419 lines
20 KiB
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419 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-15-bereavement}{%
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\chapter{Bereavement}\label{chapter-15-bereavement}}
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\epigraph{``To two deaths we are born: the first in the flesh, the second in
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the memories of those left behind.''}{Sherehazad the Seer, Taghreb poet}
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The Lanteria quarter would burn twice, that'd been my decree.
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It was a good thing Sarcella was mostly abandoned by now, or it might
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have been necessary to expel people from their homes to get our hands on
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enough lumber for the pyres. As it was, the Third Army's sappers only
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had to tear down empty homes to raise the night's work: heaps of wood
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large and tall enough for near six thousand corpses to be consigned to
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burning on them. Not all the dead bodies would be legionaries -- not
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even most, as the addition of the priests from the House Insurgent had
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done much to improve the survivability of our wounded -- but the
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soldiers of Levant would share in the farewell. I wasn't leaving a few
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thousand corpses lying around when the Dead King was on the loose, no
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matter how far from the battlefield he was supposed to be. I watched in
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silence, pipe in my mouth, as companies of goblins methodically cleared
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out a space in the burn-out quarter and filled it with long rectangular
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piles of wood. They looked almost like giants' graves, I thought, though
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the bodies would be laid to rest over and not under. There'd been talk
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of requisitioning oil and charcoal from the locals to help the blaze
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burn hot enough, but I'd put a stop to that.
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There was no need for it, when I had Mighty under my command.
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It was already night out when the strange procession began. Carts and
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stretchers bearing the dead, some covered with the thin bashfulness of a
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sheet. Some, but not all: there were too many dead, too few sheets of
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cloth. I'd heard a story once, back in Laure, about the elaborate
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funeral processions of the Fairfaxes. How the dead kings and queens were
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taken through the streets of the capital on a bier of bronze and iron as
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the bells rang in unison, until all the people of Laure had seen the
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remains with their own eyes. It'd take hours, the heads of the knightly
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orders and every other Fairfax walking along the cadaver as the people
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threw red carnations before them. The same flowers that grew in long
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swaths by the shores of the Silver Lake, though some said it was
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tradition as a nod to Selwin Fairfax's death in the Red Flower Vales.
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The procession would end where it had begun, at the palace, and the
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ruler would be buried in the crypts below. \emph{A Fairfax is dead, a
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Fairfax reigns}, the people would say, and the world would go on. No one
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threw flowers for my dead soldiers in the distance below, nor the
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Levantines so far away from home. Instead they had ash and embers, and
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the blackened husk of a district that might have been beautiful before
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we came to it.
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The burial of kings and queens took the coin of a thousand soldiers',
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and so a thousand soldiers were buried without a sound. That'd always
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been the way of the world, hadn't it? The small died quiet, the great
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with theatre and oration -- as unequal a bargain in death as it had been
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in life. It was a morose line of thought, but it paired well with my
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mood. The drow that had become my second shadows when shadow claimed the
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sky stood half-hidden and still as statues, not even stirring when the
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ashen path was stirred by careful footsteps. I'd not summoned General
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Abigail, though neither was I surprised she'd come to me. The latest
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arrangements I had made would cause most to cock an eyebrow. I didn't
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turn to look at her, and repressed my amusement when I heard the
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Summerholm girl curse under her breath before climbing up. The two story
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house I'd claimed as my perch was now little more than a twisted up
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stone floor held up by load-bearing walls that let the wind through, but
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there was a path to take if you looked properly. I wouldn't have made it
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up without a smudge of Night to chase away the pain in my leg, but with
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the coming of darkness miracles had come back to me through the turn of
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that astral tide.
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There was a dull thump and louder cursing as the general of my army
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slipped halfway up and fell down on her ass, so I took pity on her and
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called out in Crepuscular. Mighty Miklaya leapt down and picked up the
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loudly protesting Callowan by the back of her neck before leaping up to
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my side and dropping her like a sack of cabbage. I nodded my thanks to
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it, and after a bow it vanished into the dark without a trace.
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``They weren't anywhere near that sprightly earlier, the pricks,''
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General Abigail muttered.
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I turned to look at her and picked up on exactly when she remembered who
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she was on her belly in front of, complaining about allies. Abigail
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blanched and skittered up with the horrified haste of a cat near a
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goblin cookpot, saluting promptly. I wondered if she was aware that her
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armour now had tracks of soot all over it.
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``General,'' I said. ``Sit.''
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My pipe had long run out, though I was now officially out of herbs to
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stuff it with anyway. Robber had more important duties than to find me
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wakeleaf at the moment, though I'd send him out on the prowl before we
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left Sarcella. It was either that or actually trying the dried
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underground lake algae that Ivah had suggested, and I wasn't nearly
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desperate enough to go for that. I suspected that drow tasted, well,
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\emph{tastes} very differently than humans. It was the only reasonable
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explanation for some of the things they subjected themselves to eating
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and drinking.
