536 lines
27 KiB
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536 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-beheld-i}{%
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\section{Interlude: Beheld I}\label{interlude-beheld-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Necessity's children are sometimes clever but always bloody.''}
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-- Queen Yolanda of Callow, the Wicked (known as `the Stern' in
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contemporary histories)
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\end{quote}
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Godsdamnit, somehow she'd still ended up stuck in charge.
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Legate -- no, General now, because clearly someone Above was out to get
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her -- Abigail had counted her blessings when she'd gotten word the
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Black Queen had come out of nowhere to save the day. The queen could
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take command, and she could go back to being as far as physically
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possible from the fighting while also not being expected to make any
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decisions that actually mattered. That was the trap, Abigail darkly
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thought. They lured you up the ranks with the promise of better pay and
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less people shooting arrows at you, until you got dragged so high you
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had to watch out for the noose instead. And she knew damn well what
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\emph{field promotion} meant, thank you very much. It meant `do the
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work, Abigail, but we'll only pay you what your last rank offered, and
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also best not fuck up or the Hellhound will eat your liver'. But she
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couldn't exactly say any of that out loud, so General Abigail smiled all
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pretty for the very dangerous woman holding a staff that made people
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panic if they looked at it too long.
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``I'm honoured, Your Majesty,'' she lied.
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Queen Catherine's lips twitched the slightest bit. Abigail hid her
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flinch well. Could the Black Queen actually read thoughts and look into
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souls? Surely that was just a rumour. Still, best not to risk it and
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change the subject. You never knew with Named.
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``The fire wasn't our fault,'' Abigail immediately said. ``Wasn't us who
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started it, either. I swear. The Lanterns ran out of the city after
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hitting the general staff and our people went after them. The chase
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ended up going through a grocer's shop and there wasn't no food in
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there, but there were candles and oil jugs.''
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The Black Queen arched an eyebrow, saying nothing.
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``It wasn't us,'' Abigail insisted. ``I have five official reports
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showing it was some big Levant woman who broke into the room and tipped
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over the candles. We can't be blamed for this, we even tried to stop the
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spread!''
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Catherine Foundling's lips twitched once more, and she patted the
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Abigail's shoulder with open sympathy. She tried not to tremble at the
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touch. You were always less likely to get your blood frozen solid if you
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smiled.
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``You'd think so, wouldn't you?'' the queen mused. ``But I've been
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saying that for years, and no one ever believes me.''
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The -- temporary, if she had anything to say about it -- general paled a
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little at the notion that she could end up getting a reputation like the
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Black Queen's. Abigail had been in Summerholm when entire quarters
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burned green because the Squire needed to flush out a hero. Hells, she'd
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never have been dumb enough to enroll in the Legions if her family home
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and shop hadn't been part of the cinders. Too late to bail now, though,
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she admitted to herself. She wasn't sure if even temporary generals were
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allowed to retire. Maybe she could get herself thrown out, she mused.
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Might be time to consider getting `accidentally' pregnant. The queen's
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amusement passed quick enough, and Abigail straightened her back to look
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like she hadn't been thinking of what was technically an attempt at
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desertion.
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``How many Lanterns struck?'' Her Majesty asked.
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``We believe twenty,'' Abigail said, comforted to be back on practical
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matters. ``Twelve managed to escape the city, most of them killed while
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running.''
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Only one of them had died during the attack, though it'd been a Hells of
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a kill. The Callowan wouldn't forget the sight of Nauk Princekiller's
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fangs having snapped straight through the neck of a priest anytime soon.
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Not when Light had melted his plate before he even got moving, drips of
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molten metal leaving a trail of how he'd leapt for the kill even dying.
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The general had been a bloodthirsty bastard, no two ways about it, but
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no one had ever called him a coward. Her thoughts stalled. General Nauk
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was supposed to be an old friend of the queen's wasn't he? From the War
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College, and the early Fifteenth. Abigail really hoped the Black Queen
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didn't ask about the body, since she'd have to admit there was no
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splitting the corpse from the melted armour and no fire at hand would
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burn hot enough for both -- the matter had been put aside for now, since
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there were more important things to take care of. It was odd, Abigail
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though, that something mattering to her mostly because it'd gotten the
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three veteran Legates that should be standing in her shoes right now
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killed could actually be tragic to someone else. Especially to the likes
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of the Black Queen, who had burned and buried dozens of thousands. Even
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monsters had friends though, she supposed.
