458 lines
20 KiB
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458 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-6-hedges}{%
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\section{Chapter 6: Hedges}\label{chapter-6-hedges}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Irritant's Law: inevitable doom is a finite resource, and
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becomes mere doom when split between multiple heroic bands. Nemeses
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should never simultaneously engage a single villain.''}
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-- Extract from `The Axiom Appendix', multiple contributors
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\end{quote}
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I sat at a table across from Baron Henry Darlington of Hedges and
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Baroness Ainsley Morley of Harrow, shared a smile with them and wondered
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which one of them would be the first to try to sell me out to the
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crusaders.
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I knew for a fact that Procer had approached the both of them long
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before a hole was punched through the Whitecaps. Hasenbach's people were
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good, but the Observatory was better and no one had any real idea yet of
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exactly what it could do. You couldn't counter something you didn't know
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about, as I had learned the hard way. I'd been keeping a close eye on
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these two, through both the Jacks and sorcerous means, and even though
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Morley was the one who'd just had to flee her own city my bet was on
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Darlington being the one to try for a deal. He was the older of the two,
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in his late forties, and though he'd had a reputation as a knight of
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some skill in his youth his belly made it clear he'd traded swords for
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mutton chops a long time ago. Morley, the Jacks had informed me, was in
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her thirties but had inherited the barony from her father only a year
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before the Liesse Rebellion. Her lands were larger than Darlington's but
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her personal holdings smaller and the rest split among vassals who'd
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been rather unruly after her ascension. If the betrayal came from the
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Harrow contingent, I'd wager that it would be from one of her sworn
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lords and not Morley herself. Both of them were being very cordial as we
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shared a drink -- water for me, that tricky little oath -- but they were
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also quite bad at hiding how surprised they were I'd reached Hedges so
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quickly.
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Seven days through Arcadia, and my twenty thousand strong Army of Callow
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began marching out into the pastures to the south of the city. The
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Observatory had confirmed that the crusaders were only starting to come
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out on the Callowan side of the passage through the Whitecaps. Slower
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than expected, but then our estimates had been based on Legion marching
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speeds. Revised downwards, of course, but apparently not quite enough.
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There'd been some alarm when we popped out of the woodworks, but I'd
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been one of the first out the fairy gate and to be blunt if we'd meant
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to take Hedges there wasn't shit either of them could have done about
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it. The city was more of a glorified town, and its defences were
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laughable. The curtain wall was a short and worn-down compared to almost
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every other city in Callow, since the north had never really faced the
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threat of Praesi invasions. Their enemies had been each other, which
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involved more cattle-theft than sieges even in the old days before
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unification, and on rare occasion Daoine. The Deoraithe were not prone
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to expansion, but before they were brought into the fold by Eleanor
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Fairfax they'd not been above the occasional raid or punitive expedition
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to express displeasure at the royal family in Laure.
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``I'm impressed by how quickly you got your people out, Baroness,'' I
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told Morley. ``And how thoroughly.''
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There was a slight tinge of discomfort in their eyes at the reminder
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that I knew exactly what was going on in their lands and they had no
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real idea how. Darlington cleared his throat.
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``Perhaps prematurely, Your Majesty, if you'll forgive my saying so. It
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seems to me it might have been possible to contest Harrow.''
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I took that more as an indication that he'd rather pitched battles not
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take place at even the outskirts of his lands than sympathy for Morley,
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but then he'd gotten on my nerves often enough I wasn't inclined to
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think well of him. I sipped at my cup.
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``They've moved slower than anticipated,'' I conceded. ``There are,
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however, concerns you might not be considering. Do you both know what a
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Hell Egg is?''
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Morley paled but Darlington was unmoved.
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``Some Praesi devilry, no doubt,'' he said.
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``It's true then,'' Baroness Ainsley said quietly. ``The Lost Standard,
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it actually exists?''
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``I have it on good authority it's in the lands around Harrow,'' I told
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her. ``But my attempts to locate it have been fruitless for now.''
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Darlington was lost, and by the look on his face that was not a state of
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affairs he was willing to tolerate for long.
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``And what Wasteland tale is this?'' he said. ``I did not take you for a
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superstitious sort, Your Majesty.''
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``Considering the Diabolist used one of those very standards against me
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at Marchford, superstition is perhaps the wrong term,'' I very mildly
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said.
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It was rather delightful to watch it sink in. It was a well-told tale
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what I'd faced in the defence of what was now my personal holding.
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``There's a \emph{demon} in the north?'' he hissed.
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``My father told me that Triumphant left old madness behind her, when I
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was a child,'' Morley said. ``I thought it a legend, but are these not
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times where old stories breathe again?''
