613 lines
29 KiB
TeX
613 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-rats}{%
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\section{Interlude: Rats}\label{interlude-rats}}
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\begin{quote}
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``\emph{Three can keep a secret, if two are dead. Unless you're a
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necromancer, anyway, then the world is your blasphemous undead
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oyster.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Sorcerous
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\end{quote}
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About the only thing Ratface missed about the War College was the easy
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availability of good writing tables. Out on campaign he had to make do
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with a movable scribe's desk, which did not contain nearly as much
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paperwork as he actually needed it to. Juniper's insistence that
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everything be done by the book meant that reports like bred like vermin
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and he'd only barely managed to remain ahead of the curve since Ater by
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prioritizing what was immediately necessary. The backlog kept growing
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and even what passed for his staff -- three unassigned literate
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legionaries he'd nabbed before someone could draft them into a higher
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priority chore -- wasn't enough to cut down the mass properly. Heiress,
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may she be devoured by a hundred different tigers, had dropped off what
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must be every single scrap of parchment her people had ever written on
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all mixed together. The Taghreb could almost admire the elegance of
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following an order to the letter in a way that defeated the purpose it
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had been given for, but as it happened \emph{he} was the one stuck
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holding the sharper with a lit fuse. Still, he'd gotten some things out
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of the mess.
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For one Heiress had meticulously kept track of how much she fed her
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former slave soldiers, and had apparently obtained those supplies by
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paying out of her on treasury. The rations had been nothing spectacular
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but they'd been nutritious and systematically on time. Slaver she might
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have been, he thought, but at least she had taken care of her slaves
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well. There was something to be said for that, though it did not make
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the act of buying men any less despicable. In the days before the
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Miezans both the Soninke and the Taghreb had practiced slavery
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themselves, but after being on the other side of the whip for a few
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centuries that concept had been forcefully excised out of their
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cultures. Oh, some of the High Lords treated their subjects little
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better than slaves -- but though they might lay claim to the days of
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their followers, they never claimed \emph{ownership}. There was a
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difference there, one that had been taught to visiting Free Cities
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slavers through gruesome executions and at least one magical plague.
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The records on the Proceran mercenaries were much vaguer, and Ratface
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was fairly certain this Arzachel character was skimming off the top in
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both loot and pay. Likely Heiress tacitly allowed as much to keep him in
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her debt, ready to out his indiscretions to his own men if he ever
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misbehaved. Said men were unfortunately loyal to their leader, he'd
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found out when probing their allegiances. They were well aware that they
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were in a foreign land surrounded by hostile forces and not even gold on
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the side was enough to loosen tongues -- not of men with any authority
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to speak of, anyway. It was standard practice among Wasteland to try to
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bribe your enemy's troops to betray them, so most of the nobility made a
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point of matching any bribe offers if those were presented to them: he'd
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put hand to flame Heiress had done the same. She was a traditional woman
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in many regards, that one.
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For now he was making do by reading Robber's reports whenever they were
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handed in, but eventually he'd find a Proceran with more greed than
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sense. Heiress' real council was her assembly of Praesi lordlings and
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those were beyond his reach to infiltrate, but orders had to go
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\emph{somewhere}. A pair of ears in the right place would allow the
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Fifteenth an idea of what she intended when she would turn against them.
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They'd gotten caught off guard at Marchford but that would not happen
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twice on Ratface's watch -- may he swallow a hundred crows if he lied.
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Already he knew she'd gone to work putting out her version of the events
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in Praes: his contacts in Ater had reported as much. Apparently
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Catherine had meddled in things beyond her understanding and Heiress had
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been forced to step in for the sake of the Empire, putting the Tower's
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interests above her own by saving a rival. No doubt the nobility were
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hiding smiles beyond their gasps of surprise, knowing the Callowan
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wretch had been outwitted by superior Praesi wiles once again.
