351 lines
17 KiB
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351 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-9-grand-pas}{%
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\section{Chapter 9: Grand Pas}\label{chapter-9-grand-pas}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Casualties are a consequence of properly employed tactics, not
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the intent. To merely bludgeon away is to reduce the conduct of war to
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arithmetic.''}
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-- Theodosius the Unconquered, Tyrant of Helike
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\end{quote}
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Hakram had once told me about an old orc proverb: \emph{even} \emph{a
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child can devour a bear, one mouthful at a time.} Apart from reminding
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me that most orc sayings tended to involved blood or death in some way
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-- and that orcs apparently weren't afraid to eat things with even
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larger teeth than they, to absolutely no one's surprise -- it'd struck
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something of a chord at the time. As a rule, I'd tended to be the
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underdog in fights since becoming the Squire and never had that been
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truer than when my waltz with the Tenth Crusade began. Fifty thousand
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Proceran soldiers had come through the pass, and though Juniper had been
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dismissive about the quality of most that host she'd cautioned that
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numbers had a weight of their own. Even if we traded soldiers at a rate
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of one to three, halfway through that battle my army would collapse as
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an effective fighting force while the Procerans just got started with
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deploying their reserves. From a strict military perspective, we
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couldn't afford the casualties that thoroughly shattering the crusader
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army would cost us. From a political perspective, if took the gloves off
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I'd effectively kill any chance of Callow retaining its independence in
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the long term.
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We had to beat Princess Malanza without beating her too badly, without
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losing too many men or resorting to any of our uglier tricks.
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The Hellhound had complained of having her hands tied often and loudly,
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if in private, but under all that barking there'd been a visible thread
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of pleasure. She might have hated that politics played any part in this
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campaign, but I suspected she enjoyed the challenge of having restricted
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tools. It was forcing her to think beyond her traditional methods, to
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put the steel trap of a mind under all the glaring at work. We'd begun
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planning our battle before we ever entered Arcadia, refining it with
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every fresh report from the Jacks and the Observatory. The Unconquered
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had famously said that grand designs in war were a thing of vanity, but
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to us they were even more than that: with the number of heroes the other
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side was fielding, any plan too complicated was essentially guaranteed
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to fail. As long as there was even one critical component that
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\emph{had} to succeed, that specific time and place would be crawling
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with angry, literally Heavens-sent foreigners out to fuck up our day. We
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couldn't reiterate the old traps we'd used in Three Hills and Marchford:
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no matter how clever the bait, if we closed the teeth we'd find that
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steel gauntlet beat fangs.
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So we hadn't made a plan, not exactly.
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It could be argued to be a dozen of them, instead, or even just a
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general operational doctrine. If having a pivot meant we lost, then we
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had to either avoid pivots entirely or make them impossible to reach.
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And we had the means for that, for all our other flaws. That was our
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real trump card, when it came down to it: the fairy gates. Or more
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specifically, the mobility they lent my troops. I doubted they
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understood everything I could do with those, or even that I wasn't the
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only one who could make them: the Wild Hunt could open its own, if it
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was led by Larat. So far I'd used Arcadia to cut down time on long
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journeys, but that was only the surface use. Closer to the enemy I could
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still use them to disappear an army into thin air and reappear close by
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quicker than was physically possible. Just because I'd not used the
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gates for short journeys didn't mean I \emph{couldn't}. The first step
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had been splitting the Army of Callow into three columns. Two of six
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thousand, and one of nine and chance -- the largest one was the central
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one as well, and fielded all of Baroness Ainsley's reinforcements. The
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two armies on the wings had split from the central host, moving east and
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west.
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We'd set out the silver, now were were going to eat the bear one bite at
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a time.