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``Is a second strike by them likely?'' Her Majesty asked.
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The Queen of Callow was staring at the battle map even as she spoke,
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dark eyes tracing the lay of the cohorts and fortified choke points.
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Abigail had done what she could. There'd been no keeping the Belles
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Portes quarter after the disorder of a decapitated general staff had
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allowed the Dominion to take the bridges and secure a foothold behind
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them, but she'd had houses collapsed on the outskirts of the quarter and
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kept them contained in there by her own jesha of two thousand until a
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better defence could be assembled. The Levantines had since driven the
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Third Army back to the outskirts of Beaumontant quarter and mounted a
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push that took Couteau D'Or, pretty much claiming the entire
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middle-southern and south-western partss of Sarcella. Since then it'd
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been a nasty slugging match, since the Dominion had run into the raised
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defences and goblin traps she'd ordered set up at that line.
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The two fronts had quieted some, but that was just preparation for a
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serious assault in Abigail's opinion. And if the next one passed her
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defensive lines? The Third Army was fucked, to put it bluntly. She'd
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been forced to send the reserves to the frontlines to slow down the fall
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of Beaumontant until the sappers were done, and with companies still
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stuck keeping an eye on the cavalry to the city's sides there just
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weren't enough soldiers left to take back grounds if they were lost to
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Levant. If the lines broke, it was all downhill from there. Or that'd
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been the situation an hour ago, anyway, Abigail of Summerholm thought
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with a hard smile. Now the Black Queen was back, so it was time for
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lakes to start dropping. It took Krolem clearing his throat to realize
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she still hadn't answered the question Her Majesty had asked.
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``We, uh, don't believe so,'' Abigail hastily said. ``Senior Mage
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Dastardly has trip wards in place she believes will warn us if they do,
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but our priests say if they try anything that large again so soon
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they'll burn out.''
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The Queen of Callow blinked in surprise and tore her gaze away from the
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map. It was a pretty human gesture for some immortal evil-fae thing,
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Abigail decided. With the long, unbound brown hair and the lightly
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coloured cheeks, Catherine Foundling looked more like a young woman who
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hadn't slept in a while than the infamous victor of Second Liesse and
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the Battle of the Camps.
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``Our priests,'' Her Majesty repeated. ``We have \emph{priests}, now?''
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It was the temporary general's turn to be surprised. Had she really not
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heard?
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``The House of Light split after it came out what you did in Keter, Your
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Majesty,'' Abigail said.
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The Black Queen's face went blank as a wax mask. The Summerholm girl
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pressed on with haste.
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``After it was outed you went to the Crown of the Dead to kill the Dread
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Empress and prevent her making a deal, they called for a Callowan
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conclave,'' she said. ``They split over whether or not to name the
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entire Tenth Crusade graceless. About two thirds went against, but the
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Salian conclave's decrees were declared heresy by unanimous vote. Wasn't
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enough for some, though: the last third walked out and pronounced the
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Tenth Crusade to be godless Proceran intrigue. Nowadays they call
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themselves the `House Insurgent', Your Majesty. Hundreds enrolled in the
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army as healers.''
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For a moment the silence in the room was thick as oil, then the Queen of
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Callow glanced to the side. There was a half-empty bottle of wine at the
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edge of the table, leftovers from when Abigail had taken pity on
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Dastardly's pain at having an entire cheek and eye grown back. It was
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her last bottle from Callow, too. The Black Queen grabbed it, sniffed at
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the rim and visibly brightened before taking a long swallow. A little
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sigh of pleasure followed.
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``Oh, that's the stuff,'' Queen Catherine muttered. ``Been way too
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long.''
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She shook her head, afterwards, and got back to business. \emph{So no
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one's going to die}, Abigail mused. \emph{That's nice.} Tanners didn't
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have to worry about things like that, she knew. \emph{No, Abigail,} she
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thought, \emph{think of the ferret-faced cousins.} \emph{Stick the
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course, how long can we really be at war anyway?}
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``Well,'' the queen said. ``You've had an interesting year, I see. We'll
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set that aside for now, General Abigail. Your reserves aren't marked on
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the map, how many have you held back?''
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``They, uh, are, Your Majesty,'' Abigail replied.
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She leaned over and tapped her finger near the five cohorts holding the
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grounds between the fire and the edge of Beaumontant quarter. There was
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nothing held back because the reserves were on the front. The queen
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grimaced.
