437 lines
18 KiB
TeX
437 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-52-tensile}{%
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\chapter{Tensile}\label{chapter-52-tensile}}
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\epigraph{``What cannot bend is fated to break.''}{Taghreb saying}
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I wouldn't say aragh had grown on me, but it was the most common of the
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strong stuff that was peddled among legionaries. That had always been a
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source of wonder to me, that men and women who already carried so much
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weight over so many miles would still find it in them to slip a bottle
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of drink somewhere in there. Booze always found a way, didn't it? I
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hadn't asked Ratface to get me one, but it had magically appeared in my
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quarters after I'd gotten paring knives to stop disappearing from our
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supplies. My quartermaster was a tricky bastard with many an axe to
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grind, but it was little things like this that endeared him so much to
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me. Trust a Praesi to understand sometimes after a shit day you could
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need something a little stronger than wine. I poured myself a finger's
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worth in a silver goblet that Robber's men had `found' back in Arcadia,
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aware I'd be going through at least a third of that bottle but unwilling
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to actually pour myself a full glass. It would have felt like to blunt
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an admission. I knocked it back and let out a groan at the the fire
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going down my throat, shaking my hair.
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``Gods, that would outright kill a child,'' I rasped out. ``Should I
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pour you one as well?''
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Thief was pouting when she came into sight, going from not to there in a
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heartbeat's span. She sat astride the table, leather creaking on wood,
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and presented a golden chalice. I looked closer at it. Those were bells
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engraved on the side, weren't they? The heraldry of House Fairfax.
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``Did you steal this in Laure?'' I asked. ``From my own treasury?''
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``Stolen?'' she said. ``How dare you, sir. This was bestowed upon me by
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the Vicequeen of Callow herself, for services rendered.''
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``I paid upfront, actually,'' I grunted, but I poured and the aragh
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sloshed in her ill-gotten goods. ``Orphanage never covered how to
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negotiate with thieves, which in retrospective is an oversight on
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Black's part.''
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Thief tried the liquor and grimaced, coughing.
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``You drink this?'' she croaked. ``\emph{On purpose}?''
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``You get used to it,'' I lied.
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The look she shot me was more than a little sceptical, but she got down
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her second swallow without her windpipe rebelling. I leaned back into my
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chair and granted myself a second finger's worth.
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``How do you do it, anyway?'' Thief asked. ``Tell when I'm there. I was
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under cover of an aspect, and I've stood inches away from men in broad
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daylight without them batting an eye.''
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``I guess you could call it a Name trick,'' I said. ``You never had a
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teacher, did you?''
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``Not one Named,'' Thief frowned.
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``Then I will share my hard-earned knowledge with you,'' I affably said.
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``You know how when you came into your Name there was this set of
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instincts just under your skin?''
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The brown-haired woman cocked her head to the side.
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``It felt more like a hand guiding mine,'' she said.
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``Close enough,'' I said. ``When you're about to get wounded or killed,
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you're going to get a tingle just like it.''
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She nodded slowly.
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``I had no intention of striking you,'' she pointed out.
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``Yeah, but you were looking at me,'' I said. ``It does the same thing
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just\ldots{} fainter. Black had people following for weeks back in Ater
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until I learned to pick up on it.''
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``Then if I moved without looking?'' she said.
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``Probably wouldn't be able to tell you're there at all,'' I said. ``I
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didn't get the impression this was common knowledge, anyway. I doubt
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most Named we'll face will know the trick.''
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Thief finished her chalice and presented it for filling. Feeling
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magnanimous, I deigned to comply.
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``Are you sure you should have told me that?'' Thief asked suddenly.
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``If I turned on you, this could allow me to land my first strike
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unseen.''
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I took another mouthful of aragh, the roughness of the drink now
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beginning to be replaced by a vague sense of warmth across my chest. I
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waved lazily.
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``Will you?'' I asked instead of replying. ``Turn on me?''
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``If I deem it necessary,'' Thief said, and for all that she spoke
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nonchalantly her eyes were serious.
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``You say that like it's a rare thing,'' I told her. ``You think Masego
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obeys my every order? Gods, let's not even talk about Archer. Even my
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soldiers have lines in the sand they won't follow me past.''
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``You did not mention Adjutant,'' the other Callowan said.
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``Hakram's the only person in this misbegotten world I trust
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unconditionally,'' I replied, perhaps too honestly. ``If he turns on me,
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I'm fucked regardless. No point in worrying about it.''
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``He does more than you know,'' Thief said.
