521 lines
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521 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-16-shambles}{%
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\chapter{Shambles}\label{chapter-16-shambles}}
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\epigraph{``See, this is exactly the kind of trouble I'd be avoiding by mind
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controlling the entire world. You fools are making my point for me,
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can't you see?''}{Dread Emperor Imperious, shortly before being torn apart by an Ater
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mob}
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``That's not the good news face,'' I said.
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There were only three of us in the war room: Juniper, Ratface and
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myself. We'd have a real staff meeting later today or tomorrow, but for
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now I'd kept the people to a minimum. When the whole family was at the
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table discussions tended to take longer, and for now what I wanted was a
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solid notion of what had happened in Callow while I was gone. And, to my
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unpleasant surprise, I'd been gone quite a bit longer than I'd thought:
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three months as of the morning I woke up. Considering Summer had already
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been probing the borders when I'd left and being well aware that Heiress
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was going to go full bastard the moment I disappeared, I was not
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expecting a basket of flowers. Yet the sheer dourness on the Hellhound's
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face gave me pause. I glanced at Ratface -- he wasn't looking any
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happier. Well, at least it was unlikely to be worse than having my heart
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stolen by an angry Winter god. Weeping Heavens, let it not be worse than
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having my heart stolen by an angry Winter god. I firmly believed that
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was not too high of a bar to set for this conversation, but already I
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was getting the beginnings of a headache.
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``Everything's fucked,'' Ratface flatly contributed.
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``Fucked \emph{how},'' I prompted. ``That's the important part.''
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``Military affairs first,'' Juniper said. ``We are at war on at least
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two fronts, possibly up to five.''
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I missed the days when two mortal enemies had been the upper limit, not
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the starting point.
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``Summer,'' I counted out. ``Heiress?''
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``Diabolist,'' Ratface corrected grimly.
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``She transitioned?'' I said. ``Shit. I had my money on her aiming for
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Dread Empress off the bat.''
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``You weren't the only one,'' my Supply Tribune said. ``Everybody's
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wondering what her game is, right now.''
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``A lot of people dying, if I had to venture I guess,'' I grunted. ``All
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right, Juniper, lay it on me. Summer. What are we dealing with?''
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``We don't have hard numbers,'' the Hellhound replied. ``Trying to scry
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them lost two mages their eyesight.''
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The dream I'd had before waking up in Creation was still fresh in my
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mind -- it didn't feel like a memory, something that would fade in time
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or become less vivid. A Name dream was the closest equivalent I could
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come up with, and even those didn't feel quite as\ldots{} tangible,
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afterwards. Considering some of the things I'd seen Summer do in that
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sequence, I wasn't all that surprised scrying them was dangerous. It
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must have been like staring straight into the sun.
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``But you have guesses,'' I said.
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She nodded, and tapped her thick fingers against the map spread across
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the table to get my attention. There were two red stones set in southern
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Callow: one on Dormer, the other on Holden. Considering those two were
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the closest Callowan cities to the Waning Woods, why they were marked as
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Summer strongholds needed no explanation.
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``We've received intelligence from General Sacker that was collected
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from refugees of both cities,'' Juniper gravelled. ``One of them was
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former Royal Guard, so we can put more stock in her assessment of force
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numbers. At least five thousand both times, and we're fairly sure it
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wasn't the same army.''
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Ten thousand godsdamned fairies. No wonder she'd looked like someone had
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shot Aisha, earlier. Even the few hundred lesser fae we'd had to contain
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in Marchford had inflicted rough losses on the Fifteenth, and unlike
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those poor expendable bastards Summer would have titled fae leading
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their hosts.
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``Have they moved since taking the cities?'' I asked.
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``No,'' my general said. ``Not on any large scale, anyway. They're
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sending raiding parties but nearly all of them are headed towards our
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second problem.''
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The orc did not need to point at the black stone set over Liesse for me
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to know what she was talking about.
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``She shouldn't have any forces to speak of,'' I said. ``I had the
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Ruling Council strike down her right to anything but a city guard.''
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And her own personal retinue, a privilege granted to Praesi highborn
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that not even I could touch. Given her high birth the number allowed was
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not negligible -- a thousand men -- but still very far from an army.
