436 lines
20 KiB
TeX
436 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-33-clean-up}{%
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\chapter{Clean-up}\label{chapter-33-clean-up}}
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\epigraph{``Of course I don't step on people's throats using my own heels.
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Have you seen how gorgeous these boots are? I'm not getting blood on
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these beauties: it takes at least two princes to get the right amount of
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skin, and duke leather just isn't the same.''}{Dread Emperor Nihilis I, the Tanner}
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We'd had to put the entire main avenue to the torch, no two ways about
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it. While Robber took cared of scorching the earth where Heiress wanted
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to make camp, my men were stuck with the clean-up. Corpses of my
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legionaries and the Silver Spears both were stacked on great pyres that
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would burn until morning. I had one made for Hunter alone, since he'd
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earned at least this much from me. Anyhow, I suspected Archer would want
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his ashes to bring back to Refuge, whenever she came back. Necromancers
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could make some truly terrifying things out of the ashes of a hero, with
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a little time and imagination, and since I had none of those in my
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employ better they went far beyond the reach of my enemies. Handling the
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corpses was grim work, but it wasn't the worst of it. Apprentice still
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had enough wits about him that he could serve as a detection device for
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corruption with the right spell, so I had Ratface appropriate a
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guildhall and rotate all legionaries who'd been within sight of the
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demon through it.
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A dozen times, I patted a man or a woman who'd served me with nothing
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but loyalty on the back and sent them to a backroom where a sword was
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driven through their back.
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I would have done it myself, felt like I \emph{needed} to, but I was too
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godsdamned tired not to screw up the job. Of all the things to have
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happened tonight, that one left the foulest taste in the mouth. It was
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Sergeant Tordis who ended up bloodying her hands, though most of her
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line stepped in at some point or another. Casualties to demon fuckery
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were less than I'd feared: the trick it had used to make a new form
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seemed to have killed most of the affected. There was, of course,
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another problem. Apprentice himself might have been touched by
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corruption, and could not be relied on to check himself. None of my
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other mages knew the spell, and Masego was the only one who could teach
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it to them. I had records kept of all legionaries who'd been exposed to
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the demon even after the\ldots{} purge, just in case. I'd need to have
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them looked over by another mage as soon as I could manage. I could feel
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myself falling asleep on my feet, but there was still too much to do.
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Hakram wasn't waking up, so I'd had him moved to my rooms until he was
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back in action. My healers assured me this was a case of pure
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exhaustion, and for what it was worth Apprentice cleared him of any
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trace of corruption. Coming into his aspect when in range of the demon
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hadn't had the consequences I feared, much to my relief. \emph{Of
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course, unlike me he didn't try to fucking force it.} Robber came back
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half a bell later, as I dipped a torch in bucket of oil standing in a
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darkened street.
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``Boss,'' he greeted me, creeping out of an alley on silent feet.
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I'd heard him coming but I was too tired to bother. I shook off some oil
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onto the paving stones and grasped the haft of the torch more firmly.
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``Report,'' I ordered hoarsely.
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``The munitions we had stocked in the manor went up by accident,'' he
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lied baldly. ``By the time Heiress' boys got in place to put it out, the
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place was a burnt-up husk.''
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I smiled thinly. There was no pretending I hadn't given this order out
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of pure spite, but I did not regret it. Akua had crossed a line by
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meddling with demons, by setting one on my legion. The only reason we
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had a truce was that forcing a battle with her right now was too risky.
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``Tribune, listen to me closely,'' I rasped. ``As long as those fucking
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Proceran mercenaries and their paymaster remain within a day's march of
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us, there will be \emph{accidents}.''
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The moon cast its light on the sapper's face, sharp needle-like teeth
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and malevolent yellow eyes making my soldier a scarier sight than the
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devils ever had been.
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``There's all sorts of accidents,'' Robber mused. ``I wonder what kind
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might happen to them?''
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``Supplies will be poisoned,'' I ordered harshly. ``Beasts of burden
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will be crippled. Any men who wander the city alone or in small enough
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groups will end up dead in an alley. If they so much as stack two stones
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on top of each other, I want them pushed down and on fire.''
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``Hare anulsur,'' he murmured in Tahreb.
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\emph{War of vultures}, it meant. The tribes of the Hungering Sands had
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never matched the Soninke kingdoms north of them in numbers, but never
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once had they been successfully invaded: Soninke hosts wandering into
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the desert found only poisoned wells and and nights full of knives,
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until all that was left of the enemy was a trail of corpses for the
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vultures. He'd understood my meaning perfectly.
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``We've been at war since the moment she let the abomination out,'' I
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snarled. ``Time we started acting like it.''
