427 lines
19 KiB
TeX
427 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-14-situation}{%
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\section{Chapter 14: Situation}\label{chapter-14-situation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Any plan with more than four steps is not a plan, it is wishful
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thinking.''}
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-- Dread Empress Maleficent II
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\end{quote}
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I was in an unusually good mood.
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That we'd finally come within half a day's march of where the Sixth and
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the Ninth were camped was contributing: traipsing around Callow had held
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an element of novelty for the first few days, but by now I was sick and
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tired of looking at empty fields. That Hakram was so close to coming
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into his Name that I could finally feel something coming off of him was
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another factor. Soon he'd be in a position where any assassin trying to
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take him on was in for a rude awakening. Yet it would be a lie to
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pretend that the main reason for my occasional urge to whistle wasn't
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that'd I'd been sharing a bed with Kilian for the last three nights. She
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was usually gone by the time I woke up, sadly, but that was military
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life for you. We were expected to put up the pretence of professionalism
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regardless of the reality. Besides, what we got up to before going to
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sleep more than made up for it. For all that she'd apparently never been
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with a woman before Kilian had proved to be an, uh, eager and dedicated
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student. I had a fresh new appreciation for all those ribald jokes about
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nimble mage's hands.
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According to Juniper, the latest milestone our scouting lines had found
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indicated we were actually ahead of schedule: Black had installed his
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legions at the village of Harper's Crossing and at our current pace we'd
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be there before Noon Bell. It was a warm spring day, the clouds were
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clear and the sky was blue -- I'd allowed myself to be tempted to ride
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in front of the Fifteenth, keeping Nauk and Nilin company. The
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conversation had drifted towards our coming assignment and the battle
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inevitably coming with it. Opinions on the fighting strength the Silver
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Spears would bring to bear were, as it turned out, somewhat mixed.
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``Sure, Helike messed up Procer something good during the League Wars,''
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Commander Nauk growled. ``But they were under Theodosius the
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Unconquered. The man was brilliant, could have done the same with a pack
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of goatherds. He was also a villain. Tyrants are a special breed of
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competent.''
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``I think there's quite a bit of difference between goatherds and Free
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Cities men-at-arms,'' Nilin replied patiently. ``Better armour, for one.
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Fewer unwholesome entanglements with bovids, most likely -- though I'm
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not putting anything above soldiers if they campaign long enough.''
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``I'm sure they'd put togas on the poor creatures at least,'' I opined.
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``You know how they are about proper dress, down south.''
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Nauk barked out a laugh and his tribune graced me with a smile.
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``That said, I've gotten some preliminary reports from Black,'' I
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continued. ``At least five hundred cavalry, equipped in the Proceran
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style. That'll be tricky to deal with.''
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The large orc grinned nastily. ``The Legions handled the knights of the
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Old Kingdom, Boss. We'll swallow those pretty bastards whole and spit
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out their bones.''
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``Poetic,'' Nilin spoke drily. ``And I'll grant you that after Callowan
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knights every other cavalrymen look like children, but we're not the
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Ironsides. We don't field nearly enough pike to cover our entire first
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rank.''
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``Juniper is of the opinion that if we deploy your ogres in the right
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place it won't matter,'' I said. ``I'm inclined to agree. Not that their
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riders are the only challenge they'll offer.''
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There were three full lines of ogres under Nauk's command, armoured in
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the thickest plate to ever come out of Foramen and wielding war hammers
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that were outright taller than me. I knew that because I'd stood next to
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one and found out with dismay that the crown of my head didn't even
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reach the top of the shaft. My damnable height aside, the ogres could
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stop a cavalry charge flat if they stood in front of it. The war hammers
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would crush through the kind of scale mail cataphracts wore like wet
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parchment and lances would hardly do more than sting. That said, I'd
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fought ogres during the melee. I knew damn well they weren't invincible.
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They got tired like everybody else, and they could be swarmed if the
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enemy had the numbers to throw at them. Which they did, in the case of
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the Silver Spears: Scribe's estimates had them at two thousand
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men-at-arms in addition to the cavalry.
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The war doctrine taught at the College stated that a legion could take
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two-to-one odds and reasonably expect to come out on top if they had a
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full supply of goblin munitions, but in this case it was different. The
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Fifteenth could barely field one thousand and seven hundred legionaries,
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a full company of which would be\ldots{} unreliable. The Forlorn Hope
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would have to be deployed carefully, preferably in range of goblin
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crossbowmen in case they got the wrong sort of ideas. More than that,
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the Silver Spears were led by a hero. My teacher had promised he'd get
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me a look at the files both his and the Empress' spies had mounted on
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this Exiled Prince, but even if he was an incompetent wretch just his
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being present changed everything. Current Legion doctrine relied on
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shock and awe tactics to break superior numbers, after all. If the first
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rank of the enemy host disappeared in a hail of sharpers and the one
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behind it was drowned in a wave of fireballs, enemy morale usually got
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shaken up something fierce.