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``She doesn't care about the Council anymore,'' Ratface said. ``No one
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does, Cat. But we'll talk about that mess later.''
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A trickle of the fury that went through me at those words must have
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shown on my face, because when the dark-eyed Taghreb looked at me he
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paled. I took a long breath, calming myself. It did not escape my notice
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that the temperature in the war room had significantly cooled.
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\emph{Joy, another power that'll start backfiring if I don't learn how
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it works}, I thought\emph{. Just what I needed.}
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``She's hired mercenaries,'' Juniper said. ``Levantines, Helikeans and
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allegedly some drow.''
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``The last bunch she hired was wiped out to the last man,'' I frowned.
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``By us, even.''
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``She scraped the bottom of the barrel in Mercantis,'' Ratface said.
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``But over half her people are from the Wasteland and those will be
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reliable. She's pretty much taken over the Truebloods.''
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``And her mother's done nothing about this?'' I said, surprised.
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``Her mother is fighting her own war in Wolof,'' the tanned man replied.
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``Against a nephew trying to overthrow her and the Legions trying to
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contain the angry beehive the city turned into.''
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``The Empress intervened,'' I said.
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``With a light touch,'' Juniper grunted. ``But she can't allow the kind
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of summons they're throwing at each other to spill out into the
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Wasteland. There's reports of a demon being used.''
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I didn't ask what kind -- \emph{any} kind was bad enough. That meant no
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reinforcements from Praes, which was as much a relief as it was a
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problem. We'd be on our own for this.
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``Praesi,'' I said. ``So, household troops and mages?''
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``A \emph{lot} of mages,'' Ratface said. ``And with Liesse currently
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packed with refugees, I don't need to tell you how bad that could get.''
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``If she so much as sacrifices a single man she's rebelling,'' I coldly
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said.
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``She's already rebelling, Foundling,'' Juniper said. ``She's been
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summoning devils to pit against the fae -- your Council made laws
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against that. And you don't assemble an illegal army of ten thousand if
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you intend to return to the fold afterwards.''
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``She's reached her end game, then,'' I muttered. ``Fuck. It's always
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trouble to fight Praesi when they're cornered. Everybody knows that.''
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There was no longer any debate about whether or not Heiress -- no,
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Diabolist, I needed to remember that -- was ending up on the chopping
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block by the end of this. She'd given me an excuse to see her head on a
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pike and she knew I would not allow it to pass me by. Which meant that,
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by the end of her play she intended to be beyond any sanctions I could
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inflict. Was she trying to carve out her own kingdom in southern Callow?
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That would be building on sand, she was hated there.
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``All right,'' I finally said, still digesting the news. ``Those two are
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covered. Now what's the rest?''
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Juniper glanced at Ratface, who shrugged then cleared his throat.
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``Duchess Kegan has put the Duchy of Daoine on war footing,'' he said.
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``She's mobilizing both her army and the Watch, and she's refused to
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explain why.''
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``Oh \emph{come on},'' I barked. ``I already conceded Council authority
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doesn't extend to Daoine. What the Hells more does she think she's going
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to get by rebelling?''
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``We don't think she's rebelling, not since last week anyway,'' Juniper
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said. ``She's imprisoned Praesi in the duchy but she hasn't killed them
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and she hasn't declared war on the Empire.''
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``Deoraithe don't declare war,'' I replied flatly. ``You realize there's
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a one going on when you're neck deep in Watch.''
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``I said the same thing, but then Robber returned from the south,''
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Ratface said.
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``Special Tribune Robber,'' Juniper sternly corrected.
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Considering how much grief she'd given me over promoting the goblin, I
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was more than a little amused she was now insisting on the proper
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address. It wasn't that she'd disagreed that Robber with a detached
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cohort would bleed Akua's forces in the south, the orc was well aware of
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what the vicious little bastard could do. But removing an `insubordinate
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wretch' like him from the usual chain of command and the supervision it
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entailed had not sat well with her. She was Legion to the bone, though:
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now that he had the position she wouldn't let anyone dismiss the respect
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it was supposed to carry. Not even Robber himself, much as he tried.
