440 lines
21 KiB
TeX
440 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-43-cliff}{%
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\chapter{Cliff}\label{chapter-43-cliff}}
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\epigraph{``Of course not, did you see the height of that drop? That is the
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last we've seen of the Shining Prince, I assure you.''}{Dread Empress Sinistra IV, the Erroneous}
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Historically speaking, villains leading assaults against a numerically
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inferior force situated atop a hill did not lead to the kind of outcome
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I would prefer. That was a problem. On the other hand, if I didn't lead
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an assault against those hills Summer would still have a decent chunk of
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its army left when the Queen arrived. That would be a \emph{much} bigger
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problem. On the other hand, if I ended up with most my armies dead by
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the time we got a royal visit I would be fucked regardless. The Queen
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wouldn't negotiate with a host on its last gasps, even if hers was
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wrecked. It would also give a lot of power to my `allies' in Arcadia I'd
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rather they didn't have, given that they were literally incapable of not
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being treacherous. Kind of like High Lords, really, only they were less
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smug about it.
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``This is a dilemma,'' I noted, squinting ahead.
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The Immortals had come out to play. Pouring out of the castle on shining
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wings, they'd propped up the regulars holding the ring of walled
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properties around it and by the sound of the horns that were now blaring
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they were about to begin a counterattack. I'd pit the Fifteenth against
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regulars any day, especially if we had dug in positions, but the golden
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fae were another story. By my reckoning, they were physically on par
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with what I'd been able to do when I'd still been fresh to my Name.
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There were, unfortunately, ten thousand of them. No, I corrected
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silently. Less than that. Both Masego and I must have taken out a chunk
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of their numbers in Arcadia and I could hardly believe they'd scythed
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through both Nauk's men and fought of the Watch simultaneously without
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taking some losses of their own. \emph{Let's be generous}, I thought,
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and \emph{assume nine thousand are left}. That felt a lot like saying it
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wasn't as bad to have a sword tearing into your lung rather than
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entirely through.
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``We can't retreat,'' Hakram said.
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Brawling with another titled noble fae had not done wonders for
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Adjutant, it was plain to see. He had a nasty cut across his cheek that
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was going to scar even after healing magic had been poured into it and
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he had a black eye already turning dark green. The fact that the
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pauldron on his armour was loose hadn't escaped my notice either. That
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likely meant his opponent had dislocated his shoulder so hard it had
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ripped out the steel bands. For all that, he was standing and steady.
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Couldn't ask more of him. His words only sunk in a moment later. He
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wasn't wrong, not exactly. If the Fifteenth gave ground now we were
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abandoning fortified positions in favour of a street fight with
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opponents that could fly. They were a lot better at skirmishing than we
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were, I had to admit. On the other hand, I'd put my hand to fire that
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after the first wave of regulars softening us up the second would be
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Immortals. Those would tear through walls like wet parchment.
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``Masego,'' I said. ``Scry me Juniper.''
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I'd gathered most of the Woe on a flat rooftop before we went on the
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offensive, in part to catch our breath and in part to try to find a weak
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point for us to break through. Masego had also taken the time to dig the
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arrows out of my back and heal the wounds, prompting the inevitable
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jokes about having been stuck with fae wood by Archer. It'd taken long
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to get everyone there, to my dismay. We must be past First Bell by now,
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and if the presence of so many fae hadn't warped the passing of time too
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much that meant we had only about two hours until dawn. At this time of
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the year, two hours before Morning Bell was when the sun started peeking
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through. Hierophant no longer needed his trinkets to scry, I saw. He
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drew a circle in the air that shimmered like water and heartbeats later
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one of the mages attached to Juniper's headquarters appeared on the
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other side. My general shouldered him aside before long, her face
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looking comically large in the circle.
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``Catherine,'' she said. ``What went wrong?''
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If the situation was slightly less dire I would have made something of
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that, but I didn't have the time to spare. The fae were mobilizing.
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``Immortals reinforced the outer ranks,'' I said. ``They're preparing
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for a push, if I'm not mistaken.''
