475 lines
22 KiB
TeX
475 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-85-when-it-rains}{%
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\chapter{When It Rains}\label{chapter-85-when-it-rains}}
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\epigraph{``Kill an enemy,
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Make another
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How dreadfully
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We do usher!
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Killed; enemy
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To another.''}{Extract from `And So I Dreamt I Was Awake' by Sherehazad the Seer,
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Taghreb poet}
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``You're certain?'' I asked.
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``As can be,'' Vivienne replied. ``Our own people have intercepted
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reports and the Scribe's agents confirm it.''
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``Then send for Pickler,'' I said. ``We'll need someone navigate the
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implications of that.''
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I paused, and the other Callowan caught my eye with understanding.
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``Robber as well, then,'' the dark-haired woman said.
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She dipped out of the room long enough to send out messengers and
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returned as I poured us cups of wine. She took it when offered, and we
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both sipped in silence. Lost in our thoughts. It'd be better with the
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two of them, and I was glad she'd realized it. While it could not be
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denied that Senior Sapper Pickler's upbringing as the daughter of a
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Matron leant her insights into the ways of goblinkind that a nobody like
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Robber wouldn't have, neither should it be ignored that she was,
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well\ldots{} horribly unsociable. Even with other goblins. Special
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Tribune Robber, on the other hand? He somehow seemed to know every other
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greenskin we came across, and though goblins were clannish in the
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extreme amongst themselves they gossiped with relish. Robber would have
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his finger on the pulse of things in a way Pickler would not. Gods, and
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to think I'd believed it would be quiet after the disaster in Lyonceau.
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Showed what I knew.
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Midnight had come and passed, though it would be more than a bell still
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until dawn came, and no part of that span had been calm. I'd not
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returned to Salia, after the Dead King's chilling farewell, for it would
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have been unwise. Riots were beginning again, though this time not as a
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tool of conspiracy: word had spread that the war against Keter was
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resuming, and in terror and impotent anger the people had taken to the
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streets. Given that there'd been killing of foreigners last time, it'd
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been judged cautious for the delegations not to return to the capital at
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least until the day after. If not longer. The First Prince had admitted
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that she'd rather not soldiers -- even solely her own -- to put down the
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turbulence but that she might not have a choice. Should it come to that,
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though, no other member of the Grand Alliance could be seen intervening
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even if only to help. It would feed the rumours from the coup attempt
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that'd not entirely died down, that the First Prince was in league with
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foreign powers that wanted to destroy Procer.
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As Salia roiled and the rest of us kept to our camps, surrounded by
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soldiers, the last stretch of day into the night had been filled with
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fervent activity. For one, the two Named that'd been effectively keeping
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the League of Free Cities together were gone. The Hierarch perhaps not
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yet dead, as Masego had insisted, but undeniably he was in no place to
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rule. Not that he'd ever done that even when he was actually meant to.
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There'd been accusations of assassination from some cities, Penthes
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leading the charge, but it was hard to argue with a town covered in ash
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and two heroes stuck in bedrest. The League delegations had hastily
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withdrawn to their camp under a heavy escort of Proceran soldiers,
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howling mobs of Salians tossing everything they could get their hands on
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at them. I had Archer out and keeping an eye on them, though with strict
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instructions not the kick the hornet's nest. That Penthes had been so
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aggressive earlier was a good indication that Hakram was right about
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Malicia having sunk in her hooks there, but there was no telling where
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much of the League would fall. Helike, in particular, promised to be a
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mess. Kairos Theodosian had no formal successor, and rumour was he'd
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pruned minor branches of the Theodosians quite enthusiastically after
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usurping his nephew. It was not impossible that the royal house of
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Helike was dead, and there was no telling if some other nobles would
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make a play for the throne or some distant relation was about to be
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produced so they could `rule'.
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And now, like we didn't have our plates full enough with the south,
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north and west trouble was coming from the east as well. The affairs of
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the Confederation of the Grey Eyries, the fledgling goblin state that'd
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risen in rebellion against the Tower and declared independence before
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going a step further and taking Foramen, had always been opaque to
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outsiders. The Council of Matrons had ruled the goblin tribes under the
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Empire and it still did under the Confederation, but to my understanding
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the alliance between the tribes was a loose thing even at the best of
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times. The Matrons were nominally an ally to Callow, for Hakram and
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Vivienne had backed their bid for independence with dwarven gold and
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foodstuffs, to be repaid in goods we needed: goblin steel and munitions.