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``Yes, Special Tribune Robber,'' Ratface said, barely refraining from
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rolling his eyes.
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He was going to be paying for that later, by the look on the Hellhound's
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face.
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``He broke into Liesse with a tenth,'' the Supply Tribune continued.
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``And found out the Diabolist has Deoraithe stashed below the Ducal
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Palace, at the centre of some sort of array.''
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I raised an eyebrow, reluctantly impressed.
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``Her laboratory had to be a regular fortress,'' I said. ``He managed to
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get through the wards?''
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``Not exactly,'' Juniper growled.
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``He ran into the Thief,'' Ratface said, eyeing me carefully.
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``She was bound to turn up eventually,'' I sighed. ``I'll get furious
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about her meddling when I can spare the time. So, captive Deoraithe and
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the Duchess mobilizing her troops. Might not be rebellion, then.''
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``We can't afford the risk that it is,'' Juniper said. ``Marshal Ranker
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pulled the Twelfth Legion from Summerholm to reinforce her at Denier in
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case she needs to deny the crossing.''
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Ranker would be horribly outnumbered, I frowned. Eight thousand
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legionaries against what, a conservative estimate of twenty thousand at
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least a fourth of which was Watch? Ranker's Fourth Legion was heavy on
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the sappers, since the core of it had been raised from the tribe she'd
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once ruled over as Matron, but there was only so much preparation could
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do.
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``Marshal Grem should be in charge,'' I said. ``What has he been
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doing?''
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``He deferred operational command,'' the Hellhound gravelled. ``He's
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need in the Vales.''
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``Which brings us to our fourth problem,'' Ratface said. ``The
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Principate is moving.''
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``Godsdamnit,'' I cursed. ``Is there anyone who's \emph{not} trying to
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invade us right now?''
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There was pause.
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``The Golden Bloom,'' the Taghreb said.
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``Don't you bring the fucking elves into this, Ratface,'' I said. ``We
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already have a net surplus of genocidal maniacs.''
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``The Tower's used the emergency channels to inform everyone of general
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rank or higher that the Golden Bloom is phasing out of Creation,''
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Juniper told me.
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose.
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``Last time they did that was was when Triumphant was kicking around,
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right?'' I moaned.
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I ignored the twin `may she never return' the other two spoke, while
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pressing their knuckles to their foreheads.
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``That's not a no,'' I decided. ``And just like that, Diabolist kicks up
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the priority list. Fucking Hells.''
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``Most likely, yes'' Ratface grimly agreed.
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``If One Eye's staying at the border, that means we have three full
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Legions sitting this out,'' I said.
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The First, Tenth and Eleventh. Considering a dragon and a vampire ran
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the last two, I could at least find a silver lining in the fact that
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their absence would limit collateral damage. Two thirds of the Tenth
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Legion were undead mostly because General Catastrophe had the nasty
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habit of torching his own soldiers as well as the enemy. What that would
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do close to a major city I preferred not to think about.
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``The Marshal has sent word he does not believe the Principate seriously
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intends to make an invasion attempt,'' the Hellhound said. ``The two
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principalities at the border assembled their armies, but they don't have
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the men to breach the Vales.''
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``They're just acting up so our Legions can't leave,'' I grimaced. ``We
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could call that bluff.''
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``We can't afford a slugging match with the First Prince when our own
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backyard's on fire, Cat,'' Ratface said. ``She gets to have this one.''
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How lovely, that the old trend of Procer screwing over Callow continued
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no matter who was in charge of it. There were some permanent constants
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in Creation, like the Tower being a pile of horrors beyond human
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understand and the Principate always being run by a bunch of rapacious
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assholes. One of these days, Cordelia Hasenbach and I were going to sit
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down and have a nice little chat over the subject. Knives might be
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involved.
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``So your mother's in charge of Imperial response, then,'' I said, eyes
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flicking to Juniper.
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``General Istrid,'' the orc replied, galaring, ``has seniority. She's
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currently mustering north of Vale. Her own Sixth Legion has been joined
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by General Sacker's Ninth already. The Fifth under General Orim is
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supposed to be joining them, but has been delayed.''