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``I won't fight heroes on grounds where releasing a demon is a risk,'' I
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told them frankly. ``The moment the crusaders forged a beachhead near
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Harrow, it became indefensible. I'm sorry for what that puts your people
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through, Baroness, but-''
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The woman shook her head.
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``No, Your Majesty,'' she said. ``Nothing was lost but pride and coin.
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If anything, I must thank you sincerely for your prudence. I would
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rather see my coffers emptied than my people\ldots{}''
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She trailed off, and I didn't finish that sentence for her. Where demons
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were concerned, the least said was always the better.
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``They're my people too,'' I said quietly. ``I would rather not fight
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this war at all, but diplomatic resolution has been refused.''
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``\emph{Procer},'' Morley said feelingly.
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And though I suspected Darlington wished me dead at least once a day,
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even his lip curled in distaste at the mention of the Principate. We did
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like our grudges, us Callowans, and Procer had earned more than a few.
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That passing moment of common feeling did nothing to blind me to the
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very real possibility that one or both of these two would try to sell me
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down the river before the month was out.
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``I would offer my men for the battle, Your Majesty,'' Morley finally
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said.
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``It'd be a pleasure to fold your horse under the Broken Bells,'' I told
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her. ``I'll send Grandmaster Talbot your way. But if you mean to send
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foot as well, I'll need Legion officers overseeing. Marshal Juniper will
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not agree otherwise.''
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The latter was a little sketchy, under current Callowan law, but Juniper
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was the highest officer in the Army of Callow and theoretically had the
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same broad authority that the Shining Princes and ruling Fairfaxes had
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once held in war time. This particular request, though, had consistently
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seen me stonewalled by the same two nobles in front of me. Even after
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amending the request to having \emph{observing} Legion officers it had
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remained a sticking point. Baroness Kendall had argued the matter wasn't
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worth forcing, given the limited amount of men these two could bring,
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and she'd had a point. Better not to have them at all than have them
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only as unreliable addition.
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``That will not be an issue,'' Baroness Ainsley grimly said.
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Some of my surprise must have shown on my face, because she offered a
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rueful smile.
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``Morleys have held Harrow for three hundred years, Your Majesty,'' she
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said. ``I will not surrender my lands to some prancing Proceran shit
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without a fight.''
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``We'll be glad to have you,'' I said.
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That'd been\ldots{} unexpected. And, though I'd like to think better of
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her, was enough of a change it raised my suspicions. Still, it wouldn't
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do to look a gift horse in the mouth too openly.
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``They sent an envoy,'' Morley suddenly said.
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My eyes sharpened as I studied her. She looked embarrassed but
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determined.
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``The Procerans, they sent an envoy,'' she said. ``To offer terms.''
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Baron Darlington had gone very, very still. I drank a mouthful of water
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then calmly set down the cup.
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``Good ones, I hope?''
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She snorted.
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``I would be allowed to keep my lands,'' she said. ``A marriage to one
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of our \emph{betters} would be arranged for one of my children as well.
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They wanted Henrietta, which was rather telling. They're more interested
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in us taking their names than the other way around.''
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``Let me guess,'' I drawled. ``You were to join with the army and pass
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information. Maybe change sides halfway through a battle?''
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``They were slightly more circumspect,'' the baroness said. ``But the
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implications ran along those lines. They\ldots{} it was a way to weather
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the storm, Your Majesty.''
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I watched her closely. She'd not agreed, no. She wouldn't have spoken up
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otherwise. But she'd not chased them out either. I'd already known that,
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but I was surprised she was willing to share. \emph{You dislike me}, I
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thought. \emph{We both know that. But in the end for all that you see me
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an evil I am Callowan evil and that still matters, doesn't it?}
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``Treason,'' Darlington said thickly. ``How horrid. It is mother's milk
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to the men of Procer, we have always known this.''
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``I do not hang women for entertaining envoys,'' I softly said. ``And
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would rather have honest, open opposition than a snake in the grass.
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Hasenbach will make offers again. She needs to, because she knows it is
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madness to try to hold Callow by force while warring with the Wasteland.
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But make no mistake, she \emph{needs} to hold Callow. And we all know
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Procer does not easily relinquish lands it takes.''
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Morley nodded slowly. She was not a handsome woman, and the stark relief
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on her face did her no favours.
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``My duties prevent me from lingering,'' I told them, and slowly rose to
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my feet. ``Baron Darlington, an officer from the general staff will seek
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audience to discuss our supply lines.''
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``They will find me a welcoming host, Your Majesty,'' the man said,
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rising to his feet as well.
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I nodded at Morley, then paused. I looked into Darlington's eyes.
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``A redheaded man,'' I stated, ``with a Liessen accent. He stayed two
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days.''
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The man's face went bloodless.
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``Always assume I know,'' I gently said.
