736 lines
36 KiB
TeX
736 lines
36 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-greenskins}{%
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\section{Interlude: Greenskins}\label{interlude-greenskins}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The Kharsum word for war is derived from the one used for a full
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cookpot. That tells you everything you need to know about how the Clans
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think of Creation.''}
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-- Extract from ``Horrors and Wonders'', famed travelogue of Anabas the
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Ashuran
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\end{quote}
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``That was a mistake,'' Lieutenant Balker offered.
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``It got worse,'' Captain Clipper suggested instead, flirtatiously
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allowing her teeth to peek through her chops.
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She did have superb canines, Robber was forced to admit, but she was no
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Pickler. It was his curse to always be interested in the unattainable
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ones, he'd found, and the Senior Sapper was as unattainable as it got. A
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Rock Breaker tribe boy like him with the direct daughter of a Matron
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line? That was the punchline to a joke about overreaching, not a plan of
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action. Unlike humans, the Tribes didn't glorify people trying to love
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above their social stature -- they buried them in shallow graves. And
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for all that the Fifteenth was not the Grey Eyries, there would always
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be that invisible line there. He'd long made his peace with that.
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``You're all amateurs,'' he told his minions. ``And no, that wasn't
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another suggestion. Clearly we should be going with \emph{I can't
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believe that worked}.''
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There was a murmur of approval from the ranks, though some filthy
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traitorous elements dissented.
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``Fear the goats,'' someone called out. ``The one true motto of the
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Fifteenth.''
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``Captain Borer,'' the tribune addressed his second-in-command loudly.
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``Write up that man for insubordination. And poor taste.''
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Borer was one of his very favourite people in Creation simply because
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the other goblin had no sense of humour whatsoever. Probably because he
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was Deep Pit tribe, that whole bunch breathed in all sorts of nasty
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stuff when they were young. Borer squinted at the traitor, then sighed.
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``That's a woman, sir,'' the captain told him. ``Lieutenant Rattler.''
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``You sure?'' Robber asked, cocking his head to the side. ``That's
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clearly a man's nose.''
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Rattler flipped him off.
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``Add to the list that she was emotionally hurtful,'' the yellow-eyed
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goblin added without missing a beat, grinning at the wave of jeers that
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got.
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Running a sapper cohort wasn't like leading regulars. For one, sappers
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were all insane. You had to be, to willingly choose a career path that
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would see you deal with notoriously volatile munitions on a daily basis.
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There was also the fact that they were the mostly lightly armed soldiers
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in the Legions of Terror yet regularly saw action on the frontlines.
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That was fine because leading crazy people, in Robber's opinion, was a
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lot like being in prison. If you wanted your authority unquestioned you
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had to walk up to the biggest prisoner on the cell block, rip out their
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eyes and make a necklace out of them. Metaphorically speaking. So far,
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anyway. A whistle came from further ahead, lilting and then going high.
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\emph{Enemy in sight.}
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``You hear that, ladies and gentlemen?'' the yellow-eyed tribune called
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out. ``That's the sound fun makes when it begins.''
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He saw more than a few sappers shiver in eager anticipation. Crazy, the
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lot of them.
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``So let me hear it, before you get to battle positions,'' he called
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out. ``What's the operational creed of this cohort?''
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``KILL THEM, TAKE THEIR STUFF!'' the call came back.
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Robber faked wiping a tear from the corner of his eye. Considering
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goblins didn't even have tear ducts, the absurdity was delightful.
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``Go forth, my minions!'' he cackled.
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---
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``Our guests have arrived,'' Aisha said.
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Juniper could see the devils trickling in through the scrying bowl
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herself. Foundling's assessment of how many she'd killed seemed roughly
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accurate: a quick headcount put the enemy at around eighty. Most of them
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were the smaller types she'd had reports on, the iron-clawed creatures
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with fur and a swarm of fireflies. The larger ones would be more
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dangerous, given their ability to shrug off crossbow bolts, but
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Pickler's traps had been designed specifically to deal with their kind.
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The legate looked away from the bowl and absent-mindedly adjusted the
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figurine representing Squire and her Forlorn Hope -- it had moved a
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little to the left of the accurate spot when someone had jostled the
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table.
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``Word from the west?'' the Hellhound asked.
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``The enemy hasn't engaged,'' the mage overlooking that particular bowl
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informed her.
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The grim-faced orc repressed the urge to sigh. \emph{Humans}, she
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thought unkindly.