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A blockade of the Hungering Sands by the loyalist Legions of Terror had
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made deliveries of these highly sporadic, though they'd not entirely
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ceased, but the Matrons were making visible efforts to keep their word.
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I'd believed that to be a promising sign, and though the goblins were
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said to have committed atrocities against Taghrebi nobility when they
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took Foramen, the loss of the Imperial Forges and yet another great city
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of Praes had been a hard blow to Malicia. The Confederation was riddled
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with practices I despised, and the Matrons were generally speaking about
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as trustworthy as a nest of vipers, but as a counterweight to the Tower
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in the southeast they'd been an invaluable asset. Just the fact that
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they'd tied up the loyalist legions down south had been worth its weight
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in gold, since it meant I didn't have to worry about those same troops
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securing the Empire for Malicia -- or marching on Summerholm, for that
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matter. There was the promise of a long-term partnership there as well,
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with the Snake Eater Tribe having settled in my lands near Marchford.
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It'd allowed Juniper to recruit goblins to fill the ranks of the Army of
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Callow's sappers and scouts, and more abstract benefits as well. The
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relative harmony with the locals had been both a proof that Callow might
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be able to handle greenskin settlers and a tie to the Council of Matrons
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themselves.
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The generous income that rent of their tribal lands brought didn't hurt
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either, given the until recently dreadful state of my coffers.
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Some parts of it in particular: Pickler's mother, Matron Wither of the
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High Ridge Tribe. Who'd been trying to push Pickler into retiring and
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becoming Matron of the Snake Eater Tribe since the moment it was settled
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on Callowan grounds. I'd been more amused than anything when I'd first
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heard, for trying to get Pickler interested in anything that wasn't
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engineering was like pulling teeth, but given the fractious nature of
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goblin politics I'd found it shockingly impressive that Matron Wither
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has succeeded at ensuring no other matron was appointed in the wake of
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her daughter's refusal to retire and take up matronship of the tribe.
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Guards knocked on the door and jolted me out of my thoughts, Vivienne
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calling out to allow entry as I took a sip from my now near-empty cup.
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The two goblins came in together, for a moment allowing a glimpse of the
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difference between them -- Pickler was, I realized, growing
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significantly larger than Robber. Half a head more now, and where the
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male's skin was beginning to wrinkle in some places as he approached his
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kind's middle age her own was the same as when I'd first met her. Matron
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lines, it was said, were as a breed apart from the rest of their kind.
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That did not strike me as the kind of thing that came about naturally.
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``Boss, Princess,'' Robber greeted us, scuttling in and sliding into a
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seat.
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My brow rose as I glanced at Vivienne.
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``Since I was designated your heiress,'' she admitted. ``It's exactly as
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annoying as you'd think.''
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Oh, Vivienne, why would you ever admit that out loud? There was no way
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he was ever going to stop, now.
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``Catherine, Dartwick,'' Pickler greeted us, slightly more
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deferentially.
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She waited for me to invite her with a gesture before taking a seat, at
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least.
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``I've need of your insights into the Confederation,'' I admitted.
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``There's been news.''
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Amber eyes wary, Pickler watched me without blinking.
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``I'm not corresponding with my mother, Catherine,'' she said. ``And
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even if I was, she would not share secrets with me. Nor I with her, if
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that is your-''
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``Not in the slightest,'' I interrupted. ``But you were raised about as
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high as can be, by my understanding, and you know your mother better
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than anybody else we've got.''
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``And I am here to speak for the common goblin, I assume,'' Robber
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grinned, pearly needle-like teeth gleaming. ``Allow me then to present
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our demands: first, we would like larger cookpots. The ones we have
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can't fit a full Proceran child. Second-''
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``Robber's here because he hears gossip even Hakram doesn't,'' I said,
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pretending to have heard none of that.
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``His ears are too high up,'' Robber agreed without missing a beat,
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``it's like someone carved an ugly mug onto a tree, Boss.''