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All that went out the window with a hero in the ranks. As long as the
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Prince drew breath, no army he commanded would rout. They'd walk
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unflinchingly into the grinder and fight like devils until either we
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were dead or they were wiped out. Captain had told me once that, before
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the Reforms, no Imperial host took on a Callowan one unless they had
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them four to one. My own studies of the Empire's chequered military
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history had illustrated why: there were at least a dozen incidents were
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a Callowan army brutally outnumbered had made a desperate last stand and
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managed a miraculous last-moment victory. Amusingly enough, under
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Terribilis II there'd been an official decree from the Tower forbidding
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the Legions from giving battle when it seemed like they couldn't
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possibly lose. \emph{There's a reason the man managed to turn back two
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Crusades.} A shame that he'd been assassinated shortly afterwards, but
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that was the way Praesi politics worked: no great accomplishment went
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unpunished.
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``That's what we got you for, Callow,'' Nauk spoke bluntly. ``I'm
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looking forward to you running that pretentious little princeling down.
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Hells, I'd take a potshot at him myself if I thought it would work.''
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``Getting competitive with Hakram, are we?'' Nilin teased. ``A commander
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should know better than to open war on multiple fronts -- you've already
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got Robber to deal with.''
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``I have no idea what you're talking about,'' Nauk grunted. ``But I'd
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like it on official record that you're an insubordinate twit.''
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``I'll see it done,'' I promised gravely, lips twitching.
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Before I could turn back the subject to our slice of the coming
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campaign, my attention was drawn to a pair of goblins making their way
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through the ranks towards us. My vision sharpened with barely a thought
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and I made out the green markings on their armour indicating they were
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scouts and not sappers -- not that there'd been much of a chance
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otherwise, since they were coming from ahead of the column. The two of
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them were male, and relatively young-looking: closer to ten than
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fifteen, if I had to wager.
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``Ma'am,'' the officer among them saluted. ``Commander Nauk, Tribute
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Nilin.''
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I cocked my head to the side. ``You have something for me, sergeant?''
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He bobbed his head. ``Sergeant Latcher, ma'am, Second Company. We were
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scouting the road ahead when we ran into a detachment from the Sixth.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``We're getting fairly close to their camp, so
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that's not too unexpected. I'm assuming there's more?''
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``Wolf riders,'' the other goblin muttered. ``Ma'am,'' he added hastily.
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I raised a silent eyebrow, waiting for them to elaborate. The mounted
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orcs covered ground even faster than goblins, it was only natural for
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General Istrid to use them as a patrols. \emph{Especially after getting
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her supply line hit by the Silver Spears. She's got to be that much more
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careful about them sneaking about.}
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``They, uh, bring a message from Lord Black,'' Sergeant Latcher
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explained. ``He's requesting for you come ahead of the Fifteenth.
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Something about an imminent war council.''
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I sighed. ``He could have mentioned that last time we scried,'' I
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grunted. ``Still, doesn't matter. Are they still here?''
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Latcher bobbed his head again. ``They've been instructed to act as your
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escort.''
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``Kind of them,'' I spoke drily. I glanced at my companions. ``Looks
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like we'll have to cut this short. Send a runner to Juniper to tell her
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where I've gone.''
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``Duly noted,'' Nilin replied.
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``Have fun,'' Nauk waved airily.
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``My teacher's a lot of things, Nauk,'' I noted. ``Fun is,
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unfortunately, not one of them.''
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---
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The largest of the two inns in Harper's Crossing had been appropriated
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as the official headquarters for the joint Sixth and Ninth Legions.
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While it hadn't been fortified -- which was considerate of Black -- the
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Blackguards were swarming the entire area, a sure sign my teacher was
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inside. His faceless guards were never far behind, not even in the
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middle of a village-turned-fortified-camp. As it happened, when my
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grim-faced orc escorts left me behind they were surrendering me to an
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old acquaintance.
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``Lieutenant Abase,'' I spoke up, pleasantly surprised.
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The Soninke pushed up his visor and revealed his face, looking mildly
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exasperated.
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``I should have known eventually you'd start telling us apart,'' he
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replied. He offered his arm to clasp like he'd taught me what seemed
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like an eternity ago and I took it. ``Good to see you Catherine.''
