465 lines
20 KiB
TeX
465 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-48-shadows}{%
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\chapter{Shadows}\label{chapter-48-shadows}}
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\epigraph{``A passable plan done in a day will nearly always beat an
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exquisite scheme requiring a month.''}{Dread Empress Regalia II}
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Truth be told, I'd never been enamoured with the thought of travelling.
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Even if I'd never become Black's apprentice I would have left Laure
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eventually -- I'd has plans to attend the War College, what felt like
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half a lifetime ago -- but unlike some of the other girls at the
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orphanage my heartbeat had never quickened at the notion of journeying
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across Calernia. There'd been this girl I'd shared a room with, Gods,
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what'd been her name? Emily, maybe. Something that sounded like that.
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She'd found work at a street stall near the market just so she could buy
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a rough map of the continent and plan her travels when she came of age.
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She'd stolen the only volume of Anabas the Ashuran's travelogues the
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orphanage had and read it so often the pages had been worn out. That'd
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never been for me. Having a gander at the most beautiful parts of
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southern Callow had been appealing, and I'd had vague plans to visit the
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Duchy of Daoine for as long as I could remember, but my interest in
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foreign vistas had always been limited.
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And yet here I was now, camping with a few companions by the shore of a
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lake I doubted any human had seen in centuries. Few Praesi maps gave
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name to the body of water to the northeast of the Kingdom of the Dead,
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but the Procerans called it the Chalice. There was likely a story there,
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but not one I knew. It was beautiful, I had to the admit. The poisonous
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fumes that hung over the Dead King's lands did not reach this far north,
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leaving me with unimpeded sight of a misty lake with sapphire-blue
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waters. The beach was pebbles of pale and grey, with the rare splash of
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colour breaking the mould. The winds were restless, here, and the
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dawning evening pleasantly cool. Even at noon, when the day was warmest
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most of the Woe wore cloaks. Unlike me they did not welcome to the touch
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of the cold. I palmed a stone and sent it skidding across the waters,
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the final plop surprisingly loud to my ears.
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Hakram had dug a fire pit earlier and Indrani was now making some sort
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of sordid stew out of the fish she'd caught with her bare hands,
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standing hip-deep in the waters. It felt oddly domestic to watch them
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bicker around the flames, arguing about how much salt should go in a
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meal. Vivienne was napping right through it, huddled inside a pile of
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blankets close enough to the fire to feel the warmth of the flames. The
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last two had less carefree matters to attend to. I'd asked Masego to
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reach out to the Observatory the moment my little chat with Cordelia
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Hasenbach came to an end, but even with Akua as a helper the
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preparations had taken some time. He'd warned me the ritual had high
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chances of failure. Though the Whitecaps weren't in the way, up here,
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the distance was massive. It'd taken three attempts before he succeeded
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mid-afternoon. Fadila had been there, luckily enough, though what she'd
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had to tell us had taken the wind right out of me. She only knew so
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much, though, so I'd ordered the Observatory to serve as a relay for
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another ritual at dusk. Juniper would know more.
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I glanced at the tall tower of ice I'd formed to speak with the First
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Prince, which now served as the seat of Hierophant's rituals. I could
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feel the ebb and flow of sorcery within, though it'd not reached that
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palpable crescendo of active scrying. I tossed another stone and let the
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sound of Indrani slapping Hakram with a ladle -- clearly stolen from the
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royal kitchens by Vivienne, as it was pure silver and there was a
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suspicious hole where the Fairfax heraldry would be -- until he
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submitted to her demands of another pinch of salt. It was calming. I was
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in great need of that, right now. The sun was dipping into the lake with
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a riot of red and gold, when Akua came for me. She said nothing, scarlet
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eyes hooded. She'd grown better at reading my moods, when idle talk
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would grate on my nerves instead of provide appreciated distraction. I
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passed the others on the way to the ice, waving a hand when Indrani
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called out, and found Masego crouched on the ground.