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Some days, most days, Ratface was of the opinion that taking a hatchet
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to every lord and lady of importance in the Empire would go a long way
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towards making the place run more smoothly. The real danger was if
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Heiress managed to get her lies entrenched in the people's minds, which
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could make a lot of trouble down the line. Thankfully Praesi were so
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naturally cynical about any rumour putting the nobility in a positive
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light that many people were inclined to dismiss the story outright. Word
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of the Battle of Marchford had already trickled out in the legions
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posted in Callow though, according to a few friends, and there sides had
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been swiftly picked. If the choice was between rooting for he Carrion's
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Lord apprentice and the daughter of Istrid Knightsbane or the daughter
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of High Lady Tasia it was barely a choice at all. In the Legions,
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Heiress was openly blamed for the demon being summoned. Whoever had been
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hired to make Lady Akua the saviour in that story had botched the
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assignment pretty badly.
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Unfortunately, Ratface did not have the resources to start rumours of
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his own. Not outside the Fifteenth anyway. That kind of work took gold
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and contacts, both of which he was short on. Whenever Catherine and the
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Hellhound got around to appointing a Kachera Tribune he'd hand off the
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entire problem to them, but until then he'd have keep the Fifteenth
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afloat as best he could. The legion's entire entire hierarchy was a
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mess, even more now that they'd gotten reinforced. Normally a full
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legion would be run by a general and their staff, under which stood two
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legates commanding a jesha of two thousand legionaries. The Fifteenth
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wasn't a full legion though, and Juniper not a general: they'd gone on
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campaign with only two thousand men, which had made her a legate.
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Commanders like Nauk and Hune usually numbered four and were responsible
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for a kabili of a thousand legionaries each, but even now that the
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Fifteenth numbered almost three thousand they remained the only officers
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of their rank. Both kabili were over strength, though detaching Robber's
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cohort of two hundred as an independent force had cut down on that to an
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extent. Aisha's purpose as an officer was to keep all this organized, a
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hellish nightmare on the best of days. Ratface's tendency towards
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sympathizing was mitigated some by the fact that she kept denying his
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own requests for additional staff: known leaks in the legion had made
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the Staff Tribune very tight-fisted with the kind of security clearance
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needed to work under him. Ratface sighed and fished out one of the
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parchment rolls from the overdue pile, this one inherited from Nauk. The
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orc had never been great with numbers and leaned heavily on Nilin to
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handle his supply requests, which had made the man's death at Three
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Hills a minor organisational disaster.
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Nauk's new Senior Tribune had stepped up since but Ratface had still
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inherited quite a few papers when Nilin's affairs had been distributed.
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This one had been handed separately and later than the others, hence his
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curiosity.
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Unrolling the parchment, the Quartermaster scanned the neatly written
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lines while only paying half-attention. Old supply numbers from
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Marchford, he saw. Nothing particularly relevant anymore. Setting aside
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the scroll, Ratface picked up another and then paused. He picked up the
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previous parchment again, paying closer attention to the numbers. He'd
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already gotten a report for Nauk's kabili for that month, he remembered.
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It did not match the numbers he was currently looking at. Some of them
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were outright absurd -- seventy-three missing scutum? \emph{An early
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draft? No.~Nilin was cleverer than that.} He'd never been close to the
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Soninke tribune, not even when they'd both been in Rat Company, but
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they'd known each other socially. Nilin had been one of the most
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educated people in their company, one of the few who read in his leisure
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time. And yet the report in front of him could have only been written by
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a credulous idiot.
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``Oh, Merciless Gods,'' the olive-skinned bastard murmured. ``Let me be
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wrong about this.''
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``Sir?'' one of his staff asked, raising her head from her own pile.
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``Abba,'' he said, closing his eyes. ``Get me one of Kilian's mages, one
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who can scry. And then all of you clear the tent.''
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---
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He got Kilian herself. Good. Better to keep this in the family as long
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as he could. The redheaded mage frowned when he told her exactly what he
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wanted.
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``That's a specialized formula,'' she said. ``You're targeting a
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specific scrying increment without it reaching back. That's fairly
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sophisticated stuff, Ratface, and you're not a mage. How do you even
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know about this?''
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``I paid for it,'' he replied drily.
