429 lines
22 KiB
TeX
429 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-35-spur}{%
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\chapter{Spur}\label{chapter-35-spur}}
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\epigraph{``I trust people to act according to their nature. Anything more
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is sentimentality.''}{Dread Empress Malicia the First}
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\emph{The First and the Second were swarming over Aksum, stamping down
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the last pockets of resistance. Warlock -- for Wekesa had claimed the
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Name now, ripped it out of the corpse of his hated predecessor -- had
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done well in clearing the fort north of the city. It had allowed Grem to
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steal a march on the enemy and hit the outer walls before they were
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fully manned. From there it had been a slaughter, with Sabah dealing the
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last blow by ripping off High Lord Duma's head with her bare hands. That
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she was able to manage as much without letting the Beast out was a sign
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of how far she'd progressed in her mastery of her Name. The dark-haired
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man sat alone on the hill as the sun went down, watching the plumes of
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smoke rising from the city.}
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\emph{With High Lord Mawasi dead, Seneca long buried and the High Lady
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of Nok having declared for them the war was as good as done. Wolof still
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stood strong behind High Lady Tasia, but she'd already approached
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Malicia to cut a deal. The last of the highborn, the High Lady of
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Thalassina, might have been been a problem if circumstances had not
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intervened. Corsairs had hit the port and set what passed for the
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Imperial fleet on fire, looting the city before retreating to the
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Tideless Isles. Amadeus was going to have to take care of that, when
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matters were settled in the Empire. The pirates had essentially killed
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commerce with the Free Cities, and those trade lanes were the lifeblood
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of Praes.}
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\emph{``A great victory,'' a woman's voice noted.}
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\emph{One of these days, he was going to be able to notice Ranger when
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she snuck up on him. Not today, evidently.}
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\emph{``Was it?'' he wondered.}
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\emph{Hye sat down at his side, her boots sliding soundlessly against
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the yellow grass. The dying sun cast her honey-coloured skin in gold and
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red, the sight of the lazy half-smile on her sharply angled face killing
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the breath in his throat. She was beautiful. Always was, of course, but
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now and then the realization of it scattered all other thoughts away.}
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\emph{``Your enemy is dead,'' she told him patiently. ``His armies
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destroyed, his city made yours. If you find a way to be dissatisfied
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about this, I will be most displeased.''}
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\emph{Considering how often she still made a game of him when they
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sparred, this was not a threat Amadeus would take lightly.}
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\emph{``Mercy, Lady Ranger,'' he implored drily. ``Spare my already
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aching bones. Anyhow, if you damage me too much you'll have no more use
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of me.''}
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\emph{They'd taken to sharing a bed on the very night Alaya had crowned
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herself Dread Empress, and all of this was still new and wondrous to
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him. He'd never been interested in women before, or men for that matter.
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Desire had been unknown to him except in an abstract sense but now it
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flared up in his blood every time he looked at is lover. Sometimes he
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was puzzled such a change had come over him. He'd not started to be
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attracted to Hye in that manner until he'd come to trust her as much as
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he could trust anyone, so perhaps the root of it was there.}
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\emph{``That'd be unfortunate,'' the dark-eyed woman admitted
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shamelessly. ``I've finally gotten you trained up to my tastes.''}
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\emph{Carelessly she linked their fingers and he allowed their shoulders
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to lean against one another as they watched the night fall.}
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\emph{``You're usually in a better mood, after you win,'' Hye finally
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said. ``What's happening in that clever mind of yours, that has you so
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disappointed?''}
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\emph{He remained silent for a moment.}
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\emph{``This does not feel like a victory,'' Amadeus admitted. ``We've
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accomplished nothing here.''}
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\emph{``You made sure that scheming freeloader is getting the throne,''
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Ranger pointed out, tone dipping into distaste when she mentioned
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Malicia.}
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\emph{It had been too much to hope for these two would actually get
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along, he supposed. That Alaya had not taken to the field with them had
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been the last nail in the coffin for Hye -- she had no patience for
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people who did not take what they wanted with their own hands. Malicia
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being the reason they'd been able to fill their ranks with household
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troops from Nok had failed to move his lover on the matter,
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unfortunately.}
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\emph{``There was never any doubt about that,'' Black said frankly.
