458 lines
22 KiB
TeX
458 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-21-intervention}{%
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\chapter{Intervention}\label{chapter-21-intervention}}
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\epigraph{``Even madmen can win at dice.''}{Callowan saying}
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General Abigail rode poorly, though that was hardly a surprise. Most of
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my army was no better. Given that it was in majority Callowan, that was
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somewhat shameful: my people had once held a reputation for breeding the
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finest war horses on Calernia and riding them into battle with
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distinguished record. That'd been before the Conquest, though. A lot of
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Old Kingdom noble families had preferred butchering their own herds to
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turning them over to the Tower, and Black famously almost had an
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uprising on his hands when he moved to obtain horses from the
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mostly-untouched south of the kingdom. It was one of the few times my
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teacher had actually backed down. In practice, the old expectation that
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anyone of means as well as anyone of high birth would be able to ride
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with a lance had died out under the decades of occupation. A large part
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of what had birthed that custom in the first place was gone, namely the
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need for a large pool of trained mounted soldiers to fill the ranks
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should the Wasteland invade, but in my eyes the real culprit had been
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the lack of such mounts to be had.
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What few war horses had remained were either closely kept by the last of
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the Callowan aristocracy or by law set aside for the use of the Legions
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of Terror -- in specific the Thirteenth, which had been raised from
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Callowan bandits and rebels in the first place. Ratface had once told
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me, years ago, that for the smugglers who could pull it off selling a
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horse was about as profitable as selling the equivalent weight in
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spices. Wasteland aristocrats were willing to pay ludicrous sums for a
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purebred Liesse charger or even a dappled Vale courser. That'd been the
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thought, anyway, that the old herds and ways were gone. There'd been
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some satisfaction in the fact the knightly orders might be lost but at
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least they weren't under Praesi banners, the kind of bittersweet victory
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that'd been rare after the Conquest and so even more dearly savoured.
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But then the Order the Broken Bells had crawled out of the chaos of the
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Arcadian Campaign, and given time it might spread that knowledge again.
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A pretty, thought, though in the present it wasn't making either mounts
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or skilled riders appear out of thin air.
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``Ghastly beasts, I'll tell no lie,'' Abigail of Summerholm muttered,
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eyeing her mount with distrust. ``Bit unnatural, if you ask me.''
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The horses I'd confiscated from the four thousand \emph{kataphraktoi}
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numbered more than that. Less than military wisdom would have dictated a
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field force of cavalry should take with them, but six thousand horses
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was nothing to sneer at. Hakram had speculated that considering they
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weren't moving with a remount for every cataphract they might just have
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a field camp somewhere in Iserre where the rest were being kept, but
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we'd had no time to look into it. Out of sheer practicality we'd already
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had to butcher a thousand of those no doubt very expensive mounts, which
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at least had put the orcs of the Third and Fourth in a rather good mood
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-- fresh meat was a delicacy, out on campaign. But we'd also more than
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enough left for what might be considered luxury, namely mounting large
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contingents of messengers and officers. The matter was further
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complicated by the fact that horses not specifically trained out of it
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tended to panic around greenskins, but the humans in the general staffs
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had gained mount at least.
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``You get used to it,'' I said. ``Though it's been some time since I
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last rode a living mount, I'll admit.''
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I fondly stroked the rough coat of Zombie the Fifth and received a
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pleased exhale from the Helikean horse in reply. Zombie the Third was
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currently being punished by dragging a cart, which looked rather absurd
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for a winged horse and I knew she very much despised doing. The crime
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she was atoning for was that this morning I'd found \emph{someone} had
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caved in the head, ribs and spine of Zombie the Fourth. She'd tried to
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look innocent, the wretch, but unless there was another hooved creature
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in my army jealous of my attentions then I had my culprit. Apparently
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you could take the Winter necromancy out of the fae horse, but actually
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you couldn't and it would keep that vicious temperament forever.
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``If you try to shake me off again I'll have you made into boots,''
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General Abigail whispered, glaring at her horse and apparently under the
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impression I couldn't hear her. ``You know what? That's your name now.
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Boots. How do you like that, \emph{Boots}?''
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Boots proceeded forward at an indifferent trot and I cleared my throat.