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The request for advice went unsaid, but she heard it anyway. The orc
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grunted in displeasure at the news.
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``Begin Operation Candlelight immediately,'' she said. ``And hit the
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walls before they sally. If we don't keep up the pressure we lose Old
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Dormer.''
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I grimaced. We both knew that would mean brutal casualties for the
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Fifteenth. I'd known this was not going to be a clean battle or an easy
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one, but sending so many of my men to die still left a bad taste in the
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mouth.
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``What's the situation on the other fronts?'' I asked.
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``Deoraithe are getting fucked to the east,'' she bluntly said. ``Fae
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drew them in and set the entire sector on fire. General Afolabi had
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scattered the host at our back, but they're still harassing. There'll be
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no reinforcements form the Twelfth or the Fourth.''
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``Shit,'' I said. ``Kegan tried to send in the Watch, didn't she?''
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``Had to threaten putting her in chains to shut that down,'' Juniper
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growled. ``They're already headed your way, not that she's happy about
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it.''
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The Duchess of Daoine had always been the largest liability in this.
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There'd been a risk she'd scrap the entire operational plan if she
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thought she was losing too many men. We'd made a deal for her to help me
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with the fae in exchange for a crossing and backing against Diabolist,
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but she'd always put the interests of the Deoraithe above everything
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else. I had a feeling Juniper's threat had been a lot more colourful
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than just chains, and I was glad she'd lost her temper. If Kegan started
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acting out the delicate balancing act that was this battle could very
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well collapse on our heads.
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``See you on the other side, Hellhound,'' I said.
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``Don't die an idiot, Foundling,'' she dismissed, and the scrying link
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died.
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``She's growing on me, I'll admit,'' Archer noted.
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``You say that about everyone that insults me,'' I sighed. ``Hakram?''
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``I'll get this started,'' the orc replied.
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I let him leave without comments. It was Legate Hune that had the
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scrying connections to Robber and his cohort of miscreants, though the
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orders about resuming the offensive would have to be carried to Nauk as
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well.
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``So, candlelight. Are we romancing the fae now? Bold move,'' Archer
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mused.
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``We're going to burn them out,'' I said. ``Assaulting the castle was
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always going to be bloody as all Hells, so we planned to hem them in
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with goblinfire.''
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``Doesn't that burn uncontrollably?'' Archer said.
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``It can be delayed with ditches,'' Masego noted.
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``Ditches dug through pavestone?'' the woman mocked.
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``It does,'' I broke in before that could degenerate further. ``It'll be
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a race for us to break through the front before we're neck-deep in green
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death as well. To be honest I'd rather burn them out entirely, but
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Hierophant says we need to hold the beachhead to contain the Queen.''
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``Summer has prepared a crossing point,'' the mage said. ``She'll still
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be able to cross without it, if after a delay, but then we would not
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know where. That complicates warding a great deal.''
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Archer cleared her throat.
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``So, just to be sure, the plan is to set fire to a castle and then
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charge into it?'' she said.
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``That's oversimplifying a lot,'' I protested. ``There are nuances.''
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``Your general's going to be pissed you disobeyed,'' she grinned.
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Yeah, that battle was already lost. Better get out with as much dignity
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as I could manage. I strode to the edge of the roof and sharpened my
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vision. Hakram had waste no time, I saw. The Fifteenth was already
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forming ranks for the assault and moments later green bloomed in the
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distance. Then again. To the left and the right of the castle. There
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would be another foyer behind it, I knew, though the ramparts hid it
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away from me.
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``All right, we move,'' I said. ``We've got until dawn to kill us a
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duke.''
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---
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At this point I wasn't holding a shield so much as an arrowcatch that
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occasionally got set on fire. I wiggled my fingers around the latest
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arrowhead, that had come a little too close to comfort to carving
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straight through my thumb. Goblin steel didn't do much to block those
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when there was that much sorcery behind them.