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``Matron Wither has seized control of the city of Foramen and, along
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with what seems to be another few tribes, evicted the Confederation from
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the region,'' Vivienne calmly said.
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It was like someone had dropped a sheet of ice-cold water on the two
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goblins. Genuine surprise, from the two of them.
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``Was blood spilled?'' Robber sharply asked.
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Vivienne handed me the scroll carrying the latest summary report and I
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tossed it across the table. He caught it and passed it to Pickler
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without hesitating, eyes remaining on me.
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``As far as we can tell, all forces within the city that didn't belong
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to the High Ridge or their allies were taken by surprised and killed,''
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I said. ``There were a series of skirmishes afterwards that droved back
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Confederation warriors into the Grey Eyries. Maybe four to five thousand
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dead, all in all.''
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``The Legions haven't moved,'' Pickler slowly said.
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``They have not,'' I grimly said. ``Even our allies in the Eyes are
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certain. I'm not all that familiar with Marshal Nim, but I'm told she's
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the most aggressive commander among the marshals. She would not miss an
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opportunity like that without a good reason, I think.''
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``The Tribes have always turned on each other when rebellions turn
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sour,'' Robber said, ``but this is\ldots{} wrong. Too early. They're
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winning, too.''
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He did not, I thought, sound even slightly disapproving of the goblin
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tribes beginning to sell each other out to the Tower at the first hint
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of defeat. There was something in me that was disgusted by the notion --
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Gods, what kind of Callowan would sell out their own just because the
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going got rough? -- but I forcefully reminded myself that goblins did
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not see the world as most humans did.
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``No rebellion against the Tower ever lasted more than five years,''
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Pickler quietly said. ``My mother told me this, once, when I was a
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child.''
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``The Long War did,'' Robber argued. ``It took fifteen years for them to
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put down Matron Trifler up in her hidden fortress.''
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``Trifler led one tribe and the castoffs of the rest,'' Pickler said.
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``After three years the rest of the Council had submitted to Sulphurous,
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and for the twelve years that follow it was a war of raiders against
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raiders.''
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Much as the Wasteland's history could be interesting -- and I was pretty
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sure Dread Empress Sulphurous had actually died to the first known
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Shining Prince after cornering him out in the Fields of Streges -- and
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the parts of it involving the goblin rebellions as bloody as they were
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fascinating, I'd not brought them here to speak of it.
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``Why bring this up, Pickler?'' I said. ``The Grey Eyries haven't
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fallen.''
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Nor were they likely to, in my opinion. The reports of the Eyes made it
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clear that Matron Wither and her allies comprised less than a third of
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the tribes of the Confederation and that surprise had been the deciding
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element in her victory against her former allies. She might even be able
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to hold Foramen, given the wards and walls on the city, but if she tried
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to take the Eyries she was in for the same bloody slog Praesi armies
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went through every time they put down rebellion there. And unlike the
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Empire, she didn't have the numbers to simply take the casualties
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inflicted by constant vicious ambushes and keep advancing. Her people
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would know the grounds, sure, but so would the enemy.
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``Because I do not believe my mother intends to go back to the Grey
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Eyries,'' Pickler said.
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``She doesn't have the strength to fend off both the Confederation and
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the Empire,'' I slowly said. ``To be honest, I'm not sure she has the
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strength to fend off either if they put their back into it.''
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``Malicia cannot tolerate losing the forges of her war machine to an
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independent power, from a practical perspective,'' Vivienne noted. ``Not
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even one at war with her enemies. And it would see her overthrown by the
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High Lords, besides.''
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``Which she's gathering in Ater,'' I pointed out. ``Where she has the
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Sentinels, the one force of soldiers that she can be assured the loyalty
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of.''
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They were hardly an army, mind you, and more like the personal guard of
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the reigning tyrant. But within Ater they were undeniably the largest
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stick around, even if I wouldn't bet on them against the household
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troops of most High Seats beyond those walls.
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``It seems highly unlikely for her to attempt so risky a purge,'' my
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successor said. ``Especially when the aristocracy is bound to come down
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firmly in her favour when the Carrion Lord comes for the Tower.''
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``You're missing the point, Boss,'' Robber quietly said. ``Pickler's
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saying her mother doesn't think this can be won. So all she did was get
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her hands on goods to bargain with.''
