565 lines
26 KiB
TeX
565 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-14-expedience}{%
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\section{Chapter 14: Expedience}\label{chapter-14-expedience}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The art of negotiation is, in essence, convincing the other side
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of the table that you are very reluctant to part with the house full of
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rats while they are in dire need of it.''}
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-- Prince Louis of Brabant, later eighth First Prince of Procer
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\end{quote}
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I woke up an hour before nightfall.
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It was one of the more useful oddities caused by my association with the
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Sisters, that I could in some eldritch way feel the approach of dawn and
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dusk. I still had the taste of a passable Harrow red in my mouth from
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the talks I'd had with Abigail, the same sort of patient decision
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dissection I'd learned from Black and the War College. \emph{She seems
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willing to learn, at least}, I thought as I groaned and forced myself to
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keep my eyes open. Exhaustion was lingering alongside the wine, and the
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handful of hours of sleep I'd squeezed in were nowhere enough to get me
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back on my feet. I drew on the Night a lick, not to wield it but to let
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the sensation of holding it pass through my frame. Like sticking your
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hand in a bucket of cool water, it woke me right up. I could probably
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rustle up some minor miracles now, I decided. It no longer felt like I'd
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melt myself from the inside if I did. That was instinct talking, but
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like it or not I'd had more experience drawing on eldritch powers than
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most people ever cared to go through. My instinct were rather
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well-informed, when it came to things like this. Getting my bad leg over
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the edge of the legion cot I'd claimed, I allowed myself the luxury of
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grimacing at the sensation. No one to put up a front for, right now.
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I'd kept a shirt on in deference to the weather, but my fingers found
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themselves sliding under to find an old friend. The scar the Penitent's
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Blade had left still naked across my torso, nowadays more pale than pink
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but never to disappear. A testament to the costs of what had seemed like
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a victory, that night in Summerholm. The Lone Swordsman spared and
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branded with purpose, loosed like an arrow to start the rebellion that
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would see me rise up the ranks. A necessary evil, I'd told myself. What
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was one more wound on Callow, when it was already bleeding from imperial
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rule? When that wound would lead to a mending. I could only be grimly
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amused at how disgusted I'd felt by Black ordering three death row
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prisoners slain so blood magic could be worked to save my life. In a
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sense, I'd done the same thing on a much grander scale before he ever
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gave the order. I withdrew my fingers and tugged down my shirt. It was
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done, and there was no unmaking it. I was strangely glad for Sve Noc's
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returning of the scar when they struck me back down to mortal coil. What
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was I, really, without the reminders on my skin of what my choices had
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wrought?
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I got up with a hiss of pain and hobbled to a chair to have something to
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lean against when putting my trousers back on. It made me miss Indrani,
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in a strange way, and Hakram as well. It was different with my lover
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when she helped me with my clothes, sensual in a way that would be
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blasphemous to associate with Adjutant, but I wasn't sure I could
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honestly say there wasn't more intimacy in having Adjutant help me with
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my armour than in the woman I shared a bed with buttoning up my
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trousers. The business of dressing myself was finished with only minimal
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pain, and I grabbed the Mantle of Woe on the way out. It settled on my
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shoulders comfortably, the worn dark cloth warm against my back even as
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the outside boasted a riotous mix of colours all speaking of a foe
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beaten. There was a metaphor in there, I idly thought. Black's sombre
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gift whole but only out of sight, the visible sown over by all the
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fields I'd bared my blade on. Amusing as the thought was, I set it
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aside. Staff in hand, cloak streaming behind me, I got back to work.
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The abandoned mansion I'd claimed as my resting place was swarming with
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drow and legionaries eyeing each other with wariness. I caught sight of
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a black eye on a young Callowan boy and a carefully cradled wrist for a
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Miklaya Sigil warrior, which prompted a sigh. The drow had never been
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taught to play nice with others, and my own people could be\ldots{}
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touchy. At least whoever'd drawn up the roster had been farsighted
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enough not to assign greenskins. Goblins would carry the grudge until it
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could be answered for more safely, but it someone socked an orc in the
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face there was going to be blood on the floor before all was said and
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done. There was a tribune in command and I wasted no time in getting
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news from her. The city was still quiet and the Dominion hadn't tried an
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offensive since their last beating. An envoy from the Levantine camp had
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been sent, but they were being made to wait. General Abigail was
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`planning the coming march', which no doubt meant she was sleeping like
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a log. Special Tribune Robber had come for me, but declined to wake me
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up when he learned I was out of it. The last I took most notice of, and
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asked the tribune to send someone to fetch him.
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``Will you be here, ma'am?'' the Soninke officer politely asked. ``Or
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should I message for him to be sent elsewhere?'
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``The Dominion captains are being held separately from their warriors,
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right?'' I frowned.
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``As per Leg -- as per the Army of Callow's protocol, Your Majesty,''
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she hastily adjusted.