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``I'm aware of that,'' she said. ``What do the Silver Spears look like,
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sergeant? How were they modified by the corruption?''
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The man frowned, peering into the softly glowing water. ``Gods Below,''
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he said, looking nauseous. ``You should take a look yourself.''
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Juniper stepped closer, elbowing the sergeant aside. The mage on the
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other side of the scrying spell was holding up a mirror pointed at the
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enemy, standing on the roof of a house beyond the sapper-built wall.
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What the sorcery revealed was\ldots{} troubling. The men-at-arms had
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been visibly mutated, growing cysts of flesh filled with dark pus. Some
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had eyes blinking from all over their faces, or even their hands, though
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the most disgusting of it was the way their bodies now overflowed their
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armour. The cataphracts were cleaner, but somehow that made it worse.
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Their silvery armour looked like it had melted shut and there was no
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delineation where the man ended and the horse began. The mounts
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themselves looked sickly and the hair over their skin was largely gone,
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patches of flesh falling away from their flanks in long strings.
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The spell focused on the cataphract at the head of the pack, whose helm
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had been twisted in a sordid unmoving metal grin. The mage shivered at
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her side, but the Hellhound remained unmoved. That last cataphract
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seemed a likely candidate for the leader of the host, though how led the
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Silver Spears still were was debatable. Worth making a priority target,
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but not launching a specific assault to take out: she doubted morale
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would be an issue for the former mercenaries, as far gone as they were.
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Unfortunate that the usual shock and awe tactics that were the Legion's
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bread and butter wouldn't work, but this could lend advantage in other
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ways. If the minds of the Silver Spears were affected, they were
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unlikely to be able to manage sophisticated battle tactics. \emph{Bait
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and switch will be effective.}
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The legate calmly put her orders through the spell and waited for a
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messenger on the other side of the city to carry them to Nauk.
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Foundling's insistence that the orc commander be the one handling the
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front with the mercenaries had come as an unpleasant surprise, though
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she understood the internal politics driving it. Squire was still
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whipping herself over the death of Nilin, she decided, and so hadn't had
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the heart to refuse Nauk's request. Hune would have been a better fit.
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She was a coldblood, Juniper suspected, much like she'd once thought
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Hakram was. Incapable of anything but the shallowest of emotions,
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unmoved by fear and with natural assertiveness. Had the ogre been
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anything but a legionary that would have made her very dangerous indeed,
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but as an officer of the Fifteenth that meant she could be relied on not
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to lose her head. Nauk had too much of a temper, much like her own
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mother. \emph{Though Mother does not sink into the Red Rage when
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displeased.}
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Still, for all that the other orc was a skilled commander and cleverer
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than he looked. Or acted, sometimes. With the spectre of Foundling's
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disapproval driving him, he should manage to keep himself in line. The
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parts of Hune's kabili that hadn't been assigned to him would remain
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posted in strategic locations as a quick-deployment reserve, ready to
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plug in gaps when they inevitably arose. She'd spent days and nights
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going over the contingencies for this fight.
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``You're smiling again,'' Aisha observed.
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Was she? The Hellhound wiped her face clean of emotion. The dark-skinned
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aristocrat that served as her second-in-command -- and closest friend --
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snorted.
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``It's still in your eyes,'' she said. ``The thirst.''
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Had anybody else been speaking to her this way, she could have harshly
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chided them.
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``I have no such thing,'' Juniper replied gruffly, knowing it was a lie.
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It came from her mother's blood, she was sure of it: that deep, dark
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part of her that looked upon the battlefield and bared its fangs in joy.
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General Istrid was famous for being one of the only Praesi generals who
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fought in the ranks, and while the Hellhound believed that Marshal
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One-Eye's way was best there was a trace of that hunger in her. She'd
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dedicated her whole life to the art of war because there was something
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in her that sang, when she gave orders and the arrow loosed by her mind
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found the enemy's throat. \emph{Orcs are born in love with death}, the
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old saying went, and what mortal lover could possibly compare? That was
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the boon and the curse of her people. Gods forgive her, but she was
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almost grateful to Heiress for having laid out such a fine banquet in
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front of the Fifteenth. When Juniper was done sinking her teeth into the
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Battle of Marchford, the blood spilled would splatter all over the pages
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of history. This she knew in her bones, like she knew there was no
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\emph{after} the war for people like her. Just one battlefield after
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another until she went out in a glorious bloody mess that would shake
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the pillars of the very Heavens. Some part of her looked forward to that
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end\ldots{} but it would not be today. Her quiver was still full.