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There was no need to tell him not to get caught, and that if he was I'd
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have to deny I'd ever given him this order. Goblins understood the ways
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of quiet war better than humans ever could. With my free hand I opened
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the shutter to the only lantern lighting up the street and used the
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candle inside to light my torch. With heavy steps I walked to the pile
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of firewood Tordis' line had stacked up, engraving the faces of the
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twelve legionaries on it into my mind. \emph{Gods, they look so young.}
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I threw the torch.
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``Your deaths are debt,'' I whispered as the flames spread. ``And I will
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have a long price for them. I cannot give you much, where you are going,
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but I can promise you that.''
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I turned away, Robber falling in behind without a word. Dawn was but a
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bell away, and I needed to get some rest: Creation wouldn't stop
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spinning just because I was exhausted.
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---
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My entire body ached when I woke up.
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All available beds had been taken by my wounded, so I'd ended up passing
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out on a chair in one of the empty rooms of the Fifteenth's command
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centre. I tested my bad leg by putting weight on it and had to bite my
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lip to stop from screaming. \emph{Fuck. Well, I won't be running any
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time soon.} My armour was in a messy pile on the other side of the room
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but putting it back on seemed like a masochistic endeavour, so instead I
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carefully rose while putting as little weight as possible on my wounded
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foot. I felt filthy, and probably smelled like it too: a mix of old
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blood, sweat and grime. There was no washbasin, unfortunately, and going
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on a quest for a bathtub was a luxury that would have to wait. The only
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upside to how I felt was that I was too tired to be hungry. I bent over
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with a hiss to pick up my sword belt and strap it on, tightening it
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sloppily. My ponytail had turned into a tangled mess while I slept, but
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that was nothing new: at least it had stopped growing since I'd become
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the Squire.
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I pushed the door open and limped into the wider chamber. There were
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only a handful of officers there, spread among a few tables and talking
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in low voices. Through the windows in the front I could see the sun had
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risen, and that was as much as I took in before a hush fell over the
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room. Every single legionary was looking at me in utter silence. I kept
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my face blank, unsure how to react. It wasn't fear or resentment I saw,
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but something else I couldn't quite identify. Aisha's voice rang out
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suddenly.
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``Back to work,'' the Taghreb girl barked. ``Azim, put the herbs in the
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pot. If I catch any of you gossiping you're getting a double shift
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helping the sappers.''
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Aisha was perfectly groomed, looking like she'd just walked off a parade
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ground. It wasn't because she'd not been in the thick of it, because
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some of the other staff officers I could see were looking distinctly
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haggard. I even smelled a touch of perfume on her as she came closer,
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offering me an arm to lean on. I pushed away the gesture a touch too
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harshly, regretting it immediately as I hobbled to a chair on my own.
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She didn't seem particularly offended, at least. I suppose that being as
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close to Juniper as she was, she knew a thing or two about dealing with
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rudeness.
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``Aisha,'' I grunted. ``What time is it?''
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``Half past Dawn Bell,'' she replied, sitting on the edge of the table.
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I noted with tired amusement that she was as close to me as she could be
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without my feeling irritated at her closeness. I wasn't sure whether
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that perceptiveness was a result of her aristocratic origins or
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something unique to Aisha herself, but it was appreciated nonetheless.
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``Hakram up yet?'' I asked.
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She shook her head.
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``Apprentice said he'd be out until noon, at least. Something about
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drawing too deep on his Name,'' she paused, then raised her voice.
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``Azim, if that pot isn't on its way I will have you \emph{strung up}.''
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A harried-looking Soninke officer ran towards us with a very nice
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porcelain pot I'd see Aisha use for tea before, nearly dropping the
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matching cup in his haste. The Staff Tribune dismissed him impatiently
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after he set it on the table in front of me. I raised an eyebrow in her
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direction.
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``Masego left me herbs for when you woke up,'' she explained.
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I offered her a grateful nod and poured myself a cup of a brew smelling
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just like the one Apprentice had made me before the battle. I noticed
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her twitching at the sight of my pouring my own cup, which got the ghost
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of a smile out of me. No doubt the aristocrat in her balked at the idea
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of the highest-ranking person in the room filling their own cup, but she
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knew me well enough by now to have noticed I disliked relying on people
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for things I could do myself. The effect of the herbs didn't kick in
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immediately, unfortunately. I spoke up again to keep my mind off the
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burning sensation in my leg.
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``Where \emph{is} Masego, anyway?''
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``Room next to yours,'' she said. ``He didn't last much longer than you,
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and informed me that if anyone disturbed him for any reason they'd spend
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a week of their life as a toad.''
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I snorted. Whether or not he could actually do that was debatable --
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metamorphosis was a branch of sorcery that consumed a hideous amount of
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power for even the smallest changes -- but coming from the Warlock's son
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the threat would be enough to give anyone pause.