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``Hierophant, if I become a godsdamned porcupine because you're being a
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perfectionist I will be \emph{cross},'' I snarled.
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Archer, standing behind Hakram and the tower shield he'd claimed for the
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assault, put an arrow in the eye of the enterprising fae who'd come so
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close to lowering my amount of fingers. She was a vision, it had to be
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said. Movements perfectly smooth and fluid, she let loose a shot with
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every breath and I had yet to glimpse her fail to make a kill. She was
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clearing out the walls wherever she aimed as swiftly as the fae filled
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the gaps, quicker on the draw than even Pickler's repeating scoprions
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had been. Adjutant wasn't doing nearly as well, a dozen arrows stuck in
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his shield and one gone through his boot. Which he'd had to stomp around
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to put out the flames that had immediately spread, something I would
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have enjoyed watching if I wasn't busy standing around like Creation's
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angriest practice dummy.
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``This is complicated work,'' Hierophant said.
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``Gods Below, just burn our way through,'' I yelled.
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The Soninke needed to hurry the Hells up. Around us the Fifteenth was
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assaulting the walls with ladders, and dying in droves as they did. It
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wasn't that the ramparts were difficult. They were garden walls, more or
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less. But the fae had gathered archers behind them and were shooting
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massed volleys down on my legionaries. Half the ladders had gone up in
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flames before touching the walls and the fae on them were fighting
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furiously to keep us from establishing a beachhead. \emph{And these are
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the fucking regulars}, I thought. \emph{The Immortals withdrew deeper
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in.} The broad avenue that led straight to the castle passed through a
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fortified gate that Summer had closed and would laugh in the face of a
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ram: it had a heavy steel portcullis in front of it, protected by thick
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arches of stone. We'd need sorcery to punch through that, but Masego was
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dithering like a bloody milkmaid.
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``Ah,'' Hierophant sighed. ``Disappear.''
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I raised my shield to catch another arrow that would have taken him in
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the throat, glancing over the side. A wave of darkness had engulfed the
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gate and the rampart bordering it, solidifying for a moment before it
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disappeared. It left behind absolutely nothing. No stone, no wood, no
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steel. It was as if nothing had ever existed there at all. Gods. Had he
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annihilated everything? No, I could feel something at the edge of my
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senses that was not unlike Arcadia. He'd shunted the entire gate off in
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another dimension.
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``FIFTEENTH,'' Nauk's voice roared from behind me. ``TIGHTEN RANKS, YOU
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UGLY GRASS-LICKERS. FORWARD!''
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The answering shout was deafening, thousands yelling and steel brought
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up. Woven inside, though, I could hear the soft buzz of arrows that
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still fell like rain.
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``Into the breach,'' I shouted at the rest of the Woe, barely audible
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over the pandemonium.
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Hakram moved to cover my left and Masego hunkered up behind us, runes of
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light blooming with but a gesture. Archer put one last arrow through a
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fae's open mouth before joining up and together we advanced. Our way
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through the absent gate was uncontested, but in the walled avenue it led
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into ranks of fae were awaiting us. Black had once compared leading
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Named into battle to leading a chorus, and as we struck I finally
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understood why. We were, as a group, greater than the sum of our
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individual skills. The grooves were already there for us to settle into,
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as if they'd been carved before we even begun. Archer opened the song.
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She did not waste her arrows on the rank and file, instead surgically
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putting down any fae that looked like an officer. Even as we tread the
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pavestones, they dropped with every heartbeat. Hierophant added his
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voice to the melody, whispers in the mage-tongue weaving rings of
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darkness in the fae ranks that bloomed and tore through mail and flesh.
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The chaos was our cue. Adjutant and I dug into it with relish, a storm
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of steel and strength that shattered and broke the straw men standing in
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our way.
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My blood sang with the song, the heat of it something not even Winter
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could deny me. With every stroke and every stride we painted death
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across the face of Summer, Archer's long knives joining us in the steps
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without missing a beat. I could feel it without ever laying eyes on it,
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the swing of Adjutant's axe I could duck under to overextend a screaming
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soldier and carve through his throat with a flick of the wrist.