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The crusading army was large. It had nearly twelve thousand horse to my
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own mere five thousand. It had priests and wizards and heroes. It was
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also \emph{slow}. We'd only realized how slow it really was when it
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crossed the northern passage, and carefully confirmed it over the weeks
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since. Of that fifty thousand men, more than a third was levies. Men and
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women in the prime of their life, certainly, and in good shape. But
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farming and marching were different kinds of labour, especially when
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weighed down by arms and armour. The Hellhound had described our
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conflict as two hounds with a chain around their neck, sallying out to
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fight in the place where both our chains allowed us to reach. The anchor
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on our side was Hedges. We couldn't allow them to take the city, since
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it opened them a direct path into the heartlands of Callow. The anchor
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on theirs was their supply line. Snaking across the Whitecaps, the wagon
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caravans moved day and night to bring enough food across that the
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crusaders wouldn't run out of foodstuffs before they reached a place
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where they could take local supplies -- either by sacking granaries or
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foraging the countryside. But the passage was narrow, and they had fifty
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thousand bellies to feed. The foodstuffs from Procer were slowing the
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rate they were burning through their reserves at, but it wasn't stopping
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it.
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If our strengths were insufficient to carry the day, Juniper had said,
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then we had to play to the enemy's weaknesses. And the two that were
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exploitable were the sluggish pace and sprawling supply lines. Now,
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Malanza had already proved she was no fool. She had to know it would be
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child's play for me to take the Order of Broken Bells out and hit the
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pass up north while she was still too far to prevent me from putting
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everything to the torch and leave a small garrison behind to make sure
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the river stayed dammed. We believed she'd gambled on her having enough
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supplies to reach Hedges even if we did, which meant she'd be picking up
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the pace soon to force a battle there. Taking a swing at our anchor to
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force us to be where she needed us to be, essentially. Except instead of
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facing the single host manning walls she must have expected to see
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arrayed before her, she now had three field armies to contend with. And
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those armies were moving closer to hers, making a loose half-circle so
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she'd be blundering into encirclement if she didn't break us apart.
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``And now we find out what kind of a commander Malanza is,'' Juniper
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said.
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The two of us had remained with the central army, the beating heart of
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the net we'd cast over the region. The crusader army was too far in the
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distance for us to see even the fire smoke. Seven days away, by our
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estimate. We'd been prudent in case she had the means to make them pick
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up the pace. Scrying had allowed the western and eastern army to keep
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the same distance on the sides.
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``The Jacks finally confirmed the Watch linked up with them two days
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ago,'' I said. ``Kegan is keeping her part of the bargain.''
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``They won't be trusted,'' the orc grunted. ``Not if what you told me
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about the Grey Pilgrim is true.''
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``They don't need to be trusted,'' I reminded her. ``They just need to
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be there.''
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I'd sent instruction down to Hakram to kick up a fuss at the border with
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Daoine to add some weight to the gambit, but my hopes were not high.
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Procer, unlike the Empire and I, did not have the benefit of having
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mages capable of scrying within Callow. Which meant information
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travelled back to Malanza and to the First Prince with a considerable
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delay compared to us. They might not even learn about Adjutant's
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agitation in time for it to matter, but the possibility still existed
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and that was enough to warrant the attempt at disinformation.
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``So, what's your guess?'' I asked after a moment of silence.
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``She either splits her forces to engage us separately or she goes
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straight for the head of the snake,'' Juniper said. ``There's risks to
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splitting. She's not sure how quick we can redeploy and our foot's
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usually better than hers. Smaller armies make that count more.''
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``So you think she's headed for us,'' I said.
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``It's what I'd do, if I were her,'' the Hellhound said. ``Otherwise
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she's engaging on terms we dictated. She swings at us, though, and she
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can assume we'll pull down our other two armies to reinforce us. She
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still gets the battle she needs.''
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``We can't give her open field all the way down to Harrow,'' I conceded.
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``The woman has been having too leisurely a march so far, Foundling,''
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Juniper sharply grinned. ``Time to kick the hive. First blow tonight.''
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I nodded slowly.
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``East or west?'' I asked.
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``Sending your vicious little minion to the east first loses us at least
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four days,'' she grunted. ``West, has to be. I don't want to give her a
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breather or too much time to think.''
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``I'll talk to Larat,'' I said. ``The Hunt's been raring to get off the
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leash.''
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``Lots of that going around,'' Juniper said, a tad drily.
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I frowned at her.