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The black-haired woman paled, reminded of my presence.
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``I, uh, agree Your Majesty,'' she hastily said.
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I sighed. She hadn't listened to what I was said in the slightest, had
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she?
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``Oh, good,'' I airily replied, offering her a smile. ``Then I expect
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it'll be done within the hour.''
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I enjoyed the panic that seeped into her eyes a little too much.
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``Is that,'' she tried, ``customary?''
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Trying to find out what she'd agreed to by context. My long experience
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of pretending I already knew things while getting Masego to explain them
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allowed me to see through her admittedly pretty translucent wiles.
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``In Ashur, I'd assume,'' I gravely said.
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``Yes,'' she slowly said. ``That is\ldots{} well-known.''
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``You can tell Adjutant you're in need of our maritime charts for the
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Tyrian Sea,'' I continued. ``Gods be with you, Admiral Abigail.''
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She let out a little whimper, which she tried to pass off as a cough.
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Then she stilled.
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``We don't have a border with the Tyrian Sea,'' she realized. ``Or a
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fleet.''
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``Which will lend you the element of surprise,'' I mused.
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``Queens aren't supposed to have people on,'' General Abigail
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plaintively said.
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I hid my smile by looking away.
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``Call it royal prerogative,'' I replied, then took mercy on her and
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changed the subject. ``What do you think of your new officers?''
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``The transfers from the Fourth are all old hands from the Legions,''
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the blue-eyed woman said. ``To be entirely honest they didn't need much
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settling, Your Majesty. And Legate Samid could do my job better than me,
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if you let him.''
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\emph{Legate Samid served for fifteen years under General Afolabi, a
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Wasteland aristocrat, and first enrolled in the Legions at the beginning
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of Black's tenure as the captain of Malicia's armies}, I thought.
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\emph{His loyalties are rather more complex than yours, my dear.}
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``Then learn from him,'' I said. ``And take his advice, when it has good
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sense.''
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I'd ignored the implied offer to step down from her generalship and
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resume her legate duties, as I had the last five times she'd indirectly
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broached the subject. And would keep doing. Talented Callowan candidates
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for a general's mantle didn't grow on trees, much less those with no
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ties to any of the factions in my court. An abdication was a tricky
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matter even when a dynasty was stable, and considering mine consisted of
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me and a tumultuous reign of less than five years I hardly qualified. A
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popular Callowan general with a distinguished war record and no real
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ambition for power would go a long way in stabilizing what would follow
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in my wake. I set aside the thought for now. It was too early to tell if
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Abigail of Summerholm could really be used in that manner, and pushing
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too hard too fast would only spoil the broth.
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``I won't know the first thing about fighting heroes, ma'am,'' General
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Abigail said.
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``I've killed more than a few and I barely do,'' I shrugged. ``Besides,
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ideally we won't be killing anyone.''
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``That's, uh, not the sentiment I expected to hear,'' the black-haired
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general said.
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``Any corpse we make down here is one less warm body to throw at the
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Dead King, Abigail,'' I said. ``And heroes, well, we'll need more than a
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few of those to drive the Hidden Horror back into hiding.''
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``Into hiding,'' she slowly said. ``Not to kill.''
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``You ever seen a god die, General Abigail?'' I said.
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She shivered.
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``Can't say I have, ma'am,'' she replied, lips tight.
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``Neither have I,'' I said, ``but I suspect it would be \emph{messy}
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business. Best we know our limitations, and not bargain for more than we
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can deliver.''
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``I hear that,'' General Abigail muttered.
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About time to segue into more personal matters, I mused. I'd taken to
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digging into her past, when the opportunity rose, though what I'd
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learned was as amusing as it was appalling. Inquiried about her family
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had let to \emph{`My Ma brewed, and what Pa didn't drink we sold}.' An
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open-ended question about why she'd enrolled had led to \emph{`Our place
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in Summerholm burned down, and all respect Your Majesty but have you
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ever smelled a tannery?}` I'd been about to ask about the orc tribune --
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Krolem, his name was, I'd had Hakram look into him -- that she brought
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with her everywhere when movement caught my attention at the corner of
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my eye. Enemy outriders? No, I saw as I squinted, some of our own
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scouts. The Third Army was at the head of the column for the day's
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march, and with my personal banner being raised along with its own the
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scout officers were likely to head here for their first report. I'd not
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expected anything from them for some time, to be honest. Our best guess
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had Juniper's camp half a day away, further west along the frozen river
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we were following.
