594 lines
30 KiB
TeX
594 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-queens-gambit-declined}{%
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\section{Interlude: Queen's Gambit,
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Declined}\label{interlude-queens-gambit-declined}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Fifty-nine: it is always better to interrupt a plan than carry
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one out. Your finest successes will always be the failures of your
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enemy.''}
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-`Two Hundred Heroic Axioms', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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``You're in a damned fine mood, for a man who can barely stand,'' Ranker
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muttered.
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Most would not have been to pick up on it, Amadeus thought, but the
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goblin marshal had been his friend for a very long time. Longer than the
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common understanding of goblin lifespan should allow for, but that was
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one of the subjects they did not speak of. Ranker had a right to her
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secrets, as he did his. The Black Knight tightened the woolen blanket
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draped over his frame, looking up at the night sky with the barest trace
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of a smile on his face.
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``It's nostalgic, isn't it?'' he said. ``The few of us huddling in the
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dark, surrounded by a realm that would kill us all.''
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His detached force numbered two thousand, with Marshal Ranker in overall
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command as her sappers and scouts would be more valuable to their
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purposes than regulars or heavies. Cooking fires had been judged too
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much of a liability to be allowed even after a days of marching under
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his aspect that should have left any would-be pursuers in the dust: the
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legionaries had dropped their kits and made their beds on rough ground,
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not even bothering to raise fortifications beforehand. Ranker's
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decision, and one he'd approved of. Their pace was already taking the
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soldiers dangerously close to their breaking point, aspect or not.
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``It hasn't been like this since the civil war,'' Ranker conceded. ``The
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Conquest was orderly campaign, nothing like this one. Feels like we're
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making it up as we're going along.''
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``Planning too deep will be seen through by the Augur,'' Amadeus
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reminded her. ``We stay a step ahead so long as we make short-term
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decisions backed by superior pace.''
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It was a little more complex than that, in practice. Thrice now the
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First Prince's fresh mage order had passed along auguries of where his
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legions would be headed, though their very interception meant that they
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were effectively worthless. Prediction and prophecy were different
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matters, after all. The former was very much avoidable, if known, while
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the latter tended to be like a sandpit: the harder you struggled, the
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swifter you drowned. Even those could be broken, of course. Prophecy was
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only ever the writ of one side of the Great Game, and if outcomes were
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so absolute there would be no need for Creation at all -- according to
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the Book of All Things, anyway. Still, even the predictions of the Augur
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were an exceedingly dangerous tool for the opposition. Considering how
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sparsely it had been used and the recent revelations as to the forces
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stirring up north, Amadeus suspected that if the Dead King had not been
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on the move and requiring the soothsayer's attentions this campaign
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would have been much more troublesome.
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``I'm aware,'' she flatly replied. ``And I have some fond memories of
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the old days, do not misunderstand me. But back then we were still
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young. To our places, to our powers, to our stories. It's been a long
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time since we were any of that.''
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``\emph{Sing we of foe},'' he softly hummed. ``\emph{Of victories won,
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and that first woe, tyranny of the sun}.''
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``You know I hate that song, Amadeus,'' Ranker grunted. ``It's the
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anthem of old defeats, a ballad of ruin.''
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``It was a cold, clear look at what we were when it was written,'' the
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Black Knight said. ``We are no longer that, yet I suspect we never truly
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outgrew the sentiment.''
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Like a poisonous old friend, it had been clutched tight even as the
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fangs sunk in and venom spread. \emph{The Tyranny of the Sun}, for the
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most famous verse of the song was the title as well, had been written
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near the end of the Sixty Years War. Arguably the most brutal slugging
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match between two sovereign powers in the history of Calernia, and it
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had left both Callow and Praes smoking ruins in its aftermath, peace
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coming largely because neither side was still capable of continuing the
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war. Dread Emperor Nihilis had retreated to the Blessed Isle with his
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armies and ended it without ever signing formal treaty, but he'd died
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failing to rebuild the Empire and a hundred years of murderous
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mediocrity had followed until Praes recovered enough to embark in its
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disastrous waging of the Secret Wars. In some ways he suspected the
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Sixty Years War had been more traumatic an experience to Praesi culture
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than the collapse of Triumphant's empire a century and a half earlier.