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``That is was irks me. All this death, all this destruction, just to
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confirm something I knew would happen two years ago. We've not improved
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the Empire's situation in any measurable manner, Hye. All we've done is
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clean up the mess.''}
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\emph{Hye smiled languidly, a touch of heat coming to her dark eyes.}
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\emph{``Sometimes you say things like this, and I finally understand why
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they're all terrified of you,'' she said.}
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\emph{Black frowned.}
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\emph{``You've reached the threshold, Amadeus,'' Ranger murmured. ``You
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have the Empire, you have your Calamities and your armies. You've broken
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the old, now you get to make the new.''}
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\emph{She slid onto his lap, and-}
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I woke up. For one moment, I was almost pathetically relieved I could
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still have dreams like this, that my Name could still manage that much.
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I pushed aside the covers and sat up in my bed, closing my eyes to
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think. I'd gotten to see a lot more of Black's\ldots{} personal life
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than I'd ever wanted to, though thankfully I'd woken before things got
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too graphic. Still, just associating my teacher with sex was \emph{ugh}.
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That wasn't the important part of the dream though. I doubted my Name
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would stoop to giving me a motivational pat on the back, which meant it
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was the details that were the crux of it. \emph{You've broken the old,
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now you get to make the new.} Idly I thought I'd half expected Lady
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Ranger to have an accent, given her foreign origins, but I supposed it
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made since she didn't. She'd been around for centuries, even if in the
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dream she'd looked of age with Black. I chewed on the words in silence.
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Had I really broken something, I wondered? It didn't feel like it, not
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even after the twin victories the Fifteenth had gained. Then again,
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perhaps it was the second part of that sentence I should have been
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focusing on. Making something new.
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That, I decided, was something I could do.
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People had been on my back about choosing a personal retinue, an
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equivalent to my teacher's Blackguards, and believed I'd found mine
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during the Battle of Marchford. I'd need to take a look at the officer
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rolls for the Gallowborne, but unless I was mistaken the highest ranked
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remaining officer among them was Lieutenant Farrier. He'd do, as their
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captain. Not a great supporter of the Empire, but then he'd been the one
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to bring to my attention that a chunk of my Legion rather despised
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Praes. Keeping a finger on the pulse of that sentiment would be
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important, in the future. I'd been wanting to bring Callowans up the
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ranks since the beginning, anyhow, and while having that happen through
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known deserters was not what I'd expected I'd take it. If the bastards
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could take on the literal host of Hell without flinching, they could be
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relied on in a fight. As far as the Fifteenth's organization went,
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though, that was ultimately a small change. I needed to stop thinking of
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my army as a Legion of Terror I was borrowing and start thinking of it
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as the main tool in my arsenal. The reinforcements Black had promised
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would go some way in filling the ranks, but we'd still end up under the
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usual cut-off of four thousand the other legions used. Heiress' men
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would get us up to that, more or less, but they could not be relied on.
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If anything, I'd do what I could to thin out their numbers in the dark.
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So what did I have, that made the Fifteenth different? Juniper was the
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first thing to come to mind, but the Hellhound wasn't something I could
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improve on. The toolbox magician, I'd heard Nauk call her once after a
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few drinks, and the label was accurate enough it had stuck in my mind.
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My legate was a fixed point, if anything. What she was could not be
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improve save in the unlikely event she gained a Name, so the most I
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could do about this was to give her more tools. Legionaries were one
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thing, but I needed specialists. Robber was one, because he was as much
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a vicious little goblin raider as he was a sapper. It might be time to
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take him out of Hune's kabili and give him an independent command to
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mould in his image. Pickler had already shown she could handle the
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traps, artillery and infrastructure aspects of the Fifteenth in her
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station as Senior Sapper, there was no need for her to have additional
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help in the matter.
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Saboteurs and raiders, using the same tactics William had proved could
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turn a city on itself in Summerholm. I'd even found them their first
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target already.