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``That's what trust is,'' I said. ``Not \emph{needing} to know what he
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does. I'm guessing the two of you had an unpleasant conversation at some
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point. Is there anything you want to bring to me? I'll listen if there
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is.''
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She studied me for a while, then shook her head.
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``Nothing I can't handle,'' she said.
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I raised my cup in a toast, then polished off the remainder.
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``So what do you have for me?'' I asked.
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``Less than you want,'' she shrugged. ``There's twelve thousand of them,
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I only had time to have a look at the upper officers.''
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``And?'' I prompted.
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``Nothing out of the ordinary, as far as I can tell,'' Thief said. ``If
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there are planted commands they are too subtle for my senses. I have
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difficulty feeling sorcery aside from wards, so it's possible.''
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``I hate dealing with Akua,'' I sighed. ``The bag of tricks she
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inherited is a bitch to handle.''
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``I'm unsure why you would believe these legions would be her target,''
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she said. ``Did you not send them away from the front?''
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``She had to know I'd be pulling together all the forces I can before
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taking a swing at her,'' I replied. ``Istrid's legions are going to be
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the core of our offensive against Liesse. If they break halfway through
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the assault we'll be in deep trouble.''
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``The Fifteenth still seems a better opportunity,'' Thief noted. ``It
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was raised recently and has a reputation for battlefield promotions.''
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``The Fifteenth has been under Masego's eyes for over a year,'' I said.
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``She tries to enchant one of my senior officers and Hierophant will
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catch it. These three legions have been out of my sight for months.''
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``And you believe she'll have agents somewhere in them?'' Thief said.
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``I \emph{know} she does,'' I grunted. ``That's not even up for debate,
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it's the base for half the plays I've seen her pull over the years.''
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I filled my cup again, then hers when she hinted at desire for a
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top-off.
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``Diabolist has been too\ldots{} open,'' I said. ``She's a chip off the
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old tyrannical block, I won't deny that, but Akua's wheelhouse has
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always been the indirect. The massive army of undead, whatever traps she
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cooked up around Liesse -- those are dangerous, but they're not the only
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arrows in her quiver. They're blunt instruments when she's a girl with a
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thing for daggers.''
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``She spent months preparing for the ritual in the city,'' Thief said.
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``I would look there for her sharpest blade.''
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I drank and grimaced, though this once not because of the aragh.
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``That's been worrying me as well,'' I said. ``I mean, I'd have to be
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insane not to worry about a fucking ritual involving centuries of
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accumulated souls, but there's more than that. Diabolist thinks what
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she's prepared is going to put her on top of the pecking order, and she
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may have blinders but she's not \emph{stupid}.''
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``I don't follow,'' the dark-haired-woman admitted.
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``Think of it this way,'' I said. ``Akua has a large army and backers in
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the Wasteland, but not enough to handle the Empire at full tilt. Say we
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march up to Liesse, she pulls down the sky on our heads and our entire
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force is annihilated. She still loses, because she's fresh out of a god
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and the Empire's still standing. Weakened, sure, but there's other
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armies it can field and other commanders too. She's not winning, she's
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delaying a defeat.''
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Thief's eyes narrowed.
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``You're implying she can use the ritual more than once,'' she said.
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``Pretty much,'' I said. ``This doesn't make sense otherwise. And isn't
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that the stuff of nightmares? Either the ritual works once but it has a
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permanent effect -- but she didn't rant about ascending to godhood when
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we talked, so I don't like the odds -- or whatever she can pull, she can
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several times. And it won't be just a few either. If I die she's up
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against Black, and he's not the kind of man who shies away from a long
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slugging match.''
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``Great sorcery always comes at a cost,'' Thief said, but there was
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unease on her face.
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``She won't care, if she's not the one paying,'' I said. ``We'll have to
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go into that fight facing the possibility she has both her current
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armies and a deployable catastrophe in her pocket. We can't face that
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and win with traitors in the ranks, Thief. It'll be a razor's edge as
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is.''
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My fellow Callowan looked grim.
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``I'll take a closer look as we march, extend it to your men as well,''
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she said.
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``Please do,'' I said, indolently toasting her. ``And while we're on the
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subject, it's getting tiresome to call you Thief all the time. I assume
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you have a name?''
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``Juliet,'' she replied without batting an eye.
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I squinted at her.
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``That was a lie,'' I said. ``Your heartbeat quickened.''
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``Alas, you've seen through me,'' she drawled. ``Samantha.''