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``The sappers have engaged the enemy,'' Aisha conveyed.
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The Hellhound smiled, and nocked her arrow.
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---
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The bolt took the devil in the eye and it screamed. This wasn't one of
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the smaller ones so a good shot would do little more than tickle it,
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unfortunately. The beast looked like the particularly dumb offspring of
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a bull and gazelle, if both of those creatures had been morbidly obese.
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All in all, it was the size of a supply wagon and seemed intent on
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acting like a living battering ram.
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``You really let yourself go, buddy,'' Robber informed it, ``you should
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be ashamed of yourself.''
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He scuttled off inside the nearest house as another crossbow volley
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picked off a pair of the iron-hooked devils: he'd earlier thought that
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taking one of the ugly bastards in the head would kill them, but when
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the first volley had failed to make a single kill he'd been roughly
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disabused of the notion. Fill them with enough bolts, though, and they
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stopped moving. The horned devil bellowed and charged after him, ripping
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through the door he'd slammed shut behind him like it was made of wet
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clay. Cheerfully, the yellow-eyed tribune threw some poor soul's good
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tea set at the thing and legged it towards the window, jumping through
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and landing in a roll on the street as the shutters came apart.
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``Bring it down,'' he ordered the two sappers awaiting.
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The hammers fell with unseemly enthusiasm, breaking the keystones
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Pickler had marked and weakened a few days back: the house collapsed on
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top of the devil. It probably wasn't dead yet, unfortunately, since the
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roof had been mere thatch. Robber casually lit a pinewood match as the
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other two sappers threw oil jugs on the rough location of the monster,
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setting the whole thing aflame without missing a beat.
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``How's the main street?'' he asked.
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``Demolition charges took one of the big fuckers out when it tried to
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pursue,'' Lieutenant Rattler told him, wiping her hands clear of the
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oil.
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Callowan-made, those jugs. Sloppy work. If they hadn't confiscated them
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from local stocks he would have complained about the quality. He still
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would, of course, but he'd have done it \emph{more} if the Fifteenth had
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actually paid for them. There was the pop of a sharper detonating in the
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distance, the sound of an iron-hooked devil getting blown off a roof by
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his lovely minions. Goblins knew the passage of time more intimately
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than any human or orc could, and the tribune knew he'd been lingering
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where he stood too long. Already devils were honing in on his position,
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the dark failing to hide their silhouettes from his night vision.
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``On to the next choke point,'' he ordered, casting one last look at the
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burning wreck.
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This little kip of theirs was the brain child of Pickler and the
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Hellhound: goblin engineering married to the steel trap that was their
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legate's mind. Give ground one block after another, bleeding them dry
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all the way as they tore themselves to pieces going through the traps.
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Pickler's love letter to the sapper corps, he liked to think of it.
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And who was he to refuse such a heartfelt confession?
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---
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``Shield wall,'' Nauk of the Waxing Moons ordered.
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Clan names didn't mean much here, where the true clan was the number on
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the legion standard they fought under. His ancestry still followed him,
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though, the Rage always whispering in his ears and waiting for an
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opening to take hold of him. It had gotten stronger since his brother's
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death, fed on the grief and anger to become an even more ill-begotten
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thing. But there would no anger today. He would take his revenge the
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Praesi way, cold and patient and utterly absolute. Nauk had thought orcs
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ruthless once, for they took lives the way other races took breath: he'd
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learned better since. The Tower was built on blood and hatred, a
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monument paved with a hundred thousand lives sacrificed at the altar of
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boundless ambition. How could a few corpses strewn across the Steppes
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ever compare? Nauk of the Waxing Moons wanted to sink his teeth into the
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enemy's flesh and feed until his belly was full, but Commander Nauk of
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the Fifteenth Legion would remain where he stood and see the Silver
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Spears ripped out root and stem. Another pyre for Nilin, one whose
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screams would be heard all the way to the Underworld.
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The legionaries spread across the street and knelt as they put put down
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their scutum against the cobblestones, spears jutting out in
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anticipation of the charge of the damned. Three rows of longer spears
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from the men behind them bolstered the wall, his legionaries calmly
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watching the cataphracts form in the field. The Legions of Terror were
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no match for the heavy phalanxes used by the Free Cities, but they had
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suffered the charges of Callowan knights for centuries and learned from
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the defeats. The Reforms had formalized the infrequent tactics some past
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Black Knights had used to good effect against the Order of the White
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Hand, standardizing the formation into the four rows of spear the
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Legions now used against cavalry. Horses usually refused to charge a
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wall of spears unless they were trained destriers, but the mounts of the
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Silver Spears had been raised for war even before the demon had gotten
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its hooks into them. They would charge, Nauk knew. He was counting on
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it.
