371 lines
20 KiB
TeX
371 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-concourse-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Concourse II}\label{interlude-concourse-ii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-concourse-ii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Concourse II}
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\epigraph{``Thus the Gods granted us the third boon: no longer would scales
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close our eyes, obscuring knowledge of Good and Evil and preventing us
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from earning just deserts.''}{The Book of All Things, sixth verse of the second hymn}
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Juniper had done what she could to keep the army on battle footing, but
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not even the Hellhound's sternest warnings could keep an air of
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festivity from hanging over the camp of the Army of Callow. Hakram noted
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with some amusement that while the ale rations that Legion tradition
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dictated should be opened after a great victory remained sealed and put
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away there seemed to be no lack of drink flowing through the cups of the
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legionaries -- be they exiles or the Black Queen's own. While the Army
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of Callow had been under strict instructions to refrain from sacking
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towns and cities even when its columns were detached and the supply
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situation became arduous, there'd been no order sent down to avoid
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trading with Procerans. Callowan soldiers were on campaign pay, which
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meant only half the coin was handed and the rest set aside for return
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home, but they were hardly penniless and in a war-torn region like
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Iserre they were the closest thing to patrons the locals would see for
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the winter. That'd overridden reluctance to trade with wicked heretics
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some, though no doubt there'd been price gouging. At the very least,
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most the bottles and flasks merrily being traded around fires were
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filled with the rich red wines the Principate's heartlands were known
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for. The ambitious had sprung for bottles of \emph{pleurs de fée}, the
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heady Alamans herbal liquor whose name could more or less be translated
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into Lower Miezan of `fairy tears'. Hakram had tried it a few months
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back and found the drink foul, though humans seemed to like the taste
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well enough.
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``You'd think we fought a battle, by the revelry,'' Vivienne said, tone
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dry.
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Neither of them were fools, and the former Thief was an old hand at this
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sort of game, and so instead of wandering around the camp in heavy dark
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cloaks that hid their faces they'd put on officer's armour and kept
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their faces half-hidden by helms. Two well-fitted armoured gauntlets,
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one empty and the other hiding bone, had seen to it that Hakram's most
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easily discernible marks would be kept out of sight. The orc followed
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the human's gaze, finding a pair of grizzled or goblins cheerfully
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bullying some Callowan girl-soldier into drinking enough \emph{aragh} it
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was a near-certainty she'd puke. The sappers noticed the attention but
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were unbothered bit it. Not unreasonably so: Adjutant was passing for a
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captain of heavies, and Vivienne for a mage lieutenant. Neither of them
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would be in an easy position to punish the drinking of soldiers so far
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removed from their own theoretical commands.
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``Perhaps we didn't,'' Hakram quietly replied, ``but it feels like
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victory nonetheless, doesn't it?''
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``We threw some spells and shot some engines and General Abigail ordered
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a single cavalry charge on enemy mages,'' the blue-eyed noblewoman said.
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``The drow fought, admittedly, but us? This entire `battle' had seen
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fewer than two hundred soldiers die, Hakram.''
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``Aye,'' Adjutant agreed, once more amused. ``Fewer than two hundred of
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ours dead, and we've both forced the Grand Alliance into truce and put
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the League of Free Cities to retreat. They'd make songs of today,
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Vivienne, even without Choir dreams gilding the legend.''
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``Legionaries would make songs of rivers being wet, after drinking,''
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the heiress-designate to the throne drily replied. ``They've taken to
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the sport of it the way Callowans once loved jousting.''
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Hakram had never actually seen one of the famous Callowan tourneys, much
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less a joust, tough he'd read of them in books. Under the Carrion Lord's
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rule knightly orders had been banned, which effectively killed the
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practice, and though under Catherine the Order of the Broken Bell had
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risen anew it was also part of the kingdom's army in a time of war --
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and so not free to pursue such leisurely pastimes. Under the old kingdom
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the Fairfaxes had often held tourneys to recruit promising knights into
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the Royal Guard, which had leant the practice a certain legitimizing
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weight, but Cat had balked at resurrecting it. When Grandmaster Brandon
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Talbot had pressed the matter she'd told him she'd rather arm another
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company of regulars or feed a village through winter than `piss away
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gold celebrating the virtue of knocking down people with sticks'. He'd
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caught Juniper, whose distaste for the chivalric trappings of Callowan
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knighthood was deeply ingrained, grinning to herself for a solid month
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after that session of the Queen's Council.
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``Mock if you will,'' Hakram gently said, ``but you know I speak the
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truth. Tonight will be remembered for many years to come. It will have
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consequences, Vivienne. Ripples.''
