449 lines
21 KiB
TeX
449 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-kaleidoscope-iii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Kaleidoscope III}\label{interlude-kaleidoscope-iii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-kaleidoscope-iii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Kaleidoscope III}
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\epigraph{``The meaning of the exercise of war is the destruction of your
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foe's ability to wage it. `Victory' does not exist as an independent
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entity; it is merely the manifestation of the enemy's defeat.''}{Extract from `Considerations on Warfare' by Marshal Grem One-Eye}
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It would come down to steel and blood. The Thief had failed, not that
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Juniper held much hope for success. The woman was not as clever a liar
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as she believed, and the enemy was cunning. Much as she disliked the
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former heroine, the orc refrained from spending a quarter hour verbally
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ripping her to pieces. She had more important duties to see to, now that
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near forty thousand crusaders and their \emph{heroic} hired killers were
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on the march. Heroes, huh. Much like knights, Juniper had never thought
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much of them. All a knight could claim to be was a killer on a horse.
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The rest was pageantry. And heroes, well, the Hellhound had never cared
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for the smell of hypocrisy. `The Heavens told me to do it' did not
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qualify as a valid excuse under Legion regulations, and those were the
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closest thing to fair laws Creation had ever seen as far as she was
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concerned.
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``She bought us a few hours, at least,'' Aisha said.
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The two of them were alone in the tent, at least until the rest of the
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general staff arrived. Juniper cast a look at the Taghreb, eyes
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lingering on soft skin of her bare wrists. Such delicate appearance, for
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such a dangerous woman. The urge to sink her teeth into the warm veins
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warred with the urge to feel the softness with her own rough hands. The
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orc cleared her throat.
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``For all the good it's done,'' she said. ``We're in for a red day.''
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The olive-skinned Staff Tribune flicked her an amused glance.
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``The Fifteenth's eternal motto,'' she teased.
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The orc did not allow the laughter in those bright eyes to distract her.
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``We have a choice to make,'' she growled. ``Static or moving.''
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Princess Malanza was splitting her host in half, roughly fifteen
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thousand on each side of the marshlands advancing in thick columns. It'd
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been too much to hope for the crusaders would try going through the
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water. It didn't take Grem One-Eye to see that'd mean easy targets for
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Juniper's engines, and Rozala Malanza had already proved she was no
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fool.
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``Legion doctrine dictates retreat to a hardened position, when met with
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superior force,'' Aisha said.
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Their current position was as hardened as field fortifications could
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allow, so the traditional call would be remaining behind the palisades
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and preparing for a hard fight. It meant, though, surrendering the
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initiative to the enemy. And the Hellhound had been burned playing
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number games with this foe before. She was wary of a repeat.
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``We could have local superiority, if we sent enough men to hit a single
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column,'' Juniper said. ``And possibly break that side before the other
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one gets anywhere close.''
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``Without heroes on the field, it would be risky,'' the Taghreb said.
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``With them, it nears wishful thinking.''
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Her Warlord had picked a fucking bad time to take a nap, that much was
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undeniable. Were there even half as many heroes, Juniper would not
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hesitate to strike anyway. Twelve, though, was too many for her tastes.
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Even if all they did was prop up morale wherever they stood it might be
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enough to tip the balance. If the Saint of Swords or the Grey Pilgrim
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happened to be with either army, massacre was the word that came to
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mind.
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``We let them march without contest, and by afternoon we'll be
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surrounded and up to our neck in Named,'' Juniper said. ``Even if we
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don't give battle, we have to slow them down.''
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``We have munitions,'' Aisha pointed out.
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They'd both known that, but the point of this conversation was not her
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friend pushing for a plan. The back and forth allowed Juniper to sharpen
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her own thoughts, using Aisha's words as a grindstone.
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``There's a thought,'' the Hellhound mused. ``Not as a weapon, but as
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ground denial. Plaster one flank with goblinfire and hit the other
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column with our full muster.''