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Triumphant had known success before meeting her doom. The parade of
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Emperors and Empresses who'd waged war on Callow for sixty years had
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known much of the latter and little of the former.
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``We,'' the goblin chuckled. ``There's a word growing thinner by the
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year. We are exiles in more way than one, Amadeus. You saw to that after
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Akua's Folly.''
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``It is not the first time I've been told I should have tried to climb
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the Tower,'' the man shrugged. ``It will not be the last, I expect. It
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would have been a self-defeating enterprise to wage civil war in the
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Wasteland with Procer assembling its armies just across the border.''
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``The Clans would have come out for you,'' Ranker said. ``Most likely
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the Tribes as well. The Matrons smell weakness, Black, and there's only
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ever one way they react to that.''
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``I can think of few things more foolish than to underestimate Alaya,''
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he quietly said. ``Even now. She's never been one to act without a plan,
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and that we do not understand her moves should be source of fear and not
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contempt.''
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``Odds are she's the one who made a pact with the Dead King,'' Ranker
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said.
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``It could have been Catherine as well,'' Amadeus frankly admitted.
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``She thrives in chaotic situations. It's led her to the bad habit of
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creating them knowing it improves her chances of victory even if it
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significantly increases collateral damage as well.''
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``The Black Queen,'' the goblin mused. ``There's another trash fire of a
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situation. One you've stepped lightly around.''
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``The Conquest was a way to achieve objectives,'' Amadeus said. ``The
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annexation was ultimately a consequence, not the purpose itself. I
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hardly mind surrendering unnecessary gains if the actual objectives are
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met through the gesture.''
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``The arithmetic holds,'' Ranker sighed. ``It always does with you. But
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there's more to this than the numbers, old friend. We made an order of
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things, and now it's crumbling.''
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``And now you wonder what will replace it,'' Amadeus said. ``And if in
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that new order, we will still have a place.''
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``Some might say it's too early to start thinking about after the war,''
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she said. ``You and I know better. No point in even seeking a victory if
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when achieved it leads nowhere.''
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``A better world,'' the Black Knight murmured, looking up a stars that
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were not those he'd been born under. ``Oh, I have wondered. What it
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might mean, what it would look like.''
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``We made one,'' Ranker said. ``It's on fire now.''
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``And who set the flames?'' he smiled. ``Cordelia Hasenbach. Catherine
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Foundling. Kairos Theodosian. Children, in our eyes. Yet is it not the
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right of the younger generation to look at the work of that which came
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before it and judge it \emph{insufficient}?''
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``So they're right, and we'll be swept away like dust by the new age,''
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Ranker said, sounding distinctly unimpressed.
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``I still do not believe,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch murmured,
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``that I am wrong. That our methods, our works, are to be so easily
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discarded. If these younglings want to prove themselves worthy of
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shaping the world, well\ldots{}''
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He bared his teeth.
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``Let them come,'' he said. ``Let them earn it. If they can surpass us,
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then the sin is ours.''
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``And if they can't?'' Ranker asked.
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``Then they fall into line, or face destruction, and we fight one last
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great war,'' he said. ``The one that will \emph{matter}.''
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The two of them remained silent for a long time, seated at the edge of
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the camp. In the distance, the barest glimpse of the town of Saudant
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could be made out. Just a lakeside township, one of hundreds in the
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region. Amadeus doubted the name of it would be remembered as more than
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a footnote in histories, for no battle would take place there even if
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he'd been wrong. Under the light of the stars, the Black Knight pondered
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Providence and the coward's wager that was Fate. He did not sleep, even
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tired as he had become.
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With dawn he would know if he had once more cheated the Heavens at dice.
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---
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Gauthier Legrand had served as ranking captain of the guard of Iserre
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for thirty years now. He'd served Prince Merlaux before Prince Amadis
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ascended the throne and been appointed to his title by the old prince,
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but there'd been no talk of having him replaced even when the young
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prince took over and began inserting his own partisans in posts of
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influence. This he attributed to the fact that he'd carried out his work
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steadily and honestly, avoiding court politics and the intrigues
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intrinsic to any of Procer's royal seats. He was not unaware that his
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occasional bluntness and refusal to earn favours by offering plum
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positions to the kin of the influential had led some to consider him
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simple, though the more polite phrased it as him having `a soldier's
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spirit'. Gauthier did not mind. As long as they considered him an idiot
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they would not attempt to involve him in their little schemes, and he
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rather preferred it that way. Iserre had only grown larger and wealthier
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under Prince Amadis, but that rise had come with the troubles inevitably
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associated with a city expanding. Maintaining order and the rule of law
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was toil without end, especially in a land where both could change face
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at the whims of the ruling prince.
