403 lines
20 KiB
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403 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-70-reverb}{%
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\chapter{Reverb}\label{chapter-70-reverb}}
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\epigraph{``Six wars I fought since my coronation, so hear me when I say
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this: war may be fought for righteous reasons, but no war can ever
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deserve that epithet.''}{King Jehan the Wise, apocryphal last words}
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It was a cork forced into a leaking barrel, not a long-term solution. I
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hesitated to call this luck, because Black was nothing if not calculated
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even at his worst, but the damage had been limited. Destroying the array
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had freed the souls of the Deoraithe but there'd been an interval
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between that unleashing and the city smashing back into Creation. The
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wards Masego had promised held, keeping the dead shades from turning a
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third of central Callow into a haunted wasteland, but Liesse itself was
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beyond salvaging. The wights inside had gone wild, tearing apart
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everything that wasn't nailed down and quite a bit that was. Thrice a
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ruin now, the old heart of the south. There was nothing inside left
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alive, not even the rebel forces who'd been dug in. That close to the
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flood of souls their protection had been about as useful a parchment
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shield. As far as my people could tell, the few that'd survived the
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initial onslaught had been killed by the rampaging wights. I'd been
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cheated out of my hangings, but it had been an execution nonetheless.
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Besides, there were survivors from the battle outside the city. I would
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settle my scores with Akua's lot one way or another.
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``It remains a major strategic liability so long as we leave it like
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this,'' the Hellhound said.
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I was avoiding the camp and he decisions that awaited me there, at the
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moment, but there was no getting away from Juniper. My general's face
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was calm, but there was a subtle hunch to her frame she had once lacked.
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Like she was trying to fold into herself. Her mother had died, I'd been
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told, while trying to hold the right flank. He risen corpse had been
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hacked to pieces by her own legionaries and she'd had to be brought to
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the pyre in full armour to hide the marks. Juniper had put the torch
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herself, Adjutant said, while I lay half-conscious in a tent after
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crawling out of the ruins of Liesse. I might have died in there, if
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Thief had not come back for me. Black certainly would have, the backlash
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of his stand having put him in a coma he'd yet to wake from. Seated on
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an upturned stone, I watched the wreck of a once-great city and bit into
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mutton jerky. I offered the Hellhound a bite but got only a quelling
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glare for answer. Her loss.
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``I'll be putting Hierophant to work,'' I finally said. ``He believes
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the remaining wights can be brought under control.''
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``That leaves the shades,'' Juniper grunted. ``I'm less than comfortable
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with having a jug of goblinfire in the middle of the supply line for the
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Vales. Much less camping by it. Those wards break, Catherine, and up
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goes two thirds of the remaining imperial forces in Callow. And you damn
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well know Duchess Kegan's been making noise. Ignoring her won't work
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forever.''
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The necromantic nature of the powers backing the Watch was out of the
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bag for good, to no one's pleasure. Procer would make something of that,
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no doubt. There were too many people on the plains who were seeing what
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was undeniably the souls of the dead for containment to be even remotely
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feasible, not that it was my secret to keep in the first place. And
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since the moment the dust settled the Duchess of Daoine had been loudly
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demanding her wizards be given access to the wards and the city so they
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could begin the work of weaving the souls back together into a gestalt.
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I'd had Adjutant's people take a look at her forces: the Watch was
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powerless at the moment. Nothing more than well-trained soldiers. I'd
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refused to meet with Kegan until Hierophant could have a better look at
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Liesse, but around dawn today he'd given me his verdict: the weapon was
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broken. Not for good, but it would take several years and massive
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resources to bring it back to even superficial functionality and I could
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afford the costs in neither time nor coin. One word, that was all it'd
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taken, and just like that Black had smothered the last hope for my
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homeland being spared the Tenth Crusade.
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``The souls go back to Daoine,'' I told Juniper with a sigh. ``They're
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no use to anyone here, and I'll need the Watch to take the field before
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long.''
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``A start,'' the Hellhound conceded. ``Frankly, I believe we should
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torch the whole city with goblinfire. You've heard the reports.''
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Soldiers near the wards said they glimpsed dead loved ones speaking to
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them from behind the boundary, begging to be let out. Some of the mages
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keeping Hierophant's wards powered came back trembling and talking of
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whispers in their ears. Others lost track of time entirely for hours on
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end. I'd had to order the northernmost camps to be demolished and
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rebuilt south because the legionaries inside them were plagued with
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vivid and persistent nightmares. You couldn't kill that many people in a
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place without there being \emph{consequences} to it, and killing was
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only the first of horrors that'd been visited upon Liesse.
