515 lines
23 KiB
TeX
515 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-40-knock}{%
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\section{Chapter 40: Knock}\label{chapter-40-knock}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The Heavens have a way of favouring the general with the better
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army.''}
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-Theodosius the Unconquered, Tyrant of Helike
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\end{quote}
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At a regular pace, the Fifteenth would have gotten to Liesse in twelve
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hours.
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We managed it in two bells instead, eight hours, by letting the slower
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supply train slip behind. Juniper would never have taken the risk if the
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rebels had shown a willingness to sally before, but they hadn't. They'd
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remained behind the walls of Liesse and now we knew why. They'd waited
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until we were close enough that if we fled out of the angel's range, we
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wouldn't have time to do anything else. \emph{And then we'd have to deal
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with over a hundred thousand} \emph{conscripts for the Heavens.} My
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senior staff was all in agreement: if an army that size suddenly
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appeared in the middle of southern Callow, the entire campaign was
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screwed. The Legions of Terror would have to retreat north to
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consolidate and bring reinforcements from Praes and western Callow.
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Which would leave the Wasteland without supervision and the borders with
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Procer unmanned. If this was just a peasant army we were dealing with
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the whole affair might be settled before the Principate's forces came
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back north after dealing with the Dominion, but those people would be
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Hashmallim-touched. They would not break, retreat or surrender.
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The summoning had to be stopped. So here we were, two hours or so before
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Afternoon Bell, setting up camp a mile away from the walls of the city.
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There was no point in trying to encircle Liesse so we didn't bother to
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even make a token effort. There were only forty or so hours left before
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it all went to shit, we'd have to come in swinging and break through the
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defences to cut this off at the source. To avoid a panic, the rank and
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file had not been informed of what exactly was going on inside the city
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-- just that the Lone Swordsman was attempting a ritual that couldn't be
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allowed to finish. The sense of urgency would hopefully drive my
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legionaries to push through even when things got bad, because there was
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no doubt that they would.
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The situation we'd been put it was\ldots{} dire. We were horribly
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outnumbered, for one. The walls were manned by what Juniper had
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identified to be the Baroness Dormer's army, a mix of retinue soldiers
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and southern levies. They were heavy on bows, and they'd know how to use
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them: Callowan professional armies like the defunct Royal Guard had been
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heavier on knights than archers, but farmers weren't above hunting deer
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and rabbits to put on the dinner table. Smaller and swifter targets than
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my legionaries, if not as well armoured. The walls themselves could be
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pounded into rubble given long enough, but time was the thing we lacked
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most. The one redeeming factor in all this was that Liesse wasn't a
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castle, it was a fortified city. Beyond the initial wall there was no
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immediate second circle of fortifications: it was houses and shops, a
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maze of old streets and avenues. Deeper inside, closer to the lake,
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there was the Ducal Palace. It had been a fortress once but after
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centuries of peace its rulers had come to prioritize luxury over
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defensibility. \emph{Which won't matter, if we can't get into the actual
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city.}
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``Not even a portcullis on that gate. Goddamn Liessen don't know what a
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real fortress is,'' Captain Farrier spoke up from my side. ``The south
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has always been too soft.''
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The Gallowborne followed me everywhere now. Twenty of them dogged my
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footsteps everywhere I went, no matter the hour. They even guarded my
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tent.
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``Where are you from, John?''
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The man blushed. He always did, when I called him by his given name.
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``Summerholm, ma'am. Gate of the East.''
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\emph{Where Legions go to die}, he didn't say. The old boast rang hollow
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these days, with legionaries patrolling the streets of the city.
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``They'll find a stomach for this fight,'' I said. ``They have a hero
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with them.''
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``Lone Swordsman, huh?'' the man mused. ``Heard about him. Pretty boy,
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did a speech in Marchford about freeing Callow. Took the First Prince's
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silver, though. So much for that.''
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``He's not the brightest man I've met,'' I said. ``But he's a regular
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monster with a sword. I've seen Calamities fight and he's nearly in the
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same league.''
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``Hopefully you won't torch the city to get him, this time,'' Farrier
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smirked.
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I rolled my eyes. If only that were an option. With the city this
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densely packed the tactics I could actually use were sharply limited:
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even the trebuchets would have to be carefully aimed not to hit the
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streets. Civilian casualties would be horrifying otherwise\emph{. Won't
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be an issue if Masego comes through}, I thought. Apprentice had gone to
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take a closer look at the gates, to see if what we had in mind was
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feasible. There would spells inlaid in the fortifications, of course.
