523 lines
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523 lines
27 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-kaleidoscope}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Kaleidoscope}\label{interlude-kaleidoscope}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-kaleidoscope}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Kaleidoscope}
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\epigraph{``Spoken like a man I'll have raised from the dead just to execute
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a second time.''}{Dread Emperor Malignant III}
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They'd meant to make a lake, but that was not what Juniper was looking
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down at. After the flow was cut the currents had slowed to a crawl, then
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settled, and what had once been a plain was now cold marshlands. Dotted
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by a handful of glaciers, for now, but eventually those would melt.
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\emph{Not in time for the battle to be affected}, the Marshal of Callow
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decided. The massive chunks of ice could be relied on to block field of
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sight, but they should not be taken as a more than temporary cover. Not
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with the calibre of Named on the other side. With the sun beginning to
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set down, the marsh was empty save for shallow waters and corpses or
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not. Earlier in the day she'd sent the Watch to harass crusaders trying
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to fish out survivors, but she'd had to call them back when the heroes
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took the field again. Juniper licked her fangs behind closed lips, the
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ridge inside her mouth allowing easy access to clean. She'd been told by
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Aisha that the way it made the mouths of orcs look to human -- too
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broad, too prominent, almost animal-like -- was one of the reasons so
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many of them assumed her people were thoughtless brutes. It was, her old
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friend had said, an unconscious judgement. The Hellhound did not mind.
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There'd been many judgements made today, some more harmful than mere
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human stupidity.
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She still remembered the moment she saw the gate open in the sky. The
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primal awe the sight had shaken her with, that reminder that she was a
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very small creature in a very large world. That there were entities
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striding amongst mortals that could flatten them with but a word or a
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gesture. It'd been difficult to gauge how many Procerans died the moment
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the water hit them. At least two thousand, she suspected. The gate had
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not been so high up in the air that gravity would turn it into some
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divine blow, but the sheer weight of the mass of liquid made that
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largely irrelevant. A hammer flattened an ant even if you were barely
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swinging it. All that power, wielded by a shifty sorcerer and barefoot
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woman who'd murdered a demigod. That'd always been Catherine's walk,
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hadn't it? The fine line between absurd and terrifying. A single moment
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and the entire lay of the battle had changed. Proceran advance had
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immediately collapsed, thousands fleeing the sweeping tidal wave
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pointlessly. The died anyway, drowning in armour. Another few thousand
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were still lying at the bottom of the marsh.
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The crusaders had been struck with horror, but there were people on the
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other side who'd mastered their panic. Within two heartbeats, mage fire
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and white-hot heavenly flame had erupted in the centre of the cascading
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waters. Tons of liquid turned to scalding vapour, but the edges had kept
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pouring down. Slowed but not stopped. When the first glacier went
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through, it was split in two by the fires and further broken apart by
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what Juniper was fairly certain had been the Saint of Swords merely
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swinging her blade. It'd limited the damage caused by the massive ice
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structures, but then they'd been swept by the current too and began
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crushing everything in their way. Another two heartbeats and fences of
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light formed themselves across the portal to keep the water in, as the
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heavenly flames winked out. It hadn't been enough. They lasted barely a
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heartbeat before shattering under the weight. From beginning to end, the
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entire affair lasted for eleven heartbeats.
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Then the Grey Pilgrim struck.
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It had defied easy description, and not only because anyone looking
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directly at it went blind in the aftermath. There'd been\ldots{} a star,
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perhaps that was the only way to put it. Only instead of a distant
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radiant light it had been a \emph{knife}. It carved through an edge of
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the portal, and the whole thing shuddered. Then it went straight through
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the other side and the sky blew up. A ring of power spread for miles,
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boiling hot rain falling across the battlefield for the better part of
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an hour afterwards. The fairy gate was broken, though now there was a
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strange circle-shaped glimmer above both armies. Juniper had not been
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pleased, at the time, but neither had she been furious. The gate had not
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been meant to be kept open for much longer anyway. Her mistake, she now
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realized, had been thinking in terms of mortal war. Her Warlord's spell
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had taken the day away from that mould, and price had to be paid for
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such great power. Especially when that power was broken by a foe.