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``I'm not committing to that until I get assurances it won't worsen the
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situation,'' I said. ``But as soon as I get back to Laure I'll make it
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an official decree that the area as far as two miles outwards is
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forbidden territory. Markers will be placed.''
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``There'll be adventurers heading in there even then,'' Juniper said.
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``Looters with more balls than sense.''
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``My options are limited, Juniper,'' I told the orc flatly. ``I will not
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compound ruin with disaster. Ratface has a blade to the throat of half
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the Dark Guilds and Thief has her own people -- I'll have to count on
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them to keep the situation as much under control as it can be.''
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``Heroes-''she began.
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``Are coming,'' I interrupted. ``I know. Marshal Grem still holds the
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Vales, that should ward off the worst of it, but I've already ordered a
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watch on the Hwaerte. The Smugglers will know if anyone tries to sail up
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the river. If we're lucky the first wave will only hit us with the
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crusade and we'll have winter to prepare unhindered.''
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``When have we ever been that lucky?'' Juniper bitterly said.
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The death of Istrid Knightsbane had changed her, I thought. Tempered her
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in some ways, but as in all things at a price. She'd always been sombre
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but her mother's passing had put out some ineffable light in her. It'd
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cut close to home in a way the rest of our campaigns had not, I
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supposed. More than once I'd thought of reaching out, but her grief was
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not something I could truly understand. I was an orphan, after all.
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Aisha would pick up what pieces she could. I scarfed down the last of
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the jerky and licked my fingers clean.
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``There are going to be changes,'' I said.
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She looked at me for a long time, then sighed. She gestured for me to
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move and I made room on the stone. The orc sat by my side, over a head
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taller and twice as broad. I studied her face and was surprised at how
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young she looked, even after all this. The Hellhound was such a force of
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nature it was easy to forget she was only a year older than me.
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``What happened in the city, Catherine?'' she asked.
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No one had who'd not been in that room knew exactly what had gone down,
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not even Thief. There had been no order to arrest Black while he was
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unconscious forthcoming from the Tower, but I knew better than to
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believe the matter was at an end. I suspected the Empress would have
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tried it, if there wasn't a real risk the legions around Liesse would
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have refused and raised banner of rebellion around my teacher's sleeping
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form. That I could see no move on her part did not mean they were not
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being made.
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``Lines were drawn,'' I said. ``I'm still deciding on which side I'm
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falling.''
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``Are we rebelling?'' she bluntly asked.
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After a heartbeat of hesitation, I shook my head.
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``Not for now, anyway,'' I admitted. ``But we can no longer be dependant
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on the Tower for protection. Right now the situation is\ldots{} fluid.''
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A year ago, I thought, I would have backed Black against the Empress
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without hesitation. Maybe even a fortnight ago. But not after today, not
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when he'd consigned thousands of my countrymen to death for a point of
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pride.
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``We can't afford a civil war with Procer at the gates,'' Juniper
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growled.
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``I doubt it'll come to that,'' I said. ``But there was a break. The
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blades might be sheathed until the outside threat is dealt with but
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they'll come out eventually. I will not allow Callow to be the field
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where that struggle is settled, and that means an army giving them all
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pause.''
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``You want me to head it,'' the Hellhound said.
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``You already \emph{are} heading it,'' I replied. ``Your
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responsibilities will just expand.''
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``Raising an army without the Tower's permission is treason,'' Juniper
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reluctantly said.
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``I have permission,'' I said. ``Or had. I will proceed regardless of
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whether that's confirmed. Like you said, the Empire cannot afford a
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civil war. Much less one fought against me.''
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``Callowan recruits, I assume,'' she said.
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``I'd grab every legionary in the country if I could,'' I said. ``As it
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is I've had Adjutant working on the Fifth and the Twelfth. The orc now
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in interim command of the Fifth has been\ldots{} open to overtures.''
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``But not the Sixth,'' Juniper said, dark eyes studying me.
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Her mother's legion. No, I'd not crossed that line. I would have liked
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to say I'd made that choice out of consideration for the feelings of a
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dear friend, but the truth was not as pretty. I'd refrained because
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Juniper in command of Callow's army was worth more to me than a chance
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of pulling into my orbit the remains of the Sixth.
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``No,'' I agreed. ``Not the Sixth.''
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She closed her eyes.
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``I'll talk to Legate Bagram,'' the Hellhound whispered. ``I know him
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well.''
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``I'm not asking you to,'' I told her, wanting to be exceedingly clear
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about that.
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``I have already chosen the side I fall on, Warlord,'' Juniper replied,
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eyes opening and flashing with anger. ``My words were not lightly
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spoken. Do not bring dishonour to us both by \emph{coddling} me.''