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``Unusual,'' I said.
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The general followed my gaze, but said nothing.
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``Come on,'' I decided. ``We're headed to the front of the column.''
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I spurred Zombie the Fifth forward, peeling off from the side of the
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Third Army and outpacing the marching legionaries. Abigail followed more
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slowly, hissing curses at her uncooperative mount I pretended not to
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hear. It wasn't a full scouting line, I saw as I approached. Only a
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tenth, all goblins, with the line's sergeant among them. \emph{Whatever
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they saw}, I thought\emph{, it was urgent enough they backtracked.} I
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reined in my horse a dozen feet ahead of the front of my column, slowing
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him to a trot to remain ahead as the goblins approached. Abigail arrived
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just before they did, legs so tight against her saddle I winced to think
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of the cramps she'd have tonight. The sergeant -- stringy, small and
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more yellow than green, the ritual scarring around her lips lending her
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a grisly touch -- came forward and saluted.
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``Your Majesty,'' she said. ``Sergeant Hurdler, reporting.''
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``At ease, sergeant,'' I replied.
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I glanced at Abigail and saw she'd mostly composed herself. Good enough.
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``You're back earlier than expected,'' I said. ``Your report?''
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``Whatever we got out of the Procerans, it was inaccurate,'' the goblin
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said. ``The Hellhound's camp is about half a bell ahead, and when
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Lieutenant Reeler sent us back battle was already being given.''
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\emph{Shit}, I thought. There were hills to the west of us, split in the
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middle by the river our maps called the Odelle. Not all that tall, but
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enough they'd cut our line of sight. \emph{It makes sense}, I grimly
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conceded. Juniper would want hills on one of her flanks if she could,
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knowing she'd be outnumbered in a battle.
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``Battle,'' I said. ``Elaborate, sergeant.''
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``Marshal Juniper raised a fortified camp on both sides of the river
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banks,'' Hurdler said. ``An army of Levantines and Procerans was
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assaulting the northern bank, last I saw.''
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``Which was?'' I pressed.
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``A little over an hour,'' the goblin said. ``We could see from the
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taller hills.''
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Fuck. I'd bet on Juniper against most generals, and on Grem One-Eye
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against the few left, but they wouldn't just be fighting mortals. There
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would be heroes, and if what Hakram had told me about Vivienne was true
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then Juniper wouldn't have any Named to pit against them. The Pilgrim
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alone might be driven back by the Wild Hunt, but the Saint? Laurence de
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Montfort had already proved she could savage the lot of them
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singlehandedly. Our Proceran prisoners had told us about cavalry
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skirmishes and ambushes, not a pitched battle over the camp. The enemy
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had moved quicker than we'd anticipated. My fingers clenched and I
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leaned back against my saddle, turning my face to the sky. I whistled,
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loudly.
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``Ma'am?'' Sergeant Hurdler said.
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``Pass your report along to General Bagram and Lord Adjutant
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immediately,'' I told her. ``Dismissed, sergeant.''
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She saluted, and left dragging along her exhausted scouts.
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``General Abigail,'' I said.
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The blue-eyed Callowan was watching me warily.
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``Your Majesty,'' she replied.
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``The Third Army is to march on those hills as quickly as you can make
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it,'' I said, the staff in my grasp twirling to point at the slopes to
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the west. ``You're to fly the Third's banner from the tallest hills.
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Send a messenger to Bagram, and fly the Fourth's as well.''
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``And General Bagram is to follow?'' she asked.
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``Pass this along to Hakram: Five Armies and One,'' I said.
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``That's all?'' Abigail blinked.
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``It's enough,'' I amusedly replied.
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``And you, ma'am?'' she asked.
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I glanced up, and saw exactly what I'd been waiting for.
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``I'll be going ahead,'' I said.
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In a splash of snow, Zombie the Third landed right in front of me. Wings
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still unfolded, she celebrated her release from punishment with a smug
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little canter. I gesture for one of the legionaries in the front rank to
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approach, some beardless boy who looked almost too small for his armour.
