442 lines
23 KiB
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442 lines
23 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-congregation-i}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Congregation I}\label{interlude-congregation-i}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-congregation-i}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Congregation I}
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\epigraph{``Eighty-four: the only sensible solution to a maze is to not
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enter the maze.''}{``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown}
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His son's back was already a raw, bloody wound but Akil Tanja did not
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allow his arm to slow or weaken. Lady Aquiline was watching with those
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cold Slayer eyes, and would take even the slightest hint of mercy as an
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excuse to cast doubt on the validity of the punishment. The five-tailed
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whip -- Blood's Scourge, men called it, one tail for every founding line
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-- no longer ripped wounds when it struck Razin's back. All there was to
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be ripped open had been, by now: the Lord of Malaga only sent blood
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spraying, coating his own arms and face. Only three more, now, until the
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last had sounded. Fifty one in total. \emph{Ten for the Pilgrim and ten
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for the Champion, those who stood closest to dawn. Ten for the Binder
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and ten for the Slayer,} \emph{bloody hands joined in prayer. Ten for
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the Brigand, warring alone, and one more after that to atone.} With each
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old verse his hand struck again, until at last it was done. Razin
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remained kneeling in the snow before the eyes of every captain in the
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host, half-naked and bleeding. Akil's eldest son had not wept nor
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screamed, and for that the Lord of Malaga felt a twinge of pride. That
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he'd remained conscious as well spoke well of his mettle, for the lord
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had seen older and harsher been break under the scourge.
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Much had been lost, failing to take the streets of Sarcella waiting on
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the other side of the river, but perhaps some things gained as well.
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Razin could learn, if he lived, and through the savagery that'd just
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ended the Lord of Malaga had ensured he would. He glanced the Lady of
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Tartessos, standing surrounded by a ring of steel-clad captains, and she
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inclined her head in concession after matching his gaze. The undeniable
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harshness of the flogging had ensured she could not further contest the
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affair, as he'd meant it to. The Lord of Malaga, Akil Tanja of the Grim
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Binder's Blood, raised the bloodied scourge he'd tormented his heir with
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to the sky and a hush fell over the assembly.
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``Fault was incurred straying from the light of the Heavens, and from
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that light no succour will be given,'' he called out. ``Through the flow
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of ancient blood, let this dishonour be washed away.''
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Shouts of approval came from Akil's own captains, for Razin's grit in
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suffering the scourge had redeemed him partly in their eyes, but from
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the officers of Tartessos there came only cold silence. Those captains
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sworn to Holy Seljun -- in practice, to no one at all -- offered only
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sparse cheers. Too many of their fellows had taken hard losses fighting
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the Army of Callow for them to be willing to lean towards Malaga over
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Tartessos openly. Akil passed the red-slick whip to his attendant and
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resisted the urge to wipe his son's blood from his hands. Razin, brave
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to the end, tried to rise to his feet and walk away on his own terms.
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But pain and blood loss had robbed him of the strength and he
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immediately stumbled. The Lord of Malaga quickened forward just in time
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to catch him, resting his heir's arm on his shoulder and holding him up.
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``Father,'' Razin croaked. ``I-''
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``Silence,'' Akil ordered. ``Rest.''
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He passed on his son to his sworn swords, knowing they would lead him
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away to a tent far from prying eyes. Honour and law dictated that no
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priest could tend to wounds inflicted by Blood's Scourge, and no doubt
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Lady Aquiline would keep watch on Razin to see if either was bent to
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ensure his son lived. In this, at least, she had been outplayed. Akil
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had in his service a binder who had studied with the mage-healers of
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Ashur, and there was no dictate concerning the works of sorcery. An
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invitation would be made for one of Lady Aquiline's own sworn men to
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observe the proceedings, to ensure she could not even strike through
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rumours without dishonouring herself. Akil watched his son being carried
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away and mourned for the fool of a boy. He had other children, some who
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like him had been born with the Gift and so held true chance to inherit
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the Bestowal of their honoured ancestor the Grim Binder. Yet he'd named
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Razin heir over them even if he was blind to sorcery, or rather
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\emph{because} of it. His eldest son felt that absence sorely, and it
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had lit a flame in him to always seek to achieve more. No other of his
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get shared that fire, no matter their other talents. But the need to
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prove himself had made the boy exceed both his authority and capacity,
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in Sarcella. The scars that would mar his back for the rest of his life
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might be the lesson he'd needed never to do so lightly again.