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``Filthy abominations,'' Senior Tribune Jwahir spoke with distaste.
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The Taghreb woman narrowed her almond-shaped eyes at the Silver Spears,
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resting a hand on the pommel of her sword. Half the reason Nauk had
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promoted her to Senior Tribune was that she had nothing in common
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whatsoever with her predecessor, whether it be in gender, race or even
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general disposition. Even in the light cast by the torches and bonfires
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covering the entire front that much was obvious.
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``Soon to be dead ones,'' Commander Nauk growled. ``They're taking too
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long to form up, Jwahir -- send them an invitation.''
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The tawny-skinned officer raised a hand and the legionary behind her
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hoisted a banner. There was a rustle of movement behind them as two
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hundred goblins raised their crossbows, aimed and let the quarrels
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loose. Most of the monster-cataphracts were out of range, in Nauk's
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estimation, but the tip of their formation lingered close to effective
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killing range. The projectiles fell in an arc and most of them ate dirt,
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but a handful of cavalrymen took hits. \emph{No kills}, the commander
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assessed. Whatever demon buggery had mixed man and horseflesh had made
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it so that not even a headshot was enough to kill the abominations.
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``Tell the Hellhound we'll likely have to put down the horses to kill
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the horsemen,'' he told the mage hovering behind him.
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The bolts might have been mere fleabites, but they served their intended
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purpose: the Silver Spears were on the move. The damned mercenaries had
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placed their host as a mirror of his own, more or less. His own men were
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spread across the makeshift wall save for the main avenue the sappers
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had kept clear, where his cohort of four-deep spearmen held the ground
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from one side of the open ground to the other. Behind them he'd placed
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his sappers, though these ones were without munitions: fucking Robber's
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group had gotten what remained of those to deal with the devils. The
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monster-cataphracts faced his spears, all three hundred of them, while
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they'd split their infantry into two groups of two hundred and fifty on
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the sides. The men-at-arms moved first, charging forward without so much
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as a word.
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``Mages,'' Commander Nauk barked. ``\emph{Fire}.''
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Balls of flame bloomed all over the rampart, and the Battle of Marchford
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began in earnest.
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---
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``They're facing our spears with their horse,'' Juniper observed,
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frowning.
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Aisha drummed her fingers against the table. ``Could be the corruption
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scrambled their brains more than we thought,'' she said.
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Neither of the two women expected the legate to reply. The Hellhound
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spoke aloud to focus her thoughts: Aisha's contribution was to serve as
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a sounding board by throwing around ideas to be adopted or dismissed.
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``They have a surprise up their sleeves,'' the grim-faced orc decided.
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``Have Hune prepare the first fallback point.''
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The dark-skinned staff tribune drifted away to see it done. The
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Hellhound glanced at the latest report from the southern front, which
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had that little wretch Robber's casualties already nearing the forties.
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Not a sign of incompetence, though an untrained observed might have
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thought as much. She'd predicted heavier casualties when projecting the
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numbers for the engagement: a running battle through streets and alleys
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against devils was going to be a butchery, one way or another. The
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insolent twerp did have an almost providential sense of when to push and
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when to fold, though, which was why she hadn't protested when the goblin
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had been nominated for the action in the first place. There were few
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officers in the Fifteenth who'd be able to see their cohort split in
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half a dozen smaller forces and not lose track of most of them. Yet,
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aside from a line getting stuck in a dead-end and slaughtered to a man,
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the yellow-eyed tribune had managed to keep casualties to a minimum.
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\emph{Good. We don't have the men to spare.}
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Marchford, she'd grasped early, would be as much a battle of attrition
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as one of tactics. The Fifteenth could field a little above a thousand
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men, four hundred of which were sappers. Goblin munitions stocks were
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half-empty from Three Hills and there wasn't enough goblinfire left to
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deploy in any significant matter -- not that she could, since it was
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likely to collapse Apprentice's ritual. What she did have was one of the
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Legions of Terror, arguably the finest infantry force to ever grace
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Calernia. That her forces were heavy on sappers was a minor liability,
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particularly in a siege setting: if she'd had only a single cohort of
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them she'd not have managed half as many preparations as she had.