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I passed him my living mount's reins and instructed him to lead it back
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to our supply train, but paused when I caught the sun glinting off his
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helm.
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``Your name?'' I asked.
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``Edgar, ma'am,'' he replied, sounding too young and too awed. ``Of
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Laure.''
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``Are you?'' I smiled, and flicked a glance at Abigail. ``Good, it
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wouldn't do to have the Summerholm folk take all the glory. I'll be
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needing to borrow your helmet, Edgar.''
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The boy's eyes widened in surprise, but he fumbled at the clasps and
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held it up like an offering. I set it under my arm, pulling my loose
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hair back into a ponytail with the leather tongue I still carried in my
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cloak. The legionary helmet settled on my head with a comfortingly
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familiar weight. I winked at Edgar.
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``Last time I was on a field and royalty went without one of those, I
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had them shot,'' I said.
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The boy choked, and I grinned before limping to Zombie's side, waiting
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until she'd folded her wings to hoist myself atop her. I turned to
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Abigail.
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``See to it he gets another before battle, would you?'' I told her,
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dipping my head towards the kid.
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``I will,'' General Abigail nodded. ``Should I be asked your intent,
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Your Majesty, what should I say?''
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I mulled over that as my mount spread her wings.
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``I'm going to make a point, General,'' I said. ``Tactfully.''
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I spurred on my winged mount and she raced ahead, leaping up and rising
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to the beat of long wings. We rose and rose and rose, high into the sky,
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until the sun was warming my bones and I judged the height was
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sufficient. The time for quiet was over, I thought. Night flooded my
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veins, sluggish under the glare of day, but it was enough to rip open an
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inky-black gate into Arcadia. Below us, as it happened. We dove through
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the gate into the realm of the fae. Sunny skies awaited us on the other
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side, the Summer sun's disapproving light upon us, but what did we care?
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There was only the endless blue firmament and the descent, Zombie
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responding to the nudges of my knees and adjusting the angle so we would
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tumble through the destination I could feel in the back of my mind.
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I pressed close against her back, cloak trailing behind me, and squinted
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against the howling air. My staff of ebony I clutched tightly, until I
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could feel the point the needle was to emerge from the cloth. Beneath us
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was spread out a fortress, banners of neither Court I had known raised
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tall over pale walls, and cries sounded at our approach. The tallest
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tower, I saw, was our gate out. The very summit. I grimaced. Well, too
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late to hesitate. Down, down, down, until I could almost make out the
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faces of the fae jousting in the courtyard below, laden with silks and
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elaborate armaments. My staff rose and sluggishly the gate out ripped
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itself open atop the tower. We plunged through narrowly, and in the beat
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that followed found ourselves diving through fresh skies.
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The cool air of Procer whistled around me as the gate closed, and we
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joined the battle unfolding below.
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It was a bloody mess that I witness sprawling out beneath me. I'd been
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afraid that the northern Levantines and Principate reinforcements had
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somehow managed to steal a march, but by the looks of it they hadn't.
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Not exactly. In the distance I could see columns of soldiers heading
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south, spread out like glittering snakes of steel. This was a vanguard,
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not the full host. That'd be reassuring, though, if Juniper actually
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looked to be \emph{winning}. The Army of Callow and the Legions under
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Marshal Grem had raised a fortified camp across the two banks of the
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frozen River Odelle, not only palisades but earthen ramparts and even
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platforms for their siege engines. The northern part of that camp,
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however, was a wreck. What must have been flat grounds once was now a
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disaster of collapsed tunnels, the outskirts of which were being fought
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over by legionaries and Levantine foot. The Hellhound had dug under her
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own camp, I thought. It would have taken goblins to do this much damage
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so swiftly. Odds were she'd meant to bait the enemy into the northern
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bank and then collapse it on them, possibly with munitions thrown in to
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make it a crippling blow. Something had gone wrong, though, because
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among the havoc I saw more of our dead than the enemy's.