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There were plenty of mages in Ater who were too weak to be worth
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forcefully adding to the forces of either the Empress or the High Lords,
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and they needed to eat just like everybody else. Some of them fell with
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bad crowds to keep their heads above the water, and Ratface had been
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swimming in those ugly waters since the day he'd stepped foot in Ater.
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Nowadays, he was just as home there as all the other predators.
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``Scrying's restricted at the moment,'' Kilian reminded him, her frown
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disinclined to leave.
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``I have a pass,'' he said patiently.
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``I know, I know,'' the Duni said. ``This just seems, uh, pretty
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shady.''
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Ratface hummed, but did not disagree. She'd soon be upgrading that
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assessment from `pretty' to `very'. The fae-blooded woman spoke the
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formula he'd provided, carefully enunciating every syllable in the mage
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tongue. Using magic made her look more alive, he noticed, put a flush to
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her cheeks and a shine to her eyes. He could understand why Catherine
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was so taken with their Senior Mage, though he was not interested
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himself. As a man with a few issues of his own, he could smell the same
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on Kilian buried under the smiling and the gentleness. The spell
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connected, linking the scrying bowl on the table to a cube of quartz set
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on a bed table. The Quartermaster cleared his throat loudly, bringing
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awake the shape of a man in a bed. Kilian blinked when she recognized
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the distorted face of Instructor Raman.
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``Instructor,'' Ratface greeted the man. ``Good evening.''
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``It's the middle of the night, boy,'' their former Basic Tactics
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instructor from the War College snarled. ``What the Hells are you doing
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waking me up? I have classes tomorrow.''
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The dark-eyed bastard raised an eyebrow.
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``Your tone,'' he said. ``Watch it.''
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The man bit his tongue, though even through a distorted image Ratface
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could see he was furious.
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``I need you to look into records for me, from five years ago,'' he
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said.
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``You know I'm not allowed to look at those,'' the instructor said.
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``I know you have a key to the room,'' Ratface replied. ``The same one
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you use to get back into the facilities after nights of whoring and
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gambling.''
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``Don't \emph{say} that,'' Raman whispered furiously. ``Someone might be
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listening in.''
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``You're going to look into the admittance record of a former student
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called Nilin of Dula,'' the Quartermaster said calmly.
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Kilian jumped in surprise, though her control over the spell did not
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waver.
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``I remember him,'' the instructor said. ``Boy on the imperial ticket,
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from your company.''
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``I want to know who sponsored him,'' Ratface said.
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The other man remained silent for a few heartbeats.
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``That's Tower business, boy,'' he said. ``I'm not getting mixed up in
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it.''
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``It appears you've come to a misapprehension as to the nature of this
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relationship,'' the Taghreb said. ``When I tell you to do something, you
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do it. Or I sell your debt to the Night Harpies, who'll collect after
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breaking your knees and taking a few fingers.''
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``At least I'll still be alive,'' Raman spat.
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A different track, perhaps.
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``When dawn comes,'' Ratface said, ``I'll be making a report to
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Catherine Foundling.''
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The instructor laughed. ``I'm employed at the War College, boy. We're
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under the protection of the Carrion Lord.''
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``She can take that away with a single sentence, if she scries him,'' he
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replied flatly. ``I think you need to consider very carefully whether,
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when I make my report, you want your name to come up as an asset or an
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obstacle.''
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Catherine had refrained from throwing around her weight in Wasteland
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politics, so far, but she'd gotten pushed by the Truebloods one time too
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many. More than once he'd seen her talking alone with Aisha, which he
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took to mean she was finally starting some trouble of her own. Lord
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Black would back her in this particular matter, he was sure of it. The
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man was openly protective of his student: when the Fifteenth had been in
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the process of being raised, word had been put out on the streets of
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Ater that plucking even a single strand of hair from her head would be
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met with brutal retaliation. When the mailed fist of the Empress gave a
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warning, people \emph{listened}. There were plenty of stories going
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around about the people who'd been stupid enough not to, and none of
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them ended nicely.
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``Have it your way, then,'' the instructor said.
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``Now and then, that does happen,'' Ratface spoke sardonically.