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``We'd be leaving our camp exposed,'' the Staff Tribune said. ``We risk
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a wipe if they have a way to cross the marshlands or get around the
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goblinfire.''
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``They're leaving their own exposed,'' Juniper noted. ``They've got at
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most a few thousand soldiers there that're fighting fit. And they're
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serving as Malanza's strategic reserve. Which means this isn't just
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testing our defence, she's aiming for a full victory.''
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``Assuming they know our queen is incapacitated, they might be under the
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impression they need to hurry before she awakens,'' Aisha said.
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``That has sense,'' Juniper said. ``And if true, it means the enemy is
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\emph{committed}. They will not withdraw because of losses.''
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``Malanza's not been shy about trading casualties so far,'' the Taghreb
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shrugged. ``This is not fresh observation.''
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Juniper shook her head.
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``No,'' she replied. ``It is. If you're right then static defence is not
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an option. They'll not retreat with sundown no matter how many we kill,
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just send wave after wave against the palisades through the night.
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They're in it to the death, and that means the only way we make it
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through this is by forcing a retreat.''
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Aisha's eyes narrowed.
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``And the only thing that would make Princess Malanza call one is the
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risk of a defeat so major her army would not recover from it,'' the
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Staff Tribune said.
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``Which we can't inflict by force of arms,'' the Hellhound said. ``Or by
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Named superiority.''
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That meant the effect had to be obtained indirectly, through strategic
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means. Juniper licked her chops hungrily. It was a puzzle. One where the
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slightest misstep would doom her army and likely Callow with it.
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Gods, she'd missed this.
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---
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Captain Pierre Dulac squinted into the sun. The Callowans were fucking
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crazier than he'd thought, because he was looking at a force of at least
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four thousand. The Brabantine had served in the army of Prince Arnaud
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for a decade and a half now -- loyalty to the principality of one's
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birth was all well and good, but the Cantalins paid better -- and fought
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in four of the Great War's largest pitched battles. He'd been known to
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make the boast that he'd killed someone from every principality in
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Procer, after a few drinks, and for all he knew it might even be true.
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He had, to put it bluntly, gotten a handle on the waging of war. No
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fantassin lived long enough to make it to his current rank if they
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didn't, much less rise to command of a free company as he had. Which was
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why he was surprised the enemy had abandoned perfectly good palisades
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and the cover of their war machines to sally out against the column he
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was the vanguard of. Spitting out the ball of redleaf he'd been sucking
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on all morning, the captain slowed his march so his second would catch
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up. Pierre often led from the front when on the march, though he'd
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gotten old enough he left the sword-waving to younger sorts when battle
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started.
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``Captain,'' Lieutenant Francesca, better known as Belle, greeted him.
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The southerner was a massive beast of a woman, built like an ox and
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hairy as one. Some Lycaonese fuck had taken off the tip of her nose with
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a blade at the Battle of Aisne, which only added to the gruesome
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spectacle that was her. Not a nice woman. She was quick to use the knife
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and cheated at dice. But the men were fucking terrified of her, and that
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had uses.
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``Tell me my leaves didn't go bad, Belle,'' he said. ``I'm not
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hallucinating that army, am I?
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``I see them,'' the lieutenant grunted.
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``Fuck,'' Pierre feelingly said. ``I was hoping they'd stay holed up and
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we could trick another company into leading the first wave.''
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``Callowans,'' the woman shrugged. ``Hicks one and all. You want to send
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a messenger to the prince to ask for orders?''
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The captain grimaced. He'd rather not if he could avoid it. Their column
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was following the western bank of that creepy magic swamp, from a bird's
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eye view, and unlike the other army they had no cavalry backing them.
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Princess Malanza had gone to command the host with horse, like a good
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little Arlesite trying to win wars one charge at a time, and that left
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Prince Arnaud and Princess Adeline sharing command over this column.