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There wasn't a defensive wall in Callow that was without that kind of
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protection -- otherwise any powerful mage could tear through stone,
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given half a bell to work. Mages in Callow were rarer than in the
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Wasteland, though, and so the spellwork wasn't refreshed as often. Large
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Imperial cities got new warding schemes every decade or so, according to
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my books, but in the Kingdom the wards had remained the same until they
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were broken. \emph{And Liesse hasn't ever been invaded by the Legions,
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so it should be as old as it gets.}
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Masego would tell me soon. Until then there were other matters to look
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into. I wasn't forced to wait long until Hakram came back with the man
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I'd sent for. Neither did I need to turn and look to see they were
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coming: all the Gallowborne had put their hands on their swords the
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moment they appeared.
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``Lady Squire,'' the man they called Arzachel greeted me with an
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insolent smile.
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The mercenary was allegedly from Valencis, one of the southernmost
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principalities in Procer -- the one bordering the Titanomanchy and the
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giants that lived in it. He looked almost like a Taghreb, though his
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skin wasn't quite as tanned and the cast of his face was unfamiliar. The
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southernmost Procerans were called Arlesites, I remembered. Famous for
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their gallantry and tendency to be at war with all their neighbours,
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both inside and outside the Principate. With his elaborate moustache,
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forked beard and the wicked falchion at his side he looked like the kind
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of man who'd sup on babies. He was also still eyeing me with open
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disrespect.
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``It would be proper for you to kneel,'' I said.
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I felt Captain Farrier hide a smile. Callowans had not been fond of
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Procerans even before they'd failed to lend help during the Conquest.
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``I'm not a very proper man, milady,'' the man shrugged.
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I shared a glance with Hakram. Without the need for actual words, the
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tall orc laid the bone hand that had brought him his nickname and
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forcefully pushed Arzachel to his knees. The man spluttered and reached
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for his falchion, but within two heartbeats all twenty of the
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Gallowborne had unsheathed their swords. Arzachel cast a look at them,
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then spat.
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``Will that be enough?'' he sneered.
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``You can stay there,'' I replied flatly.
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``You treat all your men this way, Lady Squire?'' he said.
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I hummed. ``Not a single one of them. That's why you're here, actually.
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You're not one of mine, you're Akua's -- and she's about to betray me.''
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``Doubt it, but even if she was it's got nothing to do with me or my
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men,'' he said immediately. ``We ain't getting involved in Praesi
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scheming.''
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``Then you should have better considered your choice of employer,'' I
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replied without a shred of sympathy. ``You're here, and you're a
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liability that cannot be left unattended.''
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My tone had remained casual, but there must have been something about it
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that gave him pause. The smugness and self-assurance slid off his face.
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``You still need my men,'' he said cautiously. ``You kill me and they
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won't follow.''
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``Yes,'' I agreed softly. ``I'm told they're remarkably loyal. They'll
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listen to you whatever you decide to do. That's why your head in a
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basket isn't serving as a prop while I talk to one of your
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lieutenants.''
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Arzachel went very, very still.
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``I've got under forty hours to take Liesse,'' I said. ``I don't have
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\emph{time} to waste on you, to find a more elegant way to do this.
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Elegant's never really been my thing, anyway.''
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``Lady Squire,'' he said, ``I-``
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``\textbf{Shut up},'' I Spoke. ``Akua's clever and she's got some talent
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on her side, but I've got the single most powerful mage of our
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generation taking orders from me.''
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Hakram smoothly unsheathed a knife and crouched at Arzachel's side,
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forcing up his palm and nicking it. Blood dripped into a glass vial he
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held up in his other hand before rising to his feet and corking it.
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``When he comes back,'' I continued, ``I'm giving Apprentice the vial
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with your blood in it. He'll be under orders to use the nastiest way he
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has to kill someone if you so much as twitch in a way that looks
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treacherous to me.''
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The Proceran's eyes widened in fear. He was trying to speak but his lips
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wouldn't move.
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``Man's got an affinity with fire,'' I mused. ``Reckon he might boil
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your blood in your veins.''
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``Bad way to go,'' Hakram gravelled, thick fingers slipping the vial
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under his breastplate. ``Not at quick one, either.''
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``Now,'' I smiled, ``you might be telling yourself `Heiress is a mage.