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Only an orc, I thought, would find offense in someone respecting their
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grief. Best not to linger on this, and as it happened I had no lack of
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distractions to offer.
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``The Fourth and the Ninth are the real wildcards,'' I said.
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``Precarious as their position is.''
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It had not escaped anyone's attention that the only senior commanders to
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survive the battle were both goblins and Matrons. Rumours of betrayal
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were already sweeping through the camps and in truth I'd done nothing to
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stamp them out. Adjutant had given me a report by voice only that I'd
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ordered him to never repeat: Istrid Knightsbane had been killed by
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poison, not sorcery or undead. He'd told me the cut that killed her was
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too clean to have been made with anything but goblin steel, and that
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raised \emph{questions}. All legionary weapons were made with the stuff,
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straight out of the Imperial forges of Foramen, and the High Lords had
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definitely gotten their hands on some of it. Yet I very much doubted
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this was Diabolist's handiwork. The timing was off, and I suspected she
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would have gloated about it when we fought if it was her doing. If only
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to make it plain she had more support among Praesi than I believed, even
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in the Legions. It shouldn't be Black's either -- General Istrid had
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been one of his most vocal loyalists. That left three likely culprits in
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my eyes, the ones who had the most to gain from that death.
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First was the Empress, who'd had to know when considering her scheme
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that Black would stand opposed to it. Had she begun cleaning the upper
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ranks of his most loyal before the insurrection was over? It was
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unlikely she'd get an opportunity to make a kill this quiet for years.
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She was not to be dismissed as to practical for this, not after the
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flying murder fortress gambit she'd tacitly allowed. The second was the
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First Prince. Assassinating senior and famous commanders before an
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invasion was right up her wheelhouse, from what I'd heard of her. I
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found it hard to believe she'd managed to place an agent in the legions
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without the Eyes noticing it, but then she had shut down major imperial
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operations in Procer before. With the home front settled, she might be
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looking outwards. The last I hesitated to even think, because if it was
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true the Empire was done and this entire house of cards was going to
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fall down on my head.
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It might be the Matrons. Isolationist as they were said to be, Robber
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had told me enough about the crones ruling his people I knew taking a
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few scalps to better position commanders of their own kind was not
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something they'd think twice about doing -- if they thought they could
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get away with it. And if it was them\ldots{} Suddenly it no longer felt
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like a coincidence I'd been offered desperately needed coin in exchange
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for a goblin settlement in Marchford. It felt like a calculated move to
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secure an ally before an uprising could be started. It might be I was
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being paranoid in thinking this, but in Praes the question was never if
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you were being paranoid or not. It was if you were being paranoid
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\emph{enough}.
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``General Sacker would not have a hand in my mother's death, no matter
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the rumours,'' Juniper sneered. ``They were like sisters, Catherine.
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Their bond was decades in the making.''
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``I don't believe it either,'' I replied, only saying half the truth.
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Goblins just didn't think the way humans or even orcs did. To them
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betrayal in the name of advancement was no betrayal at all. Still, I
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suspected that if there'd been an agent of the Matrons at work here it
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would be Marshal Ranker. She was the one who'd been left the senior
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commander here by the deaths, and though the rumours were impugning her
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reputation no one was daring to question her authority. Not even me, as
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she'd stepped lightly knowing that a Named outranked even a marshal in
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the eyes of the Tower if push came to shove. But neither had I helped
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her any with my not inconsiderable clout: as long as her reputation was
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in the gutter, I had an in with anyone who bought the rumours. And I
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needed the men, needed them badly if I was to give any of the jackals
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fighting over Callow's bleeding body any reason to be wary. The
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Fifteenth wasn't enough for that, not with the nearly one thousand men
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the fucking Warlock had left stranded on the wrong side of the Hellgate.
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If the villain had been here to deal with, we would have had
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\emph{words} on the subject. The legionaries going in had known it was a
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possibility they would never come back, but the blow was still being
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felt and I doubted the bastard had done anything to try to save them.
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``They may retreat to Summerholm,'' Juniper finally said. ``Without Lord
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Black to mediate or the Tower ordering otherwise, that is the safest
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hold for them to wait out the mess.''
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``It's not happening,'' I told her flatly. ``The don't get to garrison
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one of my fucking cities anymore. If they want to go east, let them go
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all the way to the Blessed Isle. The Empire can supply them there,
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because it sure as Hells won't be my granaries coughing out the goods.''
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The Hellhound stared at me, frowning.
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``You are establishing borders,'' she said.
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``I am,'' I acknowledged.
