448 lines
20 KiB
TeX
448 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-3-demesne}{%
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\section{Chapter 3: Demesne}\label{chapter-3-demesne}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``You can never have too many tiger pits, Chancellor. That's the
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same lack of vision that has people say ``that's too large a field of
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energy to absorb'' or ``calling yourself a living god is blasphemy''.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Malignant III, before his death and second reign as
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Dread Emperor Revenant
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\end{quote}
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Marchford had come under attack during my absence.
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That much became clear as soon as we got in sight of the city. There was
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no dramatic plume of smoke announcing it but the way the Fifteenth had
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been deployed was sign enough. The outskirts of the city were untouched
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but I could see from a mile away that the central plaza had been heavily
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fortified and was manned with soldiers and siege engines -- all of them
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pointing towards the inside instead of the outside. Juniper had managed
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to keep life going outside of the restricted zone she'd carved out in
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the middle of Marchford, to my approval, but that she'd even needed to
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do this much was telling. I'd learned much about Legion formations, over
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the last year, and what I was looking at was standard practice for a
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long-term static defence. Whatever fight had been picked it was not
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over, even if there was nothing to see right now. Just when things had
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been starting to pick up for the city, I glared. Typical.
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Zombie the Second kept a slow pace, as I was the only mounted member of
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my party. The Gallowborne were infantry through and through and Hakram,
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who I would have preferred to be mounted, could not be. Orcs panicked
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horses just being being close, unless they were trained war destriers.
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Those were in a short enough supply that any the Legions of Terror could
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get their hands on were sent straight to Thalassina. The Thirteenth
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Legion was garrisoned there and, having been raised out of Callowan
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rebels and criminals, actually had a cavalry contingent. The knights of
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the Kingdom could have eaten that bunch for breakfast and still been
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hungry, but compared to the orc wolfriders that represented the Empire's
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only other mounted option they were still a vast improvement.
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``That's two rings of defence,'' Hakram said. ``Whatever tickled the
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Hellhound was nothing to sneer at: she usually prefers stacking the
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first line to defence in depth.''
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Which meant Juniper had to face the serious possibility that her first
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line of fortifications would be swept away by the opponent. There
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weren't a lot of forces on Calernia that could threaten a hardened wall
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of legionaries backed by mages and siege engines. Most of them were
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supernatural in nature.
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``You lost a month's pay, then,'' I said, squinting at the city ahead.
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``That's too blatant to be Heiress' work.''
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``Whoever physically assaulted the city could be a catspaw for her,''
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Hakram said smugly. ``It's impossible to prove she \emph{wasn't}
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involved.''
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I cursed under my breath. That was the same as people blaming Assassin
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whenever any prominent figure died -- it could be true, in theory, but
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how the Hells would anyone know?
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``You're never going to win, either,'' I pointed out.
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``Until I do,'' Hakram grinned toothily. ``Just a matter of time.''
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I'd put money on heroes, myself. They always turned up at the most
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inconvenient of times, and just when Marchford was beginning to have
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some breathing room would have definitely qualified. No head was on a
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pike by the road, though, so I could safely assume no hero had gone into
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my city and committed suicide by Hellhound.
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``Did anyone have fairies?'' I said.
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``Ratface,'' Adjutant said after a moment.
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``I hate it when he places bets,'' I muttered. ``He always knows more
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than he's letting on.''
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We'd had to form the pool on the down low, since Juniper frowned on the
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practice. Something about it diminishing the dignity of officers. The
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general couldn't technically punish me for anything, but she insisted on
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hour-long meetings about patrol routes and drills whenever she caught me
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involved. The Hellhound's sadism knew no bounds. I cast a look at the
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column of Gallowborne following behind, then sighed.
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``Let's pick up the pace,'' I said. ``The sooner I hear the reports, the
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sooner we can take baths.''
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Hakram frowned at me.
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``I washed in the river not three days ago,'' he said.
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``So now you smell like river \emph{and} wet dog,'' I said, spurring on
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Zombie before he could reply. ``Soap, Adjutant, soap.''
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It was rare enough I got to have the last word these days I savoured the
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feeling all the way to Marchford.
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---
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A patrol met us outside the sight of the city walls, or at least the
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\emph{promise} of walls. After I'd had the parts of the city wrecked
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during Battle of Marchford made liveable again, getting some actual
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defences for my home built had been a priority. I'd charged Pickler with
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designing and building the fortifications months ago and she'd had a
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shiver at the words I was fairly sure was a sign of arousal for goblins
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-- her eyes had gone a little wide and fluttered, too. The first plan
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the Senior Sapper had drafted would have turned the city into the same
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kind of army-breaker Summerholm was meant to be, but I'd sent her back
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to the drawing table after a quick look. Marchford was not a border
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fortress and while it was to be the seat of the Fifteenth it would live
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or die on trade. Which her seven overlapping rings of walls and bastions
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would complicate a great deal: no real thought had been given to
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civilian streets and arteries, or even housing districts. The second
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draft had been much more reasonable.