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\emph{There is a reason the Carrion Lord does not unleash the Warlock at
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the beginning of every battle}, she thought. \emph{And now we learn it
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the hard way.} The exercise of a villain's power always left them
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vulnerable, and the backlash for this unmaking had been particularly
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brutal.
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Catherine was not dead, they were fairly certain. Juniper had mages drag
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her out of sight and examine her the moment after she collapsed. But she
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was unconscious and\ldots{} dreaming. The orc had been told that the
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queen's body was now made of the stuff of the fae, but she had not truly
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grasped what that meant until she watched Catherine Foundling's body
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shift around like a puzzle box. Square blocs of flesh erupted her chest,
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short spikes bent bone and muscle in every direction and Juniper had
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grown nauseous watching her commander's face melt down to the skull and
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reform with an eerie keening sound. She still felt ill thinking about
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it. Orcs were flesh and bone, instinct and feeling. There was almost
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nothing of any of that left in Catherine. What had struck Hierophant had
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been subtler. They'd thought him fine at first, as he remained standing
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where he'd been. Only when he'd not replied to a question had the
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soldiers noticed that he was perfectly still. No longer even breathing.
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There was now a permanent rotation of two mages by the man's bedsides
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weaving spell to mimic what his lungs had ceased doing. His heart still
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beat, at least. Neither of the two had woken up in the three hours since
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the Pilgrim had attacked them.
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That left the Army of Callow very, very vulnerable.
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So far there had been no attempt at a heroic assault, but there was no
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telling how long that would last. An issue compounded by the fact that
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none of Juniper's mages could tell her when the two most powerful
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members of the Woe would wake, if they ever did. The army's
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fortifications had withstood the waters well at least. The wards held,
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and the only place the palisade broke was on the left flank when a
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smaller glacier chunk hit the wall. Mages had been able to keep that
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contained with shields, enough that the entire battle line didn't flood.
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It had been rebuilt since. \emph{Was this what you feared, Catherine,
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when you forbade Bonfire?} Part of Juniper still believed that plan had
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been the best chance at a winnable war they'd had, but now she was being
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forced to admit there was more to wars with Named than tactics and
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strategy. It was a bitter pill to swallow to admit that she'd had a
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weakness in her thinking, but now that she knew of it she must fix it
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lest she make mistakes in the future. Juniper spat into the shallow
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waters filling the ditch before the palisade, then turned around. She
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was in overall command, now. And there were things to be done, the first
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of them having a conversation with a woman she despised.
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For once, the Thief was easy to find. The thin woman was lounging
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outside the tent where the remainder of the Woe slumbered uneasily,
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propped up in a folding chair and sipping at a silver flask. Juniper
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sniffed out the scent. Brandy. Even her taste in alcohol was shit.
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``Marshal,'' the Thief drawled. ``I had a feeling you'd be coming.''
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And still she drank, Juniper sneered. \emph{Vivienne} might have grown
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on the Warlord and the rest of the Woe, but the Hellhound had never
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taken to her and never would. The Thief was the worst parts of her
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people crammed together in a single arrogant frame. The orc had learned
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to set aside most the dislike of Callowans she'd been taught as a child,
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admitting to herself that they were no worse than the Soninke save
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perhaps for the occasional petty moralizing. But this one, she was a
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reminder of why it'd taken the orc so long to like Catherine. She was
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hollow in the bone. Orcs and goblins understood, without ever needing to
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be taught, that the heart of the world was kin and clan. The Legions had
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taught Juniper that kin did not necessarily mean blood, or clan her own
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people, and it was that shared understanding that had brought her close
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to Aisha -- who had, herself, been forced to learn to divorce the
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loyalties of her childhood from those that were truly deserved. The
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Taghreb were perhaps the closest thing humans could come to reasonable.
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They understood tethers. Soninke, like Callowans, had no such loyalty in
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them. Instead they worshipped at some abstract altar of principle, a
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mortal-made god of meaninglessness. Climbing the Tower, saving the
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Kingdom: there was little difference save in petty details. The years
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had taught Juniper that though the people might be fools, individuals
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need not be. That the things she found so disgusting gathered mostly at
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the top.
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But Vivienne Dartwick was the incarnation of everything she despised
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about Callow.