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I left only utter silence in my wake.
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---
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I'd decided, when first stumbling upon this particular wall, that it was
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too low to be meant as a defence. And too far from the city besides,
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though the low hill overlooking the outskirts of Hedges would have been
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good grounds to raise a guard tower. Most likely it'd been used to keep
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cattle penned in, though by the looks of it years had passed since it'd
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last fulfilled that purpose. With the cool evening breeze and the view,
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it made a pleasant enough place to sit as I awaited the people I'd sent
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for. This was my first visit this far up north, and to be honest the
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entire region seemed rather bare to me. Green and brown fields made
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muddy by the melting snows spread as far as the eye could see, touched
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by only sparse thickets of trees and the occasional low slope. Hedges
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itself was a far cry from the large cities of the south. Larger than
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Dormer in overall size, perhaps, but most that space was empty and the
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city itself was visibly poorer. No paved streets, here, only mud tracks.
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And fewer stone houses than any other Callowan city I'd seen, most of
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them wooden structures with straw rooftops. Aside from the run-down
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curtain wall that sloppily circled outer Hedges, there were no real
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fortifications to speak of. Even the baron's keep was only a glorified
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hill with towers and a hall.
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I puffed at my pipe and blew the smoke into the wind, watching twilight
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catch up to the Army of Callow encamped behind me. Cooking fires were
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already lit and the tents raised, a series of palisades preparing the
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soldiers for an attack unlikely to come this early. Juniper had insisted
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on full fortifications, though privately she'd told me it was more to
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drill the men in the raising of them than out of true worry got an enemy
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strike. A plume of wakeleaf streamed further and further away until it
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thinned out of existence, and I felt a smile quirk my lips. I'd have to
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give him this, even if my senses had only grown sharper he was still
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giving it a worthy effort.
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``The mud gives you away,'' I said. ``Should have tried it without
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boots.''
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``I have very delicate feet, Your Majestic Queenship,'' Special Tribune
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Robber cheerfully lied, rising from his crouched position beneath the
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hill's angled slope.
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I hid the spasm of grief that passed through me when I looked at him.
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Robber was fifteen, now. Most goblins didn't make it past thirty-five,
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and past thirty they began to swiftly go decrepit. I'd always known at
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as a villain, if I didn't get killed, I'd likely outlive most my closest
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friends in the Fifteenth. Looking at the thickening eyebrow ridges and
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the fresh wrinkles around his mouth, I was imposed a fresh reminder that
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the goblins among my companions would be the first to go. Pickler wasn't
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showing either of those marks, but then she was from a matron line.
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Those were supposed to be almost a breed apart. I waited until he was
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plopped at my side, swinging his legs like a greenish murderous child,
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to reply.
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``You know, lying to your monarch is technically treason,'' I informed
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him.
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``I heard if you commit it enough time it cancels out,'' Robber mused.
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``I should probably keep doing it, just to be on the safe side.''
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``That's the kind of talk that'll get busted back to Lesser Lesser
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Footrest,'' I said, eyebrow quirking.
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``Oh come on,'' he whined. ``Where am I going to find another sworn
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enemy's father to murder?''
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``Well, if anyone can it's going to be you,'' I snorted.
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I inhaled the smoke as he remained silent, though never still. It was
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something I'd learned to notice about goblins: they always seemed to be
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moving, even if only slightly. Like they were afraid they'd drop dead if
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they stopped.
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``We're about to start having informational issues,'' I finally told
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him. ``Too many priests and heroes with the Procerans, and that'll screw
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with scrying. Even the Observatory's.''
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He grinned, wide and vicious.
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``Are we still pretending that thing's just a pretty bunch of scrying
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pools?'' he asked. ``'cause the Catherine Foundling I know doesn't shell
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out that much gold for anything she can't swing at an enemy.''
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I smiled thinly but did not reply. The little discovery Masego had made
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that he called \emph{absolute positioning} was potentially one of the
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nastiest tricks up my sleeve, but it was one I intended to sit on as
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long as possible. The moment I used it I would grow sharply as a threat
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in everyone's eyes. I couldn't afford that, not until I had all my
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pieces in place.
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``We can narrow down their positions with the negatives,'' I said. ``But
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we can't go in with sparse eyes against an army that large. How are the
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mages we assigned you?''
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``They're coming along nicely,'' Robber said. ``They don't even scream
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anymore when they wake up with a knife to the throat in the middle of
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the night.''
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``Don't break my mages, Robber,'' I sighed. ``You know we don't have any
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to spare.''
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``You do me grave injustice,'' he mourned. ``I'm teaching them important
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life lessons, like `crying never helps' and `sleeping deep is sleeping
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dead'.''
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``You're not getting new ones if you screw these ones up,'' I warned
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him. ``There's nothing left from the Hedge Guild to draft.''