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I blinked in surprise. This was, on the surface, madness. The Dread
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Empire was largely without allies at the moment. Sure, the Empress had
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probably made pacts in the eastern Free Cities, but none of them would
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be willing to march to war for her. And the Dead King had most the
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continent arrayed against him. Crusades with lesser forces than those
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gathered in Salia had driven him back into Keter, so why would Wither
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choose \emph{now} to change sides? The Matrons were a cautious bunch:
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they'd waited until Thalassina was dust, half the legions were in
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effective exile and Callowan support was secured before finally
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striking. Why would Wither not wait a few more months before making her
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decision, at least to see how the Grand Alliance did against Keter?
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``And what might she trade the return of Foramen for?'' Vivienne asked.
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``Rule over the rest of the Tribes,'' Robber suggested.
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``That wouldn't hold,'' I said. ``It solidifies goblins around a single
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ruler, even if it's a hated one.''
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And once the Tribes began to unify, a thousand years of Praesi work
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would begin to unravel. A coalition of tribes nudged into constant
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feuding by breeding restrictions and strictly limited trade was
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something the Tower could comfortably believe itself to be able to put
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down if it rose in rebellion, even with the difficulties inherent in
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campaigning in the Grey Eyries. An effective goblin \emph{queendom},
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though? That was a whole other kettle of fish. Even if the throne
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changed dynasties with every season, a common army and the ability to
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mobilize workforce from all tribes would make even a fledgling goblin
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state an utter nightmare to put down should it rebel. It would be much
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unlike Malicia to trade a short-term gain for a long-term disaster,
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considering she likely intended to reign until the long term came to
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pass. Especially when she could simply have waited until the goblin
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armies had bloodied each other then forcefully taken Foramen from
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whoever came out the victor.
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I wished Akua was here, for her insights into Praes would have been
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welcome, but she had duties just as pressing. Someone needed to get in
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touch with our armies before they came out of the Twilight Ways, and
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though Masego still had the know-how he no longer had the sorcery. I'd
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told him to double down on exploring his theory, besides, with the help
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of the Rogue Sorcerer whenever he could be spared. If the Dead King was
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truly about to start flinging around a few millennia's worth of
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accumulated nastiness, we needed anything that might truly be able to
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make a difference.
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``Agreed,'' Pickler said. ``Nor is my mother a fool. If such an offer
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was made she would not have trusted it.''
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``Then what did she bargain for?'' Vivienne asked. ``The current
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situation is untenable, Senior Sapper. Her seizure of Foramen has been
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the death knell of our supply routes for steel and munitions. We've
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enough in Callow to fill the Army's stocks once more, but after that the
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well is dry.''
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And that was without even speaking of the Legions-in-Exile, who after a
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year of campaigning had expended the vast majority of their own stocks.
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Marshals Juniper and Grem had combined their stores while they were
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fighting together in Iserre, but fought they had. There wasn't much left
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in those common stores, now. Much of the Army of Callow's war doctrine
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came from the Legions of Terror, straight from the Reforms, and that
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meant the sappers had a major role as both combat units and siege
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engineers. Losing one of those for lack of munitions to furnish them
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with would be a blow, and an ill-timed one if we were to fight Keter in
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the coming months. Against the hordes of the dead, goblin munitions
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would make a massive difference. One we badly needed if we were to have
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a prayer of holding the northern fronts.
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``Poison Tooth,'' Pickler said, quoting the scroll I'd handed her.
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``Bitter Stride, Clay Sun, every single tribe listed here -- they are
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all face-tribes.''
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``\emph{Pickler},'' Robber hissed.
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``That is not preserved knowledge, Robber,'' she dismissed. ``The
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Taghreb figured out that much centuries ago. And even if it was, what
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would the Preservers \emph{do}?''
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``The Preservers,'' I slowly said.
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``There are some among our kind that are tasked with the preservation of
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secrecy,'' Pickler said.
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Robber, never one to miss an occasion to be grisly, slit his throat with
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a finger.
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``Loose tongues lead to open throats,'' Robber said. ``Even a child
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knows that.''
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``And the Legions allow this?'' I frowned.