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Orim the Grim and his boys served as Laure's garrison, so I supposed
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we'd arrived to the part of the conversation where I was going to get
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\emph{absolutely livid}.
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``Tell me,'' I ordered.
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Ratface swallowed loudly.
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``Foundling,'' Juniper said. ``Your shadow's moving. Cut it the Hells
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out. It's not the Supply Tribune's fault your Ruling Council
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collapsed.''
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Surprised, I glanced behind me and found my shadow still as it should
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be. I raised an eyebrow. Juniper wasn't the type to exaggerate, to I'd
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take her word for it.
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``Sorry, Ratface,'' I said. ``Picked up something in Arcadia, it's
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making my Name act up.''
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The Hellhound's eyes narrowed.
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``Is that why you've turned into a botched weather ritual?'' she asked.
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``Learn to control it before we march. If you can make ice at will it
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has useful implications for our supply train.''
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Only Juniper, I mused, would respond to my usurping a part of Winter by
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trying to make me into the Fifteenth's personal magic coldbox. I coughed
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to hide my amusement.
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``I'll get right on it, General,'' I said. ``Tell me about Laure, Supply
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Tribune.''
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``Approximately two weeks after you disappeared into Arcadia,'' Ratface
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said, ``Murad Kalbid and Satang Motherless executed a coup in the
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capital.''
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I closed my eyes and counted to ten. I'd tried, I \emph{had}, to
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involved Praesi in ruling Callow. I'd held up my part of the deal I'd
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struck with the High Lords on the Empress' side. I should have
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remembered that even if they were Malicia's tigers, they were still
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fucking tigers. They'd always strike when they smelled weakness.
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``And they succeeded?'' I asked, eyes still closed.
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``The two Callowan members of the Council are gone,'' the dark-eyed man
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said. ``Sister Abigail was killed in broad daylight, allegedly by
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members of the Guild of Assassins. Baroness Kendal was wounded, but she
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managed to flee and no body was found.''
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I opened my eyes.
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``Her Dread Majesty's representative?'' I prompted.
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``Disappeared,'' Ratface said. ``If anyone knows where, they're not
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telling. The usurpers are turning over every rock in Laure looking for
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her so it's probably not their doing.''
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``Oh, they're not going to be finding that woman anytime soon,'' I
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murmured. ``So they murdered their way to the top, like good little
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Wastelanders. Then they declared martial law?''
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``Across all of Callow,'' Ratface agreed. ``There's been rioting in
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every major city as a consequence.''
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I cursed in Kharsum, which had the Hellhound frowning. She kept telling
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me my accent was horrible, more offended by that than the rough
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language.
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``How bad?''
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``Bad enough General Istrid is mustering outside Vale because she
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believes if she tries entering the city she'll have to take it by
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force,'' Juniper said.
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``The governors you appointed, the Callowans,'' Ratface said. ``They're
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denouncing the current Council as illegitimate and refuse to answer to
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Imperial authorities until you `restore order'.''
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``They weren't sure I would come back,'' I groaned.
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``Neither were the usurpers,'' Ratface said. ``They took a risk by
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making their move.''
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I chewed over that for a while.
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``Why's Orim stuck in Laure?'' I asked. ``Those two are treacherous
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pricks, but they aren't idiots -- after the initial riot they should
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have lined the pocket of the Guilds to calm things down in the city.''
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``They don't have the treasury,'' the dark-haired man said, sounding
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amused. ``When they tried to take it they found the vaults empty.''
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``Then who the Hells has it?'' I asked.
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``Guild of Thieves,'' Juniper informed me. ``They left a note.''
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``They have to know they're declaring war on me by doing that,'' I
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frowned.
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``Special Tribune Robber found the source of their courage in Liesse,''
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Ratface said.
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I blinked. Before I'd left, he'd told me that the Guild was under new
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management: a new King of Thieves had taken their reins. No, not a king
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-- a queen.
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``Thief,'' I hissed. ``The Thief did this. She runs them now?''
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``As far as we can tell,'' Ratface said. ``She, uh, passed a message
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through the Special Tribune. If you have an issue with what she's been
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doing, you can take it up with her in Laure.''
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I narrowed my eyes at him.