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Amadis had done well by the city, he'd always thought, and the
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principality as well. Their prince had kept them out of the worst of the
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Great War with cunning diplomacy and duly reaped the benefits of
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Iserre's rising prominence when the steel returned to the sheath. Old
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Prince Merlaux had shown a better touch with the commons, that much was
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true, but his son was a much more able administrator. The guard's
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funding had swelled under Amadis, and their equipment was now match for
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many of the fantassin companies out there making a trade of war. It'd
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seemed an unquestionable boon at the time, but now Captain Gauthier was
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forced to question. Not a state of affairs to his liking. The
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principality was under assault by wicked Easterners from the Wasteland,
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and to everyone's dismay the general levies that had preceded Prince
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Amadis going on campaign had bled the land dry of men in fighting fit.
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Iserre itself was the capital of the eponymous principality, and so had
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kept a garrison of two thousand professional soldiers, but the guard's
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equipment was only marginally inferior and it numbered five thousand.
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In principle the defence of the city was the responsibility of the
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commander of that garrison, Antonine Milenan. In practice, their leader
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was middle-aged drunk whose entire experience with martial life was a
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span of three years with a fantassin company that had never left Iserran
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borders during the Great War. She had, allegedly, commanded a victorious
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skirmish against bandits. Rumour had it they'd actually been terrified
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refugees from Salamans but that in her drunken rage she'd refused to see
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a difference. There was a reason that Antonine had not been given a
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command in the crusading host, and Gauthier supposed that a few months
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ago giving her command of a garrison that would never see combat had
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seemed a discreet way to set aside a cumbersome relative for his prince.
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Now that the Wastelanders had come, however, it meant that the woman had
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been quietly placed under guard in the palace where she could make no
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trouble. An unfortunate measure prompted by a well-lubricated evening
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where she'd decided to order the garrison of Iserre to sally out and
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`disperse the foreign rabble on the field'.
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And so Captain Gauthier Legrand now led the defence of Iserre.
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The responsibility alone would have been difficult to bear, but as the
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effective commander he'd been the one to receive the secret orders from
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the First Prince of Procer. Penned by a scribe, most likely, and the
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content would have been decided by her officers -- Hasenbach was a
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well-known oddity, a Lycaonese with little taste or affinity for war.
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Gauthier saw the cold sense in the letter he'd been delivered. With only
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two thousand soldiers, his guardsmen and whatever peasantry he could arm
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and send to stand on the walls his defence of Iserre was a risky
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enterprise. The easterners might be impious demon-worshippers, but the
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Legions of Terror were known to be one of the finest armies on the
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continent and their generals were of high renown. The captain knew
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himself to be no great tactician, and hardly a soldier besides. He had
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dwarven engines on the walls, due to his prince's foresight, but few and
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few men trained to use them. The devices were well-known to be finicky
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and prone to breaking anyway, rarely lasting more than five years under
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regular use. Rough handling might see a few unmade before they could
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even be properly put to work.
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And yet here he was, reading a report stating the Legions were but a
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day's march away and considering treason.
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There were no two ways about it, disobeying the First Prince's orders
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would be high treason. The Principate had declared a crusade, her
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authority in military matters was absolute. Gauthier was not a soldier,
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which in different times might have provided him a way out, but as the
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commander of the city's defence he was charged to obey any and all
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orders bearing the seal of Cordelia Hasenbach. The actual text of those
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was delicate and regretful, but the heart of it a brutal thing: after
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short defence on the walls, he was to draw the Praesi inside Iserre and
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set the city on fire around them. His troops were then to evacuate and
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join the relief forces sent by the Dominion, to fall upon the easterners
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while they were freshly bloodied. Iserre, as of Prince Milenan's last
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royal census, counted over a hundred thousand souls between its walls.