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Wasn't enough. What had I learned, from Three Hills and Marchford? What
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had been my best assets? The first time we'd fought the Silver Spears,
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the tipping point had been the goblinfire traps. My sappers were already
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all they could be, although my first order when I next sat with Juniper
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would be allowing Pickler free reign in building all the siege engines
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she wanted. Marchford had been won as much by magic as by steel, though.
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Three Hills too, now that I thought of it: it was Masego's spell that
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had ignited the trap. Legion doctrine was to use many mages to
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concentrate firepower, but Legion doctrine did not take into
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consideration the fact that I had a mage of Apprentice's calibre on my
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side. His ritual had turned a certain defeat into a battle where the
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Fifteenth had a fighting chance, fundamentally modifying the lay of the
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land. He'd needed several lines of mages to manage that, though.
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\emph{So I make their assignment a permanent one.}
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Black hadn't been wrong, when he'd decided how to use his mages. He'd
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seen that the Praesi gave birth to more mages than any other Calernian
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polity and turned all those untrained youths into another tool for his
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generals, folding goblin blood mages and the rare orc casters into those
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ranks to bolster the firepower. By designing a doctrine that wasn't
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centred around exceptional mages like Warlock he'd created an
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institution that would survive the death of individuals like that and
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remain a contributing factor on the battlefield. But to achieve this,
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he'd sacrificed the ability to use mass rituals that had made Praesi
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armies monstrously dangerous in the past. There was no need for me to
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follow his lead in the matter, not when I had Masego on my side. Heiress
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seemed to be fond of using magic to solve her problems, but I had a
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Named whose entire business was sorcery: she would not be able to match
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me in this, if I prepared correctly.
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Even putting the matter of my rival aside, magic was still more of a
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trump card than I'd ever expected. That trick Masego had pulled with the
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hearths might have failed to kill the demon, but aimed at an enemy army
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it would kill hundreds and break morale. The rebel armies I was going to
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face didn't have a caster that was a match for Apprentice, didn't even
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use mages the way the Legions did. Did I have it it me to deploy that
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kind of mass murder against my enemies, knowing they had no counter for
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it? Maybe a year ago the thought of such one-sided killing would have
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had me flinching, but I'd gotten that sort of sentiment beaten out of
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me. I would not surrender an advantage out of a twisted sense of fair
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play, not when I already had so many hounds baying at the gate. Juniper
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drilled our soldiers into formations to deal with specific threats,
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there was no reason Masego could not drill a cadre of mages in the use
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of rituals to ruin an enemy general's day.
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I was feeling refreshed, the nap I'd taken clearing my mind of the
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brutal exhaustion that had been plaguing me since morning. There was one
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more thing I needed to fix about the Fifteenth, I knew. My legion didn't
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have a Kachera Tribune, the general staff officer that would oversee
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scouting and information gathering. Filling the position wasn't a real
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priority at the moment, but finding someone who could have that function
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was. Over and over I'd been outmanoeuvred because my opponents knew what
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I was doing while I was in the dark about their movements. This was no
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longer acceptable, not after the number of soldiers it had cost me. In
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the long term I might not always be able to rely on Black's network of
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spies, anyhow, so the sooner I found someone to build my own the better.
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I could afford it, what with the general's pay I was stacking up without
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ever really putting a dent in it. My instinct for that was to put Hakram
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on the case, but Adjutant might not be the best fit there.
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He already had so many other responsibilities, including being at my
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side when I took the field. He did have contacts with officers in other
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legions, which would be useful, but it wasn't enough by a long shot.
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\emph{I'll table that for now, then}, I thought with a grimace. Not for
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long, though. I was running out of time. Getting to my feet, I tested my
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bad leg and found with pleasure that the brew from earlier was still
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taking the edge off. The room had no windows so I had no idea what the
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time was, but odds were I'd slept through most of the day. My body had
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certainly needed as much. Picking up the trousers I'd lazily dropped on
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the floor, I slipped into them and picked up the cloth roll for my
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breast bindings. There might not have been much to bind, but the
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additional layer prevented chafing from the aketon. On the only table in
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the room a pair of journals were laid down, the same ones Black had
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given me. The one he'd said I needed to understand before he could
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answer my question.