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Hierophant's sorcery flashed across the melee like coils of ruin,
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passing so close I could feel the caress of the power unleashed without
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it ever touching me. I could not tell the passing of time, every sight
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flowing into the other by what could have been an hour or a heartbeat. I
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felt myself grinning, teeth bared as Summer \emph{gave}. Fae let
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themselves die on my blade merely to slow it, others striking in that
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instant of killing but what did I care? I was not one blade but many, my
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body just a vessel for my will. Dust swallowed the dead man whole, the
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edge of the axe dug into the chest of the thing that would have slain me
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even as I spun and and slit the throat of the fae to my side with
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inhuman precision. Not a drop of exertion wasted, as if slaughter could
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be measured and quantified.
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The four of us stood surrounded by a field of corpses when I returned to
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myself, not a single living fae in sight. I was panting, though instead
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of exhaustion I felt invigorated. This, I thought, had been deeper a
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religious experience than anything I'd ever felt in any House of Light.
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The sensation ebbed and the absence of it was hollow. Sound returned,
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the fighting of legionaries behind us and the slow breathing of the Woe
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around me.
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``Shit,'' Archer croaked softly. ``That was\ldots{} \emph{Fuck}.''
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Hierophants' eyes were bright, though his mind faraway. Adjutant looked
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oddly serene, shield resting on his shoulder as he leaned on the haft of
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his long axe.
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``Yeah,'' I muttered, and speaking at all felt like I was whistling in a
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graveyard.
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I shook myself out of it before long, and assessed our situation. Making
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a unified push into the upper city had always been a fantasy, I knew.
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There were avenues up here, made broad for carriages, but aside from the
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path that led straight up to the castle the rest was a maze write by the
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whims of the powerful who'd once lived here. The Fifteenth had taken the
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outer walls as we'd been killing what I now grasped had been the
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reinforcements meant to drive my legionaries back. Now the knife fight
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began, my men having to spread through dozens of gardens and manors as
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Summer fought them for every inch.
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``Castle's where we need to be,'' I said, pointing my sword at the
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faraway silhouette of the tall towers.
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I could glimpse spreading green in the distance, a reminder that the fae
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were not the only enemy we had to beat. The goblinfire had made certain
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they would not be able to flank us, that they would be forced to fight
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us in a narrow corridor, but with every hour that corridor became
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narrower for us as well. Resistance would become harsher the deeper we
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went in. Archer wiped her longknives on the cloak of a decapitated
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soldier before sheathing them, running her tongue against her lips. My
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eyes could not help but linger on the sight as I wondered what kissing
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her would feel like, and peeling that leather off her. Shit, fighting
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didn't usually get my blood up this way. It had just felt\ldots{}
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intimate, more than killing ever should. I looked away before she could
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notice. Nauk came to the rescue, thank the Gods, leading up a cohort of
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legionaries with the Gallowborne at their head. The large orc whistled
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at the sight of the corpses strewn around us, Tribune Farrier coming to
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stand at his side.
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``Not that looks like it was a proper fucking fight,'' the legate said.
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``See that, you wretched layabouts? That's the kind of work I expect
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from you.''
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There were a few barks of laughter.
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``Legate, Tribune,'' I greeted, sheathing my sword as I took in the
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sight the two.
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Nauk was grinning and splattered in blood. He'd been leading from the
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front again. Farrier's mail was scorched on the side, but aside from
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that he was in good health.
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``We're making a push to the castle,'' I said. ``I take it this is our
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reinforcements?''
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``Hune's bastards are handling the flanks,'' Nauk replied. ``Scraped up
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my only intact cohort and brought your reds and gold along to spice the
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wine.''
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``Your Grace,'' John Farrier said, offering a nod that bordered on a
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bow.
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``Catherine,'' I sighed.
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He'd become irritatingly formal since it had been made open knowledge
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I'd been named Vicequeen of Callow. It had taken me the better part of a
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year to wean him off that the first time, and I wasn't looking forward
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to fighting that war again.