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Gauthier knew it was more than that, perhaps as much a ten thousand more
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who were foreigners and so unrecorded or too estranged from the law to
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want their presence noted in anything as official as a census.
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He would not be allowed to evacuate them. Their panic, the letter noted,
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would prevent the Praesi from pulling out their forces in time by
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clogging up the streets.
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He wrestled with the decision throughout the night. Handpicked men
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discretely prepared the blazes, for he did not give the order now it
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would be too late afterwards, and when dawn came Iserre had been turned
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into a pyre. It was the arithmetic of it that stayed with him. There
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were, according to reports, perhaps fifteen thousand easterners and not
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even half that many bandits with them. A host of twenty thousand at
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most. And his orders were to burn alive five times that many to wound
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the Praesi. He would be damned in the eyes of the Gods, if he did this.
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Yet how many more would die in towns and villages, if he did not? Not
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merely in Iserre, but all over the realm. Duty and faith tugged him
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different ways. Midmorning saw a Praesi envoy reached the city. The
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offer made was as brutal as the orders of the First Prince: should
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Iserre surrender its granaries and treasury, the city would be spared a
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sack. If it resisted, all armed inside the walls would be put to the
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sword. Gauthier rode out himself to speak with the envoy, to the gaze of
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Evil with his own eyes.
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The thing across him was green of skin, one of those creatures they
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called orc. A barbarous monster that ate human flesh and lived only for
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blood and rapine. There was nothing in its eyes but hunger, Gauthier
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saw. A small woman with ink-stained hands and the colouring of the Free
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Cities stood by its side, though she remained silent. Some kind of
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servant, he suspected.
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``The terms will remain as offered,'' the orc said. ``Negotiation is not
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on the table.''
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``You're a long way from home, greenskin,'' Gauthier said. ``Fighting
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the wars of humans.''
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``We go,'' the envoy said, ``where the banner goes.''
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``Your banner has come to the Principality of Iserre, Gods take you
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all,'' the captain said. ``We do not bow to foreigners. We do not bow to
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servants of the \emph{Hellgods}. If you want your fucking loot, come and
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take it.''
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``A respectable choice,'' the orc said. ``But you may come to regret
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it.''
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``Tell your masters this is Procer, not one of their slave cities,'' he
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spat out. ``Test our walls at your peril. We were there, when the Tower
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fell. We will be again.''
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The words, though defiant, were as ashes in his mouth as he rode back to
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Iserre. He'd just ensured the city he'd spent his entire life guarding
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would either suffer fire or a bloody sack. The Legions of Terror arrived
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past noon, and he watched them spread out from atop the walls. Dwarven
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engines stolen from other cities and armories were brought to the fore,
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their shapes changed by the devious goblins -- which rumour said were
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dwarves corrupted into foul form by the touch of the Gods Below. The
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easterners and their traitor auxiliaries built their camps and only
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began bombardment under cover of nightfall. The city's walls had been
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rebuilt fully early in the Great War, and so they suffered but did not
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break. Gauthier feared not the stones, only the assault of the
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steel-clad soldiers. Two more days passed, with only one breach to show
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for it -- quickly filled by sacks of sand and gravel at his order -- but
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time was running out. The assault would come soon, he knew, and the
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decision he must make with it. Duty or good? Gods forgive him, but as
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the fourth night fell Captain Gauthier made his decision. Better he be
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known a traitor than a butcher. When the assault came, he would empty
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the city and ride to Salia for his trial.
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Then dawn came, and with first light came the realization that the
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Praesi were \emph{gone}.
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---
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``Steady,'' Amadeus ordered. ``I want no incidents.''
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The town of Saudant's entire defending force had been a sum of thirty
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militiamen, who immediately folded when they realized how heavily
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outnumbered they were. There'd been actual soldiers behind them, though,
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who had fought: the Levantines had left four hundred soldiers to guard
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the fleet of barges that had ferried them across the lakes at the heart
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of Procer. None had surrendered, even when such an outcome was offered
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on rather lenient terms, and five barges had been lost to fire and
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fighting before they could be eradicated. A regrettable loss, but
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Amadeus had burned ships himself not a day later. The barges had carried
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thirty thousand Dominion infantry, while he would at most move twenty
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thousand soldiers himself. Having no intention of leaving Procer with
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any ships after he passed, the surplus had been put to the torch.