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They'd resumed walking, and though the gloom of Akua Sahelian's curtain
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of night had cast darkness over all it was not enough that Adjutant did
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not see the unease his words had brought to Vivienne's face. Like him,
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she had difficult grasping what might yet come of what had taken place
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tonight. Unlike him, however, that blindness worried her. Their steps
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slowed as they left the outskirts of the Second Army's camp in favour of
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Fourth's. He'd have to speak less here, as he'd spent months as an
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observer with the Fourth Army and he might be recognized by some through
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his voice even in the dark. Vivienne's gaze was on a young Soninke
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legionary, standing on the shoulders of a pair of orcs with a clay pot
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of black paint in hand as he added to one of the army's banners.
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``Wings,'' she softy said. ``I will not be surprised if the Third is
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doing the same. Sve Noc were not meek of hand in Sarcella.''
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The legionary had some talent, Hakram, though, for though instead of a
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brush it was the work of fingers dipped in paint the fresh symbols added
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to the banner could not be mistaken for anything but what they were:
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crow's wings. Two pairs, sharply shaped and feathered, and the Soninke
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finished the last touches on the last wing only to reveal the Fourth
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Army's changed banner: the four in Miezan numerals, gold on Fairfax
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blue, but now framed with crow wings at the upper corners.
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``It'll spread from there,'' Adjutant acknowledged.
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The soldier-artist was helped down by the pair of well-built orc women
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who'd been holding him up -- one of them, Hakram could not help but
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notice, had an enticingly muscled frame and fangs that looked like
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they'd go \emph{right} through bone -- and the three of them were
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greeted by cheers from the throng of soldiers that'd been watching.
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``I'd say something scathing about soldiers and superstitions,''
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Vivienne mused, ``but for all I know that might be enough to attract the
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gaze of the Crows.''
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``Best to keep on good terms with gods, when death and dying's your
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trade,'' Hakram said.
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``Even those?'' the noblewoman said. ``I wonder. That Catherine has
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charmed ancient horrors into some manner of patronage I've no trouble
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believing -- Merciful Heavens, it wouldn't even be the first time -- but
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that does not mean the spread of their influence is a boon. She will not
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always be there to keep them honest, and when our soldiers return home
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there might be\ldots{} complications.''
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``The House Insurgent has been rather amiable to the drow,'' he pointed
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out.
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There'd been incidents, of course, but the Firstborn were being kept in
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hand by their chieftains and to be frank the Insurgents were trouble all
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around. Hakram had been told of quarrelsome priests, before, but it'd
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been with the understanding that those quarrels were largely
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theological. The House Insurgent was rather prone to fistfights, for
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priests, and it likely did not help that most of them were young and
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fresh to their rebellion.
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``The Insurgents are the hotheads and Catherine's most radical partisans
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in the House,'' Vivienne said. ``It's the priests in Callow that might
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have words when the banners come back bearing Night's wings. Heresy, in
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particular, comes to mind.''
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Hakram had followed the debates within the Callowan House of Light with
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great interest, to the extent that he'd sought a sister for theological
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lessons. More than once Sister Mariet had hinted that he should consider
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conversion for the sake of his soul, but given how clear-spoken and
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learned the old woman had proved to be he'd hardly minded. The conclave
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in Laure that'd followed the Jacks seeding the rumours he and Vivienne
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had agreed on of the Woe's time in Keter had taken them both by
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surprise, and they'd both found that as they had no real influence
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within the House they could only be spectators to what then unfolded.
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Perhaps a third of the priesthood of Callow, numbering high with the
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young and those hailing from the heartlands of the kingdom -- which had
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always been the region most eager to embrace the Black Queen's reign --
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but also a surprising among of oldest priests from the north who'd been
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infuriated by the Proceran House being involved at the Battle of the
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Camps had taken a hard line and pressed for the entire Tenth Crusade to
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be declared graceless. That'd been judged too extreme an approach by
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many, even though the Grand Alliance had come to be held in great
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disdain. It would be, in essence, declaring the entire priesthood of the
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Dominion, Procer and Ashur to be grasping heretics and any soldier
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participating in the crusade to have forfeited the grace of the Heavens.