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What did the enemy have? Eighty-odd devils, most of which she could and
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had planned for. The threshold ritual had allowed her to dictate where
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they would enter the city, which simplified the matter even more. About
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eight hundred corrupted Silver Spears, an unspecified amount of which
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would be cavalry -- three hundred as it turned out. In the upper reaches
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of the scenarios she'd planned for: the success margin for a retreat
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would be uncomfortably thin. In most sieges cavalry wouldn't have been a
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factor at all and Pickler had suggested pulling down a few houses to
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fortify the main avenue into the west of city, the one linking to the
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road into broader Callow. It was an obvious weak point, after all. Even
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the Fifteenth had taken it when seizing the city. Yet Juniper had
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refused. If that gap was plugged there was no telling where the Silver
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Spears would strike: the tactical disadvantage it gave her was worth the
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strategic asset of being able to prepare a specific point for static
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defence.
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``Robber's entering the last stretch,'' Aisha told her, having
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reappeared at some point.
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``Good,'' Juniper growled. ``Let's tidy up this Empire.''
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---
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``I've come to a realization, Captain Clipper,'' Robber panted, casting
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a look into the alley.
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Shit. Still a bunch of the fireflies and that scaled tiger monster that
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had ripped a man's head right off.
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``And what would that realization be, Tribune Robber?'' the captain
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replied, loading her lever-action crossbow.
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The yellow-eyed miscreant cast another wary look into the alley. Where
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the Hells were his crossbowmen? At this rate they'd arrive too late.
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\emph{Ah, well}. \emph{Let's change this around a bit.}
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``I'm actually invincible,'' he told the younger goblin, offering a
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vicious grin. ``Truly, I've been ignoring the evidence for too long.
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It's the only explanation that makes sense.''
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``Oh Gods,'' the captain moaned.
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She watched with horror as he checked his gear one last time, cleared
|
|
his throat and ran out into the alley screaming at the top of his lungs.
|
|
|
|
There were five devils in there, and they paused for a moment at the
|
|
sight of him. They were, he supposed, used to people running in the
|
|
\emph{opposite} direction.
|
|
|
|
``Well, this is awkward,'' the goblin tribune said slowly unsheathing
|
|
said blade with his right hand. ``I was aiming for that other alley, the
|
|
one without all the devils in it. Do over?''
|
|
|
|
The scaled tiger glanced at the fireflies, then again at him. A
|
|
heartbeat later it had already crossed half the distance separating it
|
|
from the tribune.
|
|
|
|
``I hope you bastards have eyes,'' Robber spoke at the fireflies,
|
|
tossing the brightstick he'd lit with his good hand while keeping them
|
|
looking at the other.
|
|
|
|
The munition blew up right in the scaled tiger's face, but he didn't
|
|
stick around to find out what happened -- Clipper should have gotten
|
|
moving while he was distracting them, so he legged it as fast as he
|
|
could. Mage-takers, he discovered a moment later when one expanded into
|
|
a pale-skinned silhouette with a wet squelch, did not actually have
|
|
eyes. There went, like, half his arsenal. Still, he'd not made it this
|
|
long in the Legions without stabbing a few people in dark alleys where
|
|
no one could see him. Allegedly. He rammed his short sword through the
|
|
devil's stomach, spun around and deftly planted his good knife in its
|
|
neck. Well, Hakram's good knife. \emph{Probably isn't very good
|
|
anymore}, he decided, \emph{that blood looks pretty nasty.} Still, being
|
|
the exemplary friend that he was, he took the filthy murder knife,
|
|
forced his sword out and ran for the next choke point. If there'd been
|
|
no crossbowmen for this one, it meant some of his sappers had gotten
|
|
their idiot skulls caved in. Hellhound would get snippy about it, no
|
|
doubt.
|
|
|
|
He ran down the street and turned the corner without slowing down,
|
|
sliding on the blood-slick cobblestone and reflexively dropping to the
|
|
ground when he heard a goblin's voice yell ``Duck!''.
|
|
|
|
A hail of very late crossbow bolts passed overhead, puncturing the
|
|
scaled tiger's body half a dozen times. The devil twitched, then
|
|
dropped. Robber carefully picked up a loose pavement stone and threw it
|
|
at the monster's head -- it did not react. Nodding to himself, the
|
|
tribune wiped some of the black blood off his face and took a look at
|
|
his saviours: Rattler's boys, though not from the tenth he'd been
|
|
expecting. That had unfortunate implications.
|
|
|
|
``First, I'm claiming full credit for this kill,'' he announced.