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``Same,'' I replied. ``Any reason you lot are out in force today? It
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looks like you're pulling out all the stops.''
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``A pair of assassins tried to infiltrate the camp yesterday,'' he
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grimaced. ``Lady Scribe found them out but they killed themselves before
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they could be taken prisoner. We're not sure who their target was.''
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Well, shit. Abase probably wasn't in the loop when it came to Hakram,
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but I had a pretty good idea who'd sent the assassins and who they'd
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been hired to kill. The only real question was whether they'd been sent
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by Heiress herself or by the Truebloods as a whole. I was definitely
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upping the guard around Hakram's tent, discreet measure or not.
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``He in a foul mood, then?'' I asked.
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``Not exactly,'' Abase shrugged. ``But he's been keeping long hours. I
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get the impression there are foreign concerns.''
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``Well, only one way to find out,'' I murmured. ``Take care,
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Lieutenant.''
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``Same to you, Lady Squire,'' he replied with a nod.
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The other Blackguards moved aside to let me pass, well used to my
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presence from the afternoon lessons I'd had in my teacher's Ater estate.
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The inside of the inn was comfortable and well-lit, but I barely paid
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attention to it: there were three people inside the common room, seated
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around a broad table covered in maps and the tidy piles of paperwork
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that inevitably followed Scribe around. Black rose from his seat when I
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entered, a smile on his face as he strode towards me.
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``Catherine,'' he greeted me warmly.
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I found myself engulfed in a hug I leaned into, against my better
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judgement. I \emph{had} missed him, much as it pained me to admit it. I
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didn't have to trust him to like him, and some days it was hard to
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manage even that much. It didn't help he was obviously fond of me, and
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though I knew he could fake that easily enough I was almost sure he
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wasn't. I allowed myself a moment to enjoy the rare display of affection
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before returning to the present. I was almost as tall as he was now, I
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noticed. I must have grown without noticing, not that standing higher
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than Black would be much of an accomplishment.
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``Black,'' I replied, a smile tugging at my lips.
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A large hand clasped my shoulder as I drew back and I turned to face
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Captain.
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``Sabah,'' I said. ``It's been a while.''
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``Too long,'' the gargantuan woman replied. ``Look at you, you went up
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the better part of an inch.''
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``Hadn't noticed,'' I admitted. ``My armour still fits just fine.''
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I glanced at the third villain and found Scribe quietly studying me. She
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nodded once, then turned back her attention to the report she was
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reading. That she'd acknowledged my presence at all was already an
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accomplishment, in my experience. Still, in the back of my mind Ime's
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warning sounded. \emph{Be very careful around Scribe}, she'd said.
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\emph{Do not ever let her believe you are a threat to him.}
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``Oh my, Sabah,'' Black murmured. ``Look at the lack of tension in her
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shoulders.''
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The warrior woman chuckled. ``I see it. The Taghreb boy or the
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redhead?'' she asked.
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I grimaced. ``Should I even ask how the two of you know about that?''
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Black raised an expectant eyebrow, declining to reply.
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``Kilian,'' I finally admitted.
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Not that I'd ever seriously considered Ratface. He was nice enough to
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look at, but if he was actually over Aisha I'd plunger my head in a
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brazier. My teacher raised a hand and Captain cursed, flipping a golden
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aureus he deftly snatched out of the air.
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``Never bet against a redhead,'' he said smugly.
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``It's not like you need the gold,'' the Taghreb complained.
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``Wine tastes better when bought through victory,'' Black replied
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easily.
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``This isn't exactly the reaction I expected when you learned I'd taken
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up with someone without a Name,'' I interrupted.
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Better not to let them get started. Captain could bicker with the best
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of them, when the mood took her, and my teacher was physically incapable
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of letting anyone else have the last word. Black shrugged indifferently.
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``We'll need to have a conversation about risk management later,'' he
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said. ``But I am not unduly worried. It's not without precedent.''
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``Wekesa's husband might be a devil,'' Captain rumbled, ``but Amna
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isn't.''
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I sometimes forgot Captain was married, mostly because she rarely spoke
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of her husband. Or her children, for that matter. I'd been rather
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surprised to learn she had two, her eldest actually a few years older
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than me. That of all people she'd ended marrying a minor Taghreb
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bureaucrat from the Tower had been a shock, though it did explain her
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occasional maternal leanings. I'd never gotten the entire story of how
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it came about, though given how private of a woman she could be that was
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to be expected.
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``I'm guessing you didn't send wolf riders out for me just to discuss my
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love life, no matter how much gold you had riding on it,'' I finally
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spoke up. ``The messengers mentioned a war council?''