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Or the failure might break him, and the Lord of Malaga would have to
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look to a new heir.
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``He was not without courage.''
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Lady Aquiline Osena, of the Silent Slayer's Blood, strode past his sworn
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swords without a second look and stood by Akil's side to cast a cool
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gaze at the same boy she'd tried to have killed today. The Osena were
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reputed to be a taciturn lot though Aquiline had the forked tongue of
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snake when she put it to use, which was often. The cleverness of a
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serpent as well. Before the assembly of captains she'd feigned mercy and
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offered for Razin to be punished only by the rod, pretending it mercy
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when it was either scheme or murder. Three blows by a wooden rod would
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have been the due of every captain in the host, if Akil had not instead
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grit his teeth and himself requested the Blood's Scourge. The captains
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of Tartessos would have beaten him half to death by themselves,
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regardless of his private entreaties. And the consequence of making
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those entreaties to his own captains and those sworn only to the Holy
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Seljun would have been\ldots{} dangerous. Forbidding his own officers
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from striking blows would have been the same as saying the lives of
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Tartessos soldiers were worth more than theirs, and the unaligned
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captains would have required either heavy bribes or rough intimidation
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to agree. The choice would have been, in the end, between effectively
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surrendering command of the army to Lady Aquiline or letting his son be
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beaten to death in broad daylight.
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And now the same woman who'd schemed this would bandy words with him,
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when Razin's blood still flecked his father's beard.
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``My tolerance has limits, Osena,'' Akil harshly replied.
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``As does mine,'' Lady Aquiline said, tone cold as ice. ``Your whelp
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lost near four thousand soldiers flailing at the Third Army and nearly
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got my right hand killed after stealing the command from her. Do not
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pretend this is of my doing, Tanja. The boy should have died for this
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outrage and the thorny oaths he passed on to us.''
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In Levant, it was an old story that the enmity between the lines of the
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Silent Slayer and the Grim Binder found its source in the hatred those
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two great heroines had held for each other. Some even said that hatred
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came from their struggle over the affections of the first Grey Pilgrim,
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though Akil did personally believe that piece of the tale. The truth was
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that the bad blood came from over a century of fighting over who should
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own the lucrative orchards and mines in the valley of Lusia, which was
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located at the edge of the dominions of both Malaga and Tartessos. The
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last time there'd been longer than a few months without an honour feud
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being fought over the valley was under Yasa Isbili's reign, and in those
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days Akil's grandfather had been young. The Lord of Malaga had not been
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please to know his own soldiery would fight alongside Lady Aquiline's,
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but there'd been no other choice. The Marave of Alava took orders from
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no one, those fucking blustering madmen of the Champion's Blood, and the
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feuds between the Ifriqui of Vaccei and the Osena of Tartessos made
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those of his own line look like playful tussles. The Brigand's Blood saw
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no dishonour in poison or ambush, as Lady Aquiline's two younger
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brothers had learned the hard way.
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``Honour was restored,'' the Lord of Malaga briskly dismissed. ``Why do
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you seek me out, Aquiline?''
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``Trouble,'' the hard-eyed woman replied. ``I have word from further
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south.''
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``Then speak it,'' Akil said.
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The Lady of Tartessos gave their surroundings and meaningful glance, and
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Akil conceded the point with a nod. To his own tent they moved, leaving
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swords sworn to either idling in the snow. He made certain to formally
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offer her hospitality and have her accept it, lest honour allow her to
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use any words spoken here to her advantage.
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``There was a battle in southern Iserre,'' Aquiline said, once the
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rituals were seen to. ``Hasenbach's twenty thousand marching up from
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Tenerife met the Spears of Stygia on the field.''
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Ill news and boon ones, all at once. Akil had never counted on Procerans
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fools enough to be duped by the League to truly be of use in the battles
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to come, and that the Stygian phalanx was not following his army was
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pleasing to hear. Slaves they might me, but the Spears of Stygia had a
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daunting reputation. If the First Prince's southern army had been
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crushed however, the situation in Iserre was fast worsening
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``Whose victory?'' he asked.