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An admitted thief, one who took but did not contribute. Were she an orc,
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she'd have ended up in a cooking pot by now. And while she professed
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high ideals, unlike Catherine she didn't even have the decency to bleed
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for them. The Thief was not a fighter, only a parasite. Like a tick she
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had nestled over new warmth when her previous host died. And had made
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herself useful enough since that she could not simply be carved up and
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eaten like she so richly deserved. Just looking at her made Juniper want
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to bare her fangs. The antipathy, she knew, was shared. The occasional
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contemptuous looks shot behind Catherine's back made that eminently
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clear, though they were both professional enough that they worked
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together without trouble. Or had, anyway, when Catherine was awake.
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Without her between them the Hellhound had a feeling the knives would
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finally come out.
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``War council is to be held,'' Juniper growled. ``You will attend.''
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The Thief's brow rose, almost mockingly.
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``I am not a member of the Army of Callow,'' she said.
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``You're a spymistress,'' the orc said. ``A hoarder of secrets. Now is
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the time to spit them out.''
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``I know quite a bit that you don't, Marshal,'' the wretch agreed with
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an easy smile. ``But little of import to the battle. Which seems,
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regardless, not in the process of being waged.''
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Juniper's blood ran hot, but she ground her fangs. She would not be
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baited so easily.
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``We do not know when she will wake up,'' the Hellhound said.
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``Which makes most planning irrelevant,'' Thief replied. ``Without
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Catherine and Masego, we lack the teeth to go on the offensive. Plan
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your defence, Marshal. You do not need me standing at your table as a
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prop displaying your influence to do so.''
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That the tick would so familiarly refer to people she'd once sought to
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kill had the orc's fury spiking. She knew hat humans did not have the
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same understanding of blood feuds, but that insolent girl should be in
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\emph{pieces}. Already once a traitor, she would turn again. It was only
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a matter of time.
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``So instead of having some use, you'll just sit there and get drunk,''
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Juniper scathingly said. ``What a Named you are. I'd get as much use out
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of a fucking tavern girl.''
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``Do you often fuck tavern girls, Marshal Juniper?'' the woman asked
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smilingly. ``My word, I had no idea. Still, this is a little bawdy for
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idle conversation don't you think?''
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Juniper's fists clenched. Without ever moving, the Named had changed
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from a lounging wastrel to an amused aristocrat. She was making an
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\emph{effort} to be be infuriating.
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``I will remain here,'' the Thief said, ``and watch over them. If you do
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not believe there are agents of Malicia in this host, you are a bloody
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fool. My hours are better spent keeping an eye out for a knife than
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repeating numbers you already know for an audience of officers.''
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There was much that Juniper wanted to reply. That having her at the
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council would allay fears, serve as a display of unity. That a fucking
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spymistress had no right to gainsay the orders of the Marshal of Callow,
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especially not on campaign. But there was no point, so she held her
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tongue. Turning around without another word, she left.
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She had a battle to win, with or without help.
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---
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Rozala slumped into her seat, exhausted beyond belief. Night had only
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just fallen, but she knew the work would continue through the dark and
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unto dawn. In the first few hours, when chaos and panic had spread
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across the host, she'd desperately struggled to restore order. There was
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a very real chance the crusaders would have routed, if not for the
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heroes. They'd walked among the soldiers, helping and healing and
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soothing away fear. The Princess of Aequitan was still sure at least
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thousand levies would disappear overnight. After the tides stopped and
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the scalding rain ceased, the reports had begun coming in. Even now it
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was hard to tell how many had died, over less time than it took to boil
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a kettle of water. Early estimates were at nine thousand dead and at
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least half that out of the fight.
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Rozala Malanza closed her eyes, and dealt with the truth that she had
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just commanded the most disastrous military offensive in living memory.
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And the battle had begun \emph{so} well. The Heavenly Fences had allowed
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her to trample nearly a seventh of the enemy army within the first hour,
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badly crippling the enemy's ranged abilities: without the crossbowmen,
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the casualties involved in taking the palisades from the Army of Callow
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would have been greatly lowered. The siege engines would have taken
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their due, yes, but the Fences would have limited the damage. It would
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have been a rough affair, no two ways about it, but most definitely a
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battle she could win. And Rozala had made plans to hit hard and fast
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enough at least part of the enemy's supplies could be seized before they
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retreated through a gate. Enough that starvation could be kept at bay at
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least a sliver of the way to Hedges. Now there was most a mile of frozen
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marshland between her army and the enemy's, and her men were two days
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away from beginning to boil grass to have something to fill their
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stomachs. There was a very real chance she would have to order horses
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butchered, if it came to that, and she could already heal the other
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royals howling about their expensive war horses getting the axe to feed
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mere peasants.