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``Take a seat,'' Black said. ``There will be a briefing with Istrid and
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Sacker later tonight, though we'll wait for your legate for that. The
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council was an excuse to get you here early.''
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I frowned. ``Do we have a problem?''
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``You might say that,'' he replied. ``There were developments abroad.''
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``Ominous,'' I commented. ``Been a while since someone has been so vague
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at me.''
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The pale-skinned man's lips twitched, though the amusement was
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short-lived. Sabah idly adjusted her belt, then looked askance at Black.
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``Go ahead,'' he said. ``We're having her over for dinner anyhow.''
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Sabah clapped my shoulder again. ``I have business to attend to,'' she
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said. ``I'll see you later tonight.''
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Had she come just to greet me? That was oddly touching, in a way. I
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nodded back and watched her walk away.
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``The Principate is assembling a host,'' Black told me, claiming back my
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attention. ``We've had several reports confirming that Klaus Papenheim
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will be leading it.''
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``The First Prince's uncle,'' I mused. ``Prince of Hannoven, right?''
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``Correct,'' he agreed. ``Arguably her staunchest supporter, as well as
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one of her best generals.''
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``You think they're making a play for the Vales while we're busy here?''
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I asked. ``I thought she had domestic matters to deal with before she
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could.''
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``I think he's headed south,'' the green-eyed man replied. ``To the
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Dominion.''
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Levant, huh. It wasn't a nation I spent a lot of time thinking about. It
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was on the other side of Calernia, and considering it was surrounded by
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the Principate and the Titanomanchy it was unlikely we'd ever have to
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fight them. I did know they had several axes to grind with Procer, from
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back when their territory had been a fresh three principalities added to
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the Principate by force of arms. They'd rebelled with Ashuran backing
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and since built the Red Snake Wall, which made their northern border
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more or less impossible to cross.
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``She's not trying to conquer them again, is she? I thought she was
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supposed to be some sort of political mastermind,'' I said.
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``I doubt it will come to open war,'' Black spoke. ``But they've been
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making trouble in Orense. She needs to settle that before turning her
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attention elsewhere.''
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``And the Dominion is going to be impressed by a few thousand footmen
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standing around awkwardly?'' I snorted. ``Their wall would
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\emph{literally} eat them if they tried anything.''
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``It would if they assaulted it,'' the Knight replied. ``That won't be
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the case. She's had the fleets of all sea-side principalities
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mobilized.''
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``They have to be charging her through the nose for that,'' I pointed
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out.
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``Her treasury can weather it,'' Black said. ``It might be a different
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story if she went on a protracted campaign, but she won't have to -- the
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mere threat of landing an army past the wall will be enough to give
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Levant pause.''
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``So she's bluffing?'' I frowned. ``That strikes me as a costly gambit
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to run.''
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``The Principate is the second wealthiest nation of Calernia, and at the
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moment they have more coin to spare than soldiers,'' the green-eyed man
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noted. ``There's also the fact that throwing around that much gold will
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go a long way in convincing the Dominion she's willing to pull the
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trigger if she has to. That her own uncle heads the host will only
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further that impression.''
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``The Majilis has met on the subject already, though the official reason
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for the session was another one,'' a quiet voice contributed.
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I glanced at Scribe, who'd put down her quill while speaking.
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``That's the Dominion's equivalent of the Highest Assembly, right?'' I
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frowned, scrabbling for what little I'd learned about Levant's political
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system.
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``Roughly,'' Black conceded. ``Their official head of state is more a
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spiritual leader than a temporal one. Every city has their own ruler
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descended from one of the heroes that originally founded Levant --
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together they form the Majilis and choose the Seljun by consensus.
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Unlike the Principate, however, they have no real nation-wide policy.
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The ruler of Vaccei is the one who's been testing Orense's borders.''
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``She has no support in the rest of the Majilis,'' Scribe murmured.
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``They voted against censuring her, but she's aware she would be
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standing alone. She'll have to swallow her pride if the First Prince
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pushes hard enough.''
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I hummed. ``That's troubling, though I don't see why you needed me to
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come ahead of the Fifteenth to learn it.''
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Black ran a finger along the surface of the table.
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``Because when Levant backs down, Hasenbach's last foreign liability
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will be Helike. Which she'll be able to muzzle through a vote of the
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League, when she gathers enough allies in the Free Cities.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``And that means?''
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Black's lips thinned in displeasure, though it was not directed at me.
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``Our timetable in Callow has changed. The rebellion must be over before
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summer is over, or we may very well be facing a war on two fronts.''
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