412 lines
20 KiB
TeX
412 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-51-overlooked}{%
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\chapter{Overlooked}\label{chapter-51-overlooked}}
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\epigraph{``It is ever the temptation of chroniclers to ascribe great
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failures to a single turning point, a flaw revealed or enemy virtue
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displayed. This simplification of history ignores the starker truth of
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all great enterprises, that in the end though all leaders are captains
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of a ship they rule neither wind nor tide. Failure and victory are the
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collection of choices small and great, shaped by perspectives of the
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myriad making them.''}{Extract from `The Ruin of Empire, or, a Call to Reform of the Highest
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Assembly', by Princess Eliza of Salamans}
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The fairy gate had opened half a mile away from the outskirts of Dormer,
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and that was where the two thousand legionaries of the Fifteenth made
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camp. It had taken us a week of marching through Arcadia to cross what
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was essentially the full breadth of Callow, not a fae in sight. I was
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still only beginning to grasp the full implications of what the boon I'd
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obtained from the fae royals meant for warfare in Calernia. So far I'd
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only used the fairy gates to move quicker within the bounds of Callow,
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but that was a self-imposed limitation. With Hierophant to chart me a
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path, I could feasibly muster an army in Marchford and have it pop out
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in front of the Principate's capital bristling with steel. Keeping an
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army in the middle of enemy territory supplied without turning to
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banditry would be near impossible, but what did it matter? I could leave
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the same way I'd come when my foodstuffs ran out. If the Red Flower
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Vales could be kept in Imperial hands, I could strike at Proceran
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territory with impunity while the First Princes' army were stuck
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besieging one of the most heavily fortified borders on the continent.
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It was enough to have me shiver. There was precedent for the kind of
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power I wielded as the last Duchess of Winter, villains and heroes alike
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that had shown a capacity for destruction just as great. The gates,
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though? I couldn't think of one.
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The Fifteenth had returned midmorning to Creation and I'd wasted no time
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in arranging matters with General Istrid. Juniper's mother had always
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been my favourite of the Praesi commanders in Callow. Within moments of
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our first meeting, two years ago, she'd expressed the opinion that
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Governor Mazus had been in need of a good hanging. Always a way to get
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on my good side, that. She wasn't much like her daughter, aside from the
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rough manners that were so common with orcs. If anything, she reminded
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me of Nauk -- or the other way around, since I'd become acquainted with
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her first. She rode out to meet me on one of the great wolves that her
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people used as mounts, meeting me halfway to Holden. She gave warm
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welcome, though not without some grousing.
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``You sent us across the country from the real fight, Squire,'' she
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growled after clapping my back.
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Before I'd stolen my mantle, Named or not it would have jostled me. The
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woman had ferocious strength still, for one in her fifties.
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``Needed you to herd them towards me, general,'' I replied. ``Otherwise
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the front would have spilled across the south, and there was no putting
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that genie back in the lamp when it got loose.''
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``Sacker says the same thing,'' General Istrid said, visibly
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disgruntled. ``A real shame. I won't ever get a good crack at the
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fairies, with that peace you shoved down their throats. At least we get
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a turn in the dance with the Diabolist.''
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``I won't say she's more dangerous than a pair of literal gods,'' I
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said, ``but we're in for a rough month. You heard about the necromantic
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ritual?''
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The exact nature of Still Water was still under Imperial seal, so the
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official story was that Akua had used some kind of ancient ritual to
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turn the entire city into undead. Considering the trove of horrors that
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still lay dormant in the Wasteland no one had questioned it too much,
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but I was aware it was only a matter of time until the truth of it
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trickled out.
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``They're supposed to be high-grade undead, right?'' she growled.
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``That's fucked. Skeletons and zombies need a necromancer guiding them
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to be a threat, but a hundred thousand bloody ghouls aren't something to
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sneer at.''
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``My caster tells me they're closer to the kind of undead the Dead King
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uses for officers,'' I told her. ``We're calling them wights.''
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``The highborn twit should have paid closer attention to her history
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lessons,'' the orc laughed. ``We proved that dead men and household
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troops are no match for Legion steel when we put the Empress on the
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throne.''
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There was truth in that, I felt, but also dangerous assumption. As far
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as I knew there'd been no battle of the scale of the one looming ahead
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during the Praesi civil war. Akua would have at a hundred thousand
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wights and six thousand living under her command, by our estimates, and
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the forces I was gathering would be a little over sixty thousand. Even
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during the Conquest armies that size hadn't been fielded in the same
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theatre, and for good reason. It was going to evaporate at least half
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the Imperial treasury to keep that many people fed and armed, and the
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aftermath was likely to turn a chunk of the Empires' breadbasket into
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wasteland. Nations fought with smaller hosts for a reason, even when
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they could muster great ones. The ride to Holden was spent recounting
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the Arcadian campaign at the general's demand, until I stood in council
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with the other two generals in the city. Orim the Grim and General
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Sacker were significantly less friendly in the manners, though never
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actually impolite. Sacker did have that sharp goblin sardonic turn of
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phrase, but refrained from verbally pulling my pigtails the way she had
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on our first meeting.