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``Draw,'' Lady Aquiline said. ``The phalanx bloodied the
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\emph{fantassins} but Arlesite cavalry routed Stygia's skirmishers and
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struck at the back of the Spears. They both limped away with losses but
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in good order.''
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Akil would have asked her how she knew this, if he considered it even
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remotely likely she would tell him. The amount of detail offered was
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impressive, nonetheless.
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``Where are they limping \emph{to}?'' the Lord of Malaga said.
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``And there is the trouble,'' she said. ``The Procerans are now two
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weeks' march behind us. They broke through the Stygian defence.''
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Akil did not believe that any more than she truly did, by her tone.
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Procerans were not unskilled at war, for all that his people liked to
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diminish the worth of their blades. Their foot was match for any of
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Levant's save perhaps heavy armsmen led by Blood, and as a rule their
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cavalry made sport of the Dominion's if not outnumbered. Which Procerans
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very rarely were. They were hardly helpless babes, even facing Spears of
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Stygia, but cracking the slave-phalanxes would have been a bloody toil
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for anyone. If the twenty-thousand had been in shape for an orderly
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march this soon, either the Heavens had smiled or the Stygians had
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\emph{let} them pass.
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``The Tyrant,'' he said, ``is about to turn on us.''
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This was not unexpected, for the Bestowed ruler of Helike was a
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dangerous lunatic, but the swiftness of that betrayal was inconvenient.
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The secret missives detailing the movements of the League's armies and
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the assistance of the Helikean cataphracts in hunting down the Army of
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Callow had been well worth what was given in return -- reports on the
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situation in Salia and the war against the Dead King -- but it now
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seemed the offered `secret alliance' was to come to an end. Of the
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bargain being revealed, Akil had little worry. He would not have
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accepted it otherwise. The Tyrant of Helike was breaking the most
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fundamental of the League's laws by treating with foreign powers, as it
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was the sole prerogative of his Hierarch. His own allies would turn on
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him like hungry dogs, if it came out: he'd been at war with most of them
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a year ago, and that kind of slaughter was not easily forgot.
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``We had our bargain's worth,'' Lady Aquiline said. ``We've avoided
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battle with the League and the cataphracts slowed the Callowan columns.
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If my second had been left to her command, the Third Army would still be
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contained in Sarcella instead of days away and --''
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``Enough,'' Akil said. ``Razin acted dishonourably, and for that was
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scourged. But if you intend to insist your Captain Elvera would have
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beaten the \emph{Black Queen}, we will settle that claim blades in
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hand.''
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The Lady of Tartessos smiled sharply.
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``Can the Binder's Blood afford another disgrace so soon?'' she said,
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hand falling to the pommel of her blade.
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Akil was unimpressed. She might be over a decade younger, but he was no
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steel-swinger to be made less by such a thing: he was a binder, first
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and foremost, from the line of greatest practitioner of that art there
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ever was. Age was power gained, not lost.
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``Test me, Slayer whelp,'' he smiled back, just as sharp. ``See what
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comes of it.''
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``A poor host, to offer threat,'' Aquiline mocked.
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``A poor guest, to give me cause,'' he said.
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A moment passed, and if not for the laws of hospitality he thought she
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might have drawn on him. But honour demanded truce, and so truce held.
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``We cannot pursue the Callowans,'' Lady Aquiline stiffly said. ``We
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must first extricate the Procerans, lest the League kill them all.''
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Neither of them had seen the need to plainly speak what they suspected.
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If the twenty-thousand soldiers of the Principate had been allowed to
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pass, it was so that the armies of the League of Free Cities could
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encircle all the other hosts marching across Iserre. Such a strategy
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would have been weakened, if the Proceran host remained behind it and
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able to strike at its back.
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``I would not test the Black Queen without Bestowed at my side,
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regardless,'' Akil admitted. ``The Peregrine himself sent warning of her
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power.''
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The Lady of Tartessos discreetly made the Mark of Mercy with her
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fingers, as he did, for while she might be vicious wretch even she knew
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the respect due to the living breath of the Pilgrim's Blood. Even out on
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the outskirts of the Brocelian Forest it was known that the man who
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should be the Holy Seljun of Levant was not the one sitting the Tattered
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Throne.
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``Then battle is delayed,'' Lady Aquiline stated. ``Lord Marave must
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contain the remainder of the Callowans up north and join with the
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reinforcements from Salia. After we've secured our own Procerans we can
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all of us together force a decisive clash.''