|
|
|
|
One of the sappers reloaded his crossbow and eyed his kidney area
|
|
thoughtfully as the others loudly protested. It just warmed his heart
|
|
that someone was keeping the old tradition of goblin field promotion
|
|
alive.
|
|
|
|
``Second,'' he spoke over their treasonous whinging, ``where are the
|
|
others?''
|
|
|
|
``You're the last, sir,'' the shady one with the loaded crossbow said.
|
|
``Captain Clipper just came through; the others are getting the
|
|
reception ready.''
|
|
|
|
Robber casually flicked dirt off his shoulder, smearing twice as blood
|
|
over in the process.
|
|
|
|
``Well, gentlemen, let's get moving,'' he ordered. ``As soon as you all
|
|
thank me for saving your pitiful lives from that monster, anyway.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
No wonder their infantry hadn't thought twice about charging a wall,
|
|
Nauk thought as he watched another man-at-arms jump ten feet high and
|
|
land on top of the fortification. The warrior was immediately caught in
|
|
the chest by a burst of mage fire and went back down without so much as
|
|
a sound, but others had managed to establish a foothold. The fuckers
|
|
fought better than they had before the demon had touched them, fearless
|
|
and immune to pain. His men on the walls were taking a mauling, even
|
|
with mage lines backing them. Still, they were holding. By the edge of
|
|
their teeth, they were holding. The orc commander didn't have any more
|
|
time to grant the situation on the walls, because the enemy cavalry had
|
|
finally stirred. They started at a walk, then a trot, and fell into a
|
|
gallop twenty yards before reaching his line. At that point the ground
|
|
gave under them, revealing the trick-ditch Pickler's lot had dug just
|
|
for the lot of them. The full first rank went under but the rest pushed
|
|
through with their lances up. That was when the crossbow volley hit
|
|
them. Killed few enough, but it slowed them some before they rammed into
|
|
his spearmen. Still, the crash of steel against steel was deafening.
|
|
|
|
``Shit,'' Senior Tribune Jwahir spoke feelingly as they both watched the
|
|
first line of their formation collapse under rampaging hooves.
|
|
|
|
``Line's steady,'' Nauk disagreed, watching his legionaries waver and
|
|
then solidify their formation.
|
|
|
|
Shock cavalry like lancers was good for exactly that: shock. After the
|
|
initial impact they were just men on horses with an unwieldy weapon.
|
|
Legionaries pulled down riders when they could and killed the horses
|
|
when they could not, doing their grisly work in the dirt and blood under
|
|
the torchlight. A messenger came from his back and leaned forward to
|
|
speak quietly.
|
|
|
|
``Legate Juniper orders a retreat, sir,'' the man said.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Now}?'' Nauk started, then frowned.
|
|
|
|
The Hellhound didn't give orders without reason, and she'd be well aware
|
|
that he'd bleed men every step falling back to the next stronghold.
|
|
|
|
``Sound the retreat,'' he told Jwahir.
|
|
|
|
Before she could, though, a sharp uptick in screams drew his attention.
|
|
The centre of his spearmen was being blown through like leaves, though
|
|
calling cavalry what was achieving that would have been a misnomer. Some
|
|
great hulking beast made of what must have been at least five horses and
|
|
as many riders intertwined in a grotesque embrace was rampaging across
|
|
the formation, picking men off with spears and ripping at them with too
|
|
many hungry mouths. Nauk unsheathed his sword, pushing down the swell of
|
|
Rage that ran through his veins.
|
|
|
|
``Sound the fucking retreat, Jwahir,'' he barked. ``We're pulling
|
|
back.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Hellhound slowly sat down in the armchair someone had provided her
|
|
when they'd taken the guildhall, but that she was only now using for the
|
|
first time. She closed her eyes and allowed her fingers to clasp the --
|
|
admittedly poorly -- sculpted arms. She remained there for a long
|
|
moment, feeling the weight of all her staff's eyes on her.
|
|
|
|
``Nauk's front is still salvageable,'' Aisha assessed. ``And Robber's
|
|
casualties still aren't as high as our worst case scenario.''
|
|
|
|
Juniper did not answer. She simply allowed the images she'd been
|
|
glimpsing all night to come together in her mind, forming the pattern of
|
|
the engagement. Forces in motion, some set by her and others by the
|
|
enemy. She could see where instinct would drive her opponent, to seek
|
|
that decisive blow that would knock the Fifteenth out of this battle.
|
|
And yet\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``And yet,'' she murmured, fangs glinting in the lamplight.