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``Keep your eyes open, boys and girls,'' I called out. ``We've got their
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second line ahead and the Immortals behind that. You're in for a rough
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night.''
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``Hells, ain't that every night in this outfit?'' someone called out
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from the ranks.
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``Wouldn't be the Fifteenth if we didn't get proper fucked before
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sunup,'' someone else laughed.
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Well, they weren't \emph{wrong}.
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``Gallowborne take the lead,'' I told Farrier. ``If we run into the
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Duke, you run.''
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``Ma'am,'' the dark-haired man protested. ``We're-``
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``Ants, to a thing that powerful,'' I flatly said. ``You have your
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orders.''
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He nodded, though he didn't seem pleased about it. Nauk was eyeing him
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approvingly. Loyalty didn't really count for orcs unless you were
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willing to die for it.
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``We done braiding our hair?'' Archer drawled. ``I'm getting bored.''
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``There's nothing wrong with braids,'' Hierophant muttered, putting his
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own braids in order.
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I wisely decided not to touch that and instead gestured for Nauk to call
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the march. It would have been much harder, I thought, without Archer. We
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were ambushed from rooftops twice on our way forwards, but between her
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bow and the line of sappers that was distressingly eager to wreck noble
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houses given half an excuse we weren't given a serious challenge. That
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was when I started to get worried. We should have, by now, run into
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either a barricade or another heavy knot of fae. I let my stride lapse.
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``Something's wrong,'' I said.
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Hakram nodded.
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``I am no tactician,'' Masego said, ``but it seems poor planning to
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allow your enemy to gain foothold on your walls. We might have simply
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spent the strength of Summer, Catherine. They might no longer have
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nobles to field against us.''
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I shook my head.
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``Remember how many people there were, at the masquerade in Skade?'' I
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said. ``Summer should have at least that many.''
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``Duke hasn't come out, either,'' Archer frowned. ``He didn't seem this
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shy when we tangled.''
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I closed my eyes and considered the battle as if I were not part of it.
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The front in the plains was effectively over, by Juniper's report. The
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fighting in the east had turned brutal, but given the numbers Duchess
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Kegan could field it was highly unlikely the fae there had turned the
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tide. Unless they had flown away, as they'd allegedly done
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earlier\emph{. No, they can't do that quietly. Either one of us would
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have seen a few thousand glowing wings in the sky or Juniper would have
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scried Hune with a warning.} The forces left in play, then were the
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remaining regulars in the upper city and the Immortals. \emph{And the
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Duke, followed by whatever nobles he's got left.} If I was a Duke of
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Summer, needing to keep a fortress at all costs and three of sides
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around it already on fire, what would I do? Immortals would be my
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sharpest knife, so I couldn't waste them on attrition. So I'd put the
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regulars on the wall and send the nobles to bolster them.
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\emph{No, he can't do that.} \emph{He already sent out three Counts and
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a handful of solid barons and we just tore through them in less than an
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hour.} Sending nobles against the Woe would be trying to put out a
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bonfire with oil. Named couldn't advance alone, though, or at least not
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do so and expect to hold any grounds they took. Which he must suspect we
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needed to, with how hard we'd been going after the castle. \emph{So what
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he's aiming for is the soldiers}. Then why not push harder to hold the
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walls? Why hadn't we had a rougher fight going in? I mind mind, I
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watched the Fifteenth die in droves to enter the upper city and then
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take the fight to the maze of walled and sprawling domains, harassed by
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a much more mobile enemy every step of the way. But giving ground.
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Juniper had said, earlier, that the fae to the east had drawn in the
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Deoraithe before setting fire to the city. \emph{They're doing the exact
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same thing here}, I realized. \emph{Only they won't burn their own
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fortifications, they need those to scatter the legionaries. Once they
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reel us in\ldots{}} In a line across the upper city, golden banners rose
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high in the sky.
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In utter silence, the Immortals advanced.
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