477 lines
21 KiB
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477 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-37-apprentice}{%
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\chapter{Apprentice}\label{chapter-37-apprentice}}
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\epigraph{``I don't trust wizards. Every time I levy taxes on them, they try
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to get my political opponents to pull swords from stones.''}{Attributed to Louis Merovins, seventh First Prince of Procer}
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``She's going to betray us,'' I stated.
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I'd kept it to only my senior officers tonight, but the circle was still
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larger than I liked. Juniper was lounging in her seat, face grim as
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Aisha stood a step behind her with her hands behind her back. Nauk and
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Hune occupied half the tent by themselves, the broad-shouldered orc
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looking like a child next to the hulking shape of my ogre commander.
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Pickler and Kilian shared a bench, which I noted with amusement was high
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enough off the ground neither of their feet touched the ground. Probably
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built with orcs in mind. Hakram stood behind me as a mirror of Aisha for
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Juniper, though a Named one. Apprentice had taken the seat next to me
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without a word, and barely seemed to be paying attention. The last
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person in the room was Ratface, who raised a sardonic eyebrow before
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speaking.
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``Really?'' he drawled. ``Because Heiress always struck me as so
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trustworthy.''
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There were a few smiles at that, though no laughs. The mood was serious,
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as was our problem.
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``Most of you already know our mandate,'' I said. ``The Fifteenth, now
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bolstered with reinforcements from Callowan recruitment camps and a
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fresh set of auxiliaries, has been assigned to take the city of
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Liesse.''
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``The head of the snake,'' Nauk gravelled with a pleased note to his
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stone.
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``The heart maybe,'' Aisha disagreed. ``The head is Countess Marchford,
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and she's with the rebel host.''
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``Off-subject,'' Hune said. ``There has been warning of betrayal, an
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immediate danger. More important than semantics.''
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From the corner of my eye I saw Masego visibly restrain himself from
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responding to that. I hurried on before the situation could devolve.
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``Our auxiliary corps, which we may have to suppress before this is
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over, is made of a little above a thousand Proceran light infantry. All
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mercenaries hired through Mercantis. Juniper?''
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The Hellhound stirred in her seat, dark eyes sweeping across the room.
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``Proceran infantry can broadly be divided in three categories,'' she
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said. ``The first is peasant levies, which usually make up most of the
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Principate's armies. Little to no training, basic equipment. Vulnerable
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to shock tactics, which are usually how Proceran win battles. The second
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is principality troops. Cataphracts like the ones fielded by the Silver
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Spears and what would qualify as heavy infantry under our classification
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sheets.''
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She leaned forward for the last part.
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``The third is the type Heiress has bought. In times of war inside the
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Principate, fields are burned and villages sacked. Men and women who no
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longer have a trade take up war as a full-time occupation, though
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without the benefit of princely funding for their arms. Leather and mail
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for armour, wooden shields and longswords for armament. Almost every
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single one of them will be carrying javelins, and they're more lethal a
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volley at close range than anything we carry.''
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The Hellhound let out a grunt.
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``If you've been wondering why I covered the other two categories of
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soldiers, it's to give you comparison points when planning. We are not
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talking about better-armed peasants: these are soldiers who fought in
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the Proceran civil war and took on infantry that's in the same league as
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our heavies. They won't be used to sappers or field artillery, but
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they'll have fought mages before and some of the same tactics apply:
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move fast and disperse, use terrain as cover when possible. They're
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faster than we are, and they'll avoid a collision of shield walls.''
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There was a pause as everyone allowed that to sink in. Nauk was
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frowning, Hune looked like she'd learned nothing new and Apprentice
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might as well have been napping for how aware he'd been of what was
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going on. I cast a look at Ratface and he cleared his throat.
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``I've been given access to all the records kept by Heiress in my
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function as Quartermaster,'' he announced. ``I imagine some of them are
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falsified and she's already tried to bury me in irrelevant documents,
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but some things can't be hidden. They won't have enough javelins for
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more than three volleys, I'm almost certain of that, and before our
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advance to Liesse is over they'll be relying on us for food and water.