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``Your Majesty,'' General Abigail said. ``I'm not sure that's, uh,
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entirely appropriate.''
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I glanced at her amusedly. Court etiquette while on campaign? Besides,
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field promotion or not holding the title of general put her among the
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ten highest military officers in the kingdom. Technically she even
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outranked Grandmaster Brandon Talbot, though she wouldn't have the
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authority to give him orders in most situations.
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``I could make it a royal decree, if you'd prefer,'' I said.
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``Please don't,'' she said, then a heartbeat passed. ``\ldots{} Your
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Majesty.''
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Very warily she sat at the edge of the floor as I had, legs dangling. My
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eyes returned to the procession of corpses, noting it had turned from a
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flood to a trickle. The preparations would be finished soon enough. I
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felt her hesitating at my side, but didn't come to the rescue. If she
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was to continue working closely with me she'd have to find it in her to
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actually ask me questions without prompting.
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``Ma'am, I meant to ask,'' General Abigail said. ``About the
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redeployments you ordered\ldots{}''
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It was enough of a step forward to deserve reward, I decided.
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``You think they leave us vulnerable, now that the prisoners are being
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returned,'' I completed.
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She cleared her throat.
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``I don't mean to impugn the abilities of our allies,'' she said. ``But
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there's a lot of Dominion grunts out there, and our captures marched
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back with their weapons. If they hit us by surprise when almost the
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entire army's at the funeral, three thousand drow won't cut it. They'll
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catch us with our trousers down.''
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Not an unwarranted assumption, for someone who didn't know the Firstborn
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like I did.
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``I did extract oaths from both Captain Elvera and the highborn boy that
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commands the vanguard,'' I said.
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General Abigail began to spit over the edge, before remembering once
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more that I was there and hastily stopping. I politely pretended not to
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notice the choke and coughing fit that ensued.
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``My Da always said anyone that makes more than you do is probably out
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to get you,'' Abigail solemnly said. ``Double so for anyone not from
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Summerholm, triple if they're Wasteland get.''
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There was another pause, followed by an almost physical spike of fear.
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``That wouldn't mean you, Your Majesty,'' she hurriedly said. ``You're a
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-- I mean, everyone knows -- he's just an old drunk, didn't mean
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nothing.''
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I pondered that. I didn't get a salary from the Tower anymore -- Malicia
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was such a cheapskate, I'd only rebelled and tried to kill her the once
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-- so in a sense I \emph{didn't} make more than my general. Unless you
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counted taxes and tariffs, or the kingdom's treasury. I doubted telling
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her as much would actually help any, though, so I discarded the
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diversion.
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``Razin Tanja might go back on his oath, even after what he swore it
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on,'' I agreed. ``He could be desperate enough he'd roll the dice on a
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victory washing his slate clean. Captain Elvera, I'm not so sure. Honour
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matters a lot more when it's your own on the line instead of someone
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else's.''
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``Honour didn't stop them from sneaking in at night and offing our
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general staff,'' General Abigail bluntly said. ``Beg your pardon, ma'am,
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but what do some Levant muckabouts know about anything like honour? They
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were quick enough to roll over for Procer and join up, after all that
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hard talk about them being deathly foes.''
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``Akua's Folly scared a lot of people,'' I mildly said. ``And honour
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doesn't mean abandoning solid tactics.''
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And they had been that, regardless of the personal cost to me. The other
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Callowan shuffled uncomfortably.
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``Aren't they your enemy, Your Majesty?'' she asked.
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\emph{Your}, I thought. Interesting choice of words, and more telling
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than she probably realized. More so than the unspoken assumption:
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\emph{if they're your enemy, why are you defending them?}
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``They won't always be our enemy,'' I said. ``And even if they were
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sworn to stay one, it serves us nothing to lower them in our eyes. The
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moment you dismiss an opponent outright you stop understanding them.
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That's dangerous thing, in our position.''
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I threw her a bone after the lecture, wondering if Black had once done
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the same for me. If so he'd done it skillfully enough I hadn't noticed.
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``Most the three thousand drow are decoration,'' I told her. ``Defending
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bridges, like they are? I could have sent only two to stand guard with
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much the same effect. I just decided to temper the temptation for our
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friend Razin.''
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General Abigail went still. I was pleased she picked up on the
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implications of that so quickly.
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``Named?'' she said. ``Or just warlocks?''
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``Priests, in a way,'' I mused. ``Though the kind even Lanterns wouldn't
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want to meet in a dark alley.''
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The other woman breathed out sharply. I doubted she would be the last,
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when the scope of what the Might could do became clearer.
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``How many of those are there, ma'am?'' she croaked out.
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``An empire's worth,'' I said.