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``That is too large a territory to cover for a single host,'' Juniper
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stated. ``You mean to raise several armies, then, and that is beyond the
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writ of a general's authority. My command extends only to the
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Fifteenth.''
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``You would need to be a marshal,'' I agreed.
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I'd had Hakram take care of the physical aspect of that last night. A
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marshal's baton was traditionally made of wood from the Wasteland,
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usually ebony, but I didn't have any on hand. The elongated stick I took
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out from under my cloak and handed to Juniper was stone, rough granite.
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It'd been sculpted, but where was no mandate from the Tower in formal
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Mthethwa to be read. Among the traditional relief of legionaries in arms
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was set my own heraldry, the scales with the sword and the crown. The
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detail did not escape the orc's considering eyes.
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``They will never promote you to marshal,'' I said. ``You've been with
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me for too long, your loyalties are suspect.''
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``Then this is a mere bauble,'' she said.
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``It is the regalia of the Marshal of Callow,'' I smiled thinly. ``It's
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not actually illegal for a serving commander to have other titles, you
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see. I had Aisha look into the legalities.''
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It wasn't nearly that clean-cut, no matter what I said. Lords and ladies
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of Praesi who served in the Legions had to renounce their claim to any
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noble title for the duration of their service. But that was landed
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titles, and what I was granting her was not. There was even a precedent,
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though a distant one: Dread Empress Maleficent II had showered her
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successful commander in the Free Cities with local honours, since those
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were much less expensive than rewards at home. As a client state under
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the Tower, Callow currently fell in the same areas as the subjugated
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territories down south the ancient empress had taken. It was a fairly
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thin excuse and the High Lords were bound to howl, but Malicia had a lot
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more to prove than I did at the moment. If she couldn't even finagle her
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way through this, what point was there in backing her? Juniper's thick
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fingers clasped around the stone.
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``I dreamt of holding a baton, as a girl,'' she said. ``But not like
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this.''
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\emph{Isn't that Praes in a sentence?} I thought. \emph{Everything you
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want, just not the way you want it.}
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``You're now the highest commander in this kingdom,'' I told her. ``Your
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rank of general is irrelevant. The Fifteenth, while remaining a legion,
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is also the first division of the army of Callow. Congratulations,
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Juniper. You're the youngest marshal in the history of this empire.''
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``I am not,'' she said darkly, ``an imperial marshal. I can live with
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that disappointment, if I hold the command regardless. But if I am to be
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your second, Catherine, I will need my hands unbound. There will be
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conscription, even if limited. I will need forges to make what the
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Imperial ones in Foramen will no longer provide, and granaries to feed
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the soldiers.''
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``And you'll have them,'' I promised. ``I will have this country ready
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for war, when it comes.''
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The Hellhound suddenly snorted.
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``I suppose I should kneel,'' she said. ``Are there no ceremonies to be
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observed? Should a blade not be laid on my shoulders?''
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``That's for knighting,'' I told her. ``It would also involve me
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slapping you across the face as hard as I can, and no offense but I'm
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not sure you would survive that.''
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``Then we do this the way of my own people,'' Juniper said, and rose to
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her feet.
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She unsheathed her sword and bared her arm, cutting across leathery
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flesh. I rose and did the same under her expectant gaze.
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``Under the gaze of That Which Lurks Below, I make these oaths,'' the
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Hellhound said, tone heavy. ``I will make war for you, and be true in
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the shedding of blood. In lean seasons I will offer meat from my table,
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and in bountiful days be granted the same from yours. Your foe is my
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foe, your kin is my kin. I swear this by iron and salt, by grass and
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wind and the death of men. In ruin and glory, our threads are bound. Let
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they who would sunder this pact be devoured `til not even bones
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remain.''
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She offered her bleeding arm and I met it with mine, crimson trails
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staining us both. I did not know her people's customs, but I knew those
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of mine. Not from teaching, for etiquette lessons had never covered the
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likes of this, but from old stories. From days when this land of mine
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had still be a true kingdom.
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``Gods be my witness, and strike me down should I break this solemn
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oath,'' I said. ``Honour granted will be kept, homage rewarded by
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sanctuary unbroken. To she who is faithful and true I will be the same.
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She who loves me I will love, and shun all that she shuns. No injury or
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slight shall go unavenged, be they the work of the great or the small.''
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``I name you Warlord,'' Juniper grinned sharply. ``Willing and hungry.''
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``I name you Marshal of Callow,'' I replied, ``and in my own blood
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anoint you.''
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The baton was touched with red, when she took it, the both of us having
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shed droplets. Fitting, I thought.
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There would be more to come.
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