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Pierre didn't know shit about the Princess of Orne, but everyone and
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their sister knew Prince Arnaud was a proper twat. He was a twat who
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paid well and on time, so Pierre's company remained in his service, but
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the fantassin wasn't eager at the notion of following the military
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wisdom of the Prince of Cantal. Like all princes, he wasn't known to
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send his retinue into the breach when there were spare fantassins lying
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around. Better to take a look on their own terms, the captain figured,
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without any `inspired' instructions about when they could retreat.
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``Rustle up the last ten men who pissed you off, Belle,'' Pierre Dulac
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said. ``We're going to have a closer look at whatever they're cooking
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up.''
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---
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Tribune Abigail of Summerholm should have known someone was out to fuck
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her when she got offered the promotion after Akua's Folly. Sure the pay
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increase was nice, and word had got around she'd been in the frontlines
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during both the Arcadian Campaign and Second Liesse -- which made it
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really easy to trick strapping young lads from home into her bed, if
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they were as dumb as they were pretty. Plenty of those floating around,
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it was the type that made shit life choices just like her and enrolled
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in the Army of Callow. On the other hand, she'd been transferred from
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the command of General Hune to that of General Nauk. The godsdamned
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Princekiller himself. The orc looked like a torch had eaten half his
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face, and acted like he was going to eat half Creation to even that out.
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Of course they'd put her under the command of the one man in the Army of
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Callow who was guaranteed to be sent over and over again into the worst
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possible messes. Abigail had bought a sack of leeches in Laure and paid
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someone to drop them in Tribune Ashan's bedding when no one was looking.
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That fucker was the one who'd recommended her for promotion.
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Worst of all, her cohort was green as grass. Oh, sure, the Hellhounds
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had drilled them to collapse and taken everyone through a brutal
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gauntlet of field manoeuvres and war games. But they'd not looked death
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in the eye properly until yesterday and this was already beginning to
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shape into a worst fucking mess than Akua's Folly, which was really
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saying something. Three thousand dead legionaries within the first hour,
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because the priests on the other side had found some loophole in the
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Book of All Things. \emph{See if I ever give alms to the godsdamned
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House of Light again}, the tribune grimly thought. Could have been her
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down there, if the Hellhound had decided on different tactics. The Black
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Queen had seen their priestly fuckery and raised them mass slaughter,
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which had been good for morale. Until rumours she'd been wounded by the
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spell began circulating, anyway. Another rumour had immediately started
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going around that it was a trick and she was baiting the crusaders, but
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Abigail could recognize the work of the Jacks when she heard it. The
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Queen of Callow was having her beauty sleep while the enemy marched.
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\emph{Rank hath its privileges.}
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``Tribune,'' someone spoke from behind her.
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Abigail spat and turned to look at Captain Krolem. The orc was standing
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stiffly, broad arms visibly itching to salute. It'd taken her a while to
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wean him off that. Fresh meat from the Steppes, this one, passed through
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a recruiting camp in the Fields and now a proper loyal subject of the
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crown of Callow. Now that the Tower had forbidden recruitment in Praes,
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his sort was rarer addition.
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``I'm listening,'' she said. ``But if it's the fucking sappers again-''
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``It isn't, ma'am,'' the orc assured her. ``Our outer line reports enemy
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movement.''
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``So they have eyes,'' Abigail noted. ``Definitely picked the right
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people for the watch.''
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``Aside from the column,'' the orc clarified. ``A single tenth of
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Procerans. Scouts, we believe.''
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Ah, \emph{shit}. Her cohort was far ahead of where the sappers were
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plotting whatever Marshal Juniper had sent them here to do, but she had
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instructions from the Princekiller to stomp hard on any crusaders coming
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to have a look. General Nauk had made it clear his forces would not be
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retreating until the sappers were ready, and someone out to kill Abigail
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had decided it was a great idea for her cohort to be out on the front
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lines. At least she wasn't the poor bastard whose cohort was stuck next
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to the creepy murder swamp full of dead people to anchor the flank.
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Hells of a silver lining.
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``Send out a line,'' she told the captain. ``And since I'm in such a
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giving mood, they can eat whoever they kill.''