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Cooler heads, mostly priesthood from the ravaged south and the wary
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east, had tried to broker a compromise by instead declaring the decrees
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of the same Salian conclave that'd declared Catherine to be Arch-heretic
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of the East to be themselves heresy. That vote had passed unanimously,
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but the radicals had pushed for denunciation of the House of Light in
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Procer as a whole and found little appetite for the measure among their
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fellows. The talks turned harsh when the compromise motion of the House
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providing a tithe from its coffers to the Kingdom of Callow to support
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the defence of the realm was flatly refused by the southern priesthood,
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who was already beggaring itself providing charity to the families
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displaced by the Arcadian War. With that second compromise collapsing,
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the radicals scorned their fellows and mocked them for \emph{children of
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Dana} -- which, Hakram learned from the ever-helpful Sister Mariet, was
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a reference to the infamous Sister Dana of Laure who'd colluded with the
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Procerans during their occupation Callow -- before walking out of the
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conclave. They'd come to call themselves the House Insurgent, in the
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months that followed, and many had flocked to the Army of Callow. Yet it
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could not be denied that most the Callowan priesthood, more than two
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thirds of it in truth, had preferred a tamer stance.
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In the kingdom the priests who'd remained in the fold had come to be
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called the House Constant, though that was more story than truth: they
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were united mostly in their eschewal of harder measures, and in other
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things remained as prone to squabbling among themselves as the Callowan
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priesthood was reputed for. They could be counted on to back Catherine
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against all comers, so long as those comers were foreign, but Vivienne
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was right in worrying of dark wings painted on banners. The settling of
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a goblin tribe on Callowan soil had been a hard mouthful to swallow for
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many of them, as was the entrusting of so many high offices to
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Wastelanders and greenskins, yet those had only been earthly matters.
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The Crows earning some devotion of their own, however, would be seen as
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Below sinking its claws in the hearts of the Callowan flock. There would
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be trouble.
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``Most the soldiers we took in from the old legions keep to Below, if
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they keep to anything at all,'' Hakram said. ``And many of what used to
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be the Fifteenth do the same. It may not be too contentious a matter so
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long as it is kept ceremonial. Soldiers' superstition, as you said.''
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``I hope you're right,'' Vivienne said.
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Yet her eyes were on the cheering soldiers, surrounding a crow-marked
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banner.
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``But if you are not,'' she said, ``then it might be necessary to back
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our favoured horse within the House of Light.''
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Adjutant's brow rose.
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``Insurgent over Constant, you mean,'' he said, tone pensive as he
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measured the rusks. ``It might be it can be done. If we return victors
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one and all, their reputation will have risen. Yet there are risks to
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meddling there, especially for us.''
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House Fairfax had been embroiled in disputed with the House of Light
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more than once, over the span of its line, most often over the great
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cathedral of Laure and what was spoken in the sermons given there. Yet
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the old kings and queens of Callow had been Named as often as not,
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exalted in Above's service. It was one thing for one of that ilk to
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intervene in the House's affairs but entirely another for the
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\emph{Black Queen} to do so. If a villain was seen as trying to subvert
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the House of Light, rebellion was certain. Even the Carrion Lord had
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chosen the soft death when dealing with the priests, preferring instead
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the stratagem of starving them of coin.
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``Too early to tell if it'll come to that,'' Vivienne Dartwick finally
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said, eyes hooded. ``We'll have to keep an eye on things as they
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unfold.''
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Adjutant rumbled in agreement and they resumed their walk. The First
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Army's camp, where they'd begun their wandering, had been quiet and
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orderly compared to the rest -- as was only to be expected, as it was
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Juniper's own command and closest to her displeasure should festivities
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become too obvious. The Second's, under General Hune, had been tense for
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other reasons entirely. As Hune's army had seen fighting during the day
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and the night, it'd been allowed to rotate most their companies to
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sleep. Which had turned out less than restful, when vivid dreams began
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waking the legionaries. The First Army's entire mage contingent had been
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awoken to put together answers, as well as the Senior Mages from other
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armies. So far there'd been little more put together than the string of
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visions depicting parts of the struggle that'd taken place over Liesse,
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though the shape of the whole adventure had been taking appearance when
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they'd left the mages to it. Adjutant would have liked to assign Akua
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Sahelian to the matter, but she'd had more pressing duties: the soul of
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the Carrion Lord had been stolen back from the heroes, as had been his
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body weeks ago, and now the shade who'd once been the Diabolist had been
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tasked to bind soul and flesh anew after their brutal severing. Still,
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useful as her expertise might have been the army's mages and scribes
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were capable of seeing to the matter. It was less than urgent, anyhow,
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as Catherine would tell the tale herself when she returned. Most
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important, as far as Hakram was concerned, was that the most recurrent
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and vivid of the visions showed that Grey Pilgrim and the Saint of
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Swords were seemingly dead. The latter would do no favours to
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Catherine's reputation, but the former was a deeper concern.