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My teacher had made no attempt to continue the conversation we'd started
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the night before we last parted ways, content to let me approach him in
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my own time, but it had been weeks since I'd made progress in
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understanding the last riddle inside the journals. That column outlining
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an area in square miles, roughly the size of two fifths of the
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Wasteland. Initially I'd thought it was the Green Stretch, but it was
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larger than that by a comfortable margin. Anyhow, what would be the
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relevance of just measuring the size of the Green Stretch? It had
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remained a constant area, while that column of numbers shifted from
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decade to decade. Its relation to the population census wasn't easy to
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make a pattern of, either. It did tend to rise high before Tyrants
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attempted to invade Callow, but it also went down sharply seemingly
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without reason. Weather in some parts of the Wasteland could change from
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snow to drought in the span of an hour, so there might have been a link
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there, but I couldn't quite put a finger on it.
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I'd come close to asking Kilian if she could make anything of it several
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times, but ultimately held back. It wasn't that I didn't trust her, but
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I wanted to figure this out myself. \emph{Can I still afford to,
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though?} Black hadn't told me how long he'd stay in Marchford, but it
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couldn't be more than a few days. And when he was gone, so was my chance
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to finish this conversation with him. Part of me knew there was no hurry
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for that to happen, but there'd been too many unknowns in my life
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lately. This felt\ldots{} important. Like Creation had put a weight on
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it. \emph{Like the beginnings of a pivot.} I opened the journal one last
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time and ran a finger down the mystery column, but nothing came to mind.
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I was shaken out of my thoughts by a firm knock on the door a moment
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later.
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``Come in,'' I called out, not bothering to put a shirt on.
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As far as I was concerned modesty had been seen to by the bindings. To
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my delight, the person who came into the room was Hakram.
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``Cat,'' he managed to get out before I strode to him and enveloped him
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in a hug.
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He was warm, and the loose cotton shirt wasn't enough to cover the broad
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expanse of thick green muscle. He laid an arm around my shoulders pretty
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easily, given that he was over two feet taller, and clasped me close for
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a moment before gently pushing me away.
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``Put a shirt on,'' he requested firmly.
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``I'm just too much woman for you to handle, I see,'' I spoke drily.
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He sighed. ``Yes, your strangely-coloured thin skin and lack of proper
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canines has me all aflutter,'' he deadpanned. ``Please, cover up before
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I can no longer control myself. Or you catch a cold.''
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``We don't do that anymore,'' I reminded him amusedly, reaching for top.
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``You'll find a way,'' he muttered.
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``You know, given how much you apparently sleep around I'm surprised
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you're a bit of a prude,'' I noted as I put my head through the shirt
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only to realize the sleeves were still folded in.
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Good thing the troops weren't around to that, I decided.
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``I have no idea what you're talking about,'' the orc lied blatantly.
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After Juniper had pointed it out, I'd started noticing how often other
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orcs gave my Adjutant the eye. Fighting multiple heroes and being the
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first of his species with a Name in centuries was apparently kind of an
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aphrodisiac his kind, though in all fairness it was much the same with
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human Named.
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``You're back on your feet, then,'' I asked as I decided to actually put
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boots on for good measure.
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``For now,'' he grunted. ``Though Masego told me to avoid anything too
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strenuous for a few days.''
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``You've talked to him, then?'' I murmured. ``How did he look?''
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``Tired, mostly,'' Hakram shrugged. ``Happy to be reunited with his
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father.''
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I grimaced. ``Saw Warlock, huh.''
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Had mixed feelings about that. I'd not forgotten the pleasant little
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chat I'd had with the Calamity back in Summerholm, or the horrifying
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threat he'd made with a sunny smile. I wasn't going to complain he was
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in the city, given how dire my need for a mage who could find corruption
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currently was, but the sooner he left after that the better. That Hakram
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had noticed nothing unusual with Masego was a mark in the mage's favour,
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but still\ldots{} I'd seen the demon ichor touch his arm. I still
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remembered the moment of hesitation before his father had declared him
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untouched. I'd need to make sure he was still whole, one way or another.