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---
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Nilin had been sponsored into the War College by a minor official called
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Kadun Lombo. Not, Ratface noted, the headmistress of the local Imperial
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school. That could be significant. Most students on the ticket were
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picked by the person running their school, though in all fairness
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meddling bureaucrats were commonplace in Praes. A favour to a promising
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student not chosen could end up being paid tenfold a few years down the
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line, should the student rise in authority.
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``You think Nilin was a spy,'' Kilian said.
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``I suspect he was a spy,'' Ratface corrected.
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The redhead clenched her fingers into a fist. She was not angry at him,
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he thought, but at the thought that any member of Rat Company could have
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possibly passed information to the likes of Heiress. Ever since the
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founding of the their legion, the former cadets of the company had taken
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to watching each other's backs around the others. Avoiding that kind of
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clannishness was one of the main reasons cadets were split among
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different legions when they graduated, but the Fifteenth was not an
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average legion in many regards.
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``We all got offers,'' the Senior Mage finally said. ``After the
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melee.''
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They did not talk of it among themselves often, but all officers who'd
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been brought over from the Rats had been quietly approached before they
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set out for Callow. Oh, and what pretty offers they'd been. They'd told
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Ratface he could be reinstated as heir to his father's lordship, if he
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turned his cloak. He wouldn't even have to do much, just send a few
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messages now and then. He still clenched his teeth just thinking about
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it. Just a pawn, they'd thought of him. A tool that could be bought so
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the nobles could keep playing their games with the lives of their
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inferiors. The Truebloods were a rot in the body of Praes, a sickness in
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dire need of amputation. And on the day Catherine Foundling wielded the
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knife that would do away with them, he would be there. \emph{Smiling}.
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``What did they offer you?'' he asked.
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``Positions for my parents in Wolof,'' Kilian said. ``Gold too, of
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course, even some magical tomes. Everybody knows the Duni are a breed of
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servants, out only to fill our pockets.''
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Her tone was a bitter thing. Even in the College there were some who'd
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looked down on Kilian for her pale skin. Blood of traitors and invaders,
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that was the whisper that followed all of the Duni. Born of the last of
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the Miezans in Praes and kept light by intermingling with the crusaders
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who'd once occupied most of the Empire.
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``She wouldn't have had to turn Nilin,'' the Quartermaster said, ``if
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she owned him from the start.''
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Kilian looked ill at the thought.
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``He was my \emph{friend}, Ratface,'' she said. ``We used to trade
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books, since neither of us could afford much. And you're telling me he
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was lying that whole time? Gods, we almost got together during our first
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year at the College.''
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He'd never been good with emotions, so he remained silent. Eventually
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she sighed.
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``Cat took his death hard, you know? She didn't want to talk about it,
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but she wouldn't look Nauk in the eyes for weeks afterwards.''
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Ratface had noticed. They all had. There was a reason Catherine
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Foundling's men loved her -- she repaid that loyalty just as fiercely.
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``If I'm right,'' he said, ``Nauk is going to take it hard.''
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The redhead cursed under her breath. ``I hadn't even thought of that.
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They were like brothers, these two. He relied so much on Nilin to run
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his kabili.''
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And that was the heart of the matter, wasn't it? Ratface was under no
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illusion he could find anything the agents of the Scribe could not, but
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how deep would they really dig when it came to a mere Senior Tribune?
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One who had so little to do with Catherine directly? But Nilin hadn't
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just been a Senior Tribune, he'd been Nauk's closest friend. Anything
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the orc learned in the highest councils of the Fitfteenth he would then
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be told. \emph{Access to information above that of his rank}. Even Named
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could make miss details.
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``So you've got a name,'' Kilian said. ``What now?''
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``Now,'' the olive-skinned bastard grimaced, ``we talk to Aisha.''
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---
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``You think Nilin was the traitor,'' the Staff Tribune immediately said,
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face thoughtful.
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Many things could be said about Aisha Bishara -- and he'd thought even
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more, some of them perhaps a little too rose-tinted -- but that she was
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slow on the uptake was one of them. Some days he wondered why they'd
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lasted so long as a couple, when they'd both known going in that they
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disagreed on nearly everything of import. The sex had probably held it
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together past its natural lifespan, he thought. That part of the
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relationship had always been an unequivocal success. Ratface directed
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his thoughts elsewhere before his body could stir at the memory of it.