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The dark-haired princess shivered. Part of it was that she was still
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drenched and cold: after the first reports, she'd handed the reins to
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her officers and gone with the rank and file to drag survivors and
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wounded out of the water. It was the least of what she owed for today's
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debacle. The other princes and princesses and followed suit, even Prince
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Arnaud who she doubted had ever done a hard day's work in his life. It'd
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been a given they would, after word spread she'd gone out personally.
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They couldn't be seen to care less about the soldiers, could they? The
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thought was uncharitable, but not necessarily untrue. Rozala's mother
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had always taught her that command was her right, but also her
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responsibility. A general who spent lives frivolously was just a
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butcher, and the Malanzas were no such thing. Ambitious, perhaps, but
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their roots were that of ancient and famous generals. Her distant
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ancestor Lorenzo Malanza had been the one to conquer the northern half
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of the Dominion of Levant for First Prince Charles Merovins. His
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splendid victory at Tartessos was the subject of song to this day. And
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she had shamed that memory, she thought with a grimace. By her failure,
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but also the other reason her hands were trembling.
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Gods, she'd been so small. And no great beauty either, with that strong
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nose and those razor-sharp cheekbones. She'd talked like a sloppy
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commoner, all insults and insinuations where the situation demanded
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poise. And Rozala had not been able to hold back, trading verbal blow
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for blow with the same nonchalant woman who had just \emph{dropped half
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a lake from the sky}. The knowledge of how easily the Black Queen could
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have killed any of them had the heroes not accompanied the delegation
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would haunt her thoughts for years to come. What kind of a woman could
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do something like that, just speak a word and nigh-instantly slaughter
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thousands? The princess was not unfamiliar with war, but this
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was\ldots{} something else. A titan stepping on ants. She did not blame
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those who would desert in the night. And now she understood the fervour
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in the First Prince's eyes, when she spoke of the evils in the east.
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Rozala reached for the bottle of \emph{eau-de-vie} she'd sent for,
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breaking etiquette by pouring her own cup and downing it in a single
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gulp. The liquor warmed her enough that she did not send a servant for a
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blanket. Neither did she change out of the wet clothing, though. Let her
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visitors remember where she had spent her hours.
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The Grey Pilgrim was the first to arrive. Rozala rose to her feet, and
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bowed with genuine respect. The old Levantine had saved hundreds of
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lives after personally destroying the Black Queen's weapon, wreathed in
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Light as he spread warmth and healing wherever he went. The former had
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been the most important of the two. How many would that have lost to the
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deathly cold, if not for the pulses of heat?
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``Chosen,'' the princess said. ``I am in your debt for your toil. Any
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boon in my power to grant is yours to claim.''
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A dangerous thing to offer Named, she knew, but looking at the exhausted
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old man who looked like was folding into himself Rozala did not
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hesitate. He had saved lives in her care, and Malanzas did not leave
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debts unpaid. The Pilgrim looked at her through eyes gone rheumy and
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clasped her hand with wrinkled fingers.
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``You owe me nothing, child,'' he whispered. ``Would that I could have
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done more.''
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``Through winter and summer, my word stands,'' Rozala formally replied
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in the old Arlesite oath. ``So long as the Heavens watch and Creation
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withstands.''
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Whether he ever asked the favour of her or not was irrelevant. She would
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not allow kindness to go unanswered. The hero smiled sadly.
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``This is not the first or last tragedy this war will bring,'' he said.
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``Steel yourself, Rozala Malanza. The worst is yet to come.''
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``A prophecy, Chosen?'' Rozala asked.
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``An old man's intuition,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, shaking his head.
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``Darkness grows. I fear greater evils than Catherine Foundling are yet
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to come.''
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The dark-haired princess' blood ran cold. Worse than the monster who'd
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faced half a dozen Chosen on her own and brought down the sky? She could
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think of few greater evils in existence, save for the Tower itself and
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the Kingdom of the Dead. Neither thought was comforting.
