
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``Don't be rude to patrons, Lily,'' the innkeeper said with the
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mechanical promptness of many repetitions. ``Not everybody knows their
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mum and dad like you.''
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``That's sad,'' the daughter said, patting my hand for comfort.
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The mother looked panicked, but the tension loosened a bit after it
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became obvious I'd taken no offence.
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``I'm used to it,'' I shrugged. ``Life at the orphanage wasn't bad --
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I've seen people have much rougher childhoods.''
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I'd never realized quite how privileged I'd been to get an education and
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three meals a day until my first forays into the Lakeside district.
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There were people there who spent their days on backbreaking labour and
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barely made enough to put food on the table. The only difference the
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Conquest had made there was that Mazus' hunger for gold had driven ever
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more people to live in the wretched slums as their businesses went
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under. It would take years to undo the damage he'd done to the city's
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economy.
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``You're Callowan, then,'' the innkeeper said, tone puzzled. ``I'd heard
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some of the soldiers in this legion are.''
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Fear flashed through her eyes when she realized she'd used a rather
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familiar tone.
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``No disrespect was meant, ma'am,'' she added hastily.
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``I've never been easy to offend,'' I told her drily. ``And after
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dealing with Wasteland nobility it's a rather welcome change not to have
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to look for double meanings everywhere.''
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``You've met \emph{nobles}?'' Lily breathed out, excited. ``What were
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they like?''
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``Most of them deserve to end up in a crocodile pit,'' I replied
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frankly. ``But there are some who're aren't bad people.''
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Lily had responded to the mention of crocodiles by making vaguely
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reptilian noises and pretend-biting her mother's arms, much to the
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woman's dismay.
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``I waved at the Countess, once,'' the child told me when she got bored.
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``She didn't wave back though.''
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I snorted. ``Well, she's had a busy year.''
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Rebellions didn't spawn out of thin air. Most likely she'd been sitting
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on a plan for years, keeping her moves innocuous enough that my
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teacher's agents wouldn't pick up on them.
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``People say she's going to be queen,'' Lily informed me. ``She's
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engaged to a duke and everything.''
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I smiled mirthlessly. ``That only happens if she wins the rebellion,
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Lily. And I wouldn't count on it.''
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That was, apparently, a little too close to home for her mother. The
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child was ushered away, told to go help her father make her breakfast.
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She muttered something about hating porridge and scampered off, though
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not before waving me goodbye. I waved back bemusedly. To my surprise,
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the innkeeper remained seated across from me.
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``Ma'am, I don't mean to pry but\ldots{}'' she started.
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``Ask,'' I replied. ``If it's restricted information I won't tell you,
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but there's no harm in asking.''
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There were a few threads of grey in the woman's hair, but the colour of
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it and the shape of her face was the same as her daughter's -- I could
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see the resemblance, if I cared to look. She screwed up her courage
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after a moment.
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``Is it true, about the demon in the hills?'' she said.
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I grimaced. ``Yes. It was kept bound in some sort of temple but someone
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let it loose.''
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\emph{And we'll have a reckoning for that, won't we Heiress?} That much
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I would swear oath to, and the longer that debt when unpaid the longer
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the price would be when I collected.
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``But the Fifteenth will stay to protect the city?'' she pressed.
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``Orders came down from the top on the matter,'' I replied, hiding my
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amusement.
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The innkeeper let out a sound of relief. ``The legion has behaved well,
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for an army. You don't drink as much as the Exiled Prince's men did.''
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I very much doubted that, considering the Praesi relationship with
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spirits, but Juniper had likely given orders to keep the drinking out of
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sight.
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``I'd heard there were a few incidents,'' I probed.
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``There were scuffles,'' she admitted. ``Some of the older men say it's
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all the Empire's fault.''
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They were technically correct, I had to admit.
