431 lines
20 KiB
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431 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-10-capture}{%
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\section{Chapter 10: Capture}\label{chapter-10-capture}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The key to popular reign is to blame the previous ruler for your
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every blunder and claim ownership of their every success, while avoiding
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the opposite. As a sign of my abiding love for you, my son, I have
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simplified this process by leaving you to inherit only a large amount of
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blunders.''}
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-- Extract from the infamous `Sensible Testament' of Basilea Chrysanthe
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of Nicae
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\end{quote}
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We ran into the scouting party about half a bell before noon. Fifteen
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drow all wrapped up in furs, covering the grounds with admirable speed
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even though in the light of day they must feel half-blind. We saw them
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before they saw us, as this was a long way from the Everdark and it was
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a hard business keeping out of Archer's sight while on open field. I
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urged Zombie to pull ahead, leaving my Peerage and companions to catch
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up. I did not call on Night to sharpen my gaze, disinclined to begin
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exhausting my body when there might very well be trouble ahead. General
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Rumena was a veteran, though the host it commanded now had little to do
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with the once-professional armies of the Empire Ever Dark. More
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importantly, I'd sat on its councils when it tossed duties and
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responsibilities at sigils like one would toss a bone to a hungry dog.
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Aside from the weary contempt for the Mighty under its command it did
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not hide quite well enough, I'd taken note of how it usually disposed
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its scouts and lookouts.
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We weren't close enough to have run into spotters keeping an eye on the
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back of the southern expedition, and these weren't spread out enough to
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hold that duty besides. They weren't numerous enough for a full-on
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scouting party, though, and that was what had me riding hard. Fifteen
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was plenty enough to have good odds the band wouldn't miss anything
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moving, and few enough they'd be able to travel fast. No a scouting
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party, no. But if I had to canvass a fairly broad region for a small
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group, I'd send one or two dozen of those groups in staggered order to
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get the job done. General Rumena, it seemed, was looking for us. Hailing
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the drow confirmed as much. They'd been sent by the Tomb-Maker with the
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suggestion that my group hurry, since events to our south were unfolding
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at an even quicker pace than I'd wagered they would. An attempt to
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infiltrate the camp had been made last night, and prisoners taken.
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I bid the scouts -- dzulu one and all, by the looks of them, from the
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Brezlej Sigil -- to spread out and recall the other bands, waiting just
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long enough for the rest of my escort to catch up. Akua and Indrani were
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the only ones in my company both curious and willing to ask answers of
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me. I indulged them willingly enough.
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``The hornets are already out of the nest,'' I told. ``Someone tried
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Rumena's camp. I'll be riding full tilt, I need eyes on this as soon as
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possible.''
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``We could gate,'' Diabolist suggested.
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``I'm not lighting up a beacon of our location for everyone looking,'' I
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said, shaking my head. ``Archer, don't spend your strength too much
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trying to keep up. If there's trouble I'll want you at the tip of the
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spear.''
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She slowly nodded and my gaze moved to Akua.
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``My orders for you haven't changed,'' I said. ``It'll have to wait
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until nightfall, but prepare the necessities.''
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``It will remove the Mighty of use from the field for days,'' Diabolist
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said. ``It might be more sensible for me to serve on the field until the
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situation is less\ldots{} delicate.''
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She was useful in a scrap, true enough. I still turned her down without
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a moment's hesitation.
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``Make me a well,'' I calmly said. ``That is your priority, bar none.
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There's no point in deploying you to wipe out a few companies if a week
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later we're caught unprepared by heroes and lose a hundred times that
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number. If you've time on your hands, assemble a schedule for the Mighty
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who will contribute. Take measurements, give me options. If you've still
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hours to waste after that, consult with the Sisters. We'll get only one
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shot at this, Diabolist: if we miss it's going to cost us something
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fierce.''