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The sailors and captains to which they belonged had been furious, but
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they were not armed and so in no position to contest his orders. The
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First Prince had assembled this fleet by requisitioning merchant trade,
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not building warships, and considering piracy was night-inexistent in
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Proceran waters the merchant sailors had rarely carried anything larger
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than a knife. They were also less than eager to die for the sake of the
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Lycaonese ruling Salia who'd pressed them into service, which meant his
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assurances that the sailors would be released unharmed after ferrying
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his own troops where he wished had been received with more gratitude
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than hostility. Amadeus had taken pains to be accommodating with them,
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as Praesi were poor sailor as a rule and the Legions largely unfit for
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sailing ships. Some Thalassinans in the ranks had middling experience at
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sea, but too few and those few had too little practical experience to
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properly captain barges. It might be possible to proceed without the
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sailors, but only at a snail's pace -- which would rather defeat the
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purpose of acquiring the fleet in the first place.
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The legionaries he'd called out after nodded at his order, moderating
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the language they used when speaking at the locals loading the ships.
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Finding out there were still supplies in the town meant for the
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already-departed Levantine army had been a pleasant surprise, implying
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he'd caught the very end of the enemy supply train without meaning to do
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so. He was not a fool, of course, and so he'd checked the grain and
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foodstuffs for poison. Hasenbach might have grown desperate enough for
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such a stratagem, even if the Levantines were not. None had been found,
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and he'd been pleased enough at the discovery to dole out a portion to
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the inhabitants of Saudant as incentive to load the rest more quickly.
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Barely more than a thousand people overall, and so easily appeased by
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the notion of being assured of plentiful stories throughout winter.
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Sadly the general levy by the prince of Iserre had meant few capable of
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hard labour remained, but he'd assigned a few legionary companies to
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help matters along.
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Leaving the docks -- and the friendly shore around them, where lack of
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space had dictated most barges would actually end up -- Amadeus found
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Ranker awaiting him at the nearby tavern he'd appropriated as temporary
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headquarters.
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``They have fishing boats,'' the goblin marshal informed him
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immediately. ``At least a dozen.''
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``Not enough to ferry a significant amount of men,'' the Black Knight
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noted. ``Sinking them brings little profit and antagonizes the locals.
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Leave them be.''
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``At least order them beach for a few weeks,'' Ranker said. ``Otherwise
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some enterprising soul might try to find out where we're headed.''
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He nodded after a moment, though in truth he doubted their destination
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would be much of a mystery. Even if the Augur did not divine it, the
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strategic situation would make it obvious. By now Grem and Scribe should
|
|
have lifted their `siege' of Iserre, having remained there long enough
|
|
to draw in whatever forces had been sent to relieve it. They'd hurry
|
|
towards the nearest shore, where the fleet Amadeus has just seized would
|
|
be awaiting them. From there, they could leave their pursuers to stew
|
|
impotently on the wrong side of the Principate while they struck at
|
|
easier targets.
|
|
|
|
``Have you decided where we'll be headed, after?'' Ranker asked.
|
|
|
|
``Still a matter of debate,'' Amadeus admitted. ``Segovia would allow us
|
|
to finalize our savaging of the First Prince's opposition, properly
|
|
damaging her position.''
|
|
|
|
``But you're thinking of Salia,'' the goblin said knowingly.
|
|
|
|
``We can't take the capital,'' he said, stating the obvious. ``Even
|
|
arming a third of that hive would allow her to drown us in numbers. But
|
|
if we torch our way through its outlying territories, the sheer loss of
|
|
prestige might see her unseated.''
|
|
|
|
``Grem will call it risky,'' Ranker predicted. ``I don't disagree.''
|
|
|
|
``And so it remains a matter of debate,'' the Black Knight said. ``We
|
|
will discuss in depth when reunited with him and Eudokia.''
|
|
|
|
There was a beat, during which the goblin studied him thoughtfully and
|
|
openly.
|
|
|
|
``It's been two days since you last used an aspect,'' she said. ``I
|
|
expected you to be in better shape by now.''