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``No one can find Archer,'' Aisha continued, ``and Juniper's sleeping
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the battle off somewhere on a rooftop.''
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Surprise must have shown on my face, because the lovely Staff Tribune
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elaborated.
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``She always does that after a fight,'' she explained. ``Lets her mind
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rest.''
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As far as vices went, that was a rather mild one. Not that I should be
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surprised: the Hellhound was one of the most temperate people I'd ever
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met. Hardly drank, disapproved of gambling and I'd never heard of her
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being involved with anyone. Robber kept insinuating she was sleeping
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with either Aisha or Hakram, but then he'd also composed a ten-stanza
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poem about how Nauk had fathered half a dozen calves during our march to
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Callow. The tribune's words had to be taken with a grain of salt, was
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what I was saying. I hummed, finishing my cup and pouring another. The
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taste of the brew was bitter but it soothed my throat, and already the
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pain in my leg was receding.
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``Heiress?'' I finally asked.
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``Hasn't made a move,'' Aisha informed me. ``Set up her camp around the
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ruins of the manor and put up a palisade. There are regular watches, but
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none of her men have set foot in the city.''
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That was fine. I was willing to be patient: night would fall eventually,
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and unlike Robber's men hers did not see in the dark. Wooden stakes
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would do little to impede goblins with knives and a mandate to spill as
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much blood as they could get away with.
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``And so ends the Battle of Marchford,'' I murmured. ``We got so close
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to a real victory, Aisha. So damned close.''
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The Taghreb's face went inscrutable, then she let out a soft sigh.
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``Ma'am,'' she said, then stopped when I gave her a look. ``Catherine,''
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she corrected herself. ``Look at that orc over there, the woman with the
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lily jutting out of her breastplate.''
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The sight of a broad-shouldered orc frowning down at paperwork was
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almost comical, I had to admit.
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``That's Lieutenant Asta,'' Aisha continued. ``When she went for water,
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around dawn, a five-year old boy walked up to her and have her that
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flower. Thanked her for saving his mother from the devils.''
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I met Aisha's eyes and saw she was smiling softly.
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``That's happening all over Marchford, right now,'' she said.
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``Callowans are pitching in to help legionaries clear debris off the
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streets. Half my staff was ambushed by old women bringing them
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sweetbread and lamb stew. Catherine, a fortnight ago these people
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thought we were worse than the plague. Now children are bringing us
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flowers.''
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She rested a hand on my wrist for an instant, then withdrew. Such soft
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skin, for a soldier.
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``That look on their faces when you walked in was \emph{pride},
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Squire,'' Aisha told me. ``We're proud of what we did here. The
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Fifteenth took a stand and we were bloodied for it, but we won. And that
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makes all the difference.''
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``We didn't get the demon,'' I replied tiredly. ``Heiress did.''
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The Taghreb aristocrat shrugged. ``That may be true. But the stories
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that are coming in aren't awe about her taking care of the threat.
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They're about three villains and a pair of heroes, standing between the
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Fifteenth and a demon. They're about you and Hakram forcing back a
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monster the size of a guard tower with nothing but swords and shields,
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about Apprentice making a new sun in the sky to scour it clean. Maybe in
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the Tower they'll care about what Heiress has to say, but not those of
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us who were here. We know, and more importantly we'll \emph{remember}.''
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I looked away, feeling my throat choke up. How tired must I have been,
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for this to bring tears to my eyes? Aisha was kind enough to pretend she
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wasn't seeing anything and I forced myself to finish my last cup of
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herbal brew. I took a few deep breaths, enjoying the last few moments of
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peace I'd be getting for a long while. The Battle of Marchford might be
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over, but I still had another war to fight. The same war that had begun
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the moment I'd laid eyes on Heiress, and made the mistake of ignoring
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because I hadn't seen her since. A prickle at the edge of my senses
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chased that peace away in the blink of an eye. I immediately rose to my
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feet, much to Aisha's surprise.
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``Lady Squire?'' she asked worriedly.
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``Trouble,'' I hissed, as a door behind me slammed open.
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Masego hopped out, robes askew and his braids an unwholesome mess. His
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eyes were red and bloodshot.
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``Fucking Hells,'' he snarled. ``\emph{Really}? Right after the demon?''
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``Focus, Apprentice,'' I spoke up, forcing my voice to remain steady.
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``What exactly is this?''
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``Something's coming from Arcadia,'' he replied, and I only now noticed
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he wasn't wearing his spectacles.
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I had a dozen urgent questions, but none as urgent as this one:
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``Where?''
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His fingers lit up with red light and he traced a few runes in the air,
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muttering under his breath as they rearranged themselves on their own.