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``I hear your guidance,'' Rozala said, bowing her head in thanks.
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``May I?'' the hero asked.
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Uncertain what he meant, the princess nodded in agreement regardless.
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The glimmer of light was barely visible, but warmth washed over her.
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Permeated every part of her body, chasing away cold and weariness and
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fear. Like she was sixteen again, fearless and ready to rise against
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Hasenbach to avenge her mother.
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``It will be a long night,'' the Pilgrim said, panting lightly.
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She helped the elder into a seat afterwards, seeing his legs shake, and
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broke etiquette again to pour him a glass of liquor and press it into
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his hand. Chuckling ruefully, the Levantine sipped at it. He made a
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face.
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``Eau-de-vie,'' he said. ``The things you Alamans drink. Ah, what I
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would not do for a good pear brandy. It always tastes like Alava.''
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One of the great cities of the Dominion, Rozala recalled, nestled among
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tall hills. Famous for its orchards and its herds. It had held on a
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decade longer than the rest of Levant when the Principate invaded, and
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even after the city was besieged the inhabitants preferred to burn it
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and flee into the hills rather than live under Proceran rule.
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``Your birthplace, Chosen?'' she asked, returning to her seat.
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``Levante is where I drew my first breath,'' the old man replied. ``But
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Alava is where I grew ton manhood. It is where I will die as well, if
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the Heavens ever allow these old bones to rest.''
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``Creation will be lessened for the loss,'' the princess said, and to
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her surprise found she meant every word.
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``Creation will go on,'' the Pilgrim smiled tiredly. ``We are never
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quite so important as we like to think.''
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She would have enjoyed quiet conversation with the man a while longer,
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but it was not to be. Prince Amadis Milenan strode into the tent, his
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embroidered tunic pristine and his hair perfectly coiffed. It was not
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enough to hide the tightness around his eyes. Behind him was a short man
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in a leather coat that went down to his knees, covering loose trousers
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and shirt of coloured silk. The Rogue Sorcerer, as he called himself. Of
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the Chosen, it was him Rozala knew best: they had spent long hours
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together planning the battle and his role in it as leader of the
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wizards. She had found him genteel and polite, surprisingly so for a man
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whose Name implied a certain uncouthness. The princess began to rise,
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but Amadis held out his hand.
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``No need,'' the Prince of Iserre said. ``Not after this kind of day.''
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The princess hid her surprise. She'd half-expected that after today's
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debacle he would seek to undermine her position with recriminations. He
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still might, regardless of this unexpected olive branch, so her guard
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would remain up.
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``Princess Malanza,'' the Rogue Sorcerer greeted her, inclining his head
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before taking a seat.
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``Chosen,'' she replied, just as courteously.
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Amadis let out a long breath after sitting down, a long moment passing
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before he spoke.
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``This was,'' he said, ``not the way we had anticipated this battle
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would go.''
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An understatement if there ever was one, Rozala thought. The use of
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\emph{we} did not escape her attention. Blame was not being put solely
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on her shoulders.
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``The failure was mine,'' she said anyway.
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``We'd prepared for many things, Your Grace,'' the Rogue quietly said.
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``But the sky opening up to drop a lake was beyond our predictions.
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There is no fault in this, save in believing that our opponent would not
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be so monstrous.''
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``I agree,'' Amadis said calmly. ``I cast no doubts on your competence,
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Rozala. Your initial success is proof enough of it. There will be no
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|
talk of removing you from command.''
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The Princess of Aequitan inclined her head in silent thanks. \emph{Did
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this shake you enough you are taking this seriously Amadis?} she
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thought. \emph{Or are you simply keeping me at the head of the host to
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scapegoat if the situation further worsens?} No matter. For now, it was
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still her battle to fight.
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``I must begin, then, with a delicate question,'' she said.
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``This\ldots{} gate. Should we expect another if we attempt a second
|
|
offensive?''
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If so, this campaign was over. Rozala would not throw away half a
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hundred thousand lives for pride, even if refusing to do so ruined her.
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|
They had learned the enemy's trick, but the enemy would have learned
|
|
theirs as well. There was no guarantee the Pilgrim would twice succeed
|
|
in breaking the gate. The two Chosen traded glances.