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In northern Iserre, Akil Tanja of the Binder's Blood thought. It would
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end in the furthest reaches of the principality, near the border with
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Cantal.
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``Soon,'' the Lord of Malaga said.
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``Soon,'' the Lady of Tartessos agreed.
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---
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The sun was setting over the battlefield, and the Army of Callow was
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once more victorious.
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\emph{Parts of it, more accurately,} Marshal Juniper thought. The First
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and Second Army had been reunited under her overall command, along with
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the Order of the Broken Bells, but the other two columns she'd sent off
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had yet to arrive. Fortunately, the Legions of Terror under Marshal Grem
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had bolstered her numbers to the extent that the forty-thousand strong
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of the Lord of Alava would be reluctant to clash with their allied
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commands. And this Lord Marave had been, at first, which made the last
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fortnight of continuous skirmishes rather interesting. In the distance,
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barely visible now that sunlight was dying a slow death, Levantine
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archers and slingers were withdrawing in good order. So were the
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companies of crossbows and regulars that the Hellhound had tasked with
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simply driving them back, knowing by now there was no point in trying to
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force a larger battle with the Dominion army. One day out of three, over
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the last two weeks, the Levantines had aggressively initiated a skirmish
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and refused to withdraw unless either heavy casualties or a large
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deployment by the Legions and the Army forced them into retreat.
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The Levantine cavalry had attempted a few raids, at the start, before
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Marshal Grem nailed them with a munition-sown field and Juniper wiped
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out half their exposed skirmishers with a swift charge of the Order of
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the Broken Bells. Since that blow the Dominion riders had remained to
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guard the flanks of their skirmishers. Until today. Grandmaster Talbot
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had sallied out to turn back a charge that very nearly caught Juniper's
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supply train by surprise -- she now suspected the Levantines had used a
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last night's snow storm to sneak a few hundred horse ahead of her army
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and hidden it behind low hills until she approached. In practice there'd
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been little fighting, for the moment the knights of Callow hit the
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Levantine horse it had scattered without giving much of a fight. But
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getting the columns in marching order afterwards had taken most of the
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afternoon, which she suspected was what Lord Marave had been willing to
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trade around a hundred cavalry for. This was not a strategy of
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attrition, she'd made the calculations. In both skirmishes and cavalry
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clashes, her force came out ahead in casualties by a moderate but
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noticeable margin. Which meant, she thought, that the Dominion was
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willing to bleed to slow her down.
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\emph{Interesting}, she thought once more.
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The orc began the short trek war council tent she'd left to have a look
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at the battlefield herself, knowing she would be awaited inside. Banners
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flew above the cloth pavilion, more than there would have been a year
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ago. Catherine's own, the silver balance on black that soldiers had
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taken to calling the \emph{Crown and Sword}. Yet also the cracked bronze
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bells of the Order, and the gold Miezan numerals set on Fairfax blue of
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the First and Second Army. Lone among those, like a crow among birds,
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Lord Black's personal banner flew the wind. Sheer dark, not a speck of
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anything else. It was telling, Juniper had thought, that alongside their
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own banners the Legions in Procer flew the Carrion Lord's and not the
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Tower's. The inside of the pavilion was warmed by braziers and
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illuminated by magelights, and for now emptied of the usual swarm of
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officers that would usually buzz around seeing to one task or another.
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Inside were seated two people, at the long table covered with the map of
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central Procer, the only other two who could be considered alongside her
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to have a real say in how this campaign was conducted now that the
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Deadhand had gone with the Fourth Army.
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Marshal Grem One-Eye glanced up at her entrance and inclined his head
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the slightest bit. No a tooth bared, of course. As Marshal of Callow she
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was a peer, not an inferior or a superior, and Grem was famously
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disinclined to the kind of subtle posturing many of her kind fell into
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when jostling for dominance among assembly of equals. Mother had spent
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years trying to get a snarl out of him and never got more than a rare
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disapproving flash of fangs, Juniper remembered, and the pang of sorrow
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lingered beyond the span she allowed the memory. The other's eyes
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remained on the map, the Lady-Regent of Callow frowning as she tried to
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match words on a letter to some marked location in Iserre. Vivienne
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Dartwick brushed back a long lock of hair and sighed, the royal seal of
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the Kingdom of Callow that hung from her neck moving as she did. Juniper
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moved the chair across the table from her and lowered her frame into it,
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ignoring the moaning creaks of the wood.