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Their forced march to Marchford burned through most of their supplies,
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and they lost some before when they got whipped by the Lone Swordsman.''
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News of that defeat, when it had finally trickled to the Fifteenth, had
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evoked mixed feeling in me. Heiress getting so spectacularly beaten,
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even if she hadn't been there at the time, was a win in my book. She'd
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had four thousand men when she'd started the night, then lost half to
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defection and half again to a fighting retreat. On the other hand,
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William had picked up two thousand former Stygian spear-slaves to add to
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an army that was apparently already larger than mine. The Stygian
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magisters were a disgusting piece of work, there was no denying that,
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but their horrifying training methods had also produced some of the
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finest Calernian infantry since the early days of the continent. The
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phalanx was going to stop cold whatever part of my own army faced it and
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then start shredding it. I had a few counters to that, thankfully, but
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from now on I'd have to start planning around their existence on the
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other side of the field.
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``Our current assessment is that the forces in Liesse won't be meeting
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us on the field,'' Hakram spoke up from behind me, getting the meeting
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back on track. ``We've prepared for the eventuality of a siege.''
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I looked at Pickler and the serious-faced goblin jumped in.
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``The reinforcements we picked up brought a pair of Fante model
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trebuchets, as well as a standard load of goblin munitions. My sappers
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managed to make another two ballistae before we left Marchford, bringing
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our total to three. We can bring down the city's walls, if we take the
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time to do it properly.''
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Hune cleared her throat, the sound like caged thunder. ``Are all of the
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ballistae irregular?''
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My Senior Sapper looked displeased at the question, but she deigned to
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answer anyway.
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``We've got two larger ones designed to clear the top of the enemy walls
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as well as the one we fielded against the devils -- which is fit for use
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as field artillery.''
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The ogre commander grunted. ``That's a yes, then. I'm not entirely
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comfortable with using untested designs on the field.''
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I raised a hand to quiet down the brewing argument before it could
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properly develop. Hune was a stickler for regulations and Pickler took
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questioning of her abilities in machinery building very personally. It
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was honestly surprising they'd never butted heads until now, at least
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never in front of me.
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``We'll be running tests as soon as feasible, but it's my understanding
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of the situation that Senior Sapper Pickler's plans are derived from
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blueprints in use by the Legions,'' I said, and no one thought it a good
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idea to argue.
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I disliked intervening too directly in the dynamics between the member
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of my high command but now wasn't the time for anyone to get hurt
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feelings. Internal dissensions were close to the top of the list of
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things I couldn't allow to pass. I doubted anyone here was eager to
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defect to Heiress after she'd unleashed a demon on us, but we'd not
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found all the leaks yet. Hakram had identified two small fries with
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unexplained scrying equipment and I'd had them quietly executed before
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we left Marchford, but the kind of information Heiress kept getting her
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hands on had to be coming from someone higher up in the Fifteenth's food
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chain. Or at least someone who had access to someone cleared to know
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that kind of information.
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``She's going to betray us,'' I reiterated. ``And we need to be ready
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for it. When it comes to troops we have them outclassed in every way,
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but there's another aspect to this fight. Kilian?''
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My lover offered me a discreet smile before she started speaking,
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prompting a swell of guilt in me. I hadn't had much time for her lately,
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and the grace with which she'd taken that only made it worse in my eyes.
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``We've been coordinating with Lord Apprentice to set up a few surprises
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for the enemy,'' the redhead announced.
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Masego seemed to wake, finally.
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``The current suspicion is that Heiress has possession of a standard
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which holds the binding of a relatively minor demon from the Thirteenth
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Hell,'' the bespectacled man spoke, still slumped in his seat. ``I've
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retooled a ritual that will allow us to forbid its manifestation,
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essentially keeping it stuck inside the standard.''