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The tribune looked afraid she'd offended by her lapse. Early thirties,
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at a glance, so odds weren't bad she'd been one of Istrid's or Orim's
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before Second Liesse. Fresh to my service, after decades in the Legions.
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``Calm down, Tribune,'' I reassured. ``I know well how much we've
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borrowed from the Legions. The Army of Callow as it now stands could not
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exist without them and all they taught us.''
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That took the edge off the fear, and she nodded in nervous agreement. I
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hummed, considering my options.
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``I'll be headed to speak with our Levantine prisoners,'' I said. ``I'll
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need a guide. Have it passed to Robber he should join me there.''
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It was done with brisk efficiency, and I was provided an escort of
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legionaries to head out. The drow would have done the same, but a few
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words in Crepuscular had them headed back to General Rumena instead. I
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wasn't having the wander around a crowded city full of humans if I could
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help it. As it turned out the captains of Levant were being held in
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Sarcella's own gaol, a nice little touch of irony. The tribune in charge
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of the legionaries keeping an eye on our guests was well-informed of
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them, and told me what I'd wanted to know: we \emph{had}, in fact,
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captured the captain commanding their holding action in Belles Portes
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earlier. She'd taken a sword the shoulder while fighting, but accepted
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healing by the priests of the House Insurgent and was now merely tired.
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It would do: after all, so was I. A cell better fit for holding thieves
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than what had to be one of the highest officers in the enemy vanguard
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awaited me, cramped and bare save for a rough bench and a chamber pot.
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Some kind soul have found her a blanket, which seemed for the best
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considering that she was apparently quite old. Built like an orc and
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obviously in fighting fit, true, but there was only white left to her
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hair. One of the legionaries at my side unlocked the cell while the
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other brought out a folding chair for me to sit on. I sure as Hells
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wasn't standing any more today unless I had to. The Levantine rose to
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her feet before the door was even open, and I greeted her with a sharp
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nod.
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``Captain Elvera, I believe,'' I spoke in Chantant.
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Her face tightened. I thanked the orc who'd brought in my chair and
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eased myself into it before dismissing my pair of escorts. The door
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remained open, and the Levantine's blue eyes studied the sight before
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warily returning to me.
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``Yes,'' she replied. ``You are the Black Queen.''
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He accent was thick enough the words were near unintelligible, and she
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spoke very slowly. My officers had already established she spoke no
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Lower Miezan, though, so it was about as clearly as this conversation
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could be held.
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``I am,'' I agreed. ``I am here to discuss the logistics of your
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surrender.''
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Her brow creased, and I repeated more slowly after changing `logistics'
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for `details'. She nodded.
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``Your general promised no killing of prisoners,'' Captain Elvera said.
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``Or torture.''
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``I will hold to that,'' I said.
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The issue here was that, according to Abigail, we had the better part of
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three thousand Dominion warriors on our hands. Stripping them of
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armaments and dispersing them in Sarcella meant they were unlikely to be
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an immediate problem, but that changed nothing about the long-term noose
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around our neck they'd be. The Third Army was decently supplied still,
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but dragging that many prisoners around would eat into the reserves at a
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harsh rate. And while the southern expedition still had piles of
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dwarf-provided rations as well as what had been brought from the
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Everdark, the Herald of the Deeps had made it clear the Kingdom Under
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would only supply the drow exodus headed towards the Dead King. Any
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force sent south was on its own. Add on top of it all that the drow had
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no facilities to hold prisoners, that the Third Army had been bloodied
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raw by fighting and that we need to move quickly before this turned sour
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on us? We couldn't keep the Levantines, it was as simple as that. Even
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if my general hadn't offered them their lives with the terms I would not
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have countenanced a massacre of prisoners of war, but neither could I
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just let them loose with a slap on the wrist.
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``I cannot simply release you to fight me in a few weeks,'' I bluntly
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said.
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``Captains will have ransom,'' Captain Elvera said. ``If I am sent out
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to camp, I will gather coin to buy freedom of as many soldiers as I can.
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Then return as prisoner. I will give oath.''
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\emph{Even if coin was enough to move me, I could not trust you to
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deliver it. Your own priesthood had me declared Arch-heretic of the
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East}, I thought\emph{. You have a holy justification to consider all
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oaths made to me as null and void.} I had not been well-inclined towards
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the Lantern because of that, even before some of their own had killed
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Nauk. I breathed out slowly. I would not stoke the embers of anger I
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felt at that. He'd been a general, and this was war. I had struck
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similar enough blows in the past, and would perhaps do it again.
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\emph{But this is the wrong war, not the one we should be fighting, and
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for that stupidity you killed my friend. What was left of him, anyway.}
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I forcefully pushed the thought aside. I would not add waste to waste,
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simply to even scales that could not be evened by blood.
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``Coin is not what I want,'' I said. ``You have offered me an oath,
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Captain Elvera. There are some of your people who would say those mean
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nothing, when offered to me.''
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The old woman's face darkened.
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``I am not Blood,'' she stiffly said. ``But not a dog. Even oath to
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devil should be kept. \emph{I} have honour, even if Hells do not.''