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\emph{And sometimes I fear even that might not be enough, for what's to
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come}, I thought.
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``You and I -- Callowans -- we were taught to fear the monsters on the
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other side of the river,'' I mused. ``The hordes and the sorceries and
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the things that go out after dark.''
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I clapped her shoulder, ignoring the flinch.
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``But not this time, Abigail,'' I said. ``Tonight, you see, we're
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looking at the river from the other side.''
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I felt my honour guard of drow stir through the Night. People were
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approaching us, and not a moment too soon. I dragged myself up after
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reaching for my staff, turning to my shivering general.
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``Time to go,'' I said. ``The dead have waited long enough.''
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---
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Once lit, the torches turned the darkened wreckage of Lanteria into a
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sea of fireflies.
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It'd been some time since I last stood for a vigil. There'd been others
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after the one that followed Three Hills, grim heaps of ash made across
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Callow wherever my armies fought and died. Marchford, where the grim
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necessity of killing everyone touched by Corruption had made it even
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uglier business than usual. Liesse and Arcadia, Dormer and the
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blood-soaked fields of the Folly. Far north, after the Battle of the
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Camps. Had there even been a year, since I first gained command, without
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some of mine being given to the flame? Sometimes it felt like I'd been
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at war from the moment I had taken up Black's knife, without ever a
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moment to catch my breath. But this wasn't about me, not really. I owned
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a part of it, but so did every single of the almost eight thousand
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legionaries and officers standing in Lanteria. So did the Levantines
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across the river, though they might not see it that way. We'd bared our
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blades and wrecked all around us, each convinced that we were right,
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necessary, that the other side was damned and blind. I almost smiled at
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the thought. Had anyone ever gone to war believing they were in the
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wrong? I could not help but wonder at the people who'd once lived in
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this city, and watched it torn apart by foreign armies engaged in a war
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first started by a woman far away in Salia. They should not be forgot,
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even if they were my enemy's people and not mine.
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They too tread the same grounds that had my leg throbbing, whispering
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with every limping step: \emph{do not forget, that this was never a
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game. Do not forget, that you make mistakes. Do not forget, that there
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must be more than ruin. Do not forget.}
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These weren't drow, so the crowd below spoke in murmurs that lapped at
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the platform the sappers had raised. I did not stand alone on it, did
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not have that gall when I'd come so late to the battle for Sarcella.
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General Abigail stood at my right side, cheeks reddened by the old
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Callowan remedy for chilly nights. She cut a good figure, in her
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polished armour freshly marked with the wings of a general glimmering in
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the glow of the magelights surrounding us. Bareheaded, her black locks
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brought out the sharp blue of her eyes. Spreading out from her right,
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the surviving general staff stood with us as well: the last remaining
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legate, a heavyset man by the name of Oakes, her Senior Mage and Staff
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Tribune. At my left I kept Robber and Mighty Jindrich, the latter of
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which was looking at the proceedings with strangely innocent
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fascination. Never before, I thought, must it have seen so many torches.
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The purpose of this had been as strange to it as its fascination was to
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me: drow did not have funerals the way the people of the surface did,
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not since the coming of Sve Noc. Corpses were just rotting meat that
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could not be eaten, nothing to be given any particular attention beyond
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disposal to avoid diseases. I'd waited long enough, I eventually
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decided. All the torches that would be lit already were.
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I raised my staff, and a single horn was sounded by an officer below.
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The sound echoed across the district, and left silence in its wake. I'd
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been offered sorcerous help by the Third Army's mages, but I had no need
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of it: the Night coiled in my veins, and when I spoke it was in a voice
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that resounded across all of Lanteria quarter.
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``The first time I met Nauk of the Waxing Moons clan,'' I said, ``he
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called me dead weight and I nearly slugged him in the face.''
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The officers standing next to me looked appalled, save for Robber who
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was grinning like a gleeful imp, but a ripple went through the crowd.
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There were greenskins who'd laughed outright, and many more soldiers who
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looked like they were feeling guilty about smiling at a funeral.
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``It wasn't even half a year after that the Fifteenth Legion was
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raised,'' I continued. ``And by then it didn't even occur to me he
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wouldn't be part of it. That was the kind of man he was, long before he
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put an arrow in a prince and got another name out of it.''
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Grief and guilt, hand in hand. For the friend I was burying, in a way,
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for the second time. For what had remained of that friend in my general
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and I'd cravenly looked away from. Another regret for the list that
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would never, could never, be expiated. It always seemed like there were
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more pressing things to see to, didn't it? Until the bells rang and you
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realized it'd become too late.
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``He was brave,'' I thoughtfully said. ``We always say that, about those
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we bury, but he truly was. Kind, to those he owed kindness to, and
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always cannier than he let on. But most of all, when I remember him, I
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remember that the same night we met he marched most of a mile on a
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broken leg without a word of complaint. It's a small thing, but it
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stands for more. There was not an ounce of \emph{give} in him.''