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``Unfortunately, the ritual requires very precise timing,'' Kilian
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explained when it became clear he wouldn't keep talking. ``And at least
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forty mages acting in concert under the supervision of Lord
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Apprentice.''
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If there'd been a table in this tent instead of just a handful of seats
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and benches, I would have drummed my fingers on the surface of it.
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``Heiress can't be allowed to play that card,'' I stated. ``Not a second
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time, not if we're to win. I'm creating a temporary task force whose
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sole purpose is preparing for that ritual. The involved personnel will
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be assigned by Senior Mage Kilian, who'll be forwarding you a list of
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names later tonight.''
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There was no argument from the gallery, even at the loss of mages. The
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memory of the rampaging demon and the round of executions that had
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followed its appearance was still fresh for everyone.
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``I'm worried we're focusing too much on Heiress, Boss,'' Nauk
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gravelled. ``She's dangerous, but all she's got is a thousand mercs and
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some nasty mage tricks. In Liesse there's at least seven thousand
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soldiers and a bunch of heroes waiting for us. They've got walls,
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they've got numbers and they've got access to a lake. Starving them out
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isn't an option, we'll have to punch through.''
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``We've got ideas for Liesse,'' the Hellhound intervened. ``At the
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moment we're focusing on Heiress because those ideas require time and
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lack of intervention on her part.''
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``Are we allowed to know what those ideas are?'' Ratface asked drily.
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I didn't want to risk the plans Juniper and I had hatched getting out
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before they were implemented, but I could at least point my officers in
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the general direction.
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``We've got a massive imbalance in our favour on the magical side,'' I
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told Ratface. ``We intend to leverage that.''
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``Fortifications in all major Callowan cities have wards woven in,''
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Apprentice contributed. ``But they're not unbreakable and if the other
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side doesn't use mages to counter us we'll have free reign.''
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``As for the Lone Swordsman,'' I said. ``He'll be mine to handle. The
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Thief and the Bard have limited combat value, though when we get closer
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to Liesse we'll have another briefing to address them.''
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With everyone up to date on the latest developments, it was about time
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to wrap this up.
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``Any other questions?'' I prompted.
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Pickler raised her head.
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``Robber has been on assignment for over a fortnight, now,'' she said.
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I looked at Juniper, who nodded.
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``You can consider his cohort of sappers detached from other duties for
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the foreseeable future,'' I said. ``I've got work for them.''
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``Anything to do with the Procerans who turned up dead this morning?''
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Hune asked.
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``We're keeping that operation under wraps,'' Juniper grunted. ``High
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command must retain plausible deniability as much as possible.''
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Given the specific orders I'd given the tribune, that much was an
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understatement. We were breaking both Tower law and Legion regulations,
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and not in ways that got you a fine and a slap on the wrist. No one else
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had anything to bring up so my officers scattered shortly afterwards.
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Hakram made to linger but I shook my head -- Apprentice remained in the
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seat opposite of mine, slouched with his eyes closed. He'd been sleeping
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almost ten hours a day lately, often catching naps in supply wagons when
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the rest of us were marching. I waited until we were alone in the tent
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before speaking again.
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``Masego,'' I spoke up.
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Dark eyes blinked open, staring at me through enchanted spectacles.
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``Catherine,'' he replied, fingers rubbing at his left wrist where the
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demon's blood had touched his skin and now burned flesh remained. ``I
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expect you're about to spit out whatever you've been almost saying to me
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for the last fortnight.''
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He'd noticed that, had he? At first I'd kept my distance to see if he
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was acting strangely. Whether or not his judgement seemed to have been
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affected by an outside source. The problem was, I didn't know Masego
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that well. I'd shared drinks with him, spoken alone quite often, but I
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didn't have the kind of friendship with him I had with Adjutant. Would I
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even notice, if he was acting strange? Warlock had cleared him of
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corruption, but I remembered that the man had paused before doing so. It
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could have been how the spell took to cast\ldots{} or something else
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entirely. I'd nearly brought up the concern to Black, but I already knew
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what his answer would be: he'd trust Warlock's word. Scribe had told me,
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once, that Blacks great flaw as a villain was personal loyalty. Warlock
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was his first and oldest friend. The conclusion there wrote itself.