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``Milenan must be using a different name than the one our own maps
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use,'' the Lady-Regent said. ``Otherwise it makes no sense.''
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``Proceran cartography is famously imprecise,'' Marshal Grem said.
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``Particularly on the subject of borders,'' Dartwick drily commented.
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The other orc's lips quirked, though Juniper was less than amused
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herself. Dartwick might be convinced she could squeeze Prince Amadis
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Milenan for information as long as the right prize was dangled, but the
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Hellhound had doubts on how reliable what they got out of him would be.
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``I take it the walk cleared your mind,'' the Lady-Regent suddenly said,
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looking up.
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``It did,'' the Hellhound grunted. ``I don't think this is about our
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columns anymore.''
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One-Eye leaned forward with interest, but it wasn't him Juniper needed
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to sell on this. Vivienne Dartwick was the one with the last word, these
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days, much as it irked the orc to even think it. The fact that Adjutant
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had looked to the Callowan for the final word when Juniper had come
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forward with the proposal for the Proceran campaign had driven that nail
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in hard and loud -- whatever it was that'd lost the Deadhand yet another
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hand, it had changed things. And not just, the Hellhound thought, that
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she was nearly certain Dartwick no longer had a Name.
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``Then what is it about?'' the Lady-Regent asked, eyes considering.
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``This isn't attrition,'' Juniper said. ``They're not winning that
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fight, not at the casualty rates we're trading.''
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``They're exhausting us,'' Marshal Grem noted. ``The Legions have been
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on campaign for most a year now, even for veterans morale is fraying.
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And a lot of your soldiers are green, Marshal Juniper. They won't hold
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up as well as Levantine foot under that kind of pressure. It might not
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matter they have less soldiers, if they have more in fighting fit.''
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``I considered that,'' she said. ``And there is a sense to it -- delay
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giving battle until they've brought us to the brink, and engage only
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after my other two columns have been dismantled by their other army.''
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``But,'' Dartwick said.
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``They're taking too many risks,'' Juniper said. ``That strike with the
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cavalry, today? That was an escalation in recklessness. I believe we'll
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see the pattern hold up the longer they're in pursuit.''
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``The only gain from that was slowing us,'' Marshal Grem calmly said.
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There was a pause.
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``You believe there's a Proceran army headed our way,'' One-Eye
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concluded. ``Through Cantal, most likely, descending toward us following
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the lakes. We're being softened up before they pincer us.''
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``I believe they want to win the war in Iserre before the Grand Alliance
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moves north as a whole,'' Juniper said. ``And to do that they need to
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force a decisive battle, soon.''
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``The Tyrant of Helike passed information indicating that most of the
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principality of Hainaut has fallen to the Dead King,'' Dartwick frowned.
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``And the Lycaonese are steadily losing ground.''
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The boy-king of Helike had been willing to cut a deal offering quite a
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bit of useful information, after failing to kill Juniper. Mostly useful
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in how to remain out of the path of the League's armies, but the latest
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reports out of Salia and the war against the Dead King were of some
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importance. That he'd asked for detailed assessments of the Proceran and
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Levantine armies in exchange had been judged an acceptable price by
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Dartwick, and Juniper agreed. Anything making him more inclined to
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attack the Great Alliance than them was of some benefit.
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``Procer can't afford a long war down here,'' Juniper agreed.
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``Attrition, defeat in detail -- they'll take too much time. If they're
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not done here within two months, there's a decent they lose the northern
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Principate. So they need us crushed, quick.''
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``And large enough an army to intimidate the League into a truce, if not
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a treaty,'' the Lady-Regent murmured.
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Marshal Grem peered down at the map, and his face tightened.
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``Not one decisive battle,'' he gravelled. ``Two. They smash us up
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north, smash General Bagram and the Princekiller further south and then
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link up to face the League.''
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``We can't keep marching north, then,'' Juniper said. ``We're giving
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them exactly what they want.''
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``Then what do you suggest?'' Dartwick said, head cocking to the side.
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Marshal Grem One-Eye grinned.
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``We march back south,'' he said. ``And find out who'll blink first,
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between us and the First Prince.''
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