|
|
|
|
``I drew deeper than I have in decades,'' he candidly admitted. ``And
|
|
you know my well is shallower than most. I expect within a fortnight
|
|
I'll have recuperated.''
|
|
|
|
She nodded, after a beat.
|
|
|
|
``Gods, at least it worked,'' she sighed. ``I half-expected a band of
|
|
heroes to be awaiting.''
|
|
|
|
``There are over a hundred thousand souls in Iserre,'' Amadeus said,
|
|
avoiding even the slightest hint of smugness. ``Souls at risk of
|
|
slaughter, if left unprotected. So long as we were willing to carry out
|
|
that ugly work, it was possible to dictate where the heroic intervention
|
|
would take place. I expect Grem found the place swarming with their
|
|
like. It would have been a beacon lit for every sword of the Heavens not
|
|
gone north to fight the Dead King.''
|
|
|
|
``There's no need to get smug,'' Ranker told him, eyes squinting.
|
|
|
|
Alas, sometimes there was no winning a battle. By the fourth day, they'd
|
|
departed the charming little town of Saudant on surprisingly good terms
|
|
with the locals. Legionaries were spread too thinly across the fleet for
|
|
Amadeus' tastes, but there were enough mages along that any sailors with
|
|
notions of patriotic resistance would be forced into restraint by their
|
|
more fearful fellows. The fleet made good pace, for the first three
|
|
days.
|
|
|
|
Then the sickness started.
|
|
|
|
It showed in the sailors first. Fever, sweat, weakness of the limbs and
|
|
after twelve hours they were dead. Amadeus ordered any with the symptoms
|
|
thrown overboard as soon as he first saw the disease. It was too clean
|
|
and too sudden: there had been no sign at all before the fevers, the
|
|
sailors being in perfect health. It was not a natural disease.
|
|
Reluctantly, he ordered every Proceran sailor disposed of after the
|
|
first legionary showed symptoms. It was too late, by then.
|
|
|
|
On the sixth day, Amadeus of the Green Stretch found he was the only
|
|
person left alive of the entire fleet.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Tariq let out a panting breath when the last of the victims died.
|
|
|
|
There were Choirs, he knew, that treated their relationships with heroes
|
|
as a sort of subjugation. The Hashmallim of Contrition, in particular,
|
|
were known to be heavy-handed -- though to this day he was uncertain
|
|
whether it was because they bestowed upon only the desperate, or because
|
|
such was their nature. As a young man, the Pilgrim had found that the
|
|
Choir of Mercy demanded nothing of him. He'd simply been found to be of
|
|
a like mind with the Ophanim, and so found them at his side. As if they
|
|
had been there all along. They were more like old friends than patrons,
|
|
never far from his thoughts. Always there with a whisper of comfort in
|
|
hard times, a reassurance when the world seemed dark. They shared, after
|
|
all, the same mandate.
|
|
|
|
The alleviation of suffering.
|
|
|
|
Tariq had no longer been a young man when he'd understood the frightful
|
|
depths of that simple sentence. He'd thought, as mortals often did, that
|
|
angels saw through his eyes. Understood his thoughts, his beliefs and
|
|
his choices. The first, he thought, was perhaps true. The rest was not.
|
|
The Ophanim were absolute, in nature and mandate. There were no shades
|
|
to their perspectives, and while they might fondly tolerate them in one
|
|
sworn to the Choir of Mercy that indulgence should never be confused for
|
|
\emph{approval}. The Grey Pilgrim had first understood this when he'd
|
|
smothered his young nephew in his sleep, knowing the boy was charismatic
|
|
enough to unite the Dominion and lead to war against Procer. He'd tried,
|
|
first, to reason with him. To show him the pursuit of old grudges
|
|
through blood could not redeem a single thing.
|
|
|
|
The young never listened, he'd learned. And so old fools like him had to
|
|
smooth out the sharp edges of Creation.
|
|
|
|
Praesi, he'd been told, believed that Good only came in certain shapes.
|
|
That it must obey strict boundaries and rules, that it must rely on
|
|
little tricks like Providence or angelic intervention. An understandable
|
|
misunderstanding. For all that the raving Tyrants who climbed the Tower
|
|
liked to style themselves anathema to all children of the Heavens,
|
|
they'd rarely fought opponents beyond Callow -- where heroism was so
|
|
deeply linked to war that a villain waging one was now seen as good.