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My voice turned rueful.
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``But then I speak to nothing you don't already know, do I? Everything
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Nauk Princekiller had to give, you have made a part of you.''
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My lips quirked, because this was a fool's war but how could I not be
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proud of how they had fought it?
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``The Third Army marched across the span of Iserre, pursued by fourfold
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its number and ambushed by Helike's finest,'' I said. ``Yet when I found
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Sarcella, your banner flew. They rode you down, they burned you out,
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they stormed every single wall you raised -- and the Third Army did not
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break.''
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The last part rung louder like a rest, almost deserving of echo. There
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was a sea of faces splayed out below me: old and young, Praesi and
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Callowans and greenskins. Old Legion veterans come under fresh banner to
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ply the same harsh trade, youths who'd put on the armour with that
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burning need to do something that would \emph{matter}. Some had joined
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for coin, some for purpose, some for having nowhere else to go. Some had
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put on the mail for their country, and among those there were hard-eyed
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Soninke and Taghreb who I thought might yet \emph{make} that country
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after they went home with a blade in hand. Once you'd drunk from the cup
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of defiance the taste was not easily forgot, and they had all drunk
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deep. How many of them had sung on the march to Dormer, I wondered,
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joined their voices to that chilling song Nauk had penned? I had taken
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the armies of the east and told them they were owed better, that they
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could \emph{do} better, and they had believed me.
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Since that day they had been sharpened on bloody fields every bit the
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match of the Conquest's, marched victorious through a gauntlet of
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horrors. And they'd done it without High Lords, without Dukes and
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Baronesses, without any of the old banners above their heads. One day
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those soldiers would go home, and those who would be their masters would
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not find them so easily bent to the old order. \emph{I've borrowed the
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strength of an empire and the godhead behind it, bared it at my foes
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like a blade}, I thought, \emph{and some fools will tremble at that
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alone. But you, all of you.} \emph{Oh, how they would tremble if they
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could look at you now. What you are and might yet do.} In the golden
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glow of the torches they all seemed tinted by the same dye, as if they
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had shared some strange rite that left the same mark on all of them.
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Maybe they had, this lone column in the snow surrounded by foes. I saw
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all that and one thing more, a reflection of what I felt in my bones
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when looking at them: pride\emph{.}
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``I could praise you,'' I said. ``But what could I possibly speak that
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would ring louder than your record? Instead, I will say there are faces
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here that I recognize.''
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It was true. More greenskins and Praesi than Callowans, who had come
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later to my campaigns, but more than a few of those as well. Legionaries
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and officers both, some who'd been under Nauk as far back as Three
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Hills.
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``From the two thousand that charged Summer, at Five Armies and One,'' I
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said. ``From the first into the breach, at Dormer. From those who took
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the hellgate at the Doom of Liesse. From the Battle of the Camps,
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holding against three to one and hero's wroth.''
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I laughed.
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``Have you ever fought a battle where you were not meant to lose?''
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Laughter answered, harsh and grim and heartbreakingly proud.
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``In the crucible of the Conquest,'' I said, ``names were granted to
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honour the greatest deeds of Legions. \emph{Cognomen}, they are called.
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You have gone through crucible harsher still, and so this honour is long
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overdue.''
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My voice rose.
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``You are the Third Army of the Kingdom of Callow,'' I proclaimed. ``You
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have been the vanguard of our every victory, never once flinching nor
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breaking -- and for that I name you \emph{dauntless}.''
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For a moment there was only silence, and my stomach dropped, but then
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roar drowned out everything. Thousands of throats screaming out into the
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night, a chorus of stomping feet and blades striking shields. Dauntless,
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I thought, letting the sea of noise wash over me. That had been impulse,
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but I did not regret it. I would see it put to the rolls, and I would
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see Nauk's name written as the first general to command it. It was the
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only kind of grave marker he would have cared for, I suspected. The
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Third Army howled its approval, long and loud, and when the sound
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thinned General Abigail's own tribune approached me with a torch,
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passing it to my hand. For the pyre, I knew. It was my right, as Queen
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of Callow, to throw the first one.
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``We'll all put friends to the flame tonight,'' I said. ``And there will
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be others, on other fields. So weep for the lost, but know that I can
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promise you this: in the end, they will \emph{remember} us.''
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I wanted to throw the torch. For the friend I'd loved, the memories I
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would still clutch now that he was gone. But this wasn't about me, not
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really. I owned a part of it, but so did every single one of them. So
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instead I limped to Abigail and passed her the torch.
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``Send them home, General,'' I said.
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Blue eyes met mine, unreadable, and slowly she nodded.
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The torch flew, and the sea of fireflies followed.
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