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``Where we fought it,'' he replied, and didn't have to specify what `it'
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was.
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I felt calm settle on me. We could handle this. We'd have to.
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``Aisha, evacuate the whole sector,'' I ordered. ``Send word to
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whichever commander is awake, I want the Fifteenth on combat footing
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immediately. Surround the place. Mages are to make sure nothing gets
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out.''
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She saluted immediately, and I turned to Masego.
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``We're going,'' I said, and it wasn't a question.
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---
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``I thought Fae could only come into Creation through gates? You know,
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like the one in the Waning Woods,'' I said to Apprentice as we hurried
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through the streets.
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``Powerful enough fairies can create paths,'' he explained, rubbing at
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his eyes.
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The morning sun wasn't doing either of us any favours.
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``And Marchford is in a unique situation,'' he added.
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We turned a corner. The street was empty, Aisha's runners having taken
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care of making sure there wouldn't be anyone caught in the crossfire. It
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would take longer for the legion to be in position, though. We'd be
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without backup for the beginning of the fight.
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``Elaborate,'' I gritted out when it became obvious he wouldn't.
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``Slower,'' he panted.
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I resisted the urge to point out that I was the cripple between the two
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of us. \emph{He's running drills with Hakram after this, Heavens burn me
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if I lie.}
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``Demons damage Creation,'' he told me as we cut down our pace. ``The
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separations between Creation and a realm as close to it as Arcadia will
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be running thin right now. Maybe forever.''
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``Well that's just fucking wonderful,'' I cursed.
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Fae inside a bloody city. Just what we needed right now. And I couldn't
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even use all of my legion against them: at least a third would have to
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be watching Heiress' army to be sure they didn't backstab us at the
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first occasion. Which they damn well would, because Akua was the kind of
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insane megalomaniac who used existential threats as catspaws. Sometimes
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I understood why Black had wanted to put all the Wasteland's nobility to
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the sword after the civil war.
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``Are we sure they're going to be hostile?''
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``Fae aren't hostile, Cat,'' he got out. ``They just like their games
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and don't understand the concept of mortality. They're basically souls
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given form -- inside Arcadia they can't die.''
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I paused. ``But in Creation they can, right? \emph{Right}?''
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Apprentice cleared his throat. ``That's, uh, a matter of academic
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debate. The most popular current of thought is-``
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``\emph{Masego},'' I barked.
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``Sure,'' he replied, looking as pained by the lack of precision as he
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was by the act of running. ``Stab away, that'll work.''
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We cut through the plaza as fast as we could and arrived at the head of
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the avenue just when something tore open. Blizzard poured out of an
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opening I couldn't see, impossibly thick. Winds howled as frost spread
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across the ground, an empty ruined avenue turning into the eye of the
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storm faster than I could unsheathe my sword. I grimaced.
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``Well, that's promising,'' I muttered.
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Masego whispered something under his breath and a moment later I stopped
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feeling the cold. I shot him a grateful glance, and together we strode
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forward. It was hard to make anything out in the spinning snow, but as
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we got to the edge of the blizzard we saw a silhouette approach. A man?
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Maybe not, the features were too fine to tell and the long hair could
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have belonged to either gender. If Fae even did gender, which I wasn't
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sure they did -- some were supposed to be shapeshifters. Tall, with
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impossibly clear blue eyes and hair that looked more like flowing
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darkness than anything materially possible. Those eyes, I noted, were
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wide and showing white. The Fae looked at us and hesitated, then jerked.
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``\emph{No},'' it called out in a voice that was like velvet made sound,
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even when taken by terror.
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Something dragged it deeper into the snow storm and there was a scream,
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then a sickening crunch. I licked my lips nervously.
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``Suddenly I'm not too sure about going to have that look,'' I admitted.
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``You're the commander,'' Apprentice croaked out. ``If you favour a
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tactical retreat, who am I to argue?''
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We never got to make a choice, as the blizzard continued to expand and
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enveloped us a heartbeat later. I kept close to Masego and brought up my
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sword. The visibility was the real problem here, not even my Name sight
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could -- the cold touch of steel against the back of my neck stilled my
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heart.
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``Wekesa?'' my teacher's voice prompted.
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``She's clear,'' Warlock replied, still invisible. ``Though someone took
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a butcher's knife to her soul.''
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``Your son?''
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There was a long pause.
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``Also clear,'' Warlock finally said.
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The sword came away from my neck as the tear in the distance closed, the
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blizzard dispersing to reveal the sight of the Black Knight in full
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regalia save for the helmet. He offered me a sardonic smile.
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``So,'' he mused. ``I'm given to understand you've had an eventful few
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weeks.''
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