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``You're leaving something out,'' I said.
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``She was rather unpleasant about the phrasing,'' the Supply Tribune
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replied frankly.
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I decided not to push. I was pissed enough as was and more anger wasn't
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going to make me think any clearer. I leaned back in my seat and closed
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my eyes again, thinking this through. I had six months to either break
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the Summer Court or force a peace settlement on them. I hated the
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thought of giving Akua any longer to prepare, but bloodying my army on
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the walls of Liesse when there were still flame-happy demigods wandering
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the countryside would be a major blunder. I couldn't just march the
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Fifteen south, though. I needed General Istrid's army in the field, and
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they weren't moving until the Fifth Legion joined them. Juniper's mother
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was reckless but not even she would take on Summer with only eight
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thousand men. So that meant I had to clean up the mess in Laure before
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taking care of the rest. Opening my eyes, I set my hands on the table.
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``I'll need Nauk and his men ready to march,'' I told Juniper. ``And
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Robber's cohort. Laure takes priority for now.''
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``We'd be thinning the defences around the portal,'' the Hellhound said.
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``We're emptying them,'' I said. ``Winter's dealt with, at the moment. I
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bought us at least six months until anything goes down.''
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Six times the coming of my title, the King of Winter had said. Overly
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dramatic phrasing but at least I had a number.
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``Then the rest of the Fifteenth be moving as well,'' Juniper said.
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``Six months, Hellhound, is also our timetable for wrecking Summer,'' I
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said. ``I hope you've been thinking about ways to kill fae.''
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``Oh, Foundling,'' the orc replied happily, baring her teeth. ``I have
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been thinking of precious little else.''
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I was not too proud to admit to myself that Juniper scared me a little,
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sometimes.
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``Give Nauk two thousand men,'' I told her after a moment. ``That should
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be more than enough. That leaves you a little over full legion to work
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with, no?''
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``More,'' my general replied. ``As of yesterday's census, the Fifteenth
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Legion now numbers eight thousand soldiers.''
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I blinked.
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``\emph{What?}'' I spluttered.
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``The south is literally on fire, Cat,'' Ratface said. ``And we have a
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reputation for both taking in Callowan soldiers and killing anything
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that invades the region. We've had a \emph{lot} of recruits pouring
|
|
in.''
|
|
|
|
``As well as some less desirable individuals,'' Juniper added coldly.
|
|
``The nephew of the defunct Countess of Marchford showed up last
|
|
month.''
|
|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``He tried to take back the city when it was under fae siege and
|
|
occupied by what's pretty much two full legions?''
|
|
|
|
Nobility wasn't as inbred in Callow as it was in the Principate, so that
|
|
level of blatant idiocy was a little surprising.
|
|
|
|
``He's renounced his claim on Marchford publicly, actually,'' Ratface
|
|
said. ``Says he wants an audience with you, won't talk to anyone else.''
|
|
|
|
``He's in a cell,'' the Hellhound said. ``I've no patience for
|
|
agitators.''
|
|
|
|
``I'll look into it,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Another thing for the list. There either needed to be more hours in a
|
|
day or I needed to find a way to get rid of sleep entirely.
|
|
|
|
``We'll have a more formal meeting to plan our operations, but get Nauk
|
|
ready to go as soon as possible,'' I said, rising to my feet.
|
|
|
|
I made to leave, but turned when Juniper called out.
|
|
|
|
``Foundling.''
|
|
|
|
I met her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' she said, more softly. ``What happened in Arcadia?''
|
|
|
|
``You'll get the whole story when everyone's there,'' I said. ``But in
|
|
short? I fucked up. The Winter King was playing me before I ever stepped
|
|
foot in there.''
|
|
|
|
I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
|
|
|
|
``Doesn't matter,'' I finally added. ``I think I got what we need to win
|
|
this war.''
|
|
|
|
The hourglass had already been flipped and time was slipping away. What
|
|
I'd thought I needed was more of it, but I might have found a way around
|
|
the need. I was the Duchess of Moonless Nights, nowadays. And Apprentice
|
|
had once told me that high-ranking fae could open portals both in and
|
|
\emph{out} of Arcadia.
|