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``Catherine,'' he said without turning. ``I believe we've stabilized the
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formula properly. There should be no more troubles.''
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``Good work,'' I said.
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``They'll be able to feel that as far south as Keter, at least, if they
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are keeping an eye out,'' he reminded me.
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``Let them,'' I grunted. ``Scry, Masego.''
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He did not comment any further, tracing a few runes out of light that
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set the entire array glowing. I ran my fingers across the back of the
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seat I'd carved myself out of ice before sitting down. A look was enough
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to dismiss Akua, though Masego remained close. If the ritual had issues,
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I expected him to intervene. At the centre of the array lay a dark
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wooden bowl filled with dark waters taken from the Observatory's own
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pools. A sympathetic connection, I thought, and silently praised myself
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for remembering the fancy terms. We'd improved somewhat on the usual
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spell, Hierophant having me weave Winter as he required. When Fadila's
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face appeared in the bowl, it did in the mirrors surrounding me as well.
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``Your Majesty,'' she said, bowing.
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``Mbafeno,'' I mildly replied. ``Any issues on your end?''
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``Marshal Juniper awaits you,'' she replied. ``Shall I proceed?''
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``By all means,'' I said.
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Her face rippled, then vanished, and a heartbeat later I was facing the
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Hellhound's tired gaze. Juniper looked like she'd been put through a
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ringer. If half of what Fadila had said, that might very well be the
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case.
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``Juniper,'' I said. ``Been a while.''
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``Foundling,'' she gravelled. ``I have a dozen fires to put out, so
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let's skip the courtesies.''
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I almost replied with a sardonic \emph{lovely to see you too}, but if
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the situation was as serious as I believed it was no time for banter.
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``I had a talk with Fadila Mbafeno earlier today,'' I said. ``But she's
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constrained to the palace, so most of it was hearsay. I'll need a full
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report.''
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The orc nodded.
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``The Empire just fucked us hard,'' Juniper bluntly said. ``I can't
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actually prove it's them, but it has that Wasteland reek.''
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I grimaced. That'd been Fadila's opinion as well, but I'd hoped she
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might be wrong.
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``How bad was it?'' I asked.
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``Every member of the King's Council is dead,'' she said. ``Around a
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third of your court officials. It was a godsdamned massacre.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``Ratface?'' I quietly asked.
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She shook her head mutely.
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``Knife to the back of the neck,'' she said. ``He wouldn't have felt a
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thing.''
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I closed my eyes. There was a cold, measured part of me that was furious
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I'd been robbed of a skilled Lord Treasurer for who I had no real
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replacement. The rest of me grieved the death of a boy I'd known since
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we were seventeen, children playing war games in the Tower's shadow.
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Ratface had been with me since the beginning, since Rat Company. He'd
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been a friend, one of the few I had left. I inhaled, place the tempest
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of grief and wrath in a box and set it aside. I opened my eyes, calmed.
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``Anne Kendall?'' I asked.
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``First to go,'' Juniper said. ``We think she was one of the primary
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targets.''
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And there went the woman I'd considered my most likely successor to the
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queenship of Callow. I was slightly appalled that my first thought at
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hearing the death of Baroness Anne confirmed was how it'd complicate the
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line of succession, but I would not shy away from the facts. Anne
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Kendall had been a kind soul, a skilled ruler and if not a friend
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someone I had deep respect for. A patriot, of that rare breed that put
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the needs of her people above her own. And she'd been, informally, the
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closest thing to an acceptable successor I had at my court. Malicia --
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and this was her work, of that I had no doubt, for it'd been a crippling
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blow to Callow in too many ways not to be -- had ordered her killed just
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to weaken my position. Fury flared, but I mastered myself. \emph{Anger
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is the death of reason. You need a lucid mind to survive, now.}
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``Merciless Gods,'' I finally said. ``Who holds Laure?''