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The towered curtain wall around Marchford she'd sketched was nothing too
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fancy, but where the Talbot Manor had stood before I'd had it torched
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would become a proper fortress. Permanent barracks were added to
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accommodate the Fifteenth, with access to training fields for drills and
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mock battles. That draft I accepted, and mandated she start working on
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when feasible. That was the first rub, unfortunately: being feasible.
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Her sappers had been needed to repair the bridge in and out of
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Marchford, and when that was over simply would not have the numbers to
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undertake as large a project as building the fortifications for an
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entire city. Not if I wanted to be done before a decade has passed,
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anyway. That wasn't acceptable: the entire reason I needed those walls
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\emph{now} was so that when Heiress tossed her next abomination at me my
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soldiers would have something to stand on.
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The obvious solution was drafting hand from the rest of the Fifteenth,
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but Juniper had flatly refused. It was one thing to keep sappers busy in
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peace time, another entirely to draw from the rank and file for a
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civilian project. Especially when she was integrating a massive influx
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of Callowans and other fresh recruits into the Fifteenth, trying to turn
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them into a cohesive fighting force. Fortunately, Marchford was a mining
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city. There was available skilled labour, which at the moment milled
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around aimlessly or enrolled into my legion to make ends meet. That was
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the second rub, so to speak. Those miners would need to be \emph{paid}.
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I was, sadly, close to broke. There was not enough trade coming in to
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fill my coffers, and raising tariffs on what was currently coming would
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just kill it off entirely. Taxing a city who'd effectively been sacked
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less than a year ago and of which a third of the population had lost
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their income when the mines closed -- courtesy of Heiress fucking me
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over with a demon whose corruption was still far from gone -- was a good
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way to have revolt on my hands. I still drew my pay and so far had done
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little to spend it, but it was a drop in the bucket compared to what was
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needed.
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The only saving grace here was that my legionaries also drew pay from
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the Tower and had nowhere to spend it but Marchford. That had slowed the
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bleeding some, though there was only so much that buying ale, whores and
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grub could do for a city. In the end I'd had Pickler outline the
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foundations for what would be be the city walls and freed her to take
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care of the bridge. We needed the trade more than the defences, right
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now. Staring at those ropes and pickets put me in a foul mood, a
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reminder that soon I'd need to either borrow coin or effectively go
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bankrupt. I'd ordered Aisha to look into my options before I left for
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Southpool, so maybe she'd have good news for me. That'd be a first.
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I dismissed the patrolling legionaries without bothering to ask
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questions about what had happened to the city, heading straight for the
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guildhall Juniper had appropriate during the Battle of Marchford and
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never returned. On the way there, after having sent off most of the
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Gallowborne back to the barracks for well-deserved rest, I was presented
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with the sight of a tired but still ridiculously pretty redhead escorted
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by a gaggle of mages.
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``Lady Squire,'' Kilian smiled.
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I spurred on Zombie instead of replying, scooping up my Senior Mage by
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the waist and setting her in front of me before she was even done
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squeaking in surprise.
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``\emph{Cat},'' she protested. ``We're in-``
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One arm still wrapped around her waist, I leaned forward to interrupt
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her with a kiss. She smiled against my lips before sliding a hand around
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the nape of my neck and replying in kind. Teasingly, I bit her lip
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before withdrawing when we were both out of breath.
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``Kilian,'' I finally said. ``I missed you.''
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She rested her head against my breastplate, for once the fact that she
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was slightly taller than me not apparent.
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``Missed you too,'' she muttered. ``Even if you're making a spectacle of
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us, you utter brute.''
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Hakram cleared his throat loudly, because he was the most inconsiderate
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creature ever spawned in Creation. I ignored him, pressing my lips
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against the crown of Kilian's head and already craving something
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stronger. I hadn't seen my lover in two months and to say I'd missed her
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would have been something of an understatement. Hakram cleared his
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throat again, louder.
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``We're having a moment, you sack of sentient manure,'' I said.
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``Good afternoon to you, Senior Mage,'' Adjutant said, cheerfully
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ignoring my insult.
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``Lord Adjutant,'' Kilian replied, with as much dignity as she could
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manage while wrapped in my arms.
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``I see you've been abducted by some sort of barbarian warlord,'' the
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tall orc mused. ``Whenever you manage to free yourself from captivity, I
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imagine we'll be needing you for the staff meeting with General
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Juniper.''
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The redhead wiggled in my arms and reluctantly I allowed her to slid off
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the horse. Zombie the Second took all of this rather placidly, staring
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at a food stall on the other side of the street with greedy eyes. Kilian
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coughed, got her pixie-cut hair in order again and composed herself.