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She didn't argue any further after that. I suspected she rather wanted
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to, though there was no trace of it on her face, but she knew well
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enough by now not to push when my heels were fully dug in. Not that she
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knew why they were dug. I'd shared a lot of my suspicions with my
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companions, during our journey to catch up to the army, but not all of
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them. There were some I'd rather keep to myself until I had more
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information to go on. I rode on after that, straight south as the
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Brezlej scouts had told me. I kept to a quicker pace than them, on my
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latest Zombie, though that should be no surprise. I kept to a quicker
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pace than even riders whose skill made a mockery of mine simply because
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my horse would never tire. I was willing to damage the corpse a bit, if
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it got me there faster. It was a little past Afternoon Bell when I found
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the southern expedition's army. On the way I'd run into another band of
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scouts, which I sent out with the same duty as the Brezlej, and then
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three successive screens of lookouts. Rumena had tightened the watch now
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that we'd entered troubled waters, I noted with approval.
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Andronike had flown away in silence long before I got anywhere near
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here, and I couldn't feel either her or her sister in the labyrinth of
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tents. There was a pulse I could barely make out further south, though.
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It sang to me, cool and comforting like a good night's sleep come
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autumn. I rode into the camp, noting this late most drow had wakened,
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and ran my gaze along Rumena's layout. It was a lost cause to get the
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southern expedition of the Empire Ever Dark to behave anything like a
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proper legion, with a carefully laid out camp and raised palisades
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before sundown, but since I'd left my general had forced some form of
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structure onto the chaos. Sigils raised their tents together, by the
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looks of it, with the larger ones on the edge of the broad circle the
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entire lot of them formed and the smaller ones filling that outline. Two
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clear paths, one facing north and the other south, had been cleared out
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-- though I noted while riding down the northern one that it was hardly
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straight. Wobbly was a generous assessment, but it was already better
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than the utter lack of arrangements the drow had kept to until now.
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Mighty Brezlej met me in advance, introducing itself as the appointed
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\emph{islne-ravce}. It meant `keeper under the glare of the sun', more
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or less, if I'd understood the emphases correctly. I took that to mean
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commander of the watch when it was daylight. Broadly muscled, short and
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a little thick around the waist the Mighty was strikingly unusual for a
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drow but I had no time to spare on the matter. I was informed that
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General Rumena was currently at a forward position, preparing a
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detachment to take the nearby town of Lancevilliers if it proved
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necessary.
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``I was told there was an attempt to enter the camp,'' I said, staring
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down from atop my mount.
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``That is so, Losara Queen,'' Mighty Brezlej agreed. ``Twelve enemies,
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nine of which still live. They have been separated and we identified the
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one we believe to be the leader.''
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``You've interrogated them?'' I asked.
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``Though questions were asked, they have refused to answer them,'' the
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drow said. ``It was spoken under Night that they should not be
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touched.''
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Brezlej murmured prayers under its breath after saying the last
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sentence, under my steady stare. Well, at least Rumena wasn't getting up
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to the torture of prisoners of war while my back was turned. Still,
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`spoken under Night'. That meant one of the Sisters had meddled, which
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was unusual to say the least. Who'd be important enough for them to
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speak? Maybe some bold Proceran royal with spirit but little brains to
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match had decided to gild the family name by taking a look at the
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foreigners, I mused. Prince Amadis was a cunning enough intriguer, but
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the Principate's royal bloodlines tended to be large and many-branched.
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If a tree bore enough apples, one of them was bound to be inbred enough
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to try sneaking up on drow at night. I ordered Mighty Brezlej to prepare
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a full report of the ways the situation had changed in my absence, and
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to send the Mighty Archer directly to me should she arrive. I would,
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meanwhile, be having a chat with the officer among our catches of the
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night.
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Drow, sadly, were not used to taking prisoners -- it was simply not the
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way they were used to waging warfare. Night was best harvested from
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corpses, and when it wasn't the insult was meant to be dealt to a living
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foe sent back into the wilds as a sign of contempt. That meant they had
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little experience holding captives, or raising structures to keep them.