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``The got the legate I sent to command the garrison and all his staff,''
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Juniper said. ``The highest-ranking officer in the city was a Senior
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Tribune by the name of Abigail. At a guess, they missed her because she
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was on leave. She's been on the rolls since the Arcadian Campaign,
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fought under Nauk at the Battle of the Camps.''
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I frowned.
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``I know of her,'' I said. ``She used to serve under Hune, has a
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Summerholm accent. She's got a handle on the situation?''
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``People went to the streets after your court declared martial law,''
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Juniper replied. ``So she had the palace cellars emptied and every
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winesink in the city do the same on the crown's coin.''
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``She got rioters \emph{drunk}?'' I hissed.
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``Drunk enough they weren't able to riot,'' the Hellhound said. ``She
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didn't have the men to enforce the decree, Catherine, and spilling blood
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would have been like lighting a sharper. She made the best possible
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decision, even if she overstepped her authority. I'll state that for the
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record, if I have to.''
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose.
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``Fuck it, as long as it worked,'' I finally said. ``How quick can you
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have a senior officer in the city?''
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``At least a month,'' Juniper said. ``We're camped close to Ankou, at
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the moment, in talks with General Sacker's legion.''
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I drummed my fingers pensively.
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``Promote her to legate, then,'' I said. ``Field promotion, to be
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confirmed at a later date. She's in charge of Laure until I can send one
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of the Woe to take over.''
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``I'll pass it along,'' the orc said.
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Good. It'd been an unorthodox method, but then that was the kind of
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thinking the Army of Callow encouraged. If she had the mettle for higher
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rank, she'd get to keep it. Gods knew I was always in desperate need of
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fresh talent.
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``Did they manage to assassinate within the army?'' I asked.
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``They tried,'' Juniper said. ``Had agents in the ranks, one made it as
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high as tribune. The Jacks caught most of them. The rest got knifed
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before they could do any real damage. Lord Black sends his regards.''
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I chewed on that, split between relief at my teacher still being on my
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corner and displeasure as the fact he'd infiltrated the Army of Callow
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deeply enough his people were comfortable fighting Eyes of the Empire.
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``You got his people?'' I asked.
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``They're under arrest,'' Juniper said. ``None resisted, so I used a
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light touch. Only soft interrogations.''
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``Try to get anything they know about Malicia's people,'' I said. ``I'll
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authorize release back to Black if they work with us.''
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The orc nodded.
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``Ranker has expressed willingness to work with us,'' she told me.
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The first bit of good news today, that.
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``Her legion got mauled at the Vales,'' I said.
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``She's got more than half in fighting fit,'' Juniper replied. ``More
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importantly, she's willing to trade goblin munitions for supplies.
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Including goblinfire.''
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``Get your hands on anything you can,'' I ordered. ``Had she said
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anything about the Empress?''
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``Said politics don't concern her, since she's part of an Imperial
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expedition army under the direct command of the Black Knight,'' my
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Marshal grunted. ``She'd got no intention of heading east, and she'd
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publicly turned away messengers from the Tower.''
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``Malicia's still sending diplomats through Callow?'' I frowned.
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``Not anymore,'' Juniper said. ``It got bloody, Catherine. When word
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about Laure got out, fresh off that proclamation from Salia? They
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butchered any Praesi they could get their hands on. We lost legionaries
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that were on leave.''
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Fuck. The last thing I needed was Callowans taking swings at the Army of
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Callow.
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``The Tower hasn't formally declared war, has it?'' I asked.
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``Not a word from the Empress,'' she said. ``But we're having Praesi
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troubles anyway.''
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``The High Lords can't possibly be fools enough to pick a fight
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\emph{now},'' I said.
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``Worse,'' the orc replied. ``We have refugees coming through the
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Blessed Isle. Ashur's torching the coast and the sack of Nok displaced
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thousands. The Wasteland's already rationing, so they're moving west
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where the food is.''
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``How many?'' I grimly asked.