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She'll put up something to protect me from that.' Here's thing thing,
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though: sure, if you talk to her she might put up a ward. She's skilled.
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What she \emph{isn't} is an endless power sink -- if Apprentice swings
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hard enough at that protection, it'll break. She's got other plans,
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Arzachel. How much do you really think she's willing to invest in saving
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your skin instead of her own objectives?''
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Adjutant hoisted the Proceran to his feet, patting his shoulder
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amicably.
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``Off we go, mercenary,'' he said.
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Arzachel turned to leave but I raised my voice again, stopping him in
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his tracks.
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``Oh, and one last thing.''
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I allowed my Name to flare up, the beast howling in laughter as I felt
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my shadow stir behind me. I had a feeling that if I looked it wouldn't
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my own silhouette outlined on the ground.
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``Your men are auxiliaries in the Legions of Terror,'' I said.
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``Regulations apply to them now. If any of them loot or rape when we get
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into the city, it's the gallows for them and the officer who failed to
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keep them in line. \emph{Dismissed}.''
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---
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``Blasting those gates would be pointless,'' Masego said, wasting no
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time on small talk.
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Juniper grunted in displeasure, glancing in my direction.
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``Thought you said the wards in Liesse would be dusty relics,'' the
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Hellhound said.
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``They are,'' Apprentice intervened. ``I'm fairly sure that scheme
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predates Triumphant.''
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Hakram and Pickler pressed knuckles to their foreheads, murmuring
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\emph{may she never return}. Juniper didn't bother with the formula,
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absent-mindedly moving her hand in the gesture. Masego drummed his
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fingers against his side irritably. He wasn't any more inclined to
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superstition than I was, maybe even less.
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``It's simple in nature, but it's lasted this long because it was
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cleverly designed. The runes inlaid on the iron take magic and move it
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into the walls it's linked to. Those have been designed with some
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standard dispersal spellwork -- anything trying to blast that door would
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have to be strong enough to bring down the entire set of walls at
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once.''
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There were rituals that might be able to do that, I knew. Praesi had
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been horrifyingly skilled with rituals even before they'd been occupied
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by the Miezans, the unchallenged masters of that branch of sorcery. They
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usually required mass sacrifices, though, and I had neither the people
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nor the willingness to bleed them. Pickler spoke up.
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``The trebuchets are positioned,'' she said. ``Give me the word and we
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start hammering away.''
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``We won't need that,'' Apprentice said. ``Simple in nature, remember?
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The scheme doesn't deal with the physical aspects of manifested
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sorcery.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``And for those of us not too clear on what that
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meant?''
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``If I send fire at it, the flames won't damage the gate. The flames
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themselves are magical energy, turned into a physical manifestation. But
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it'll still be affected by the heat emanating from the flames, since the
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heat itself isn't sorcerous in nature.''
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Kilian had tried to explain something similar to me once. She'd said
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that sorcery was, in a way, using your will to lie to Creation. You
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convinced it that your magic was actually fire or ice or light or a
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curse, and that it should react accordingly. The bigger or more complex
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the lie, the more willpower it took. I had a feeling this was all an
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extreme oversimplification, but it was enough for me to get the gist of
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what Apprentice was saying.
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``Melting the gate would require hours of constant, very high
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temperature fire,'' Pickler pointed out.
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``So we don't use fire,'' I said. ``Masego, you used a trick in
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Summerholm. Can you do it again?''
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He blinked, then frowned. After a moment his eyes lit up.
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``Clever,'' he praised. ``Yes. Though we'll need an impact afterwards.''
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``You'll get to use your trebuchets after all, Senior Sapper,'' I said,
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and the goblin grinned.
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For a moment she looked just like Robber about to slip a lit brightstick
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in someone's pants. I nearly shuddered. \emph{Goblins.} That this one
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preferred siege weapons to slitting throats in the night didn't make her
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any less dangerous.
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``It's after the way is open that worries me,'' Adjutant spoke up,
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grounding me back in the present. ``There's heroes in the city, they'll
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have set up surprises. And there's no trace of the Stygian spears on the
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walls.''
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``They know we need the gate to invest the city in time,'' Juniper said.
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``They'll be waiting on the other side, in full phalanx. If there's a
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competent commander on the other side, there'll be archers on the
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streets and rooftops behind them.''