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So far tents had been the makeshift solution, with the isolated
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prisoners tightly bound inside, but that wouldn't work forever. It was
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all well and good when we only had a few, but if a few companies laid
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down their arms we just wouldn't have enough spare tents to keep them.
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Four Soln dzulu were keeping guard at the corners of the tent where the
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officer awaited, looking bleary-eyed but attentive, and I met their deep
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bows with a nod before parting the flap and going in. I froze in
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surprise. Hanging down from the wooden frame holding up the dome-like
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tent of leather and linen, a small form was sleeping. I recognized
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regulation-issue undershirt, the skinny frame it was on and even the
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cast of the face covered in part by a too-large blindfold.
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\emph{Robber}, I almost said, but then stopped. The leather and rope
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bindings were too loose to really keep someone from a race as flexible
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as his in place. And given goblin hearing, my entrance should have
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wakened him. So why was he still pretending to be asleep? A torturer
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wouldn't-
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose and forced down a sigh. It was a good
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thing I hadn't walked further into the tent. Leaning against my staff, I
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crouched down to take a better look. Robber did not stir, but I felt him
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tense. Took me a bit, but I found what I was looking for. A thin, dull
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metal wire covered by snow leading up to a hook cleverly set into a
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sharper, barely peeking out from a pile of furs. No doubt the other end
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of the wire, which I couldn't see, was anchored solidly and the wire
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itself tensed for a hair-trigger. One step on it and the sharper would
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blow, then he'd pop out of the bindings while the enemy was stunned.
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Knife to the throat, and off he went to try his hand at a getaway. Drow
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clearly needed better schooling in looking for hidden armaments, I
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decided, if they'd missed both a knife and a sharper trap while
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stripping him. I pushed myself back to my feet, then carefully picked my
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angle and positioned my staff. With a quick hand I lobbed the sharper
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through an opening in the tent flap, calling out \emph{scatter} in
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Crepuscular, and turned even as it blew in the muddy snow outside. I was
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a little impressed he tried to knife me without even taking off the
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blindfold or fully slipping the bindings, I'd admit. My Special Tribune
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had been keeping sharp. Not sharp enough I didn't catch the wrist under
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the hand holding a slender blade, though.
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``The wire's new,'' I mused. ``Won't shine under light like the old
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stuff would, and something must have been done to make it more
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sensitive. Pickler's been busy, I see.''
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I grinned even as Robber went stiff as a board. I took a moment to yell
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out at the guards not to come in.
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``Boss?'' he hissed out.
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``I'm not seeing a salute, Special Tribune,'' I mildly said. ``Do you
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really want to find out what's \emph{below} Lesser Lesser Footrest?''
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The knife immediately went over his heart, which was the closest to an
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actual salute he'd given me in years, and deft green fingers hiked up
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his blindfold.
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``Well I'll be damned,'' Special Tribune Robber said, large yellow eyes
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blinking. ``It \emph{really} is you. Wait, you could be an impostor.
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Tell me something only Catherine Foundling would know: what is my
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official salary as Lesser Footrest?''
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``That I don't let Indrani put ribbons in your hair, you adorable little
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princess,'' I drawled.
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``I don't even \emph{have} hair,'' he complained. ``And you know she'd
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glue on really coarse stuff just to spite me.''
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For all that he was leaning into the exchange, I did not miss the way
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his eyes flicked towards my bad leg and then towards my chest. Since I
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was pretty sure he wasn't looking at my tits -- not that there'd been
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much to look at -- that meant he was checking if I breathed.
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``Leg's back,'' I agreeably told him. ``So's the more-than-decorative
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breathing.''
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``There's actual colour to your cheeks, Boss,'' Robber bluntly said.
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``Like being out in the cold did something.''
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``That's a long story,'' I said.
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``Did you murder another demigod?'' he mused. ``Does doing that twice,
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like, cancel it out?''
