392 lines
18 KiB
TeX
392 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-21-marchford}{%
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\section{Chapter 21: Marchford}\label{chapter-21-marchford}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The best revenge isn't living well, it's living to crucify all
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your enemies.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Malevolent III, the Pithy
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\end{quote}
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Nilin looked younger without his armour on.
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With his eyes closed he might have looked like he was sleeping, if not
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for the gaping wound across his stomach. I hadn't had to order him
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cleaned or his insides put back inside, and for that I'd be grateful to
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Hakram until the day I died. Orcs took death differently than humans,
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he'd told me. They preferred avenging to mourning, one of the many
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reasons the Steppes were such a spinning wheel of blood feuds whenever
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the Empire wasn't at war. Open displays of emotion were seen as a
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shameful act dishonouring the dead. Nauk's reaction to the death of a
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boy he'd been close as a brother to was strange by the standards of his
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people, and Juniper eyed him with silent disdain whenever she thought no
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one was looking at her. Witnessing that sent a flare of rage through my
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veins every time, but I'd held my tongue: I could not expect to command
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a host hailing from five different cultures without occasionally
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encountering ways I found repulsive.
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Soninke and Taghreb funerary customs were alien to me, influenced by
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centuries upon centuries of rubbing elbows with necromancers. In Praes
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men and women could sign away rights to their bodies for gold, selling
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their dead flesh as materials the corpse-raisers would use in their
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work. An abomination, by the standards I'd been raised to. Of all the
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traditions of the Wasteland none was so despised by Good nations as
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necromancy. The hatred had been kept fresh in Callow by the multiple
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undead plagues unleashed on the kingdom by past Warlocks, while in
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Procer the Lycaonese had been warring with the Kingdom of the Dead since
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before the foundation of the Principate. Signing away your corpse was
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against regulations, however, and so Nilin was to burn. The Soninke
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preferred to bury their dead in large labyrinth-mausoleums of baked mud,
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but out here on the field legionaries got a Legion burial: fire and the
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promise of more death to come.
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Lumber had been cut from the woods flanking both sides of the road for
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most pyres, but for this one things had been arranged differently. Dead
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cataphracts were piled up in a makeshift pyramid, with the two corpses
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Nilin rested on recognizable even from where I stood: the Exiled Prince
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and his Page, both still in full armour. As the highest ranking officer
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present the right of lighting the pyre went to me, but doing so would
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have felt\ldots{} wrong. Nauk was the one to dip the torch in the
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still-burning goblinfire and toss it onto the stacks. Green flames
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spread over the flesh and metal with unseemly haste. Kilian had hobbled
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her way to the funeral against her healer's advice, leaning heavily
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against my shoulder as she clasped her hand in mine. The redhead was
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paler than I'd ever seen her, exhausted and still shaking with the odd
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tremor. She stood by my side as night fell and our friend's corpse
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turned to ashes.
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``We were taken into Rat Company at the same time, you know,'' Kilian
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eventually said. ``Back then Nauk scared me -- always loud, always
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looking for a fight -- but Nilin and I always got along. We bought books
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at the same shop in Ater, traded them when we were done.''
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She smiled sadly.
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``I suppose I'll have to find someone else to talk history with.''
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Grief looked pretty on her but then I suppose most things did. I
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squeezed her hand, because what could I possibly say? Juniper was the
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first to leave. Hakram followed not long after, heading out to see my
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will done. Every single member of the former Rat Company who'd made it
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into the Fifteenth passed by at some point in the burning, many stopping
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by the flames to whisper something into the crackle.
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``What are they saying?'' I asked Kilian quietly.
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``They're giving Nilin a secret or a promise,'' she replied. ``Something
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to bargain with on the other side.''
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It was such a deeply Praesi thing to do, I reflected, and for once the
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thought was fond. I kissed the side of my lover's neck, letting go of
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her hand and found myself walking up to the pyre.
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``I've never done this before,'' I told Nilin, by now little more than
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blackened bones wreathed in green. ``The priests from the House of Light
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handle the funerals, back home. Consecrate the graves and shepherd souls
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on their way to the Heavens.''
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I already knew what I wanted to say, but spitting it out was proving
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more difficult than I'd thought.