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``Not openly,'' Pickler conceded. ``Yet Marshal Ranker did not join her
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entire tribe to the Carrion Lord's cause without requiring
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\emph{concessions,} in the days before the Conquest. As for the days
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before the Reforms, well\ldots{}''
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What did your average Dread Emperor care for goblins killing each other,
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she meant. Not a lot, most likely, and they'd have to know that trying
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too hard to get at goblin secrets would mean a rebellion. I doubted that
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the common assertions that only goblins spoke the goblin tongues was
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true, but then Black had taught me they regularly changed their spoken
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language so that it could not ever truly be grasped.
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``I made no such concessions,'' I flatly said.
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``They would have sought them form you, in time,'' Pickler said, hissing
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through her teeth. ``Made sale of steel and munitions contingent on
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them.''
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``Allow me to be perfectly clear,'' I said, tone clipped. ``In choosing
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to serve in the Army of Callow, you have become citizens of Callow. With
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all rights and protections so afforded.''
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``We do not make exceptions to this,'' Vivienne said, voice as offended
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as I felt. ``And if the old crones think they can twist our arms over
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such a matter with \emph{trade}, then they will be taught otherwise
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harshly.''
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Robber looked, to my deep unease, almost helpless.
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``You don't understand,'' he said. ``It is\ldots{} you, we\ldots{} We
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just don't spill secrets, Boss. It's not what we do. It's not what a
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goblin does.''
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``Matrons talk,'' Pickler said, tone embittered. ``All else hold their
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tongue. That is our way.''
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We had, it seemed, tumbled into a deeper pit than I'd thought. It would
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not be bridged tonight, I thought, and there were prior callings. Best
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move on.
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``Face-tribes,'' I said. ``Is that what I think it is?''
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``Tribes who represent us with outsiders,'' Pickler said. ``The High
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Ridge learn and speak with the Taghreb, by custom, but under my mother
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the Banu of Foramen were the humans cultivated. No doubt the secrets she
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stole and traded helped the Confederation take the city from the Banu
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and helped her take it from the Confederation.''
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``And all the other tribes she allied with have similar purposes?'' I
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pressed.
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``The Bitter Strides are a dark hand by custom -- they hurt in concert
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with another tribe that speaks sweetly -- but they too know well the
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peoples of the Hungering Sands,'' Pickler said.
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Suddenly Pickler's assertion that her mother did not intend to return to
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the Grey Eyries sounded more believable. Matron Wither had assembled
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allies that could navigate the Wasteland and only that kind, which
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implied those were the people she had a \emph{use} for.
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``Fuck,'' I said. ``She's trying for nobility, isn't she? With so many
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nobles dead the Empress can find her a holding somewhere, and she'll
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take in her allied tribes as retainers.''
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``Thalassina was obliterated with sorcery, but it has a strategic
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location and great prestige as a holding,'' Vivienne said. ``A worthy
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reward, perhaps, for one returning Foramen to the Tower.''
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The knock on the door saw my irritation rise sharply, but I mastered it.
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A young Callowan soldier -- fair-haired, likely southern of birth --
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entered, face anxious. He was bringing, he said, word from Lord
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Hierophant and Royal Advisor Kivule as well Lord Adjutant. Contact had
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been made with the Army of Callow. My brow rose, since Akua had told me
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it was unlikely to work until we were much closer to dawn. Hierophant's
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presence must have helped more than anticipated.
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``Noted,'' I said. ``You may leave.''
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He looked like he wanted to twist his hands anxiously, but he spoke up
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again.
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``Your Majesty,'' he said, ``your presence has been required.''
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I frowned.
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``I left Lord Adjutant with them to see to anything that might require
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my presence in the first place,'' I said.
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``And it is he that sent me to you, Your Majesty,'' the boy said. ``I am
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to tell you that the Army of Callow has left the Twilight Ways, and is
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now encamped in northern Bayeux.''
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|
It took me a moment to place the principality in my mind -- it was south
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of Arans, where my army was meant to march, and had commanded one of the
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two paths into the Red Flower Vales before the passes were collapsed.
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Well short of where they should be.
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``Are the Legions-in-Exile with them?'' Vivienne asked.
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The boy shook his head.
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``My lady, they \emph{left},'' he got out. ``And Marshal Juniper has
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placed herself under arrest, along with almost third of the officers in
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the army.''
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