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``Oh, stop hanging like a bloody gargoyle and put that knife away,'' I
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sighed.
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My eyes narrowed as I remembered Mighty Brezlej's full summary of how
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he'd ended up here, though. I waited until he'd deftly landed in the
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snow and taken off the blindfold before pressing the subject.
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``You tried to infiltrate the camp with just a tenth,'' I stated.
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His mouth parted to reveal a short flash of hungry, needle-like teeth.
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``That what the greyskins told you?'' he said. ``We only tried the outer
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perimeter, not the camp. Then it was all sorcery everywhere, and
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Sergeant Slicker's flesh melted off his bones. Another two of my crew
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reached for blades and they had holes in the head before they could
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draw.''
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I grimaced.
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``Gods, Robber, what took you to even try?'' I said. ``Hakram and
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Vivienne knew where I was headed -- it should have been envoys sent, not
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scouts.''
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``We didn't even know it was the drow,'' Robber admitted. ``Just an army
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and not a small one. And there's been, uh, instructions from up top even
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if we run into the greys.''
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``Instructions,'' I repeated blandly.
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He grimaced.
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``We couldn't know if you were still alive, Boss,'' he said. ``And if
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you were, that it'd be you in charge. And even if you looked in charge,
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that it was really \emph{you}.''
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He paused, then squinted at me.
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``You \emph{are} in charge, yeah?'' he asked.
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``Some,'' I said. ``It's an alliance with limits to it. But I've got the
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ear of the people running the show, you might say.''
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``Thank the fucking Gods,'' Robber muttered. ``That you're back more
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than for the greys, I mean. This campaign is turning into a bastard
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mess, Boss. It'll be good to have your hand holding the reins again.''
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``Then you'll have answers,'' I flatly said. ``About what Juniper's
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doing campaignin here in the first place. I distinctly remember leaving
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my army on the \emph{other} side of the Whitecaps.''
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His lips quirked, sharp and mean.
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``Well, Lady-Regent Dartwick got invited by our good friend the Prince
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of Iserre to `clear out bandits and foreign agents from his lands',
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y'see,'' Robber told me.
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My brow rose. I honestly couldn't imagine Vivienne willing to risk the
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Army of Callow at the say so of a Proceran prince, which likely meant
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Prince Amadis' arm had been twisted until he gave said invitation. Might
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not be Thief's notion at all, I decided. Hakram? What would he think we
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could gain from intervening here?
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``What are we using Amadis as a pretence for?'' I bluntly asked.
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``Taking out the Carrion's Lord legions from here with a semblance of
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clean, the way I hear it,'' my Special Tribune said. ``They were on the
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edge of a wipe, and no one wanted that. Plan was to prop him Amadis as a
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banner to force Procer to give us room, pop in, pick up Ol' One-Eye and
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his people then then pop out.''
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``By fairy gate,'' I slowly said.
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Which meant either Masego was back, with a titled fae bound, or the Wild
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Hunt had not been freed of its oaths when Winter ended up in the Night's
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belly. That was a relief, to be frank. I was bound by oath to Larat
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aside from the Hunt's own terms -- seven crowns and one, still to be
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delivered -- but I'd not been sure that would be enough. The sooner I
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could have a good look at the fae the better.
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``Yeah, the Hunt's been all darling since you sent them back,'' Robber
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said. ``Which is suspicious as all Hells, if you ask me, but apparently
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putting that to verse and having a choir sing it to Marshal Juniper is
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`reprehensible' and `a flagrant breach of regulations'. I mean, it was
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only the middle of the night.''
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I smothered the smile, though not quite quickly enough for him to miss
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it. The humour waned, though, when I remembered what we were speaking
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about.
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``But you're still here,'' I said, stating the obvious. ``What
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happened?''
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``We gated in just fine,'' the goblin said. ``Ran into a League force
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two days in, but after they missed taking the Hellhound's head they
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mostly kept their distance. Made contact with Marshal Grem when the
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scrying block shut down for a bit-''
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``The scrying block,'' I said. ``Wait, more important -- you can still
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scry sometimes?''