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``That tall orc, the one they call Deadhand, he stopped it before it got
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out of hand,'' the innkeeper continued. ``And Tribune Ratface has been
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making rounds to see the people displaced by the goblins are properly
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fed. It's bought a lot of goodwill, with those of us who remember the
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last war. Armies are not easy guests no matter who they obey to.''
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\emph{Well now, Supply Tribune.} I hadn't seen much of him lately, since
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he wasn't needed for most war councils, but it was pleasing to hear he'd
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been keeping busy.
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``He's a good sort, Ratface,'' I spoke over the rim of my tea mug.
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``You one of his, then?'' the innkeeper asked.
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``Something like that,'' I replied vaguely.
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She clearly recognized the non-answer for what it was and did not pursue
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the subject. Apparently the fact that I'd yet to ask for her head had
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qualified me as not a monster, because there was precious little fear in
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the older woman now.
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``I suppose it helps you have a Callowan in charge of the legion,'' she
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decided, then turned a curious eye on me. ``You ever met her, the
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Squire?''
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``A few times,'' I agreed.
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``Doesn't seem proper, to have one of us a villain,'' she said. ``But it
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may not be a bad thing, you get my meaning? If the Empire's going to
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stick around, we might as well have a voice in the Tower. Heard she
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helped hang Mazus so she can't be all Evil. Nasty piece of work, that
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man.''
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\emph{And how did you hear that, I wonder?} There'd only been a handful
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of people there that night, and only one of them had the means to spread
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rumours that far and that quickly. I resisted the urge to clench my
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fingers. \emph{What are you up to, Black?} Every time I thought I'd
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sketched out his endgame, something else cropped up to put the design
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into doubt.
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``He got what was coming to him,'' I agreed softly.
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The front door was suddenly forced open and the innkeeper immediately
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flinched back, rising to her feet. I cast a look and saw the Fifteenth
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had finally caught up: Lieutenant Tordis and a handful of orcs snapped a
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salute as soon as the saw me.
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``Lieutenant,'' I greeted her, spearing the last of the now-cold sausage
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and taking a bite.
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``Lady Squire,'' she replied, fist over heart. ``I apologize for
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disturbing your breakfast, but a war council has been convened.''
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I heard the gasp from the innkeeper when my identity was revealed, but
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did not bother to turn. I put down the remains of the sausage and
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finished my tea before sliding two golden aurelii on the table -- over
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fifteen times what the meal was worth, but what did coin really mean to
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me these days? I glanced at the greying woman.
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``When the enemy is sighted,'' I told her, ``take your family to the
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centre of the city. It'll be the safest place.''
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I passed Tordis by and stepped into the morning light.
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---
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I'd been under for two days but my officers had not been idle.
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I'd yet to take a look at the outer defences, but as we made for the
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council I saw that Juniper had ordered a second set of walls further in
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-- though ``walls'' was perhaps too ambitious of a word. A ring of
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houses had been collapsed to form a citadel inside Marchford, the stone
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and wood stacked as a makeshift barricade already manned by legionaries.
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The Countess' manor was long-abandoned, too removed from the rest of the
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city to be defensible. The people left bereft of a home by my sappers'
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work had been packed in taverns, inns and the houses of relatives
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willing to put them up. Still, central Marchford was densely packed. The
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main avenues were kept clear by patrols so that deployments would not be
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hindered when the battle started, though eyes were peeking at us through
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blindfolds all the way through. Juniper had picked a large guildhall as
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the headquarters for the Fifteenth, clearing out the occupants and
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nailing most opening shuts with wooden planks.