|
|
|
|
``Juniper?'' Aisha said. ``What will we do?''
|
|
|
|
``I'm going to take a nap,'' Juniper replied.
|
|
|
|
There was a heartbeat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``Should I just wake you when the battle's over, then?'' her
|
|
tawny-skinned friend asked sardonically.
|
|
|
|
The Hellhound smiled without opening her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``It already is.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The armoured boot came down and crushed the soldier's sword hand, then
|
|
came down again and broke the bastard's neck. Nauk spat on the
|
|
abomination and wiped his blooded sword one of the the still-blinking
|
|
grown eyes.
|
|
|
|
``In \emph{good order}, you weak-kneed prissies,'' he growled.
|
|
|
|
His men reacted like the sound of his voice had been a lash, tightening
|
|
their line as they slowly backed away from the enemy. The Silver Spears
|
|
infantry was being a hellish pain, what with the way they ignored battle
|
|
lines and threw themselves into his formation with their weapons out.
|
|
He'd ordered his legionaries into the testudo to take the hits, but some
|
|
scraping of tactics must have remained in the cataphracts for they'd
|
|
immediately charged -- the first time had cost him a full line before
|
|
they'd drawn back, and that was without counting their bitch of a trump
|
|
card.
|
|
|
|
``It's coming again,'' Jwahir called out, dripping blood through the
|
|
openings of her helmet.
|
|
|
|
``MAGES, FIRE,'' the commander bellowed.
|
|
|
|
Four dozen fireballs impacted the massive abomination who'd wrecked his
|
|
spearmen, blowing it back. It careened into a house, wrecking the wall
|
|
and slowly getting back to its feet. Only a matter of moments before the
|
|
cataphracts hit again, Nauk knew, but he grinned nastily under his
|
|
blood-streaked helmet. They were just a corner away from the plaza now,
|
|
and that meant\ldots{} Just in time, Nauk's remaining legionaries fell
|
|
into position at the head of the alley. The sounds of the cavalry's
|
|
hoofs against the stone rang as they charged, but they did not impact
|
|
his men. The ranks split smoothly in two, letting them through to meet
|
|
the line that had emerged from the plaza: twenty ogres in full plate
|
|
raised their warhammers and brought them down on the riders, killing man
|
|
and beast alike in a single stroke. The legionaries closed around the
|
|
riders as they tried to retreat, taking their revenge for lives already
|
|
claimed.
|
|
|
|
A cry of warning came that the great beast was coming again but he was
|
|
not worried because Pickler, beautiful glorious Pickler, had been the
|
|
one to build this fallback point. The stone the ballista threw hit the
|
|
monster right in its centre of mass, a textbook perfect shot. Horse legs
|
|
and unwary necks broke, though the creature wasn't dead. It crawled
|
|
forward and Nauk strode to it, elbowing aside any legionary in his way.
|
|
At some point he'd dropped his shield but he had no need for it for this
|
|
kind of work. The soldier closest to the abomination was run through by
|
|
a spear a heartbeat after he reached the enemy, but the orc did not
|
|
stop. He felt the Red Rage welling up in him, like a tide about to tip
|
|
him over, but he did not fight it. He rode the wave, let its anger
|
|
strengthen his limbs as he caught a lance about to skewer him and ripped
|
|
it out of the rider's arm -- the hand came with it, but what did he
|
|
care?
|
|
|
|
In a moment of perfect clarity, Commander Nauk saw the hoof about to
|
|
cave in his chest and \emph{howled}, ramming his sword in the horse it
|
|
belonged to. Hands and teeth were grasping at him but he climbed the
|
|
abomination until he reached the summit of it. Under him was the roiling
|
|
nest of corruption, flesh convulsing and pulsing like a repulsive
|
|
heartbeat. With a laugh of heady battle-joy, he plunged the lance into
|
|
it. Then he ripped it out and did it again as the abomination broke its
|
|
silence for the first time, screaming through every mouth it had. Again
|
|
and again he plunged the lance, until finally the monster stopped
|
|
moving. Rising to his feet, covered in pus and blood, the orc howled at
|
|
the night sky and the red moon filling it. Seven hundred voices took up
|
|
the scream and he bared its teeth and looked down at the remaining
|
|
Silver Spears, watching them mass for another assault.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Hear that, Nilin?} \emph{Isn't it better than a pack of mourners
|
|
at a funeral?}
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Reception Alley, as the planning committee consisting of Robber and
|
|
everybody within hearing range of him fondly knew it, was a cramped mess
|
|
of wooden walls and stone foundations that had already looked about to
|
|
collapse before the sappers got their grubby little hands on it. It was
|
|
currently filled to the brim with devils trying to push their way
|
|
through to the goblins shooting at them from the neck of the alley, most
|
|
of them adding insult to injury with gleeful enthusiasm. He had trained
|
|
his minions well, the tribune decided.