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``I'm hoping he was not,'' he said. ``But it needs to be looked into
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nonetheless.''
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The other Taghreb nodded sharply.
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``He was from Dula, right? The small city in Aksum territory.''
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Kilian cocked her head to the side. ``You know people there?''
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``I have a cousin,'' Aisha replied vaguely.
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The Bishara family's glory days were long gone, Ratface knew, but the
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bloodline was still prestigious. One of their ancient chieftains was
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said to have wed the daughter of a djinn prince, and though the creature
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blood ran thin nowadays it was still purer than in a lot of more
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powerful families. Aisha could still put her hand into an open brazier
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and feel no pain, or spend an entire day under the sun of the Devouring
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Sands and not have her skin burn. That meant the sons and daughter of
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the Bishara line made good consorts for nobles looking to improve their
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blood rather than make a strong alliance, and that in turn meant Aisha
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had relatives scattered all over the Empire.
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For a Soninke that might not have meant much -- they murdered even
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family over minor titles -- but for the Taghreb it was different. The
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tribe, even if it was no longer called that, always came first. No
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matter who you married, no matter how many years had passed. Unless you
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were a mere bastard, of course. Then getting rid of you was just good
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planning. Ratface smiled so that the poisonous fury he felt would not
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show. They had to leave the tent while she got in touch with her
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relative and they got in touch with their own contacts, but within a
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bell they had their answer. Kadun Lombo had been, it appeared, nothing
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more than a minor official. No known ties to a higher authority.
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``Two details, though,'' Aisha said. ``First, when he sponsored Nilin
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there were rumours he was a distant relative.''
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Kilian's eyes sharpened. ``Nilin was an only child, and so were his
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parents. He used to joke about it. Said it ran in the family.''
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From the well-hidden look of surprise on Aisha's face, Ratface guessed
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she hadn't known that. She'd only been trying to be thorough. \emph{But
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she has that tone of victory, so she found something else. Something
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relevant.}
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``Second, Kadun Lombo had a riding accident in the month following his
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sponsoring.''
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The Quartermaster let out a long breath. He'd hoped. Against the
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mounting evidence, he'd hoped.
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``A loose end being tied up,'' he said.
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``It's standard practice when placing a long-term spy,'' Aisha said
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quietly. ``Getting rid of anyone who could possibly give them away. The
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Truebloods have people in the Legions, that much is a fact. He might
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have been an investment from the High Lady of Aksum -- he certainly had
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the talent to rise into someone's general staff. It could be any of
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them, for that matter. They all have the resources to pull off something
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like this.''
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\emph{Them}. The Truebloods. The War College did try to weed
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infiltrators out, or at least identify them, but some inevitably got
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through. Not enough to ever cripple the army if there was a rebellion,
|
|
but definitely enough that the Truebloods would remain appraised of what
|
|
the Legions were up to.
|
|
|
|
``Circumstantial evidence,'' Ratface finally said. ``We need more. All
|
|
we have right now is an odd report and speculation.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha eyed him with unpleasantly familiar disappointment.
|
|
|
|
``You were handed an inaccurate report and you just noticed? Perhaps
|
|
Juniper is right and we \emph{do} need to audit your books.''
|
|
|
|
That the Hellhound was out to get him was not news. She'd disapproved of
|
|
he and Aisha getting involved back in the day and taken no pains
|
|
whatsoever to hide it. To the extent that she'd said as much to his
|
|
face. Several times. In retrospective, she might have raised some valid
|
|
points. It did not make Ratface any fonder of her.
|
|
|
|
``I only got it when Nilin died, and it dated back to Summerholm,'' he
|
|
said a touch sharply.
|
|
|
|
``Why?'' Kilian interrupted before Aisha could respond. ``Why only
|
|
then?''