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``Two, three thousand for now,'' the Marshal of Callow said. ``Mostly
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families. There'll Eyes and assassins among them though, that's a
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certainty. Farmers have been forcing them to remain near the Isle, by
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force if need be.''
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So Malicia was dumping her refugee troubles on me. I supposed from her
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perspective there was no loss to be had. Either I slaughtered them and
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became even more reviled in Praes, or I allowed them to stay and had to
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divert time and resources to force order onto the mess.
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``We can't allow them to go deeper into Callow,'' I said.
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``If we don't get them out soon, the numbers will keep growing,''
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Juniper said. ``And it's only a matter of time until they get hungry and
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desperate enough to steal from farmers who won't stand for it. When
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steel comes out it'll get ugly \emph{fast}.''
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``Our only host close enough is the Summerholm garrison,'' I said. ``And
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that's the key to our entire eastern defence. If she's baiting it out to
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ambush it\ldots{}''
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``I know,'' the Hellhound growled. ``Her belly's unprotected, but so is
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ours. She's short on legions, but she could order the High Lords of the
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interior to send their household troops.''
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The worst part was that I knew exactly what Malicia was doing, but there
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was no easy solution. She'd shaken Callow just as the Dead King got
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loose to prevent me from intervening in the war with Procer, and now she
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was trying to tie down my forces with the least possible effort on her
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part. If she'd sent an army into Callow, she'd had to feed and fund it.
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To commit men. Instead she'd mutilated the administration of the
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kingdom, then dropped a mess at the border on my lap. If I wanted to
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retaliate, I'd have to venture into the Wasteland. Where every major
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city was a fortress heavily warded and filled with horrors and it was
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impossible to live off the land. Hells, she could probably raid my
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godsdamned supply lines to fill her own granaries. I would have called
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it utter idiocy to provoke the Kingdom of Callow when she was already
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fighting a losing war with the Thalassocracy, but I knew my army was in
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no state for a protracted eastern campaign. I needed it elsewhere, and I
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needed it to be making up for the losses of the Battle of the Camps. If
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I acted, I risked incurring a major loss for no real gain. If I did not
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act, on the other hand, I would keep paying for it.
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I was too furious to be admiring.
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``Pull back all the people in the Fields to Summerholm,'' I finally
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said. ``Have them bring every bag of grain and herd of cattle back with
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them while they do. The refugees won't keep coming if there's nothing to
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be had.''
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``And if they head towards Summerholm?'' Juniper asked.
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``We'll cross that bridge when we get to it,'' I said. ``They're
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refugees, not a legion marching column. It'll take months.''
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``That's a stopgap,'' she said. ``Not a fix.''
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``A stopgap is what we need, right now,'' I said. ``I'll send Thief back
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to Callow to take control of the situation.''
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Juniper's broad face grimaced.
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``You're not coming back?'' she asked.
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``We need an army,'' I said. ``The Dead King dealt with Malicia instead,
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so I'm getting us another.''
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``The drow,'' the Hellhound said.
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``The drow,'' I agreed softly. ``We're out of alternatives, Juniper. The
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Principate is about to be hit hard from the north, which at least will
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buy us time. I need Callow stable, and the army in fighting fit. That
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falls on you and Thief. I'll return as swiftly as possible with
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reinforcements.''
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``There's good news on that front, at least,'' Juniper announced.
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``We're drowning in volunteers.''
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I blinked.
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``Even after I was named Arch-heretic of the East?'' I said.
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``That's what got it started,'' the orc said. ``Half of Ankou's been to
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our camp to enrol, Catherine. And after the assassinations in Laure it
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was like a damned fire was lit. There's formed Royal Guard coming from
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as far as Holden to enrol, and there's entire convoys on the roads
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coming towards training camps. Half a year, Warlord. Give me half a year
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and I'll have you an army that'll shake this fucking continent.''
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I exhaled softly. They'd cornered us, hadn't they? The Procerans and the
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Praesi. And the harder they struck, the harder my countrymen would dig
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their heels.