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The central hall was bustling with my legate's men, reports coming in
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and orders coming out every few moments. Close to the wall in the back a
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pair of tables had been forced together to accommodate maps and seat all
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of the general staff -- most of which, I saw, was missing. Nauk and Hune
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were there, as the highest-ranked officers after the Hellhound, and so
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were Hakram and Pickler. No sign of Kilian and Ratface, or even Aisha. I
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dismissed Lieutenant Tordis absent-mindedly, my attention already on the
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conversation to come. If so many were elsewhere then something had
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happened requiring their direct attention: that both Kilian and
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Apprentice were absent was telling in and of itself. Nauk eyed my bad
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leg with a frown but held his tongue as I made my way up to the others,
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keeping my pace steady so the limp wouldn't be too obvious. I had a
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feeling tapping into my Name would allow me to power through the pain if
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I ever needed to run, but for daily life I might well have to take up
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Masego's offer of herbs to take the edge off. \emph{Or start taking my
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drinking more seriously.}
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``I'm guessing we have a situation,'' I spoke up, disinclined to indulge
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in small talk.
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``The enemy has been sighted,'' Commander Hune spoke in that
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incongruously delicate voice of hers.
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``The Silver Spears?'' I asked.
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The last report I'd read had made it clear the devils were out there,
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though they'd yet to make a move. Juniper wouldn't have sought me out
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unless the situation had changed more than that.
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``They'll be on us by nightfall,'' Nauk growled. ``The bastards finally
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arrived.''
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Nightfall, huh. I supposed it'd be too much to hope whatever corruption
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the mercenaries had gone through wouldn't allow them to see in the dark.
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When had I ever been that lucky? I glanced at the maps on the table,
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then frowned. There was half a dozen scrying bowls scattered in a
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half-circle around where Juniper stood. I tapped the rim of the one
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closest to me, then cast an eye on the Hellhound.
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``I thought the demon scrambled scrying?''
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The grim-faced orc bared her teeth. ``Apprentice's threshold ritual
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changed things. As long as the point of origin and the point of
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reception are under the ritual's aegis, our mages can the simplest
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versions of the spell.''
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\emph{Useful, that}. Would allow my legate to react immediately to
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changes on the battlefield, if I grasped her intent correctly. There'd
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been no time to set up that sort of fanciness when we'd first taken on
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the Silver Spears, but defending a city was a different sort of
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business.
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``Are we ready?'' I finally asked, because what else could I say?
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``I've spent most of my time setting up our killzone,'' Pickler smiled
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unpleasantly, spindly fingers tracing the rectangle I'd told Masego to
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leave out of his ritual. ``When the devils come, they will be warmly
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received.''
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I nodded. ``And the Spears?''
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``They'll go through the west,'' Juniper grunted. ``Quickest way to get
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to a hearth, and that's what they'll be aiming for. There's a wider
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avenue where their horse will be able to charge properly.''
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``I'll be waiting for them there,'' Nauk spat, and his fists tightened
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hard enough the knuckles popped.
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``We'll have to concentrate our forces on the mercenaries,'' Hune spoke.
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``If the devils get loose in the city our entire defence will
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collapse.''
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``Then I'll be dealing with the devils,'' I murmured.
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No sign of surprise from anyone. I supposed that had been a rather
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obvious fit for me. \emph{Takes a monster to kill a monster, doesn't
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it?}
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``Robber will be commanding the sappers assigned to that sector,''
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Pickler informed me. ``You'll have his full cohort.''
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``You'll get another company to follow you when the swords come out,''
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Juniper growled. ``We haven't settled on which one.''
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``Words was put out,'' Hakram told me. ``Seven different companies
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volunteered -- I have the list, if you want to take a look.''
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``Don't need it,'' I replied. ``I'm taking the Forlorn Hope.''
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That finally got a reaction.
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``Is that wise, Lady Squire?'' Commander Hune asked, her buckler-sized
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palm resting on the table. ``Deserters are not known for their ability
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to hold under pressure and that part of the battlefield will be the most
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brutal.''
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``She means they could put a knife in your ribs and leg it if things
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look bad enough,'' Pickler spoke more frankly.
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``This is the very kind of situation I formed the company for,'' I
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replied. ``If they can't be used, they should be hanged.''