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``I was actually sent by Juniper,'' the Senior Mage said. ``The general
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staff was assembled for a meal, so she's extending an invitation. The
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most pressing reports could be handled at the same time.''
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I grimaced. Well, no sense in delaying it. I could go for a bite anyway,
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there were only so many times you could eat standard Legion rations
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before wanting to jump off a bridge. \emph{Oh}, and I'd get a real bed
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tonight. Gods that would be nice. I snuck a look at Kilian, drinking her
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in even if legion gear was the opposite of enticing. With a little luck
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I might even have company in that bed, and I was looking forward to that
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a great deal more than sleep. After I'd learned that our scrying
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sessions were very likely being listened in on I'd curtailed, uh,
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certain activities we'd sometimes indulged in when time allowed.
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``You're staring, Cat,'' Hakram said.
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``Am not,'' I lied.
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I slid off my saddle and handed Zombie to one of the Gallowborne. Kilian
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smiled and began moving, Adjutant and I following.
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``Killjoy,'' I hissed at him under my breath before we caught up.
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He grinned back unrepentantly. One of these days, I promised myself, I
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was going to get a minion that didn't give me lip.
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---
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``No wonder you're so small,'' Nauk said. ``Look at the size of those
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portions.''
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I pointed my fork at him over my bowl of oxtail stew and sambusa.
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``I will end you, you ugly green gargoyle,'' I promised. ``Don't think I
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won't just because you're a legate now.''
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Hune rumbled in approval.
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``His commander would handle the paperwork more quickly, if she had his
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rank,'' the ogre said.
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There were no seats capable of accommodating someone the other legate's
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size, so in the end someone had taken off the back of a stone bench and
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dragged it inside. Unlike the rest of us, who were taking our portions
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from the communal bowls, Hune had been brought her own. Considering her
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side dish of koshari was larger than my torso I could see why.
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``I'm not doing the forms for it, if you murder him,'' Aisha said,
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daintily picking at her plate from her seat at Juniper's left.
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``They'll be handled promptly, don't you worry,'' I said, and Hakram
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cursed under his breath.
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He should, since they would most definitely end up on his desk instead
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of mine. The Hellhound speared another slab of uncooked red meat with
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cumin from the bowl only orcs were using and dropped it on her plate.
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``Don't start murdering officers, Foundling,'' the general said. ``I'm
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told it's habit-forming.''
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That was almost a joke, and I still wondered at how the orc was willing
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to unbend even that much in private. Never when anyone but the general
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staff was there, but it was still like night and day compared to when
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the Fifteenth had first been formed. Going through the Liesse Rebellion
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together, all the desperate battles of the campaign, had warmed her
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considerably towards me and the officers who could once have been
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considered my ``faction'' in the Fifteenth. Those old lines were long
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gone, now. Like Captain had once told me, showing proficiency at
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violence was the quickest way to earn an orc's respect. Ratface and
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Kilian were chatting with Pickler further down the table but I refrained
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from sending a longing look in that direction. There would be time
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enough for that after we were done eating. I dipped the sambusa in the
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stew and bit off a piece of the meat-stuffed pastry. Still warm, I
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hummed in appreciation. Someone had gotten their hands on a decent cook
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from the Wasteland.
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``So,'' I finally said. ``Looks like I missed a battle.''
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The amiability -- or what passed for that with Juniper -- slid off my
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general's face the moment the subject was broached.
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``A single skirmish, so far,'' the Hellhound said. ``Fae crossed over
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from Arcadia in small numbers.''
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Further down the table, Ratface smothered a grin. The bastard, in all
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senses of the word. He'd be filling his pockets deep with that one.
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``Do we know why?'' Hakram asked.
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The conversation in the back had petered out when I'd begun the formal
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part of our meal, and Kilian was the one to field the question.
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``They're claiming the land for Arcadia,'' she said. ``Exactly how far
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their definition of `the land' extends isn't clear at the moment.''
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I fished out a piece of ox and popped it into my mouth, chewing
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thoughtfully and wiping my hands on the cloth afterwards.
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``That's a problem,'' I said. ``I'm already using that land.''
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``We think they're Winter Court,'' Nauk said. ``They used ice, anyway,
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and they were arrogant little shits.''
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``They're all arrogant little shits,'' Juniper grunted. ``Wouldn't be
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fairies otherwise.''
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Sometimes it was reassuring to see that the vast majority of my officers
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were even more terrible at diplomacy than I was. Made me look better
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than comparison, at least.
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``No negotiations were attempted so far,'' Aisha said, the exception to
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that last thought. ``That does not mean, however, they are impossible.''