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``It's my Gods-given duty to educate tender-hearted Callowans like
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them,'' he righteously told me. ``Speaking of, I heard this thing about
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northerners. Is it true they-``
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``Every single joke about northerners and sheep has also been made about
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goblins and goats,'' I warned him.
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``Calumny,'' he protested. ``That hardly ever happens unless the goat is
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shaved and painted green.''
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I rolled my eyes.
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``All right, if you're comfortable enough fucking around then they won't
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be an issue,'' I said. ``Juniper will put scouts on the field, but I
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want a set of eyes deep behind enemy lines. You've just volunteered for
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that duty.''
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``I am the most dutiful goblin ever born,'' Robber agreed, clearly
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pleased. ``Tell me we're not just skulking, though. It's been a while
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since my people stabbed anything, they're getting restless.''
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``I'm keeping you as a dagger,'' I said. ``That means low profile until
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I use you.''
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He blew his tongue at me, which was mildly unsettling considering it was
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pitch black.
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``Boo,'' he said. ``Boo Catherine boo.''
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``Have Captain Borer write you up for insolence,'' I ordered. ``The
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exceedingly well-document fact that you are a filthy wretch aside, we
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both know sending you to roam when there's a crew of heroes on the loose
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is like feeding a wolf meat scraps.''
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``They can't kill us if they don't fight us,'' he shrugged.
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``I thought you'd say that,'' I grunted. ``But I have worries, and
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Juniper shares them. So we're assigning you a partner.''
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``Tell me it's Larat,'' he begged. ``The man is like a goblin that was
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fed particularly violent rocks.''
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Wait, could goblins actually eat -- no, Catherine, never go down the
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Robber rabbit hole. There are no answers at the bottom, only headaches
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and befuddlement.
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``No,'' I replied. ``She's actually coming up right now.''
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Yellow eyes flicked downhill and then I was given the opportunity to
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delight in the vicious little bastard actually looking uneasy.
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``\emph{Gods} no,'' he said. ``That's sadistic even for you, Queenie.''
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``Evening Cat,'' Archer grinned. ``And you too, Robert.''
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``You know that's not my name,'' the goblin hissed.
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``I'm very sorry, Bobber,'' Indrani said. ``I swear.''
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``You can't send her with us,'' Robber said. ``She bit off Akua's
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head!''
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I blinked.
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``She did what now?'' I warily asked.
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Robber looked shifty, which considering he could skulk in broad daylight
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without trying was an almost miraculous achievement.
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``I'm not saying it happened, but it's possible a betting ring
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technically illegal under Legions regs just spontaneously emerged,'' he
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said.
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``Akua was a scorpion,'' Archer cheerfully informed me.
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``Not just a scorpion, you brute, she was a purebred Wasteland
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Rattler,'' the goblin insisted. ``And her full name was Akua
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Sahedon't.''
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``You bit off a scorpion's head,'' I enunciated slowly, looking at
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Indrani.
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She shrugged.
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``The Lady always said it's important to establish the pecking order
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early in a relationship,'' she replied. ``Wouldn't you agree, Borer?''
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``That's someone else,'' Robber muttered peevishly. ``And I had a
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month's pay riding on Akua killing Willie Angels.''
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So my sappers were importing no doubt massively oversized Wasteland
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scorpions, naming them after old opponents of mine and pitting them in
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death fights. I truly wished I could say that was the worst thing I'd
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ever caught them doing, but this was a bad time to start lying to
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myself.
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``I'm going to pretend I never heard this,'' I decided out loud.
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``Mostly because, well, Hakram's not around and \emph{I}'\emph{m} sure
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as Hells not filing a report about giant scorpions if I can avoid it. As
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your beloved queen, I order you to pretend to get along when I'm within
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hearing range. There, I fixed it.''
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``I love it when she gets all authoritative,'' Archer told the goblin.
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``I hope you also enjoy scorpions in your bedding,'' he whispered back
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at her. ``Akua had babies, before you callously murdered her.''
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``See, he's already offering me snacks,'' Indrani smiled. ``Herbert and
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I are great friends, Catherine. Just the best.''
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I closed my eyes and wished very hard they would disappear, but when I
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opened them they were obstinately still there. One of these days, that
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was going to work and they were all going to be sorry.
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``Robber, get your people ready,'' I ordered. ``You're leaving in half a
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bell. Archer\ldots{}''
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``No need, I've already prepared supplies,'' Indrani replied, hoisting
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up what was quite clearly a wineskin full of -- by the smell of it --
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hard liquor.
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``Just don't forget your bow,'' I sighed.
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Gods go with them, though hopefully not the ones Above. The kind if work
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I had in mind for these two would be frowned upon, upstairs.
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