|
|
|
|
``Gotta be at least twenty in there,'' Lieutenant Rattler commented,
|
|
spitting to the side as they both watched another volley take a
|
|
jackal-faced devil in the throat.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat later another quarrel punctured the thing's crotch with a
|
|
dull thump. Robber made a mental note of finding out whoever had done
|
|
that and giving them a commendation. It was the little things that made
|
|
this career so much fun.
|
|
|
|
``I figure we'll have taken forty total, by the time we're done,'' the
|
|
yellow-eyed officer replied.
|
|
|
|
And taken over twice that in casualties for their trouble, but it just
|
|
wasn't a party if half the guests weren't dead on the ground by the end
|
|
of the evening. Another of the mage-takers burst in the middle of his
|
|
men but it was taken out within moments, long knives plunging into its
|
|
flesh from every direction. Situational awareness was a natural goblin
|
|
trait. They wouldn't have lasted very long as a species otherwise,
|
|
either because of predators or each other. The single mage Juniper had
|
|
assigned them for the scrying link was in the back and well-guarded,
|
|
though the sight of an orc twice the size of the goblins watching over
|
|
him had been most amusing. Once in a while the fireflies made a play for
|
|
the man, but it turned out they could be swatted like actual fireflies
|
|
when they were in that form. Who knew? Well, Apprentice knew. And had
|
|
told them. Which was how \emph{they} knew. Details.
|
|
|
|
``This is as much as we'll manage to sucker in,'' Robber said. ``They've
|
|
gotta be making their way around by now. Light them up.''
|
|
|
|
The thing about sharpers was that they didn't burn, not exactly. The
|
|
alchemy as it had been explained to him released something called
|
|
``kinetic force'' which was obviously a made-up mage word. Still, all
|
|
the heat that accompanied sharpers blowing came from friction with
|
|
whatever they hit: you couldn't set something on fire with a sharper.
|
|
Not on its own, anyway. The only good thing about Marchford he'd found
|
|
was that one of the main merchant guilds in the city had a great big
|
|
stock of oil jugs that had been overlooked by the Countess when she'd
|
|
stripped the city clean of useful stuff before bailing for her
|
|
rebellion. About nine out of ten jugs from that reserve were currently
|
|
inside the houses making up Reception Alley, along with all the sharpers
|
|
and smokers they'd been able to put aside.
|
|
|
|
Pickler was more interested in mechanics than munitions, but Robber
|
|
himself had always been more of an explosion sort of fellow. Kept the
|
|
blood flowing. So he'd designed the network of makeshift explosives that
|
|
dotted the alley himself, and he watched with unholy pleasure as his
|
|
minions lit up the initial charges and scampered away. One sharp whistle
|
|
from Robber himself and all his remaining cohort bailed, giving ground
|
|
to the devils who clawed their way in pursuit immediately.
|
|
|
|
The explosion still flattened him. He rose to his feet to witness a
|
|
burning wasteland of rock and splintered wood, strewn with the cooked
|
|
corpses of devils. Billows of toxic scalding smoke covered it all, too
|
|
heavy to rise in the sky even with the wind trying to move them.
|
|
|
|
``I'm a little turned on right now,'' he admitted.
|
|
|
|
``Aren't we all?'' Lieutenant Rattler spoke in a reverent tone.
|
|
|
|
He shook himself out of his reverie after a moment. Silhouettes were
|
|
already prowling the smoke, hissing in pain but still pushing through.
|
|
|
|
``Full retreat, my lovelies,'' he called out.
|
|
|
|
Their part in this was done. By now Apprentice should have finished the
|
|
second part of his ritual, the one that closed the threshold-free
|
|
rectangle behind the devils. The door to retreat had been shut down, and
|
|
now they were stuck with a real monster. He almost pitied the poor
|
|
bastards: stuck in a box with the Boss and a hundred angry Callowans?
|
|
\emph{Someone} was going to have a bad time, and it sure as Hells wasn't
|
|
going to be the Boss.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Fifty yards away from the burning, Catherine Foundling slowly unsheathed
|
|
her sword.
|