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Retreating in my thoughts for a moment as I finished putting on my last
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boot, I only noticed Hakram casting a curious look at the still-open
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journal when I was done.
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``A lend from my teacher,'' I informed him.
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``I do not mean to pry,'' the tall orc gravelled immediately.
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I clenched my fingers and unclenched them. Pride had held me back, so
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far. That and a reluctance to act on trust even when I felt it. Still,
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if I couldn't rely on Hakram then who \emph{could} I rely on?
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``Maybe you should,'' I grunted. ``Have a look, there's a column I can't
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quite pin down.''
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He lumbered over to the table, overlarge fingers picking it up. He
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frowned at the pages I'd left open for a long moment, then flipped back
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to the beginning of the journal. His frown deepened, then he flipped to
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the last page. Black's last entry was on the year he'd begun the
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Conquest, if I remembered correctly. Why he'd stopped then was something
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I'd mulled over for some time.
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``I think,'' he spoke slowly, ``that number is the total territory in
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the Empire can bear crops.''
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``That doesn't make sense,'' I told him flatly.
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He shook his head.
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``Look at this,'' he said, returning to the first page. ``The number is
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much larger, then it goes down after the reign of Dread Empress Sinistra
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the First.''
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``And?'' I prompted.
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``She's the one who tried to steal Callow's weather and ended up making
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the Wasteland,'' he reminded me.
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``So it may be related to that,'' I conceded. ``Doesn't have to be
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cultivable land.''
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He flipped back to the last page.
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``The year before the Conquest,'' he gravelled, ``the levees in the
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northern part of the Green Stretch broke. It flooded a massive chunk of
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the fields. Look at the number for that year.''
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It took a sharp descent. And yet\ldots{}
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``Hakram, that \emph{makes no sense},'' I said. ``The population of
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Praes is slightly larger than Callow's. There's no way you can feed that
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many people with only that much farmland. Ater alone is half a million
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citizens. The whole reason death row prisoners are auctioned in Praes is
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so blood rituals can make parts of the Wasteland usable for crops.''
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I'd been horrified at the systematic gruesome executions when I'd first
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learned of them, but Black had flatly informed me they were a necessity.
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They were, as a matter of fact, one of the reasons High Lords and Ladies
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had come to exist: one of their duties to the lesser nobles sworn to
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them was to ensure enough of their fields were fertile that they could
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feed their own. Since the prisoners were technically under the aegis of
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the Tower, the gold used to buy them helped fill Imperial coffers as an
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unofficial tax. The practice had become less popular since the
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annexation of the Kingdom, since foodstuffs could simply be imported,
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but it had not disappeared entirely.
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``That's why the area is larger than the Green Stretch,'' he gravelled.
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I bit my lip. I didn't know much about blood magic, but for the amount
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of people that got bled over altars the gain seemed incredibly low. I
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knew mage healing was limited by the amount of magic you could pump into
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something living before it was saturated, though. There was a very real
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possibility that using the rituals on the same grounds two consecutive
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years might not work. Gods Below, though, these numbers\ldots{}
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``I mean, even if you import from the Free Cities it would be impossible
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to ever accumulate a surplus,'' I said. ``The coastal cities can fish,
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but every given year there would be a part of the Empire facing
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starvation. Hells, the moment you got a bad year of crops in the Green
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Stretch there'd be food shortages everywhere.''
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The implications of that were massive. If from generation to generation
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starvation remained a constant, it would leave lasting marks on the
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mindset of the Praesi. \emph{And that shapes Names, in the long term.}
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If you added what we'd just unearthed to the book of stories Black had
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given me, a pattern was beginning to form that put a shiver up my spine.
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I passed a hand through my hair, only now noticing I'd forgotten to tie
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it back into a ponytail. Fixing that would have to wait.
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``I need to talk to Black,'' I said. ``Now.''
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