|
|
Praesi had learned to bury and defeat a certain breed of stories, after
|
|
millennia of butting heads against them. But oh, that was such a shallow
|
|
understanding. The world was large, and so few ever saw more than a
|
|
speck of it. There were as many stories as there were peoples, and to
|
|
build one's understanding on but a fraction was to raise a tower on
|
|
quicksand. The Black Knight, Tariq thought, was not a stupid man. But
|
|
he'd been arrogant enough to think he saw all the rules of his world,
|
|
and arrogance was ever the death of villains.
|
|
|
|
Crafting the plague had been easy as snapping his fingers, and mayhaps
|
|
that was the most distressing part of it. The Enemy delighted in
|
|
displaying its power, raising massive contraptions or weaving elaborate
|
|
schemes to praise its own cunning and cleverness. Like it was the only
|
|
side capable of doing those things, like it wasn't a \emph{choice} to
|
|
turn away from the unsightly means of the Gods Below. The Grey Pilgrim
|
|
could have birthed diseases and disasters that would raise the hair on
|
|
the Warlock's neck, if he so wished. But power had to used responsibly,
|
|
turned to moral purpose, else it could only ever be a form of tyranny.
|
|
And so Tariq had wept, and asked for the guidance of the Ophanim to
|
|
create a disease that would undo the Black Knight and all his murderous
|
|
designs. It was not so far removed from healing, to make someone's body
|
|
turn on itself. To allow it to spread had required learning deeper than
|
|
his, but as always the Choir had provided.
|
|
|
|
At a small price, a reminder of what he wrought. He would feel the agony
|
|
of all taken by the disease.
|
|
|
|
He'd come to Saudant a stranger on a dark night, and seeded this foul
|
|
miracle in a single man before taking his leave. Ten days and ten nights
|
|
it would wait, before beginning to kill. That the Black Knight would
|
|
come to the sleepy little town had never been in doubt. By the man's
|
|
perspective, heroes could only go to Iserre. He was making sport of
|
|
decency by forcing their hand with a threat before stealing away a fleet
|
|
to spread even more death. \emph{Where was it written}, Tariq had
|
|
thought then, \emph{that Evil will have monopoly on ruthlessness?} He'd
|
|
awaited close, with Laurence and four other heroes for company. Far
|
|
enough such a small party would not be noticed, close enough he could
|
|
ensure none of the sick would leave Saudant and spread the sickness to
|
|
the rest of Procer. The Praesi had came, the Praesi had gone, and he'd
|
|
followed in their wake. Laurence, in her own kind way, had offered to
|
|
purge the town for him. He'd refused, and offered the Last Mercy
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
This would be his own sin, from beginning to end.
|
|
|
|
They followed the villain after, taking fishing boats. No need for
|
|
anything a gaudy as a barge, when they were only a handful. It was not
|
|
difficult to find the Black Knight. He was at the centre of a fleet of
|
|
dead men, a ring of ships adrift in the lake. Tariq was the first to
|
|
climb aboard, though Laurence was not far behind, and they found him
|
|
awaiting on the deck. Standing straight-backed, armoured in old plate
|
|
without having bothered with a helmet. He watched them approach in
|
|
silence, pale green eyes emotionless.
|
|
|
|
``We finally meet, Black Knight,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
|
|
|
|
The man did not reply. He was eyeing the others, gaze lingering on
|
|
armaments and armour. Guessing at Names, guessing at powers. Already
|
|
planning the span of his last stand. Yet Tariq felt no power coming from
|
|
him, no presence. As if his Name had been snuffed out. It might very
|
|
well have been, the old man thought. The Gods Below reserved only one
|
|
fate for a lame horse.
|
|
|
|
``Surrender,'' the Pilgrim said. ``This will not end well for you.''
|
|
|
|
``It was never going to end well,'' the green-eye man smiled. ``That was
|
|
rather the point.''
|
|
|
|
His sword cleared the scabbard with a ringing sound.
|
|
|
|
``Let's see,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said, ``if I can at least
|
|
leave a mark.''
|