|
|
|
|
Ratface paused. ``I don't actually know. Hakram was the one to give the
|
|
scroll to me, after Nilin died. Catherine told him to handle the whole
|
|
thing since Nauk was too upset to get it done.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha shrugged, somehow managing to make the mundane gesture elegant. He
|
|
really wished she wasn't as good as that, or at being beautiful in
|
|
general.
|
|
|
|
``Let's ask Deadhand for answers.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Hakram was not sleeping. Ratface was not convinced Adjutant ever slept
|
|
-- he certainly got an amount of work done that implied he was beyond
|
|
such mortal foibles. The orc was paying shatranj with Apprentice and
|
|
apparently beating the Warlock's son handily. Both of the Named made him
|
|
uncomfortable, though for very different reasons. He'd known Hakram
|
|
before the orc had stepped into the realm of legend. Before he'd become
|
|
Deadhand, the first orc with a Name in over a millennium. It was hard to
|
|
reconcile the sergeant who'd used to badly hide his contraband alcohol
|
|
with the warrior who was followed by hushed whispers from greenskins
|
|
wherever he went, a demigod in the flesh to his people. As for
|
|
Apprentice, well\ldots{} No one who'd ever seen the mage at work would
|
|
ever be comfortable around him. At Three Hills he'd turned an entire
|
|
flank into a frozen wasteland of death and at Marchford he'd lit up the
|
|
entire night sky with his wrath. So much power contained in the chubby
|
|
frame of a mild-mannered bespectacled man, always at the tip of his
|
|
fingers.
|
|
|
|
``Adjutant,'' he greeted them. ``Lord Apprentice.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram's eyes swept over Aisha and Kilian before settling on him. The
|
|
orc clicked his tongue over the roof of his mouth, the gesture strangely
|
|
human.
|
|
|
|
``You're hunting our rat,'' Hakram said.
|
|
|
|
``There'll be more than one,'' Aisha replied. ``But in essence you are
|
|
correct. We think we've identified a leak.''
|
|
|
|
``That explains all the scrying that's been going on,'' Apprentice said.
|
|
``I was going to have to ask questions about that.''
|
|
|
|
The man was distinctly indifferent when he mentioned it, toying with a
|
|
new trinket in his braids. The bone amulet Catherine had made. He was
|
|
only aware of its existence because she'd killed an oxen to craft it and
|
|
the report had made it to his metaphorical desk.
|
|
|
|
``I got a pile of documents after Nilin died,'' he said. ``Among them
|
|
was a parchment, apart from the rest. Why was it?''
|
|
|
|
Hakram hummed.
|
|
|
|
``It was found in his personal effects, not the papers for the kabili,''
|
|
he said. ``Hence why you got it later than the others.''
|
|
|
|
Kilian let out a sharp breath. ``Ratface. You said what tipped you off
|
|
was that there were odd numbers in the report.''
|
|
|
|
He nodded slowly.
|
|
|
|
``Adjutant,'' she continued. ``The parchment, did you find it in a
|
|
book?''
|
|
|
|
The tall orc's eyes were hard now, and cold. ``Yes.''
|
|
|
|
Nilin's personal affairs had been inherited by Nauk but they were held
|
|
in one of the carts in the baggage train, all of which were under
|
|
Ratface's authority. Hakram pointed out the right book and from there it
|
|
was only a matter of time until they figured out the cypher. Numbers for
|
|
the page, the last letter of the word for the first letter of the word
|
|
it actually meant. The message outlined the number of deserters in the
|
|
Fifteenth to have disappeared in the wake of the fight with the heroes
|
|
as well as the casualties incurred that night. It ended with a
|
|
suggestion of what might be the Fifteent's next assignment, namely the
|
|
suppression of the Silver Spears.
|
|
|
|
``If it's still here, it was never handed in,'' Aisha said afterwards.