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My squint deepened.
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``Did you force your heartbeat to quicken just to sell this current
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lie?'' I asked. ``Because that's genuinely impressive.''
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``Did I? Vivienne,'' she said.
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``Your heart went faster again,'' I sighed. ``Now you're just screwing
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with me.''
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``I would never dare defy you, Your Grace,'' Thief said, sounding
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wounded.
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``I'll call you Boris,'' I threatened. ``Don't think I won't. Robber
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will have a song about it before the moon's turned and that's a
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promise.''
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She brushed back her bangs, seemingly amused.
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``Vivienne Dartwick,'' she said.
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Huh, that sounded highborn. Wouldn't have pegged her for one, though it
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wasn't impossible. There'd been a lot of former nobles who'd fallen on
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hard times after the Conquest.
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``Had a feeling it was that one,'' I baldly lied.
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My money had been on Juliet and I'd been coming pretty close to
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pretending I'd used a Name trick to know it was the truth. \emph{And
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they said I'd never learn prudence.} I turned to offer an another refill
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but found only thin air. I waited for a long moment, but couldn't feel
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her eyes on me.
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``I might have shot myself in the foot there,'' I admitted.
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---
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I ended up drifting from the path Masego had charted me. The fairy gate
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opened a few miles southwest of where I'd meant it to, though honesty
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compelled me to admit that might be on me more than Hierophant. Was I
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going to present it that way when we next spoke? No, absolutely not.
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Still, holding the destination in my mind when I opened the first gate
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was proving tricky when I'd never been there before. It was hardly a
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disaster, though. We'd have camp ready for sundown instead of Noon Bell,
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and a few hours of delay were hardly worth a second thought when I'd
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managed to lead fourteen thousand legionaries from Holden to central
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Callow in the span of a mere nine days. General Istrid was of the same
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opinion.
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``That is a nasty trick you've got,'' the orc gravelled. ``The Procerans
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are going to piss their pants the first time you appear in the middle of
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their fields without warning.''
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The two of us had gone with the vanguard, which for once was not made of
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my men. Istrid was riding a wolf the size of a pony, though noticeably
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broader. My own Zombie the Third had me standing taller than the orc,
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for once, since the great wolves stood closer to the ground. Mine also
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had wings, not that it was a competition. If it had been, though, hard
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to beat the flying undead horse. Her full contingent of wolf riders had
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preceded us, a horde of eight hundred that brought out old primal fears
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just to look upon. Beasts like those with riders just as green had been
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a plague on Callow for centuries, no match for the kingdom's knights on
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the field but able to ravage large swaths of territory and withdraw if
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they were not checked quickly enough. The reminder that they were on my
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side rang a little hollow when Istrid's own mount occasionally snapped
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at my own with fangs the size of daggers.
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``Might not work out that cleanly,'' I said. ``Black tells me they have
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a Named future-teller on their side. I figure there's decent odds
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there'll be an army waiting for me on the other side of the gate.''
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Neither of us bothered to pretend war with Procer wasn't around the
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corner.
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``Then they have to pull off thousands from the border to wait for
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you,'' Istrid grinned savagely. ``Their armies don't march so quick,
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Squire. You hop south, then you hop north and just like that their
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army's split in three -- or the Fifteenth's torching their fields and
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poisoning their wells. Big place, Procer. Won't be easy to defend.''
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I hummed and did not disagree. I wasn't convinced, though. If Cordelia
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Hasenbach got her Crusade, that cause would attract more than armies.
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There'd be heroes too, and those had a knack for being in the right
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place at the right time to wreck the plans of people that worked on my
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side of the fence. The Fifteenth had been right behind the vanguard and
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I glimpsed Hune's tall silhouette, surrounded by a dozen smaller ones as
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she advanced. I must have let my gaze linger a little too long, because
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Istrid noticed.
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``Thought you liked them smaller than that,'' the orc snorted.
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``Wasn't that kind of look,'' I said.
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The general wasn't exactly someone I wanted to discuss who I kept bed
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with, so I did not elaborate. Although, to be fair, the Istrid
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Knightsbane had been happily married for several decades so in that
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regard she was definitely doing better than me. The orc's very daughter
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had informed me that the word in Lower Miezan really was married and not
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`mated', no matter what some Praesi books said. It wasn't an exact
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translation from the Kharsum term, which was closer to
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\emph{bound-in-fortune}, but the meaning was the same even if the
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customs differed some.