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``I was afraid of that,'' she said. ``That's going to get messy. These,
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are they paved roads or bridges?''
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The Black Queen was pointing at the four grey streaks representing the
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bridges going into Belles Portes, and Abigail told her as much.
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``How broad is the river?'' Her Majesty asked.
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``At the bridges, around twenty five feet,'' the temporary general said.
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``It's broader further west, going towards the source. Stays about the
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same going east, though a mile downriver it'll start splitting and
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narrowing.''
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The queen frowned at the map pensively. Abigail cleared her throat.
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``If you're thinking of using munitions on it, ma'am, we've already
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tried,'' she said. ``General Nauk had our sappers take a look, wanted to
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use that to repulse the first attack. It's frozen too deep, though, took
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an entire cart of demolition charges and it didn't spread all that
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far.''
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``Munitions aren't what I have in mind,'' the Queen of Callow calmly
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replied. ``General, if we hold until sundown our retreat is assured.
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Cracking the river will buy us that breathing room, but only if you can
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push the enemy out of the city first. We need a moat, not an
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obstruction.''
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Abigail tried to think of a very polite, professional way of saying that
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this couldn't be done but it wasn't her fault. While she was considering
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what would work best, the Black Queen pressed on.
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``I'll be taking five hundred drow and Special Tribune Robber's cohort
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with me,'' Her Majesty continued in that same even tone, eyes remaining
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peeled on the parchment. ``That grants you three thousand and a half
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fresh warriors to break the deadlock.''
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``They're dug in good, ma'am,'' General Abigail said. ``Unless the drow
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can scale walls barehanded-''
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``They can,'' Catherine Foundling casually said, like it was nothing out
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of the ordinary. ``While light infantry and currently no more physically
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able than humans, they have extensive training in raiding tactics. I'd
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suggest you send a number of them here-''
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The Queen of Callow's finger tapped the boundary line between
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Beaumontant and Couteau D'Or, which by Abigail's reckoning was a line of
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tightly-packed merchant homes facing outwards.
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``- to split the Levantines up, then thin your right flank to reinforce
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your left,'' she mused. ``A hard assault on this `Couteau D'Or' quarter
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will have them packed tight in the open when they draw back into
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Beaumontant, and a few sapper companies can bloody them into retreat
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from there.''
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General Abigail squinted down. The right flank had better hard defences,
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it was true -- she'd had a guild house's lower level barred and turned
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the flat rooftop into a shooting galley for her crossbowmen -- and it
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would hold against attack for a while even if thinned. With the
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recommended distraction and enough forces moved to bolster an assault on
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the left flank, this could possibly work. That'd still leave a pack of
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very angry Levantines with their blood up holding Belles Portes, though,
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and that quarter was the door to Sarcella. As long as the Dominion had
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their foothold there they'd keep bringing in troops. If the Levantines
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mounted a hard counterattack after the Third Army had left its defensive
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positions, the quarters it had taken might be just as soon taken back --
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and it wouldn't stop there, Abigail knew. With the kind of losses that
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the assaults would bring, the Third Army might end up driven out of
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Sarcella entirely. That'd be the end of them, with the Levantine cavalry
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hacking them to pieces as they retreated into the plains.
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``That's only workable if the river is cracked,'' General Abigail
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finally said. ``And unless you intend on taking less than a thousand
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light infantry out onto plains where the Dominion fields at least that
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much in cavalry, to get to the river you'd need to go through Belles
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Portes -- which we can't take, until the river is cracked.''
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The Black Queen smiled, thin and sharp and just a little mad.
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``There's another way through, as it happens,'' she said.
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Abigail followed where the gloved finger was pointing on the map. She
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choked.
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``That's the part that's on fire, Your Majesty,'' she said.
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``So it is,'' Catherine Foundling cheerfully said. ``Get ready for the
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offensive, general. I'll want it beginning within an hour.''
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The Black Queen patted her shoulder once more and limped out of the war
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room, humming what Abigail was pretty sure was the opening notes of the
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\emph{Lord of the Silver Spears}. She was also, the leader of --
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temporary leader, Abigail corrected -- of the Third Army noted, still
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holding that half-empty bottle of Vale summer wine.
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``Tribune Krolem,'' she whispered. ``I need you to looking into
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something.''
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The orc leaned forward eagerly.
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``Find out who you can lodge a protest to, if the Queen of Callow steals
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your wine,'' General Abigail said.