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I'd risen in rank quite a bit since then.
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General Istrid had begun preparations for a march the moment my mages
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had scried hers, and I was rather pleased to hear the twelve thousand
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legionaries would be ready to leave come dawn. There was a certain
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pleasure to working with veterans knowing their way around a war. The
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Fifteenth's officers were getting there, but my legion was not a
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well-oiled machine yet. Part of that was on me, I knew. Even after the
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brutal casualties we'd taken in Arcadia and Dormer, the Fifteenth was
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still twice the size of any other legion and severely lacking mages. It
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was a rare month I did not thank the Gods for granting me both Ratface
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and the inclination to not look too closely at how he kept us supplied.
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Even Juniper had ceased slapping his fingers when he bent the rules a
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little, using the fact I'd effectively suborned the Guild of Smugglers
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to him as an excuse to wash her hands of the matter. It was not the
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place of an Imperial general, she said, to meddle in civil affairs. A
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little rich of her to say considering Marshal Ranker used to run Denier
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through the governor, but in theory it was supposed to be true.
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I rode back to camp a few hours before sundown, declining the offer of a
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roof over my head in the city in favour of sticking with my men. I was
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still chewing on the conversation I'd had with Juniper before leaving.
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That Hune had made the right call, even if it had seen one of the few
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people I considered a friend halfway to the grave. Even if it had led to
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the Gallowborne being all but wiped out. The ogre legate was the only
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one of my senior officers I'd never truly reached out to. I hadn't made
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a lot of mystery about that, it must be said. When I'd first crossed the
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Empress by resurrecting a knightly order, she'd not been one of the
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people I gathered to tell. The Hellhound had objected back then as well,
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though I'd dismissed her words by saying I did not trust her the way I
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did others. Nauk, I recalled grimly, had been the very example I used.
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It might have been a mistake, I now thought. By visibly keeping Hune out
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of my `inner circle' even though she was the second highest officer in
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the Fifteenth, I was making a self-fulfilling prophecy. Trust freely
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granted, in my experience, had a way of making people trustworthy. Of
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making them want to live up to that trust. I'd never attempted that with
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the legate.
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It might not be too late to rectify that mistake, though. I still didn't
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like the call she'd made, I admitted to myself. But it was a dislike
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that was borne of reasons personal. \emph{I do not have a monopoly on
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ruthlessness employed to save lives.} I'd raised the Fifteenth out of
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people I knew, had shared struggles with, and they had since the
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beginning been given a measure of my trust. Hakram, Nauk, Ratface,
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Pickler, Robber. Even Juniper and Aisha, who had been opponents in the
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College but ones I respected. Hune had been brought in at the
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Hellhound's word and so never fully welcomed into that fold. It was part
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of a larger flaw in the way I did things, one the Empress had already
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warned me against: I rarely gave power to those I did not personally
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know and like. It was telling, perhaps, that Anne Kendal and Juniper
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were respectively the effective ruler of Callow and the commander of the
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largest military force within its borders. But I could not continue
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along these lines if I wanted my homeland to ever climb out of the hole.
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No matter how skilled the few I fully trusted were, they were not enough
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to form the ruling class of an entire kingdom. I shook myself out of the
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thoughts and sought Hune instead of continuing down the spiral and of
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excuses and recriminations.
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The ogre wasn't with her officers. I found her at the edge of the camp,
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tucked away between two low hills and kneeling on the ground. Even like
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that she still towered several feet above me. I remained at a distance,
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though when I saw her lips move I sharpened my hearing to listen in. I'd
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had a casual disregard for other people's privacy even before I began
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employing spies. Pouring wine into a wooden bowl, she murmured to
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herself.
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``O Faceless Gods, I give you thanks,'' the legate said. ``For crossing
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survived and refuge found, for the breaking of the chains of men.''
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Breaking a small loaf of black bread with fingers large as sausages,
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Hune crushed it into crumbs she dispersed next to the bowl. Crossing
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survived, huh. I knew ogres were not native to Calernia. They'd been
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brought over as slaves by the Miezans, and ended up joining the Dread
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Empire when the first Maleficent founded it in exchange for land to live
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on.
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``Neither poor nor rich, neither free nor bound,'' she murmured. ``For
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the promise made to our ancestors, I offer bread and wine.''