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``I'm sorry,'' I finally whispered. ``You were my friend, one of the
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first, and this cost you. But if I had to make the choice again, knowing
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it would end like this, I still would. I could say that we'll win, that
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I'll make your death meaningful, but how will that help you? They're
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empty words anyway. We both know I would have done all I can to win
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regardless.''
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I wondered if all the offerings he'd been given had been so bitter or if
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it was just my own. Shame was not a feeling I'd felt in a while, not
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since I'd come to Ater, but I recognized the sting of it then and there.
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``Here's something you can use, at least,'' I spoke quietly. ``I let him
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go, the Lone Swordsman. I'm the one who started all of this.''
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Maybe it was just my imagination, but I thought that for a moment the
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nearest flames to me flared up. \emph{Until we see each other next,
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Nilin.}I trudged back to Kilian and we stood there until the moon
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reached its apex, silently taking comfort in each other's presence. Nauk
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was still standing by the fire when we left, silent face lined with
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grief.
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I did not meet his eyes.
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---
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Before my teacher had conquered Callow, Marchford had been defended by
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walls.
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I could still see the marks where they'd stood as I rode into the city:
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the sappers who'd brought them down hadn't bothered to remove the
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foundations. The Countess had fought with the royal army and so her
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demesne had been stripped of its defences and of some of its privileges
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-- she'd barely been allowed to keep enough men to keep bandits out of
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her lands -- but the city itself had remained in the hands of the House
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of Talbot. It had been the Tower's policy after the Conquest to keep the
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number of Imperial governorships to a minimum, so that the transition
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would be smoother. The Countess' contributions in the defence of
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Summerholm had ranked her city a Legion garrison, though, later
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slaughtered in the opening move of the rebellion. \emph{And now she's
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said to be engaged to the Duke of Liesse, our would-be-king.} That a
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fucking exile who'd bailed without ever facing the Legions on the field
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claimed to have a right to the throne of Callow rankled me. Especially
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since he'd lived out the decades since in comfortable exile across the
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Vales.
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Six days had passed since what the men now called the Battle of Three
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Hills, and our advance on Marchford had gone suspiciously smoothly. My
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goblin companies had been hunting the remaining Silver Spears in the
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dark every night, but they found fewer of them every time. Interrogation
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of the prisoners we'd taken at the battle had yielded that the commander
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of the men-at-arms had apparently survived the massacre, meaning the
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mercenaries still had someone to rally around. While I doubted the
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Spears would give us battle again, now that they'd lost their main
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leaders and been given such a sharp lesson by the Fifteenth, I did not
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want them escaping to join the main rebel army. If they fled back to
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Mercantis to lick their wounds I'd make my peace with it, but having to
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face the bastards on the field in a few months was out of the question.
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Juniper had predicted they'd retreat to Marchford and choose their way
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from there, but as I led a company through the deserted streets of the
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city it became clear she'd been wrong.
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There were no soldiers here, and you'd think there were barely any
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people at all. According to the Imperial census Marchford had a
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population of ten thousand, though many of the residents only lived
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there temporarily. Many of the inhabitants were miners from the silver
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mines in the hills, whose families moved with them to the mining sites
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when a fresh vein was found and only returned to the city when they were
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out of work. The county itself was rich, and it showed in the way the
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city had been built. Stone was more common than wood and the layout of
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the avenues had been planned, unlike the maze of dead-ends and cramped
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alleys that was Laure. To the south I could see the wide grounds of
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Marchford Manor, and even to my Name-sight they were deserted. There
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were still people in the city, but they'd fled at the sight of the
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Fifteenth and barricaded themselves inside their homes. I lingered at
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the crossing of an avenue, considering my options.
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``Lady Squire?''
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I glanced at Captain Ubaid, the young man in charge of the company
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escorting me. One of Commander Hune's men, who'd apparently
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distinguished himself at Three Hills by killing three men-at-arms and
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dragging one of his wounded back behind our lines. He had sharp eyes and
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Hakram had remembered his marks at the College being above average, if
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not exceptional. He looked about as wary as I felt, casting cautious
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looks at the empty streets. \emph{If I wanted to set an ambush for an
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enemy commander, I'd wait until they were too deep in the city to turn
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back.} Or was I being overly cautious? The locals seemed terrified of
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us, and there'd been no resistance at all as we advanced.
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``Send a runner back to Legate Juniper,'' I ordered. ``We'll be pressing
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on to the manor without waiting on her. She's to garrison the city and
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proclaim martial law.''