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---
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The cattle-dwelling reeked.
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Everything about the Burning Lands was mad, Mighty Jindrich decided.
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This land had never truly known order, not even in the days before the
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Tenets of Night, and while the Firstborn sought enlightenment through
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sacred strife -- \emph{the worthy take, the worthy rise} -- the cattle
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had grown fat and insolent for that absence. The Mighty bared its teeth
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at small eyes peeking through a shuttered window, pleased at the squeak
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that sounded from inside the house. The shutters were wood, Mighty
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Jindrich saw. Most the house as well. How disgustingly decadent, that
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these Prokeren could afford to make a city mostly of wood. Even sigils
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of the Inner Ring were not so wealthy: it had taken an effort not to
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beat the cattle that had found it fit to \emph{burn} wood, of all
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things. The Tomb-Maker had said that the Prokeren owned many forests,
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and that even if they allowed their wooden houses to rot and break they
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could afford to make new ones. Madness, waste and madness. Mighty
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Jindrich might have taken from the cattle what it knew not how to
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appreciate, had the First Under the Night not forbidden it.
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The sigil-holder of the Jindrich let its eyes stray from the
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cattle-things trembling in their dwellings, instead turning to Losara
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Queen. Honour had been given, when the First Under the Night had picked
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Jindrich and many of its sigil to accompany it into battle. More so than
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could be truly grasped, for Losara Queen was the voice of the Night and
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so honour given by it was honour given by the Night itself. What more
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esteemed accolade could there be? The presence of the \emph{gobberin}
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marred the situation some, but not so much that it grew beyond
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enjoyment. The green creatures were not true cattle, having many years
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ago warred against the \emph{nerezim} with great fury and viciousness.
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They were being made to bear strange packs and drag carts, but no beasts
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of burden they. The leader of the pack, this Robber, it had spirit. If
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Losara Queen was to have servants from the Burning Lands, worse stock
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could be drawn from than a being that would mock Mighty at their own
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table. The pack following the Robber was just as dauntless, and already
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Losara Queen had ordered warriors of the Jindrich and the Cohort to
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sheath their blades thrice. This was pleasing, for sharing purpose with
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the weak and cowardly made for a weak cabal.
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Mighty Jindrich threw back its head and hollered when their promised
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destination was reached, the sharp calls sounding out in defiance of the
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pale light. Its sigil answered in kind, approaching the heat and smoke
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of the blaze storming ahead without a speck of fear. The Mighty strode
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forward, elbowing some \emph{gobberin} wearing strips on its shoulders
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and laughingly slapping aside the knife it pulled. The First Under the
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Night stood first before the blaze, as well it should. Even in the pale
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light of the sun Losara's silhouette seemed shaded, soot and ash falling
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at its feet as it watched the flickering flame. Jindrich bowed
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respectfully before approaching. It had bargained with this holy one
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when it was still but a strange curiosity, a creature borne by these
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lands yet capable of slaying Mighty. It'd also intended to betray Losara
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as soon as the Rumena were dealt with, as was only fitting. Since then,
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Mighty Jindrich had been taught the extent of its foolishness. What
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could a Mighty hope to do, against the very herald of Sve Noc? Some
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ill-made things calling themselves Firstborn still murmured of Losara
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Queen being \emph{human}, but this was crass ignorance. What human could
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possibly bear Sve Noc on its shoulders, speak for the Tenets?
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No, Losara Queen was the get of Night itself. It would return the
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Firstborn to these lands and wrest a realm out of the hands of the Pale
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Gods, usher the Empire Ever Dark born anew. And Mighty Jindrich would be
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there to share in that glorious thing, drenched in the blood of those
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that dared to test the Tenets of Night.
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``Losara Queen, we stand ready for war-making,'' Jindrich said. ``We
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will tread this blaze, should you wish it so.''
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The holy one smiled, white teeth flashing like ivory in shade.
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``Miracles don't come cheap, Jindrich,'' the First Under the Night said.
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``And there are only so many I can bear. Fortunately, I have something
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almost as dangerous to wield.''
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The Mighty smiled, pleased at the sharing of wisdom.
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``What may this be, Losara Queen?''
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The holy one's eyes crinkled in amusement, and it inclined its head
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behind them.
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``Madmen, Jindrich,'' the First Under the Night said. ``Never
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underestimate what a few of those can accomplish when told something is
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\emph{impossible}.''