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``It's like rolling dice,'' Robber said. ``Kilian says the block is
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something massive already using the sky, but once in a while it looks
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elsewhere -- then there's a short window where we can use the old
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rituals. And I do mean the old ones, Boss. Dunno if you noticed, but the
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Observatory went the way of an orc with the key to a liquor shop. No one
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can get it do to anything, and when we left Callow the pools were
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starting to evaporate.''
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I clenched my fingers. Shit. Someone had definitely targeted us, then.
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If it were just Iserre being screwed with I could put that to a ritual
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or miracle we ended stumbling into, but the Observatory wouldn't get in
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that bad a way if someone hadn't aimed for it. And just like that,
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Kairos was back in the running for the prick most likely to be
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responsible. It seemed very much like his kind of play -- he might have
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planned the ritual in Iserre first, then gone after the Observatory
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because it'd allow my forces to bypass it. If there was anyone who
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wanted everyone in this principality blind, right now, it was the Tyrant
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of Helike.
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``Marshal Grem,'' I said, setting that trail of thought aside for now.
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``He's also still in Iserre?''
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``We tried to pull him out,'' the goblin told me. ``The Levantines were
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starting to catch up when we arrived, too close to risk it, so the
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Hellhound had us gate in between their armies to force them to retreat.
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And it worked fine -- the Legions gained a few days of lead while the
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Dominion got really angry at us being there. But then we tried to gate
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out, and on the other side was a godsdamned sea of boiling pitch.''
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My fingers tightened around my staff.
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``That doesn't sound like Arcadia,'' I said.
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``Best we can tell, it was one of the Hells,'' Robber snorted. ``No one
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went in to check, you know, on account of the \emph{sea of boiling
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pitch}.''
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``And it's all been leading there since?'' I asked.
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``Worse,'' the goblin said. ``It changes. Mostly Hells, so far, but once
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in a blue moon we get Arcadia again -- not that we can travel it, since
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no one's sure we'd be able to leave after entering. Hakram ordered an
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end to the attempts after we almost let out a horde of devils into the
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camp.''
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``What has Masego said?'' I frowned.
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``\emph{Shit},'' Robber said, eyeing me warily. ``You haven't heard.''
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My stomach dropped.
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``Tell me,'' I ordered.
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``The Lord Warlock blew up Thalassina sky high trying to hold it against
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Ashur, himself included,'' the goblin told me. ``Place is a graveyard,
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even those that fled got some sort of magic sickness and cacked it.''
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``Masego?'' I softly asked.
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``Word from Praes is the warlock's get made it out,'' Robber said.
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I let out a shaky breath. Thank whatever Gods were listening for that.
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``Empress had people looking for him, anyway,'' he continued. ``No one
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knows where he is though. I know Deadhand and the general staff kept
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something about him under seal just before we gated for Procer, but I
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haven't managed to ferret it out yet.''
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``We'll find him,'' I grimly said.
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His fathers were dead and he'd likely fled through the Wasteland alone
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with Malicia's agents hounding him every step of the way. He must be a
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wreck of grief and exhaustion, I thought. I didn't like this talk of
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magic sickness at all, either, considering he must not have been far
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from Thalassina when this all happened. I reluctantly forced myself to
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focus on more immediate concerns. There was little I could do for him
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right now, much as I hated to admit it.
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``Juniper's stuck between the Levantine armies, then,'' I said. ``Is she
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close? For that matter, is Marshal Grem backing her?''
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Robber's wide eyes thinned with sudden alarm.
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``I never reported back,'' he said. ``Boss, we have a problem. If Nauk
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still thinks your greys are a Proceran army, then he won't leave his
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dug-in positions. Which means you're about to lose a quarter of the Army
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of Callow.''
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Well, I darkly thought, it \emph{had} been that kind of a week so far.
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Why stop now?
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