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``Kind of you, ma'am,'' Krolem replied, sounding absolutely serious.
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Of course he was. Tribune Abigail worried her lip and stared at the
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column in the distance. An hour, maybe, before the enemy was in
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engagement range. They'd been waiting out here for two. Maybe the
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Heavens would smile on her for once, and the sappers would be done soon.
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She looked up at the sunny sky, grimacing.
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``Come on, you assholes,'' she said. ``I got to sermons thrice a year,
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that's gotta count for something.''
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---
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``Only four thousand, Your Graces,'' Pierre said, bowing again.
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He wasn't sure if etiquette required it, but with royals it was always
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better to be on the safe side. The Princess of Orne had turned out to be
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young and easy on the eyes, not that he allowed himself to look. That
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was a good way to end up blinded. Neither she nor Prince Arnaud had
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bothered to dismount from their horses to receive his report after he
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was ushered into the presence of greatness. He was pretty sure each
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horse was worth at least ten times the war chest he'd accumulated after
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over a decade of soldiering. They were, he grimly thought, probably
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better fed too. His company had bought food and kept a hidden stash
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since, because relying on the largesse of princes was a good way to end
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up starving, but even their own reserves were beginning to run out. The
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horses, he could not help but notice, looked perfectly healthy.
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\emph{Better a prince's mount than a peasant, eh?}
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``And you did not approach close enough to ascertain what they were
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doing there,'' Prince Arnaud of Cantal said, pawing at his wisps of a
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beard.
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The disapproval was clear, as was the implied question of why he had
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not. Somehow the fantassin doubted that the answer of `the orcs they
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sent out looked a little too eager' would earn him much favour here. He
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cleared his throat.
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``As my men and I had already come close enough to see their formation,
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I judged it more important to return and make sure that knowledge was
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brought to you,'' he lied.
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It was one thing to kill for Prince Arnaud's silver, another to die for
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it. The man didn't pay \emph{that} well.
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``Prudent,'' the Princess of Orne said, tone neutral. ``And what can you
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tell us about their formation?''
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``They're digging in, Your Grace,'' Pierre said, bowing again. ``There
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was no reserve, but there were troops detached on their flank to prevent
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easy encirclement. It looked like they were preparing to fight.''
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Princess Adeline frowned.
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``With four thousand?'' she said. ``We've more than thrice that
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number.''
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The captain had not been addressed directly, and so decided not risk
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speaking up.
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``Were there many mages, Captain?'' Prince Arnaud asked him.
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``Not on the front lines, Your Grace,'' Pierre replied. ``I cannot speak
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for further back.''
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``It seems a rather obvious trap,'' the Princess of Orne mused.
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``They might be a mere sacrifice to slow us down,'' Prince Arnaud said.
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``Or a feint by the Callowans,'' the other royal said. ``Trying to give
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us pause without any true threat.''
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``We can simply smash through,'' Prince Arnaud said lightly. ``Why even
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bother with battle order, against such feeble opposition?''
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Pierre winced. Going in half-cocked against the bastard child of the
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Legions of Terror would get a lot of people killed before numbers won
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the day. The captain had never fought legionaries before, but he'd heard
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stories.
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``Let us not blunder at this late hour, Arnaud,'' the Princess of Orne
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coldly said. ``A careful approach is needed. We give battle only when
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properly arrayed.''
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``if you insist,'' Prince Arnaud indifferently said. ``Fuss, if you feel
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the need. The Principate will prevail regardless.''
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Pierre Dulac silently wondered when they going to remember they had not
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dismissed him. And, perhaps, if it was time to politely inquire whether
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the Princess of Orne was still hiring.
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---
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Princess Rozala Malanza watched the enemy host through her mother's old
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Baalite eye, the clever arrangement of lenses within the wooden tube
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allowing her to study in detail even at a distance. Ashurans demanded a
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fortune for every single one of these, but the imitations from Nicae
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were of much shoddier quality. That the Thalassocracy would remain so
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tight-fisted over a device they had not even invented themselves -- it
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came from across the Tyrian Sea -- was typical of that grasping gaggle
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of merchants and sailors.