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Behind them the \emph{gobberin} had opened begun empty the carts, to
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work with wood and steel to raising strange wooden structures and nail
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them solid. Skins reeking of vinegar were taken out from the bags, and
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boxes of snow prepared. Long staves of metal and wood, some with
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broom-like endings and others not, were prepared and made wet with a
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strange concoction kept in bottles.
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``Prepare yourself, Mighty Jindrich,'' Losara Queen said. ``We'll pass
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where the blaze is weakest, but to hesitate is death.''
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``It was ever thus,'' it laughed, and raised its fist to the sky.
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\emph{All is Night}, Mighty Jindrich yelled out, and its sigil echoed in
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kind. For a moment, it thought, that prophecy drowned out even the roar
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of the fire.
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---
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``I missed this,'' Special Tribune Robber admitted.
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There'd been some good laughs, since the Boss had gone underground to
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take over yet another nest of vipers in order to throw it at one of the
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other nests of vipers. He'd gotten to hunt Imperial agents in the
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streets like animals with the Guild of Assassins, stuck it to the
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Matrons while negotiating for munitions in Thief's name and even gotten
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to see what happened when you sent back a High Lady's threatening envoy
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by trebuchet. There'd been deaths, too, but no anyone he cared too much
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about. Well, Hakram had somehow managed to lose another hand but sad at
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was Robber was looking forward to the truly legendary amount of sarcasm
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the Boss would inflict him over it so it could be called a draw. Pickler
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was still both mind-blowingly lovely and completely out of reach,
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especially when putting shady dwarven gold to nefarious purposes, but
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that was just the way of life. Robber of the Rock Breaker Tribe, also
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known as the Lesser Footrest to Her Majesty the Queen of Callow, had
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started to figure he'd seen it all. He'd been to more places most
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goblins ever would, killed people in most of them and participate in the
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strategic arson of not one but \emph{several} cities. He was no longer
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young, by his people's standards, and he'd wondered if it might not be
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time to start thinking about a glorious death.
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Then the Boss had come back, and she was as superbly mad as ever.
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She'd left as some sort of bastardly immortal fae thing and come back
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breathing and smelling like a mortal, with an army of bloodthirsty
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treacherous magical dark elves she'd somehow become a religious figure
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for if he'd picked up on the chatter right. And she was going to use
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them to wage war on half the continent, so she could make it sign some
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sort of treaty then use that to attack the Hidden Horror as a united
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front. She also had in stand a blackwood staff that felt to his senses
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like some sort of silent, monstrously large predator and she was talking
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shit to some possibly god-like crows that no one but her seemed to be
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able to look at directly for more than a fraction of a heartbeat at a
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time. Robber had been close to those things for hours, and even avoiding
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to look at them he'd since been plagued with some of the most horrifying
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nightmares of his life. Gods, it was just like coming home. And now
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she'd decided that the best way to use tactical surprise was to attack
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through where no one had positioned troops, which had happened because
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the place in question was on fire. So he'd casually been informed that
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his cohort was to build several examples of a lighter siege turtle so
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that she could stuff seven hundred soldiers in them and run through a
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city fire, in order to crack a frozen river. All the while and enemy
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army and several larger cavalry contingents were on the prowl.
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No one did crazy like the Boss. There was a \emph{reason} goblins
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volunteered to enroll in the Army of Callow, and it wasn't the
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Hellhound's winning personality.
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``You know, sometimes I wonder if there's something in the water back in
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the Grey Eyries,'' Catherine Foundling drawled. ``It'd explain a lot
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about goblins. Isn't lead supposed to make people go mad? How likely is
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it that there's some in your wells?''
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``I wouldn't know, I've only ever drunk the blood of my enemies,''
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Robber shamelessly lied.
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``That sounds rather unsanitary,'' the Boss said. ``Zeze says there's
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all sort of humours in that.''