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``Oh, I see how it is,'' General Istrid grunted with amusement. ``Got on
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your nerves, did she?''
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I cast a steady look at the orc, who seemed rather unimpressed.
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``We had something of a disagreement,'' I diplomatically said.
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``She doesn't like you,'' the orc said, fairly bluntly.
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I winced.
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``That's a possible interpretation of it, yes,'' I said.
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``You've been running with Named too long,'' the general said. ``That
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sort of thing matters with a pack of villains, but she's an officer.''
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``I can work with people who don't like me,'' I said. ``Hells, Juniper
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didn't when we started out.''
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``She's a sweet girl, my daughter,'' Istrid casually dismissed. ``Ogres
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are harder to deal with.''
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I stared silently at the general. Juniper. Juniper, \emph{sweet}? I'd
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seen her chew out a man so harshly over sloppy gear that he'd teared up.
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Even Robber tread lightly when she was in a bad mood, and the goblin
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regularly rode undead creatures I'd stuffed with explosives into active
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battlefields.
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``The commander for my riders,'' the orc elaborated. ``Finest one I ever
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got, leagues above the woman I had during the Conquest. I still want to
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break his teeth every time his smug lips open. Don't have to like him or
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trust him, though, because in the end we're both under the banner.
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Doesn't matter if you can't stand your legate, it's the Legions that
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come first -- trust in that instead of the woman.''
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\emph{Except my banner isn't exactly Malicia's, is it?} It stood on the
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same side, I'd made sure of that as much as I could. But our interests
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weren't all aligned. The ogre hadn't been wrong when she's said the
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Fifteenth was more likely to heed my orders than the Tower's, if it came
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down to it. That Hune probably wouldn't felt like a liability, but not
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one I could do much about. Setting aside the fact that the Hellhound
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would dig her heels in if tried to have the ogre transferred, I couldn't
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exactly use `loyal to the Empire above me' as a reason to act. I wasn't
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sure I should, anyway. How likely was it that she was the only soldier
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in the Fifteenth who thought this way? We had a lot of Callowans these
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days but most my officers tribune rank and above were from the War
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College, and that meant greenskins and Praesi. I didn't like the thought
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of having a lightning rod for those who shared the belief, but there
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were risks to not giving those people voice at all. I clenched my
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fingers and unclenched them. It would have to wait after the war,
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anyway. Changing the second in command of the Fifteenth right before the
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largest battle it'd ever been in would have been sheer stupidity.
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``I got a lesson in ogre opinions,'' I sighed. ``Not a pleasant
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conversation, though it was worth having.''
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``Nim's never been accused of being too much of a laugh,'' Istrid
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contributed. ``There's a reason she was assigned in the Wasteland. Mok's
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better.''
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Marshal Nim, that was who she referred to. The ogre that led the Seventh
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Legion and held overall command of every legion in Praes. The other was
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General Mok, commander of the Third and currently at the Proceran border
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under Grem One-Eye. The two most powerful ogres in the Empire, not that
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you'd know to hear Istrid speak of them.
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``Surprised one made Marshal,'' I finally said. ``I didn't get the
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feeling from Hune they particularly wanted to get involved with the rest
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of Praes.''
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``Oh, they talk a good talk,'' the general conceded. ``But they like a
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good scrap as much as anyone. They can't farm for shit in their hills,
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anyway, so they have to bring in the food with coin.''
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``Thalassina's pretty close,'' I noted.
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As the main trading port in the Wasteland, it was from there the grain
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imported from abroad poured through. There would be advantages to that,
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if trade was what kept the Hall of Skulls fed.
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``Though that can't be pleasant all the time,'' I added after a moment.
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The disadvantages of having a Praesi High Lord this close to your
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backyard rather spoke for themselves. Istrid snorted.
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``They can talk when they share a border with Wolof,'' she said. ``Or
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the fucking Wallerspawn.''
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A moment later she remembered my tan wasn't all from the sun, and
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cleared her throat.
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``No offence meant,'' Istrid said.
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I wasn't eager to get into an argument with an orc about who exactly was
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in the wrong when it came to centuries-old border wars that had occurred
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often enough Daoine had seen fit to build a giant wall, so I let that
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one go. Probably for the best, since we were interrupted not long after.
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One of my mages hurried at our side, bringing word from the latest
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scrying. Diabolist was on the move, undead had poured out of Liesse.
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They were going, I was told, south. Towards the eight thousand men Ankou
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had sent out at my order.
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It looked like the Second Battle of Liesse was going to have an opening
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act.
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