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Whatever precautions I took would have to be my own.
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``I'm sorry,'' I said and I was, though not for the reasons he'd think.
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He looked baffled. ``Whatever for?''
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I tapped my own left wrist and he flinched. ``I took you into a fight
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with a demon, ill-prepared and knowing the kind of consequences it could
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have.''
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Masego sighed, the trinkets in his dreadlocks tinkling gently as he
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shook his head.
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``Is that really what you've been chewing on all this time? I would have
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gone with or without you, Catherine.''
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I kept my surprise off my face as well as I could.
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``You never struck me as the kind of man who took stands to defend
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strangers,'' I said, cautiously.
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I did not mean to give offense, though I did believe what I'd just said.
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Masego didn't really care about people in a broader sense. A few
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individuals he liked, perhaps, but even then sacrifice was not in the
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cards for Apprentice. It just wasn't the way he thought. The
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dark-skinned man snorted.
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``Thank the Gods I'm not,'' he said. ``Look at all the trouble that
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keeps getting you into. No, this wasn't about the people. It was about
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the demon.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``Is this a Warlock thing? You think you have a
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duty to keep demons contained?''
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That could be useful, though it would be coming out of nowhere. I'd
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never gotten the impression that diabolism and demonology were anything
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but passing interests of his. He'd known ways to handle the demon, sure,
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but it hadn't felt like a personal specialty.
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``I don't owe anyone a damned thing,'' Masego said, displaying white
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teeth in a hard smile. ``The demon itself was besides the point, it was
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the effect their kind has on Creation that was worth witnessing first
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hand.''
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``You went into battle against a monster like that for a \emph{scholarly
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pursuit}?'' I repeated disbelievingly.
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His face turned from amused to serious in a heartbeat.
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``It may be that to you,'' he conceded. ``It isn't to me.''
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``Then help me understand,'' I asked, ``because this makes no sense to
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me.''
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A pudgy hand pushed back and errant braid, ignoring the silver mirror
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shard woven into it.
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``I don't remember my life from before my fathers adopted me,'' he
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admitted. ``My first memories are of playing in a sprawling garden under
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a warm sun, tripping in a pile of daffodils.''
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I didn't interrupt, though the image had my lips twitching in amusement.
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``I grew up there in that garden, sleeping outside more often than
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inside the tower where Father ran his experiments. Dada used to bury me
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in blankets and tell me stories until the moon came out. Never once did
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it become winter.''
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Weather control? That was an almost absurdly costly branch of sorcery,
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and rarely behaved as it was supposed to. Besides, I'd have heard of it
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if some part of the Empire had resisted the passing of seasons for
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several years in a row -- it was the kind of thing that drew attention.
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Masego smiled at the curiosity on my face.
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``It was a spell, of a sort. When I turned nine years old, Father
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decided I was old enough for us to return to Ater. So he unmoored the
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chunk of land he'd stolen from Arcadia and allowed it to crumble.''
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My eyes widened. ``You weren't in Creation?''
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``Between it and Arcadia,'' he replied. ``Did you know the full name for
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that place is `Arcadia Resplendent'? There's a reason for that.
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Beautiful doesn't even begin to cover it.''
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He laughed but there was no joy in it.
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``Nine years old and I saw the world end,'' he said. ``I don't think
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Father realized what he was teaching me. Creation is aptly named,
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Catherine: it was created by the Gods, Above and Below. To settle some
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kind of moral pissing match, apparently, but I've no interest in that.''
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He raised his palm up and whispered a word in the mage tongue. A globe
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of light appeared over his hand, small sprites of energy spinning inside
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of it.
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``All we are is a spell, and spells\ldots{}'' he closed his hand over
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the globe and it winked out, ``can be dismissed. At any time. For any
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reason. All that's required is will.''
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``There's more to it than that,'' I said.