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The inside of the modified siege turtle was stiflingly hot, even with
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all the preparations. Skins soaked in vinegar and water, boxes of snow
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to cool the air coming from the slight openings above and poles coming
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|
out of the shuttered panels that allowed enterprising drow to push down
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|
anything still on fire that came too close. Beneath the bottom rim,
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still-burning embers could be swept with broom-like poles when they were
|
|
layered too thickly or skins of water used to put out open flames --
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|
though the smoke and vapour from that was wicked, and had already
|
|
scalded a few unwary goblins. Each of the shells allowed for fifty
|
|
people to hide under, fourteen brave turtles having tried the blaze. One
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|
had been struck by a falling beam barely twenty feet in, and less than
|
|
ten of those inside had managed to crawl screaming back to the safety of
|
|
outside the fire. The outer ring was the most dangerous part, though,
|
|
they'd know that from the start. The fire had begun somewhere deeper in,
|
|
and spread out more or less in a circle depending on where stone and
|
|
space obstacles could be found. Past that part there'd been
|
|
progressively less flame and more smoulder, though that hardly meant
|
|
there was no danger. More than once the lack of air or the heat of what
|
|
was left to breathe had made soldiers pass out.
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|
|
|
The lucky ones fell inside the shell when there were enough in shape
|
|
left to carry them. The others were left behind for the fire to take.
|
|
The Boss had made it clear she couldn't start calling on her tricks
|
|
without putting the river work at risk, and there was no point in trying
|
|
this at all if she exhausted herself trying to keep everyone alive.
|
|
Another turtle was lost when its warriors misjudged what they were
|
|
stepping on under the ash layer and got themselves over red-hot stone, a
|
|
chunk of the drow immediately dropping with screams as their thinner
|
|
boots got torched through and the turtle fell for lack of enough people
|
|
holding it up. The structure turned into an oven within moments, and the
|
|
four survivors only lasted long enough to make it out in the open --
|
|
which wasn't any more survivable than inside. Robber had been blessed
|
|
enough to share a shell with the Boss herself, and she'd been utterly
|
|
nonplussed the whole way through. Her face had darkened every time a
|
|
turtle was lost, but they'd pressed on anyway. Everyone inside was
|
|
sweating like a pig, including her. Robber watched the Queen of Callow
|
|
pat down her cloak while hobbling forward and cleared his throat.
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|
|
|
``Looking for something?'' he asked.
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|
|
|
In front of them a pair of drow shifted the panels open, knocking down a
|
|
wooden wall half-devoured by flames and almost entirely blackened. The
|
|
panels closed, and the turtle came forward. Soon they'd reach the last
|
|
crucible, the second part of the outer ring -- and after that, out onto
|
|
the snow.
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|
|
|
``Would you happen to have matches on you?'' the Boss casually asked.
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|
|
|
``Sure,'' Robber snickered, reaching for his sapper's bag.
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|
|
|
Sadly all the munitions delicate in the face of heat had to be removed,
|
|
but he still had a few goods left to peddle. Including a set of pinewood
|
|
matches, which he handed to his queen. She let out a noise of
|
|
appreciation then shoved her staff into the crook of her arm, produced
|
|
from her cloak an already stuffed pipe and struck the match. Within
|
|
moments it was lit, filling the turtle with the acrid scent of wakeleaf.
|
|
She carelessly dropped the match on the ground, where it fell on embers
|
|
and almost instantly began burning up.
|
|
|
|
``That is \emph{cruel},'' Robber admiringly said.
|
|
|
|
And yet when he flicked his eyes, he caught most the drow smothering
|
|
grins. Gods, they actually enjoyed the Boss being like that didn't they?
|
|
Kind of an asshole, and utterly indifferent to the fact that they were
|
|
strolling through a bonfire of a city if it got in the way of her petty
|
|
pleasures.
|
|
|
|
``I waited until we were on the last stretch,'' the Black Queen defended
|
|
herself.
|
|
|
|
She added something in the drow tongue afterwards, and the drow roared
|
|
and sped up. Robber was pretty sure, by the tone, that it was along the
|
|
lines of `put your back into it, I haven't got all day'. After that it
|
|
wasn't long until through the thin openings made into the wood he was
|
|
able to glimpse the silhouettes of tall granite statues, and a mostly
|
|
open way to there. Which was for the best, given that some of his
|
|
minions were starting to slow down and only kept from passing out by
|
|
biting their lips bloody. There was a sudden crash behind, and the Boss
|
|
called out in drow tongue: the porters at the back opened the shutters
|
|
there, revealing a large wooden plank had scythed through the middle of
|
|
the turtle right behind them. Catherine breathed in sharply at the
|
|
sight, then cast a look in front. \emph{Not out of the woods yet},
|
|
Robber thought. Another call in drow-tongue. The shutters were shut and
|
|
the advance resumed. Eleven turtles made it out onto the snow, out of
|
|
the fourteen who'd set out.
|
|
|
|
There were some, Robber thought, who'd call that a miracle.
|