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My brows creased when I saw the crumbs rot and the wine turn to vinegar.
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Hune was not a mage. No ogres were, they could not be born with the
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gift. This was the closest to the miraculous powers wielded by priests I
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had seen on the Empire's side. I knew there were cults in the Empire
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that sacrificed to the Gods Below in exchange for powers, but I'd never
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actually seen the Hellgods extend their hand to Creation before. It was
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chilling to watch, light as their touch had been. \emph{A reminder
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there's more than one side of the old war looking at us.} The ogre
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emptied the bowl onto the grass and brushed her hands clean, picking up
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the empty wineskin before rising back to her feet. She did not seem all
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that surprised to see me. Ogres, as far as I knew, did not have senses
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better than a human's. \emph{She might just have been expecting me.}
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Reaching me in a few strides, Hune lowered her massive torso in a bow.
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``Lady Squire,'' she said.
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``Legate,'' I replied. ``Didn't take you for the pious type.''
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Her face did not react, neither irritated nor amused.
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``I am not Praesi,'' she said. ``My people have their own ways.''
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``So I see,'' I said. ``I'll admit to some ignorance on the subject.
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Never found a lot of books written about ogres the way there are about
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orcs and goblins.''
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Hune studied me calmly.
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``We are not numerous enough to merit scholarly attention,'' she said.
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``Are you seeking reports, ma'am? I gave instruction to my commanders to
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have them prepared, but I remember the details if you would prefer them
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spoken.''
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``No, your officers already have me in the loop,'' I awkwardly said.
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``They're, uh, quite thorough. The precision of it will shave a few
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hours off Ratface's workload when we link up.''
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``I am sure your words will please them,'' the ogre said. ``How may I
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offer service?''
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I was honestly unsure if she was politely putting me off or not. There'd
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been some people currying favour with me when the Fifteenth was founded,
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before Juniper had put her foot down. Even after, though, it was rare
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for people \emph{not} to lean into an opportunity to talk with me when
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they could. I left matters of promotion to the Hellhound without
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meddling, but I was still arguably one of the ten most influential
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people within the Empire. I was a little at a loss at how to deal with
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whatever this was. I wondered if the Empress had felt the same, when
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she'd summoned me to the Tower for audience and I'd bluntly pushed
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through the small talk.
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``Sit with me for a while,'' I finally said. ``If you've no pressing
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duties.''
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``I can spare some time,'' Hune said, her tone hinting at neither
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displeasure nor expectation.
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I ended up with my legs going down the slope, thinking of how ridiculous
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we must look from a distance. Even with my plate making me seem larger,
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it would take ten of me put together to even remotely rival the legate
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in mass. I ran a hand through my hair, wondering exactly how I should go
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about this. It'd been easier, with the others.
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``Are we to revise the command decisions I made in Dormer, my lady?''
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the ogre broke in while I was still debating.
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Ah. She'd picked up on that, had she. Hard to play coy about displeasure
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when mine literally lowered the temperature.
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``No,'' I said. ``It's been pointed out to me that my objections were
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personal. Childish, arguably. I apologize for how I acted.''
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``You were not impolite or unprofessional,'' the legate said. ``Even if
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you had been, you are Named. It is your prerogative to speak as you
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wish.''
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``Doesn't mean I should,'' I replied. ``So have the apology anyway.''
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``There is nothing to forgive,'' Hune said calmly. ``Was there anything
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else?''
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I turned to her and studied her face. There was something brutish about
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the ogres looked, the way their features were slightly broader than a
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human's would be if they were the same size. It made them look a little
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slow, but there was nothing dim about those deep and dark-set eyes
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meeting mine.
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``You don't like me very much, do you Hune?'' I asked.
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The ogre's face shuttered.
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``I am an officer in the Legions of Terror, under your command,'' she
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said. ``If my demeanour offended you in any way, I apologize and stand
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willing for any punishment you deem fit.''
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\emph{Catherine Foundling}, I thought ruefully, \emph{charmer of the
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year.}
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``It's not a crime to dislike me,'' I said. ``And I'm not offended. I'm
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honestly surprised at how well along I've gotten with the people around
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me. I wasn't exactly the most popular girl at the orphanage.''
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``You are apprentice to the Carrion Lord, named Vicequeen of Callow by
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Her Dread Majesty,'' the ogre said woodenly. ``Praises are your due.''
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``I'm not all that interested in praises,'' I said. ``But I'd like to
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know what\ldots{} this is about.''
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I waved my hand vaguely. There was a flicker of irritation in her eyes,
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but I couldn't call it a victory. It was too shallow. The kind of
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irritation you had for a fly buzzing in your ear, not something I could
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use to bridge a gap.