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|
``That is a complicated question,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``Against
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|
most other villains, I would say that forceful shattering of the gate
|
|
might actually kill them. The amount of power and involvement in
|
|
crafting such a thing is staggering, and the break would lead to vicious
|
|
backlash.''
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|
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|
``Yet Catherine Foundling is not merely a villain,'' the Pilgrim said.
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|
``She is a titled Duchess of Winter. Perhaps the last fae of that realm,
|
|
if I interpret the Augur's words correctly. She is no longer human, in a
|
|
sense. What would destroy the likes of the Warlock or the Carrion Lord
|
|
might not affect her at all. Her nature has grown other.''
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|
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|
``We have seen neither the Black Queen nor the Hierophant since the
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|
battle,'' Prince Amadis noted. ``To be frank, I was expecting an
|
|
Imperial offensive while we were in disarray. We might very well have
|
|
lost the battle if one had followed.''
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|
``I'll concede that much,'' Rozala said. ``Yet there might have been
|
|
other limitations at work. I am no scholar of sorcery, but it occurs to
|
|
me that such a great blow -- even if it had not been shattered -- might
|
|
have incapacitated the two of them for some time. The duration, however,
|
|
is beyond my ability to theorize. We may very well be facing another
|
|
gate come morning.''
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|
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|
``We'll know it's coming, this time,'' the Rogue Sorcerer darkly said.
|
|
``It's not impossible to contain the flow until the gate itself can be
|
|
broken, though I'll admit it'll be difficult.''
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|
The princess put her hands in her lap, resisting the urge to brush back
|
|
her hair.
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|
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|
``There are too many uncertainties,'' she said. ``I am reluctant to
|
|
commit to an assault when everyone I send might be drowned. And that is
|
|
without addressing the difficulties of an assault. Wading through the
|
|
marshlands will be difficult, and it might be weeks before the soil
|
|
drinks the water whole. That means having to march around it, and likely
|
|
splitting the host in two.''
|
|
|
|
``A probing attack come morning, perhaps,'' Prince Amadis suggested.
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|
|
|
\emph{Even a probe could see a few thousand men die screaming to find
|
|
out the answer to a simple question}, Rozala thought. The alternative,
|
|
however, was retreat. Through hostile land, while so low on supplies
|
|
they were barely worth mentioning at all. The Black Queen had offered to
|
|
provide food for a march back, but there was no guarantee that offer
|
|
would still hold after today. And if it did not, the amount of men she'd
|
|
lose to a small-scale offensive would be a pittance compared to what
|
|
hunger would kill. That was without even considering the reports that
|
|
the Duchess Kegan's army was crossing the river far to the north. The
|
|
numbers there were said to be over ten thousand, and the Deoraithe were
|
|
infamous for their skill at \emph{la petite guerre}. Harassment and
|
|
ambushes, without ever giving battle.
|
|
|
|
``This is not the kind of decision that can be lightly made,'' the
|
|
Princess of Aequitan said. ``And not without knowing all the facts. I
|
|
must recommend we send an envoy to their camp to find out if the queen's
|
|
terms still hold.''
|
|
|
|
Amadis' lips thinned in displeasure.
|
|
|
|
``Surely you're not suggesting retreat,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``I am reluctant to even consider it,'' Rozala admitted. ``Yet if the
|
|
Black Queen is unharmed and the terms hold, it may be that we have no
|
|
other choice. We cannot dally. Time works against us more than they.''
|
|
|
|
``I would accompany your envoy, if you permit,'' the Grey Pilgrim said,
|
|
breaking his silence.
|
|
|
|
He looked half-asleep, even now. The princess kept her scepticism away
|
|
from her face. Had the Chosen not tried to take the villain's life but a
|
|
few hours ago? Still, she did not pretend to understand the ways of
|
|
Named. For their sort, attempted killing might be no great enmity. The
|
|
Prince of Iserre watched everyone at the table silently, then slowly
|
|
nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Envoy will be sent,'' he agreed. ``And to speak with only the Black
|
|
Queen, so her state may be assessed. Should she prove incapacitated,
|
|
however\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
Princess Rozala grimly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Then we will settle the score in full,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
Malanzas, after all, did not leave debts unpaid.
|