|
|
|
|
And yet Heiress had known where to find them and when. The implications
|
|
of that were unpleasant.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Ratface grabbed a few hours of sleep before dawn came. He'd been
|
|
unofficially mandated to be the one who would tell Catherine, much to
|
|
his displeasure. She wasn't the kind of woman who took her displeasure
|
|
at bad news on the messenger but this was not a duty he looked forward
|
|
to. Not when he'd had to see that guilty look on her face for weeks
|
|
after Nilin's death, when she thought no one was looking. The Squire had
|
|
gotten up before he did, he found out. Dressed in a simple tunic and
|
|
leggings she was sparring with five men from her freshly appointed
|
|
personal guard, the so-called Gallowborne. The Callowans eyed him with
|
|
distrust as he claimed a seat just to the side of the sparring ring,
|
|
several of them moving behind him without a word. It was almost
|
|
endearing how much Catherine was unaware of the fact that she fucking
|
|
terrified people, he reflected.
|
|
|
|
The Squire was undefeated in battle, that was part of it, but it was the
|
|
things she'd \emph{done} that gave people the shivers. She'd torched
|
|
Summerholm to flush out a hero barely two months out of Laure, killed a
|
|
monster the size of a fortress with her bare hands and even being being
|
|
crippled had failed to slow her down -- apparently she'd strolled into
|
|
the host of devils at Marchford and casually killed their leaders
|
|
without sustaining a single wound. Hells, she'd taken a handful of Named
|
|
into battle with a demon and wiped the floor with the thing for half an
|
|
hour straight in front of hundreds of witnesses. That wasn't the part
|
|
that really scared the Truebloods, though. It was the way she seemed to
|
|
gather talent around her effortlessly. She'd brought the most promising
|
|
student in the history of the War College into the fold with a single
|
|
conversation. She'd picked a nobody as her liaison and in a matter of
|
|
months he'd become the Adjutant. The son of the Sovereign of the Red
|
|
Skies took orders from her. She'd taken a \emph{company of deserters}
|
|
into battle against devils and somehow turned them into loyal hardened
|
|
killers.
|
|
|
|
Men of the Gallowborne had been on report twice since Marchford for
|
|
beating a man bloody for disparaging Catherine. The second time, when it
|
|
had been implied the only reason the Black Knight had taken her in was
|
|
to keep his bed warm, the legionary had to have all of his teeth grown
|
|
back by a healer. Armoured boots were not a forgiving weapon. And now he
|
|
was watching a woman his own age toy with five veterans like they were
|
|
children, somehow making them run into each other without ever going
|
|
quicker than at a walk. She'd mentioned once that she'd never used a
|
|
sword before leaving Laure and Ratface honestly had trouble believing
|
|
it. He's known people who practiced the sword since they could walk who
|
|
weren't half that dangerous with one, and that was without even taking
|
|
her uncanny reflexes into consideration. The Fifteenth had not even
|
|
existed for a year and already it worshipped at the altar of Catherine
|
|
Foundling -- you only needed to hear the song already written about
|
|
Three Hills to know that.
|
|
|
|
Squire stopped before her men were too bruised to walk, clapping them on
|
|
the shoulder amicably before dismissing them. Ratface idly wondered how
|
|
many of them were already in love with her. Her relationship with Kilian
|
|
was not common knowledge -- he'd made sure of that -- and Named always
|
|
attracted admirers the way carrion attracted flies. She wiped her face
|
|
with a wet cloth, though she didn't look particularly sweaty, and then
|
|
finally noticed him. Catherine Foundling was not a strikingly beautiful
|
|
woman, he decided: her face was sharp, almost austere unless she smiled.
|
|
Her most attractive feature was the long hair that she kept in a loose
|
|
ponytail. The Deoraithe colouring lent her touch of the exotic,
|
|
admittedly, but compared to the likes of the Heiress there was no
|
|
contest. And yet she had a strange charm of her own. \emph{Charisma, not
|
|
beauty.}
|
|
|
|
``Ratface,'' she greeted him with a smile.
|
|
|
|
She eyed him thoughtfully after that.
|
|
|
|
``And you look like you just killed my horse, which seems a bit over the
|
|
top since it's already dead. All right, Supply Tribune, ruin my morning.
|
|
I'm about due a nasty surprise.''
|
|
|
|
The Taghreb bastard cleared his throat.
|
|
|
|
``We've found one of the spies. You're not going to like it.''
|
|
|
|
She didn't, but she listened anyway.
|