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The Dominion was prickly, when it came to the Peregrine, and though the
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visions legionaries had received made it clear Cat had tried to prevent
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his death that might not mean too much to grief-stricken killer with
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more pride than sense. Someone would have to be blamed, and even if it
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did not outright come to war they might try to kill Catherine upon her
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return to `avenge' the Grey Pilgrim. Which would lead to war regardless,
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no two ways about it. His warlord was popular even with the
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Legions-in-Exile, who of the coalition holding this camp were the host
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with the least fondness for the Black Queen. The Army of Callow and the
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Firstborn had deeper loyalties, and very few qualms over killing either
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Procerans or Levantines if provoked. The truce over the field had been
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achieved by scheme and force of personality more than great desire for
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peace by the soldiers, Hakram knew, and that made it fragile. Even more
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so now that the League's hosts had retreated some and no longer stood as
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a close and obvious threat to the other two great assembled armies on
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the field. Juniper was well-aware, which was why there were scouts out
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there keeping an eye on the Grand Alliance's positions and the Army of
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Callow had yet to entirely leave battle footing.
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If the betrayal came, they knew, it would come after dawn rose when the
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drow would be struck by the sun-sickness and forced into slumber after
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being stripped of their power. Some would remain able to fight, but few
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and as little more than tribes of warriors.
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The orc was forced out of the thought from the first stirrings of a song
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in the distance, one he did not recognize. The mismatched pair wandered
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closer to the source by unspoken accord, until they found a broad
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bonfire and a crowd half-drunk soldiers around it. Orcs and goblins,
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Taghreb and Soninke and Callowans. They were, to hear of it, crafting a
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song in the old legion manner -- everyone trying a verse, a chorus of
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loud voices singing the attempts until something passable had come of
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the crucible. Hakram missed Nauk like a limb, in that moment. The other
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orc's rough humour and gift for song and poetry, his strange yet
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unrepentant sentimentality. It was not enough to distract him from the
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sight of one of Vivienne's agents approaching her discretely, whispering
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news in her ear when she gestured permission. The orc's attention turned
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instead to the song, heart clenching at the remembrance of a friend he'd
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now twice grieved.
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``Came they proud princes, one and all
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Great lords from olden, golden halls
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And as one they fell, under the moon
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When the Black Queen sang her tune
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For in lovely Iserre did come undone
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Dominion of seven crowns and one
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`lo blood of slayer, brigand, binder
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And champion too, binding tighter
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Yet what star could shine so brightly
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It would not fear our queen's fury?
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For in lovely Iserre did come undone,
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Dominion of seven crowns and one.''
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The song, he thought, was fiercely proud. Raw and half-done, yet already
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he could see the grimly boastful shape of it ripping free of a hundred
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voices. The Jack slipped away and without pause Vivienne leaned close,
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lowering her voice.
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``Juniper sends that the Dominion has begun to gather troops,'' she
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whispered. ``So has Princess Rozala.''
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The one-handed orc looked up the night sky, so very close to fading. He
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could feel it in his bones, how close to that veil falling they had
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come, how near to the end of the journey they'd arrived. It would all
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end soon, one way or another. And beyond that, Hakram felt another pull.
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An older claim to him, one he'd embraced body and soul.
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``We gather our own, then,'' he growled. ``And quickly.''
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The woman who'd once been the Thief glanced at him knowingly.
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``You know where Catherine will return,'' she said.
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``I do,'' Hakram Deadhand said. ``So let us gather steel, and march
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towards it.''
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Vivienne did not question him, for she knew the truth of it. In end,
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Hakram of the Howling Wolves Clan was many things. A soldier, a killer,
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a steward and on occasion a scribe. He'd served as an advisor and a
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herald, as an ender of loose ends and watchman of missteps. For the hand
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taken from him by the Penitent's Blade and returned by the sorceries of
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the Sovereign of Red Skies, he had earned the sobriquet of
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\emph{Deadhand}. To ensure the succession of everything that had been
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built in the beating heart of Callow he'd carved through the other
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wrist, and not once regretted it. That lesson, like many others, he had
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learned from someone he loved the way a knife loved a steady hand or
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sparrow loved flight. For, most of all, he was a bored sergeant on a
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warm Wasteland night, catching his first glimpse in the eyes of a
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stranger of the girl who'd topple empires and feeling his blood
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\emph{burn}.
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He was the Adjutant, and Catherine Foundling was returning.
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If any stood between them they would be broken, sure as dawn and dusk
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and the death of men.
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