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I'd spoken calmly and without raising my voice but I could see several
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of them repressing the urge to move back. I smiled mirthlessly: one of
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these days, Praesi would learn to stop thinking that mercy and
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ruthlessness were mutually exclusive. I'd made the Forlorn Hope with the
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intent of deploying it in battle: if it could not be deployed, it could
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return to the gallows I'd snatched it from. There were only so many
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chances I was willing to give people.
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``That's settled, then,'' Adjutant said, shutting the door on the topic.
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``We have one last issue to address: Archer has yet to take a stance on
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whether or not she'll participate.''
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``Said she'll only talk with you,'' Juniper spat, clearly disgruntled.
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\emph{Not much of a diplomat, that one.} I didn't bother to specify
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which woman the statement was meant for, since it could easily go both
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ways.
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``I'll handle it,'' I said. ``Nothing else?''
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The Hellhound shook her head. I almost walked out, but forced myself to
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stay a moment longer.
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``Luck in battle,'' I told my officers.
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``Luck is for amateurs,'' Juniper replied with bared teeth. ``I have a
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plan.''
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If there was ever to be a motto for the Fifteenth, I decided, that would
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be it. \emph{I have a plan. Watch how it goes south.}
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---
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Archer was on a rooftop, because Named were inevitably afflicted with a
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deep thirst for melodrama.
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Foot on the ledge, she looked in the distance where a cloud of dust
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revealed the Silver Spears were getting closer. I hoisted myself up
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through the trapdoor and waited for her to acknowledge my presence,
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sighing when it became clear she wouldn't. Out of morbid curiosity I
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cleared my throat, just to see how far she'd be willing to push the
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farce. Fluidly the woman turned and a flash of silver was the only
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warning I got. The throwing knife had been placed expertly, spinning in
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a trajectory that would see it bury straight in my throat. Without
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missing a beat, I snatched it out of air.
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``You can throw faster than that,'' I said.
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``I can,'' Archer agreed, finally bothering to face me. ``But this is
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still slightly swifter than a mundane mortal could manage.''
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She'd been checking how much my Name had been affected by my latest
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debacle. Fair enough, even if this was an idiot way to go about it.
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``I'm told you won't talk with my legate,'' I grunted.
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``I don't speak terms with minions,'' she replied easily.
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Maybe if I'd had an easier fortnight I would have been politer about it,
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but my well of patience was running pretty dry.
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``Legate,'' I corrected flatly. ``She's my \emph{legate}. Regardless,
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here I am. Have you made a decision?''
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If anything my abruptness seemed to amuse her. My irritation ratcheted
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up a knot in response.
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``While your battle is not unworthy, is it not mine,'' she shrugged.
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``Hunter and I will leave when enemy assaults the city. We'll kill a few
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on the way out, out of politeness.''
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``Fine,'' I grunted.
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Making my way down the trapdoor was going to be a godsdamned pain, but
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jumping down into the street would probably be worse. I turned to leave.
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``Not going to try to convince me?'' Archer asked, mildly surprised.
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I shot her an aggravated look.
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``I don't have the time or the patience for this kind of game,'' I said.
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``You'll fight or you won't. I get the feeling not much I'll say will
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tip the balance either way.''
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``Considering the corner you're in,'' the ochre-skinned woman spoke,
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``are you sure you can afford not to?''
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I couldn't help it -- I laughed, right in her face. The look of
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incredulity that got me was a memory that would warm me on cold nights.
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``I'm always in a fucking corner, Archer,'' I told her. ``I don't think
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I've been in a fight where I wasn't horribly outclassed since I can
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remember.''
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I spread my arms and turned the palms up, encompassing all of the city.
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``And yet, I'm still here. Standing.'' I said softly. ``So scuttle off
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if you want to. I don't need you to make this a victory.''
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I leaned forward and flashed her a hard smile.
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``You think one less aspect and a limp is going to stop me? I don't win
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fights because I'm the Squire -- I win them because I'm Catherine
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Foundling. Watch them take a swing. \emph{See where it gets them}.''
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