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``Ma'am,'' he hesitated. ``That seems\ldots{} ill-advised. We're
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surrounded by thousands.''
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``We're surrounded by scared civilians, captain,'' I grunted. ``Look at
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them -- they don't have the stomach for a fight. I'd wager the Countess
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took all the men of soldiering age with her when she left for Vale.''
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``As you say, Lady Squire,'' he deferred.
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A legionary peeled off from the company to carry my message. I noted
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with a mix of approval and amusement that Ubaid tightened the formation
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as we headed south, positioning the men so that they could form a
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\emph{testudo} in moments. \emph{Good. Just because they have a villain
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with them doesn't mean they're safe. Callow's taught the Legions that
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lesson again and again, over the years.} The path to the manor was bare
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of fortifications, and not because of any edict of my teacher's. The
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hills surrounding Marchford were a natural defence that had served the
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city for centuries, impassable to armies save for a few goat paths the
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locals kept knowledge of to themselves. Back when Callow was a mess of
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petty kingdoms, the rulers of Marchford had fought most their battles at
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the ford the city was named for, only rarely facing siege in their seat
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of power -- as a result they'd put their wealth into men and swords
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instead of the kind of walls Summerholm boasted. The paved road brought
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us to a pretty hilled garden dotted by lovely pavilions, where fountains
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of white chalkstone gurgled merrily. Granite statues of stone knights
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guarded the last stretch to the manor gates, still smiles splitting
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their bearded faces.
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``Lovely place,'' Captain Ubaid spoke drily. ``Lucky they poured all
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that silver into the fountains instead of soldiers, or we'd have a fight
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on our hands.''
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``Would that we did,'' I replied. ``That'd mean less men with Liesse.''
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The stables were empty and looked like they'd been for quite some time.
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For appearance's sake I left Zombie in one of the stalls, though I could
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have left him standing in a flower bed for all the difference it made.
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It wasn't like he was going to wander. Marchford Manor itself was quite
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large, all beige limestone and wide glass windows. Not coloured stuff,
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though, so unlikely to be imported from Procer. Wide oaken doors opened
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without trouble when a pair of my legionaries pushed, revealing a
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half-dozen people in livery. Ah, finally someone to talk to. The maids I
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dismissed immediately as irrelevant, but one man with a closely-cropped
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beard wore a steward's uniform. I entered the manor flanked by Captain
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Ubaid and one of his lieutenants, both of them sword in hand. The sight
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of the bare steel had the locals flinch in fear.
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``I'm Catherine Foundling,'' I announced flatly. ``You may know me as
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the Squire. Who's in charge here, exactly?''
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The bearded man swallowed loudly but stepped forward and bowed.
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``I'm Fourth Steward Greens, my lady,'' he replied. ``Responsible for
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the manor. And the city, I suppose.''
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Fourth Steward. I frowned and struggled to remember the orphanage
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etiquette lessons I'd breezed through. He wasn't in charge of the
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stables, that would be the third, so --
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``Latrines,'' I spoke amusedly. ``You're the sanitation man.''
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``That would be me, your ladyship,'' he agreed nervously.
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My lips twitched.
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``Do you have the authority to surrender the city to me, Fourth
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Steward?'' I asked.
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``I do,'' he replied. ``I think. But whether the people will observe
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that surrender is beyond my means to ensure.''
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Heavy patrols, then. I didn't intend to order the massacre of fellow
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Callowans but public order would have to be maintained. I resisted the
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urge to grimace. \emph{Scared people can do stupid things, and we've got
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them too scared for my tastes.}
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``Then kneel, Greens,'' I ordered. ``As of this moment, Marchford is
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returned to the Imperial fold.''
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He did, and just like that I'd won a city.
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---
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Countess Elizabeth's solar was almost decadently comfortable. It had
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been stripped of all the more obvious signs of wealth and what I assumed
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to be the most expensive paintings were missing, but even after that it
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was one of the most luxurious rooms I'd ever held council in.
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``The city's been stripped bare of men and food,'' Ratface told the
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senior officers. ``They barely have enough to feed themselves.''
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``I'll double the watch on our supplies, then,'' Nauk growled. ``Nip any
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notions of looting in the bud.''