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``You're going somewhere with this, I take it?'' I said.
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Juniper spat to the side.
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``Don't take this wrong, Catherine, but you've lost the taste for it,''
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she said. ``Any fool can see that.''
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``I'm not sure what you're saying,'' I admitted. ``That I'm trying to
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stab people less? Juniper, saying \emph{fuck it} and chewing through the
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opposition no matter the consequences is what got us in this mess in the
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first place. We're not playing with the kind of stakes where mistakes
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can be afforded anymore. One slip is all it takes to tumble down on our
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heads.''
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``You put on a crown so you have to play Wasteland games,'' the
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Hellhound grunted. ``I don't like it, but I get it. But a year ago,
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Foundling, you would have been licking your chops at the thought of a
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battle like we're planning. You were \emph{hungry} for it. Now you're
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just\ldots{}''
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``Tired,'' I finished quietly. ``Tired and afraid.''
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``It's not pretty to look at, Catherine,'' my Marshal said. ``Now's not
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the time for the fire to go out. The enemy's at the gate and going at
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them half-hearted is going to get a lot of people killed.''
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My fingers clenched, then slowly unclenched. If Juniper was willing to
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say this much, she'd been sitting on it for some time. And she wouldn't
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be the only one of my officers thinking it.
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``When I was nine, I think, I was sent to the market by the orphanage
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matron to pick up our meat for the month,'' I told her. ``When I got
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there, I saw the butcher getting roughed up by city guard. They wanted
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him to join one of the guilds, so Mazus would get his cut.''
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``So Imperial Governors were shit to your people,'' the orc shrugged.
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``Not exactly a revelation, Foundling.''
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Compassion had never been one of Juniper's strengths.
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``I stood there,'' I told her. ``I knew, bone-deep, that there wasn't a
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fucking thing I could do about it. So I just watched.''
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Juniper bared her teeth.
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``You have the fangs now, Catherine,'' she said. ``Keeping them pearly
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white means nothing's changed.''
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``I used to believe that,'' I admitted. ``You know who broke that fight
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up? Legionaries. A pair of orcs. They beat the guards badly enough one
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had to be carried away. I think that's when I decided, before I really
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knew it, that I was going to join the Legions. So one day I'd be the one
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handing the beatings instead of just \emph{standing there}.''
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``So why the fuck are we giving Procer a pass for invading, then?''
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Juniper growled. ``Those princes, those heroes. It's like we're worrying
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more about keeping them alive than our own soldiers. No one put a knife
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to their throat to make them cross that pass, Catherine. Banner went up
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in Salia and they signed on. I'm not preaching devilry at you -- that
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sort of blow always comes back around. But we have all these nasty
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tricks we're just sitting on, and I can't think of a good reason why. So
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Procer gets pissy if we kill their boys? They're already riding on a
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godsdamned crusade. Burn them all, and the First Prince too. I'll say
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this for the Empress, at least when she screws us she doesn't expect us
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to \emph{apologize} for it.''
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``You're still angry I shut down Bonfire,'' I said, and it was not a
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guess.
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``I love it, you know,'' Juniper grinned unpleasantly, all teeth and
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malice. ``Having this unholy mess up north and still having to beat the
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opposition with my hands tied. Ain't no one ever fought a war like that
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before. We will be \emph{remembered}. But you know how we got all these
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fancy titles? `cause we were willing to go as far as we needed to. We
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brawled in the mud to get up here, Catherine, and suddenly we're too
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good for it? We're going soft. And soft ends up in the cooking pot,
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sooner or later.''
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``That's the thing, Juniper,'' I said quietly. ``This is the strongest
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I've ever been. I have armies, wealth, a kingdom. I have the Woe,
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sharpened fighting heroes. I have the Wild Hunt and the last good claim
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on Winter. Even in wildest dreams as a kid I never thought I'd get this
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much power.''
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I bit my lip.
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``I thought that was \emph{enough},'' I told the orc. ``Having the
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biggest stick. That once you had that, everything else fell into place.
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But while I was using that stick to whack the opposition, running all
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around Callow, an entire city went dark.''