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``They did not seem inclined to negotiate, Aisha,'' Kilian said mildly.
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``Otherwise we would have tried.''
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I raised an eyebrow. She must have been on the scene herself, then. I
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would have been worried, but the redhead knew how to take care of
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herself. She might lack in power compared to some other mages, but she
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made up for it in swiftness and control.
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``I believe the terms used by Legate Nauk after the introduction were
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`fuck off','' the Taghreb said, tone sardonic.
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I shot the orc in question a look. He grinned, then shrugged. Well, Nauk
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had always been more of a blunt tool than precise instrument. There was
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a place for that. Sometimes it wasn't about how fancy the trick was, it
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was about how hard you could clobber the other guy. And as far as clubs
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went, my legate was among the finest.
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``Dealing with fae is like dealing with devils,'' Ratface said. ``They
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always screw you on the technicalities.''
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``I'm not taking the option off the table,'' I broke in. ``But at the
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moment, that's not the situation we're looking at. If they're invading
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our priority is clear.''
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``Defences,'' Juniper growled with approval. ``Our mages have set up
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wards, but the reports are the border between Creation and Arcadia is
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thinning regardless.''
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I glanced at Kilian, who grimaced.
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``That is beyond my knowledge,'' she admitted. ``Apprentice might know
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more.''
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``I notice he's not here,'' I said. ``What's he been doing all this
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time?''
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``He cleared out the strongest of the fae to cross and threatened them
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not to attempt it again,'' Hune said. ``He did not leave his tower
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before, and has not since. It borders on dereliction of duty.''
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The ogre's tone was thick with distaste. \emph{Masego}, I sighed
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internally. \emph{How are you worse at making friends than I am?} Not, I
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would admit, that Hune was the cuddliest of my merry bunch. She didn't
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speak much and was easily irritated. I'd had her under my command for
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about a year and still knew next to nothing about her. Hakram, usually a
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fount of useful gossip, had nothing to tell me about her either. Quiet,
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competent, never socialized much even at the College. Nothing I hadn't
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observed with my own eyes.
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``Lord Apprentice is not officially part of the Fifteenth Legion,''
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Juniper said, in the tone of someone who'd had to make that point before
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on several occasions. ``He has no obligation to us.''
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``I'll talk to him,'' I said. ``Assuming he can't contribute, what do we
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have on our side of the field if the fae come back?''
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Pickler rocked in her chair, which I noted with amusement was stacked
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with cushions so she'd sit about the same height as the rest of us.
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``My sappers have built two rings of fortifications around the plaza,
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using the existing houses as props. We've installed cast iron
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foundations on everything, which Senior Mage Kilian informs me should
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afford them some protection against fae magic,'' she said. ``To target
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the fae themselves, I've had scorpions of my own design installed and
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nailed to the rooftops. One of the invaders used strong winds during the
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incursion, which would limit their effectiveness, so I've also had
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catapults loaded with sharper-filled iron balls placed behind the second
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ring.''
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Pickler seemed as if she wanted to say more, but one look at Juniper and
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she rethought the notion. I checked with a glance and, predictably, Nauk
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looked like she'd just slipped him some tongue. Ugh. I should not have
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inflicted that image on myself.
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``We need to consider the possibility those fortifications might be made
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permanent,'' Juniper said, thankfully claiming my attention.
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``We'll need to redirect civilian traffic through different streets if
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that's the case,'' Ratface said. ``The plaza sits in the middle of the
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main artery in and out of Marchford.''
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I sighed.
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``Start looking into it,'' I ordered. ``Wishful thinking isn't going to
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make this go away.''
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The Taghreb bastard raised an eyebrow.
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``Well,'' he said, ``if you believe some of the stories\ldots{}''
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I looked at Aisha.
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``Him you'll do the forms for, right?''
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``They're already filled just in case,'' the Staff Tribune replied
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without missing a beat.
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``Defence is all well and good,'' Nauk grunted. ``But you don't win wars
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from behind walls.''
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``Can't send scouts into Arcadia, Legate,'' the Hellhound said. ``Not
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with the way it warps time. The logistics would see them dead or the
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information gathered useless.''
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``So don't send scouts,'' the large orc said, baring his teeth. ``Send
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an army. We happen to have one of those lying around.''
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``We don't know enough to commit to that at the moment,'' I said. ``For
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all we know, this could be a minor incident that will never escalate.''
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There was a moment of silence at the table. Hakram was the first to
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snicker, which broke the dam. Laughter splattered over the room, ebbing
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after a few moments.
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``I'll talk to Apprentice, see what he knows,'' I said, still smiling.
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``Anything else that's urgent?''
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``No Legion business,'' Juniper said, and that was that.
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We dug into the meal properly and I allowed the renewed sounds of
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chatter to wash over me. It was, I thought, good to be home.
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