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It would be like walking into a meat grinder. The ring of spears would
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remain an unmoving rampart skewering anyone coming at it, and with a
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constant stream of arrows falling on my legionaries they'd be unable to
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form up in enough of a mass to just push their way through. We'd
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expected to have to face the Stygians, though, and over the last few
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fortnights the Hellhound had developed her own tactics to deal with
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them.
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``Sappers and heavies,'' Juniper continued. ``Crack open the formation
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with sharpers, then keep them split. We'll use the Procerans to soften
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them up first, thin the numbers.''
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``We have my little surprise, if it comes to that,'' I said.
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``You'll need that to deal with the brat,'' the Hellhound replied.
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``Keep as many trump cards in reserve as you can. Getting the latter
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parts of this battle done without you would be troublesome.''
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``How sentimental of you, Juniper,'' I said, but I also nodded to
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concede the point.
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William was due a victory, but victory was a very broad concept. My
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being defeated in single combat might discharge that obligation and then
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leave him vulnerable to an ally picking him off -- after the pattern of
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three was over, our lives were no longer bound to each other's hands.
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The trick would be surviving the defeat. I'd had a lot of time to chew
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over the idea, to think up contingencies. I imagined most of them would
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fail, which was why I had a \emph{lot}.
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``Speaking of brats,'' I said. ``Heiress. The counters are ready?''
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``Kilian has her orders,'' Juniper gravelled.
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``I had a look at our Proceran friend earlier,'' Masego said amusedly.
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``He's bare of protection, and I believe the slight warming of his blood
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for a moment was enough of a warning to ensure good behaviour.''
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``He was shaking when he left,'' Hakram said. ``There was kind of
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a\ldots{} pressure, when Catherine dismissed him. Even I felt it, and I
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wasn't the target.''
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I hid my surprise. I'd been on the other side of that trick once, the
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night I'd met Black. I'd seen him use it several times since, inflicting
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raw terror on people just by focusing his Name in their direction. Had I
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reproduced it accidentally? I'd need to look into that later. It was too
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useful an ability not to try and add it to my arsenal. \emph{Finding
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volunteers for testing might be a little hard though}, I grimaced.
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Shaking away the thought, I met the eyes of my officers.
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``We're as ready as we'll ever be. Another half bell for the legionaries
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to rest, and then we get this stone rolling.''
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---
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Afternoon Bell was ringing inside Liesse but no one paid the sound much
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attention.
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My horse moved according to my will, trotting slightly ahead of the
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assembled lines of the Fifteenth. I'd considered making a speech before
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we struck the first blow, but what would be the point of it? My
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legionaries knew what needed to be done. They knew why, and they knew
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who we'd face doing it. Anything else was just posturing. Hakram was on
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foot at my side, the two of us surrounded by the full contingent of the
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Gallowborne. Masego was idling somewhere behind us, talking in low tones
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with his task force of mages as we waited for our last guest to arrive.
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She made us wait as long as she dared. Heiress arrived with her usual
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panache with her minion Barika in tow.
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Akua was wearing ridiculously gorgeous armour, as was apparently her
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habit. This one was lamellar steel, with whispers of gold standing out
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from the red aketon underneath. It split on her upper thigh, revealing
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beautiful greaves set over high supple leather boots. Even her horse was
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covered in armour that was prettier than my own very plain -- and
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somewhat scarred, because people kept \emph{shooting} me -- plate. Her
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horse was also alive, unlike Zombie. Whether that was a victory for me
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or not I still wasn't sure. Refusing to stare at the sight of her, I
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fished out my dragonbone pipe out of one of my saddlebags and filled it
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with an herb satchel, striking a pinewood match on my own saddle to
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light it. I puffed out a mouthful of white smoke, eyeing her unkindly.
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``You realize this is a military campaign, not a court session,'' I
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said.
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``It is the burden of nobility to be superior in all things,'' she
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replied gravely. ``Not that I would expect you to understand this, given
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your\ldots{} origins.''
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``Pretty armour,'' Hakram spoke up mildly. ``Crossbow will punch right
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through it, of course. There's a reason we use mail and plate
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nowadays.''
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Heiress graced him with a disdainful glance, but did not bother to
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reply. I breathed in the smoke then blew it out in her general
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direction. She wasn't close enough to feel it, but the general pettiness
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of the gesture was still kind of satisfying.
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``I assume you summoned me for something resembling a reason?'' Akua
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said.
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``A generous assumption,'' Barika added in her wake.
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``Barika Unonti, isn't it?'' I smiled. ``How's the finger?''