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Juniper opened her mouth, but I gestured for her to let me keep
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speaking.
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``No,'' I said. ``Really think about it. \emph{An entire city}. More
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than a hundred thousand people, Hellhound. Because we were good and we
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were strong and we got cocky. There is an entire part of a kingdom gone
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forever because I thought being feared and powerful would see us
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through. It didn't. It won't now, either.''
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``You can't let Liesse fil your shadow, Catherine,'' Juniper said,
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almost kindly. ``Wasteland get always fucks the world. It's the only
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trick they have.''
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``I have to, Juniper,'' I said. ``I've walked out ruins still breathing
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again and again, so I stopped thinking we could lose. But we did lose,
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last year. We killed and got killed, and all we had to show for it at
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the end was a mass grave.''
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``We killed Diabolist,'' the orc said. ``We shut the door on the Fae.''
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``We beat them,'' I said. ``That's not a victory. We just stopped them
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from making the larger mess they had it in them to make.''
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``Then you learned the wrong lesson,'' Juniper said. ``And we should
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have pulled the trigger on Bonfire the moment the army was halfway
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ready. We're still fighting their kind of war, Catherine.''
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``No,'' I said, and ice crept into the tone. ``They think that, no
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doubt. Some of your officers might think that too. But make no mistake,
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this is \emph{my} play from opening to curtains. I'll negotiate with the
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other side, because it gets me better results than crushing them
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outright. Because peace is a better path to what I want than setting
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cities aflame. But I still have it, Hellhound. The urge to just
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\emph{step on them}. The victory I'm after simply happens to require
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more than corpses.''
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The Marshal of Callow studied me for a long time, before giving a sharp
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nod.
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``So long as it's not squeamishness,'' she finally said.
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I looked up at the afternoon sky, the spring sun that failed to warm me.
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``You're right, about the fear,'' I said. ``I am afraid. That was the
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hardest learning, that power doesn't solve anything, it just\ldots{}
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broadens the scope. Raises the stakes. I got on top of the pedestal, and
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now that I've had a good look around what I'm seeing is making me want
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to flinch.''
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I was not blind to the gathering storm. The Empress was feeling
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cornered, and she'd already proven the kind of measures she was willing
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to take if she thought survival was at stake. Black had holed up in the
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Vales for winter, cut from his old anchors, and in a way that made him
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more dangerous than he'd used to be. When he came out swinging, and he
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would, there was no telling who he'd be swinging at. The Free Cities
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were a pot about to boil over, led by two madmen whose intent was
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anyone's guess. And the whole muster of the West was gathering,
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preparing to hit Callow in waves. And in the middle of it all, I had to
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break the ugly story that had ground both Callow and Praes under the
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wheel for millennia.
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``Fear's good,'' Juniper said. ``Fear is blood and life. But it's too
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late to flinch, Warlord.''
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``I know,'' I murmured. ``And so we got to war again.''
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We parted ways after that, and began our work. The thing was, what we
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were doing wasn't rewriting the book. The tactics at work were old ones,
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used by armies for centuries. On the other hand, none of those armies
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had had fairy gates to work with. All it took was asking Hierophant to
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scry our western commander -- the freshly-promoted General Nauk, as it
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happened. And so after nightfall, the six thousand men of the western
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army disappeared from the field. They reappeared three days of march
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behind the crusading host, and the wolf riders that had once been
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General Istrid's began to raid their way up the Proceran supply line.
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They took cattle and grain, poultry and bread, but left the men who
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surrendered untouched. Didn't even take them prisoner. Juniper's notion,
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that, not sentimentality. Leaving them behind mean more mouths for
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Malanza to feed. The Princess of Aequitan sent twelve thousand men north
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to bring Nauk to battle, mostly horse and fantassins, but by the time
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they arrived the army was long gone. It reappeared to the west a few
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days later. \emph{That's right, Malanza. Now you know for sure I have
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two gate-makers. So let's find out if your heroes can discern where they
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are, shall we?} The hive had been duly kicked.
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Now we got to see what came screaming out.
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