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``Ma'am, I am your subordinate,'' Hune said. ``This is unnecessary.''
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And that was the heart of it, wasn't it? I didn't consider my people to
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be subordinates, or at least not just that. They were the people I drank
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and laughed with, the people I shared a fire with. There'd been less of
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that since I'd begun gathering Named around me, it was true. But I'd not
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allowed those relationships to go fallow either.
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``I ask more of my officers than others do of their own,'' I said. ``I
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try to give more as well.''
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``We,'' the ogre said bluntly, ``are not equals. You hold power of life
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and death over everyone in the Empire, save a hallowed few. This
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pretence, my lady, is tedious.''
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``So this is about power,'' I said.
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The sigh the legate let out was cavernous. I was pretty sure a single
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one of her lungs was the size of my entire torso. \emph{Should have done
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this when it was dark out}, I mused half-seriously. \emph{Seems to work
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better that way.}
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``Is this an order?'' Hune asked.
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I nodded. I would have preferred not to make it one, but evidently that
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wasn't an option.
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``Then with your permission, I will speak frankly,'' the legate said.
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``You are \emph{dangerous}.''
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``Usually when people call me that they mean it as a compliment,'' I
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said. ``I'm getting the feeling that's not the case here.''
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``The treaty with the Tower that granted us the Hall of Skulls and
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adjacent lands comes with mandatory service in the Legions,'' the ogre
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said. ``There has not been a war since the Declaration where my people
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did not fight and die.''
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``I'm not unfamiliar with being on the wrong side of Praesi rule,'' I
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said.
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``With all due respect, ma'am, that is untrue,'' Hune said. ``You were
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born in the wealthiest city of the Empire's breadbasket and raised by an
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institution whose education is on par with that of lesser nobility.''
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``The orphanage saw lean month toos, Hune,'' I said. ``We had Governor
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Mazus running the city for years before he got the noose.''
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``Every month, one of my people is murdered and drained of blood after
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coming too close to a lord's border,'' Hune said. ``When the Green
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Stretch has a bad year, families sign themselves into servitude to avoid
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shortages. The Reforms barely lowered the amount of warriors that must
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be provided for service. We are strong enough to be of use and too few
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to be worth appeasing. Callowans hang when they rebel or resist, ma'am.
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We earn death by \emph{existing}.''
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``That can be changed,'' I said. ``Hune, none of this is set in stone.
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It's not inevitable. It only works as long as we \emph{let it}.''
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``And speaking words such as these, you have raised a host that answers
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to you before the Tower,'' the ogre said. ``You promised freedom to the
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greenskins, insurgence to the many colours of men. And yet two things
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you have brought in fact: ever greater titles to you, and war wherever
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you tread.''
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``Because it's working,'' I replied bluntly. ``There's opposition
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because we're gaining ground. We push hard enough and it'll break. We're
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not going against infinite strength. At some point they have to bend or
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lose.''
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``That may be,'' Hune said. ``Perhaps you will deliver all you have
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sworn. But you are not the first silvertongued monster birthed by Praes.
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We have seen them come and go, and what has changed? In the end all of
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them smile, and ask us to die in their wars.''
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``I'm not asking you to die,'' I said. ``I'm asking you to fight. If not
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for me, then at least for something you want. To do more than
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just\ldots{} linger.''
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``We fought heroes,'' the legate said. ``Then devils. Then the courts of
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the fae. Now we march against a madwoman of the old way. What meaning
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have any of these to me? I took oath, and will serve in the Fifteenth
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until I die or my term ends. But you ask me to bleed for strangers and
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thank you for it. That is not the due of a soldier. It is the due of a
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servant.''
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``I don't want servants, Hune,'' I said sharply. ``I want comrades.''
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``Servants are what you have, my lady,'' the ogre said. ``Your causes
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are their causes. You are Named, and so this is only natural. But I took
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oath to the Legions of Terror and not the army of House Foundling.''
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``I'm not asking you to commit treason,'' I said.
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``We are riding with knights,'' she replied bluntly. ``Half the
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Fifteenth is Callowan. You strong-armed the Dread Empress into naming
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you ruler of this land. Do not misunderstand me, Lady Foundling, I wish
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you well in these ventures. The world may be better for your victory,
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should it come.''
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Her dark eyes narrowed.
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``But I will not die for another woman's dream,'' Hune said.
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Slowly, she rose to her feet.
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``I apologize for any offence I have given,'' the ogre said. ``May I be
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dismissed?''
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I bit my tongue and nodded. I watched the legate stride away and passed
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a hand through my hair.
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So much for mending that bridge.
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