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She looked like she wanted to show me one finger in particular but she
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controlled herself. Smugly, I blew out another mouthful of smoke. It was
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good to know that my talent for pissing off people hadn't dulled since
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my days in the Pit.
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``Your presence had been requested here so that you can offer technical
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advice on our offensive, Heiress,'' Hakram lied blatantly in my name.
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We had her here so that if she looked like she was about to double-cross
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us the goblin munitions buried under her feet could be detonated and a
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full company of eager Callowans got to stabbing her, should Apprentice
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fail to explode her head first. That was actually a thing he could do,
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I'd found out today. Explode people's heads. What a world we lived in.
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It was a good thing I wasn't a mage, I decided, because I wasn't sure
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how good I'd be at resisting the temptation to use that spell whenever I
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had to deal with nobles.
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``How flattering of you,'' Akua said drily. ``Not at all a waste of my
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abilities.''
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I smiled. ``See, you're giving me advice already. Clearly you were born
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for this.''
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Before the conversation could devolve any further, Apprentice strolled
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away from the other mages and broke in.
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``Everything's ready,'' he said.
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Heiress smiled in his direction, showing perfect teeth on her perfect
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godsdamned face.
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``Lord Masego, how pleasant to see you,'' she said. ``I've been meaning
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to say that you and I should share of cup of wine soon. We could learn
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much from each other.''
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The dark-skinned mage peered at her over his spectacles.
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``Agreed,'' he said quietly. ``I've been meaning to dissect a Named for
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years, Heiress. Who knows, you might even survive the experience.''
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Emptying the smouldering remnants of my pipe on the ground, I smothered
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a grin as the other Soninke's face went blank. Considering Masego had
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been in the thick of the fighting against the demon, Heiress wasn't
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going to be making any ground there in the foreseeable future. I cleared
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my throat, turning to the closest line of Gallowborne.
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``Escort Lord Apprentice on the field, please,'' I ordered. ``Shields
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up. You should be out of arrow range but it pays to be careful.''
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The twenty men clustered around Masego in a lozenge as they strode ahead
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of the army, watched silently by the rebels on the walls. They were too
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far away for me to hear when Apprentice told them to stop, or to hear
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him when he started incanting. Heiress leaned forward in the saddle,
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watching carefully.
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``He's calling on a contract,'' she said.
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``So he is,'' I agreed.
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``Magic won't break the gate,'' Akua said. ``It is warded to ensure as
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much.''
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``See, that's the problem with you traditional Evil types,'' I said.
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``You see a gate and it's a personal affront for it to be in your way --
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so you have to batter it down. You think in straight lines. Even you,
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Akua. Your whole thing is scheming, but you only ever scheme to remove
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the obstacles straight in front of you.''
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The front tip of the lozenge formation scattered as a globe of ice-clear
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water emerged from Masego's hand. It flew forward steadily. Arrows
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streaked from the ramparts and the bastion above the gate but it was a
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small and moving target. It hit the gate without a sound and ice burst
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from the point of contact, swallowing the whole surface in a heartbeat.
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I did not spread to the walls, covering only the gate with inhuman
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precision.
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``It is now frozen \emph{and} closed,'' Heiress said. ``Truly, your
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|
tactical acumen is without peer. You have a mage who can call on Cocytus
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|
at his age and this is the best plan you can craft?''
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|
In the distance, a trebuchet swung. The stone was too high -- it hit the
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crenulations of the bastion above, taking the tip of it clear off and
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|
impacting inside the city. I really hoped the rebels had evacuated the
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|
outskirts of Liesse. In the distance I heard Pickler scream at the top
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|
of her lungs that if the next stone was off by that much the third
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projectile would be the goblin responsible for it. The second stone was
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better aimed: it hit the gate, cracking the ice. The metal behind it
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|
groaned. As the sappers loaded a third projectile, I smiled at Heiress.
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|
``Gate's warded, yes. The hinges, though? The hinges are just metal. And
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what happens when metal is exposed to the coldest temperature devils can
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|
muster?''
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|
``It gets brittle,'' Hakram said before she could.
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|
The third stone hit, and with a ripping sound the gate\ldots{} fell
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down. The hinges had broken and nothing held it up anymore. I smiled
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unpleasantly at the aristocrat.
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``As you said, my tactical acumen is truly without peer.''
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|
The Fifteenth roared its approval behind us as Masego returned to the
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safety of our lines and the Battle of Liesse began in earnest.
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