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``Is there?'' he smiled. ``I'd like to believe so. Am I just an insect
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on a speck of cosmic mud, or does my immortal soul make me something
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greater? That is the question that has been hounding me all my life.''
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``So you watch the places where Creation comes apart,'' I spoke slowly.
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``To understand what makes it tick?''
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Masego's eyes behind his spectacles were smouldering with real passion,
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for the first time since I'd met him.
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``There is a law in sorcery called the Sapience Limit,'' he told me. ``A
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mage cannot create something of a higher order of sentience than
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themselves. For millennia sorcerers and wizards alike have tried to
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discover whether it is a creational law or an original one, without
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success. An original law applies to the Gods themselves, Catherine.
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Consider the implications of that.''
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I was starting to think I needed to pay more attention to Kilian when
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she talked magic after we got done with the fun parts.
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``You're saying that the only difference between us and the Gods is
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power,'' I said.
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He shook his head.
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``Power is a consequence, a happenstance enforced by laws that were
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artificially set in place. Knowledge is the heart of this. And should a
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man know as much as a God\ldots{}''
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He shrugged.
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``Would there even be a difference?''
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I took a long moment to process that, silence heavy in the tent. Weeping
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Heavens, and I'd thought my teacher was ambitious.
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``This is more than a little blasphemous,'' I finally said.
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``Fuck the Gods,'' he said, calmly. ``Every single one of them. I can
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respect what you and Uncle Amadeus are trying to accomplish, I really
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can -- but you're looking at the other prisoners, when you should be
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looking at the bars.''
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\emph{I need a drink}, I thought. The philosophy he'd just described
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could have been taken straight out of one of those old Praesi fairy
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tales I had a book full of. The madman with great power trying to grasp
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something beyond his understanding, wrecking the world in his hubris.
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Fuck. I'd gone into this conversation hoping my contingency wouldn't be
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needed, but now I couldn't pretend it wasn't even a little bit. Had he
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been like this, before the demon? I couldn't know. I cursed myself again
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for not having taken the time to get know Masego better after
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Summerholm.
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``I'll stay with you until the end of the rebellion,'' Apprentice
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assured me, misinterpreting my silence. ``I made a commitment, and
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seeing heroes in action again might yield some additional
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understandings. When the campaign is over, I'll return to Marchford to
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study the thinning there between Creation and Arcadia.''
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I cleared my throat. ``That's all I can ask of you, Masego,'' I said.
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``You've already helped us much, and you'll be missed sorely when you
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leave.''
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``Flatterer,'' he replied, but he pushed up his spectacles to hide his
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embarrassed pleasure.
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``I know you're not part of the Fifteenth in any official fashion,'' I
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continued, ``but I've considered you one of us since Summerholm. The men
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agree, so I made you this.''
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I fished out a small brooch from inside my doublet. Bone, roughly shaped
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as two snakes swallowing each other's tails around a circle stamped with
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the Fifteenth's Miezan numbers.
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``\emph{You} made this?'' he asked in surprise.
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``Can't carve for the life of me,'' I admitted, ``but I killed an oxen
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and raised it. I can kind of shape the bones when my power is in it.''
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``That explains the traces of your Name in it,'' he smiled. ``Help me
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put it on?''
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I rose easily and stood behind him, picking a braid on the back of his
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neck and carefully threading it inside the hair. I adjusted a last time
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and stepped back around, only to be greeted with a warm smile.
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``Thank you,'' he said, touching my arm. ``It means more than you
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think.''
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He excused himself afterwards and I felt dirty as I watched him part the
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folds of the tent. There was just a bit of my power left in the brooch,
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just like he'd said. Enough to activate a small mechanism Robber had
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|
created inside before treating and filling the whole bone with goblin
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munitions. During the war games last year, I'd gotten to observe that
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|
the alchemy reacted violently to Name power: if it was ever activated,
|
|
it would blow his neck clean off.
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|
``Contingencies,'' I murmured to myself.
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|
I went to look for a fucking drink.
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