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``Good,'' I said. ``I don't care if you have to empty every treasure
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vault in Callow, Juniper, I want them armed and trained. The fights
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around the corner are going to be like nothing we've seen before.''
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The orc grinned toothily.
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``It'll be my pleasure,'' she said. ``That would have been pleasant note
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to end on, but I have two more messes to pass you.''
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I sighed.
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``I'm listening,'' I said. ``Wait, shit, Prince Amadis and the Pilgrim.
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Are they\ldots{}''
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``No assassin went after them,'' Juniper said. ``But the Pilgrim's a
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third mess, looked at a certain way. He legged it and left the prince
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behind. We haven't seen sign of him since the killings.''
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Shit. Yeah, it made sense. I wasn't there for him to work on, and when
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we'd last spoken it had been with harsh words. The old man wouldn't sit
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pretty in Laure while the Dead King was on the move. Even if he was so
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inclined, the Heavens wouldn't let him.
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``That's a breach of our truce terms,'' I said.
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``The Hells can we do about it?'' the Hellhound said. ``Kill Milenan? It
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gets us nothing.''
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Much as it irritated me, she was right. The northern crusaders were out
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of the passage and they'd likely be headed upwards to delay the Dead
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King. I did not want to do anything that might affect that decision, not
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right now anyway.
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``Keep him under our thumb,'' I finally said. ``We'll settle accounts
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with the Peregrine another day. What's the first disaster?''
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``Don't know if it's that,'' Juniper said. ``But diplomacy's not my
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wheelhouse. The Snake Eater Tribe sent volunteers to enrol, but there
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was an envoy with them. She says she's coming on the behalf of the
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Council of Matrons.''
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Well, shit. It wasn't the first time the ruthless old bats made discreet
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overtures to me. Back before we'd purged the worst of the Regals they
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matron-attendants that rule the Snake Eater Tribe had interrogated
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Pickler about what intention I might have for Praes, if I ended up on
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the winning side of a war with the Empire. There'd been no offer, back
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then. Malicia had yet to bleed enough the Matrons would consider her
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easy meat. I suspected that with the Ashurans running rampant across the
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coast and Black strolling around the Principate with half the Legions of
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Terror, that'd begun to change.
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``What do they want?'' I warily asked.
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``She wouldn't tell me everything,'' Juniper replied. ``Said she'd deal
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only with you. But I was given a taste, probably to bring you to the
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table. The Council of Matrons is offering to begin negotiations over the
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sale of goblin munitions to the Kingdom of Callow.''
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My fingers clenched. That was very, very dangerous talk. The Tribes were
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bound by treaty to sell those only to the Tower, and it wasn't the kind
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of clause that got a slap on the wrist when broken: it'd be called
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rebellion, if it got out. Even possession of goblin munitions was
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illegal in Praes. \emph{Highborn} would have their entire direct family
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executed if they were caught with a stash.
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``Fuck me,'' I said quietly. ``They're preparing to rebel, aren't
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they?''
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``Who the Hells ever knows, with goblins?'' the orc grunted. ``Does look
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like it, though. We both know it's been a long time coming.''
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``And they won't talk with anyone other than me?'' I pressed.
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``That's what the envoy told me,'' Juniper said.
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Godsdamnit. I couldn't afford to head to Callow right now, no matter how
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sweet the prize.
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``I'll give Thief full authority to negotiate in my name,'' I said. ``If
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that's not enough, they'll have to wait.''
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The orc nodded.
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``The second thing,'' she said. ``It's the Warlock.''
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``He's in Callow?'' I said, eyed widening.
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``He was,'' Juniper replied. ``Long gone by now. He left a message for
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Hierophant.''
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``And what would that be?'' I flatly asked.
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``To head to Thalassina immediately,'' the orc said. ``There's a
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situation coming to head, and he wants his son there yesterday.''
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The string of curses I let out at that was foul enough even the
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Hellhound winced.
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