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I sipped at my cup of Vale summer wine, resting against the back of my
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cushioned seat as I studied him. He seemed steadier now, but there was
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something angry to the orc that hadn't been there before. As if Nilin's
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death had stripped him of the last check on his recklessness. Still, now
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was not the time or place to speak to him about it.
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``Still no sign of the Silver Spears?'' I asked Commander Hune instead.
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``We've interrogated some of the locals,'' the ogre replied softly.
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``Some passed through, including what remains of the cataphracts, but
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they're all gone -- into the hills, I'm told. Less than eight hundred in
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total.''
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``We can't pursue in there with the Fifteenth,'' Juniper stated.
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``Goblins might manage the paths but I'm reluctant to commit scout
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companies without backup.''
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She was right, much as I disliked admitting it.
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``We'll table that for the moment,'' I said. ``Hakram, how's the city?''
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The Adjutant hummed. ``Quiet, for now. But they're afraid we'll put
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everyone to the sword to hurt the Countess.''
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I closed my eyes and let out a sigh. Would they even have considered
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that, before Heiress had set half of the duchy of Liesse on fire? Hard
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to tell, but I was ever inclined to blame the other villain for the
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messes I found myself in.
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``I want Legion regulations observed to the letter,'' I spoke flatly.
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``If there's any scuffles with the citizens, come down harshly on
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everyone involved.''
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I got a chorus of acknowledgements in response. Pickler cleared her
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throat afterwards and I raised an eyebrow.
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``If we're going to be staying here for a few days, I'd like sanction to
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build siege engines,'' she said.
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I cast a look at Juniper. The grim-faced orc frowned.
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``Dragging a trebuchet around would slow us on the march,'' my legate
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finally said.
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``I'll keep it light,'' the Senior Sapper replied. ``A few scorpions,
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maybe one of the smaller ballista models. Think of what you could do
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with those, when we finally tangle with the Liesse host.''
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The Hellhound glanced at me and I shrugged.
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``Sanction given,'' she gravelled. ``You can have the sappers and a
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company of regulars to gather the wood.''
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I was about to redirect the subject to patrol schedules when Masego
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interrupted. I started -- he wasn't even sitting at the same table as
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us, having claimed a smaller one near the windows overlooking the hills
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to the south.
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``Ladies and gentlemen, if I could have your attention,'' he exclaimed,
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peering into a scrying bowl. ``First, I can confirm that it was the
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priest our own Deadhand killed that was blocking my scrying. Second, I
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appear to have found what remains of the Silver Spears' leadership.''
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He rose to his feet, carefully bringing over the bowl to us without
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troubling the surface. I leaned over the table and saw three men, two of
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them in horseman's plate, arguing near what seemed to be the bottom of a
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hill.
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``\emph{We need to go deeper, to}-`` one of them started but the sound
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went silent.
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``Apprentice?'' I prompted.
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He blinked. ``That shouldn't be happening.''
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A heartbeat later the silhouette of the Silver Spears disappeared, the
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water rippling without cause.
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``That \emph{definitely} shouldn't be happening,'' Masego said,
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confusion and irritation warring for dominion over his tone.
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The water stilled momentarily and sight returned to us, but it was no
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longer the Silver Spears we saw: a pair of pale green eyes were staring
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back, skimming over my officers and stopping on me.
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``Catherine,'' my teacher said.
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The sound was muted, like he was speaking through a door.
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``Black,'' I replied. ``We're not due to scry until Evening Bell.''
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``Listen,'' he began, then the sound cut out again.
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``I can't hear you,'' I told him.
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``Danger,'' he managed. ``Egg. The hills.''
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The water went still again and my blood ran cold.
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``Masego,'' I spoke urgently, ``can you-``
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``Oh Merciless Gods,'' Ratface whispered.
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I followed his gaze out the window, and my stomach dropped. Night had
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just fallen, but there was no trace of the stars out there. The sky was
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red as fresh blood, and tendrils of scarlet were spreading through the
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moon. A faint scream was heard in the distance. It rose higher, and
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higher, and higher until all of us were clutching our ears in pain. The
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pressure winked out as suddenly as it had appeared, but something had
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changed. I looked at Masego.
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``You can feel it?'' I asked.
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``Yeah,'' he whispered, fingers clutched so tight the phalanges paled.
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``Shit. There's a demon on the loose.''
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