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Our side was stuck in fighting retreat to the southern bank
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fortifications, but the legionaries were getting the bad end of that
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scrap -- on uneven grounds, the lightly-armored Levantines were proving
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much more effective. Many of them carried javelins, I saw, and those
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were death on even good armour when properly thrown. Even when not, they
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turned shields useless by sticking in them. It wasn't the kind of fight
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the reformed Legions of Terror had been built for, and the Army of
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Callow was daughter to that institution. The Order of Broken Bells was
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out on the left flank, but \emph{too} far out: they'd been baited into
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pursuing lighter Levantine cavalry, by the looks of it. But it was on
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the right that disaster loomed. Proceran horse, a force at least seven
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thousand strong and advancing at a trot. I'd put my hand to fire it'd
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held back until now, and I could see why: if it charged down the Odelle,
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as it was moving to do, it would neatly cut the retreat of the
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legionaries fighting their way out of the wreckage. There'd been
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palisades put over the ice, Juniper wasn't an amateur, but they'd been
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shattered beyond repair by something and sappers were struggling to
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raise fresh ones. They wouldn't make it in time, I assessed. Not
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something solid enough to resist a hard charge by seven thousand
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hardened Proceran mounted killers.
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Someone had hit my side exactly where they needed to for this to turn
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into a debacle, and I had my suspicions as to who. I wasn't seeing the
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Pilgrim or the Saint anywhere but that hardly meant they weren't there.
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Yet this could still be salvaged, I decided. If the legionaries in the
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wreckage didn't get cut off, most of them should make it to the southern
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bank and then the siege engines would stop the enemy advance cold. Which
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meant that seven thousand horse had to be turned back. I worried my lip
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but pressed my knees against Zombie's side and she angled her glide down
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to land ahead of the Proceran cavalry. Making the fairy gates hadn't put
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me out of commission, but I wasn't exactly fresh anymore either. I
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wouldn't be able to pull a second Sarcella today, of that much I was
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certain, even if heroes decided not to interfere. Calling on a few
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vicious Night tricks might slow down the enemy, but I'd burn out long
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before I could make a real dent in seven thousand horsemen.
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Five hundred feet before the enemy, Zombie's hooves skimmed the surface
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of the cold field and left long spouts of snow like wings as she landed.
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I watched the Proceran banners trail in the breeze far ahead of me,
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vivid coloured stripes flying high above rows and rows of steel-clad
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soldiers. Some of those I had seen on the pages of ancient volumes. The
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red lion of Valencis, the strange green dragonfly of Lange. Other
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symbols I did not: a long-haired maiden clutching bow and arrows, a
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bronze wheel atop a pale column.
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Four hundred feet.
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One I had seen before with my own eyes, I realized, and not so long ago:
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a scarlet salamander on flaxen bed, the arms of Aequitan. The detail
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startled a laugh out of me. An old acquaintance was among them, then.
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Borrowed helm glinting in the sun, I twirled my staff and leaned
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forward. No miracle of Night came. Instead, using the length of ebony
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wood I traced a line in the snow ahead of me.
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Three hundred feet.
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Watching seven thousand killers ride towards me with no sign of slowing,
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I did the only reasonable thing left to me and went looking through my
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cloak. I snapped my wrist, black flame flickered, and I pulled at my
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pipe. I inhaled the wakeleaf with a little sigh of pleasure and breathed
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out a long stream of smoke.
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Two hundred feet.
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|
I grinned, broad and sharp and just a little mad. Now, the thing was, if
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it came to a scrap they might just kill me. They knew that. I knew that.
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|
Yet here I was, unmoving.
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|
One hundred feet.
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|
|
|
Catherine Foundling, out of breath and out of her depth, would be swept
|
|
aside with a warlike shout. They weren't facing that girl, though, were
|
|
they? They were facing the Black Queen, the warlord who'd slain fae and
|
|
bound them to her service. The monster who'd brought down the sky at the
|
|
Battle of the Camps, faced a band of heroes alone and raised a lake's
|
|
worth of dead. They were facing every dark rumour I'd ever had put to my
|
|
name, after watching me dive out of a pitch-black portal on a dead fae
|
|
horse. And sure, odds were I was mad. Gone the way of the Old Tyrants,
|
|
drunk on power.
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|
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|
But, a little voice would be whispering, what if I \emph{wasn't}?
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|
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|
I grinned, and smoked my pipe.
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|
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|
Fifty feet.
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|
They flinched first.
|