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``More than twelve thousand,'' she said.
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``They mean to give battle?'' Prince Amadis frowned. ``Would it not have
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been a superior notion to do so from atop the palisades?''
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``Maybe,'' the Princess of Aequitan hedged. ``The Legions of Terror are
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known for their skill at sieges, but this is the Black Queen's army.
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They made their reputation on pitched battles.''
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``Then why even raise them?'' the Prince of Iserre murmured.
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``Something's changed,'' Rozala said. ``Their general has a plan.''
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``One would assume,'' Amadis drily replied. ``I don't suppose you could
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hazard a guess as to the nature of that plan?''
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The dark-haired princess frowned. The enemy should have perhaps nineteen
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thousand soldiers left. Assuming at least two thousand had been left to
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guard the baggage train, the soldiers in front of them represented
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around three quarters of the Army of Callow. That left a rough quarter
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unaccounted for, a fact that was making her uneasy. The enemy could not
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hope to hold back the other column with those numbers, they'd be
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encircled and slaughtered to the last. And, to be frank, if defeat in
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detail was to be attempted it was Adeline's host that should have been
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the target. Rozala had stripped it of cavalry specifically to tempt such
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a blunder since the Saint of Swords was with that army.
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``They could be attempting to delay us until sundown,'' Rozala finally
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said. ``To prevent us from encircling their camp, counting on my being
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reluctant to conduct war after dark.''
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``You do not sound convinced,'' the Prince of Iserre observed.
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``It would be the first major mistake by their commander,'' she said.
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``I was taught it is a rule of war that when a skilled enemy makes an
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obvious mistake it is no such thing.''
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``It may no longer be the same commander,'' Prince Amadis said. ``Their
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Marshal would hold authority, in the Black Queen's absence.''
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``Juniper of the Red Shields,'' Rozala muttered. ``Hasenbach's reports
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did not mark her a fool. She is alleged to be one of the finest
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graduates of their War College.''
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``A skilled second does not necessarily mean a skilled first,'' the man
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replied. ``I will not question you in matters of war, but what seems
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like foolishness might simply be youth and desperation.''
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\emph{She might be young but she's fought just as many battles as the
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rest of us}, the princess thought. Yet the Princess of Aequitan could
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not remember a single of these where the incipient Black Queen was not
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holding overall command. It was a plausible explanation that Amadis had
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offered. Yet she still felt as if she was being invited to make a
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mistake. It was irksome she could not quite put it into words. It
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was\ldots{} an alignment. Rozala knew that dwindling supplies were
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forcing her to be aggressive. She'd only risked splitting the host in
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two because heroes accompanied both halves, and there should be no
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villains left to fight them. The Wild Hunt might strike unexpectedly, so
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she'd left soldiers to guard her camp and wounded, but everything else
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she had to field was on the march. Her armies were moving in strength,
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but there was a certain fragility to that strength. All of this together
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was bringing muted dread she could not explain.
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``We wait,'' she finally said. ``The other column has orders to signal
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if they engage the enemy or find their path unobstructed. We will
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proceed when we receive either.''
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An hour passed with two armies eyeing each other across the field until
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sorcery rose into the sky. Three red streams. Princess Adeline was
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attacking an enemy force.
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The choice was out of her hands, then. She could not allow the army
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before her the possibility of disengaging or reinforcing the other side
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of the marsh.
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---
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Watching the streaks of red in the sky from her open tent, Juniper
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allowed the reports spoke to her to go unanswered. The enemy on the left
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flank was moving to engage Nauk. The enemy on the right was moving to
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tie up the army she'd put in front of them. She looked down at the map
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on the table, the figurines she had set down.
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``That,'' she murmured through her fangs, ``was a mistake.''
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The Hellhound smiled, and in her mind's eye she loosed the arrow.
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