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I studied her closely as she spoke. The indignation was genuine enough,
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I decided. And those of the Dominion did have a reputation for being
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straightforward, as concerned with honour and reputation as the Arlesite
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princes they so often squabbled with. But the reputation ascribed to a
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people living so far away from mine meant very little, in the end. It
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was like calling all orcs bloodthirsty savages, or all Callowans
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obsessed with grudges. Having a warrior's build and displaying valour on
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the field did not necessarily mean she was not deceitful.
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``And you have the authority to speak for all the prisoners currently in
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my hands?'' I pressed.
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She nodded after taking some time to parse out my words. I'd spoken a
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little too fast.
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``Then we can bargain for release,'' I said. ``I want an oath from
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you.''
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Her wizened face hardened.
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``I will not fight against Levant,'' Captain Elvera said. ``Better
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death.''
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I shook my head, almost amused. I supposed I did have a reputation for
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making old enemies fight my fresher ones.
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``None of the prisoners are to make war against me or my allies for
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three months,'' I said. ``I want your oath on this.''
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The old woman looked wary.
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``That is all?'' she asked. ``No ransom?''
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\emph{From you, yes}, I thought. \emph{But I've every intent of selling
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your freedom twice. I have an envoy from the camp waiting, and
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concessions you cannot give me.} I refrained from smiling, well aware
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that a villain offering lenient terms with one of those would in all
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likelihood be taken as a trap.
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``That is all,'' I said.
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I'd considered keeping their arms and armour, but what point was there?
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It would slow us down on the march, and in six months it would be a lot
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more useful in their hands than filling my army's supply carts. Captain
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Elvera watched me in silence for a long time.
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``Why?'' she finally asked.
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``You are under the command of the Lord of Malaga,'' I said.
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She made a disgruntled noise.
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``I serve Tartessos,'' the old woman said. ``Lady Aquiline fights with
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him.''
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Akua had been right in her assessment, I mused. The Dominion's armies
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were not without internal squabbles. \emph{That's what happens when
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nobles command instead of officers with a clear chain of command.}
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``Then take this message back to her, and to him,'' I said, and my eyes
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hardened. ``There is only one war that matters, and it is being fought
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up north. Not here. I come with an offer of peace for the Grand
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Alliance.''
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I paused, waiting to make sure she'd understood me well. She nodded,
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eyes hooded.
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``If you refuse that peace, I will have to fight you,'' I said. ``And I
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will not have the luxury to be \emph{nice} about it, because we are
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running out of time.''
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I coldly smiled.
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``So take my peace,'' I said. ``Or we'll have to do this the hard way.''
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Silence filled the cell.
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``Threat,'' Captain Elvera said.
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``Promise,'' I corrected.
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Leaning on my staff, I rose to my feet.
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``You have my terms,'' I said. ``I will leave you to consider them. Tell
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the guards when you make your decision.''
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The old woman hesitated.
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``Agreed,'' she said. ``I will give oath, and message.''
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I left Sarcella's gaol not long after, with the first of the two oaths I
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wanted, and Captain Elvera's cell was locked anew.
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---
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Robber was waiting for me outside, lounging atop a wrecked street stall
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and looking oddly vulnerable without his armour. The shadows were
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lengthening outside, like they were slowly devouring the world, and in
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the back of my mind I knew we were not long before twilight began in
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earnest. I limped through the snow, my earlier escort of legionaries
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resuming their duties before I gestured for them to stay back for this.
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The goblin nimbly leapt down and I caught sight of a few glints of steel
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scattered over his body. Hidden knives, I thought, or other murderous
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accoutrements. He didn't salute, and his yellow eyes were without the
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usual malicious glee.
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``And?'' I asked.
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``He wasn't burned,'' Robber replied. ``His corpse\ldots{} It's bad,
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Catherine. They melted his plate with Light. It's cooled down since, but
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you'd need to butcher the flesh to get him out. If we're giving him a
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Legion funeral, we'll need more than just the usual pyre.''
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My fingers clenched around my staff. Molten steel, Gods. What an
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agonizing death that must have been. Summer's flames had changed him,
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and Warlock's sorcery failed to bring back the orc I'd known, but he'd
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still felt pain. And there'd been enough of the Nauk who'd been my
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friend left that I felt a clench of rage. The Lanterns had done this.
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Killing, killing I could stomach. Had to. It was war, and if I ordered
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deaths I must be able to withstand them as well. But this was\ldots{}
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He'd deserved better than that. I closed my eyes, and thought of the
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night after Three Hills. Green flames taking Nilin, who had been a
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traitor but beloved by many of us even after that. And now his closest
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friend was following him. I'd never told Nauk, that his second and
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good-as-brother had been passing information to Akua. I'd made the
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decision he was better off not knowing. How presumptuous that felt, now
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that he was dead.
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``The part of the city that's on fire, it's almost out?'' I said, eyes
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still closed.
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``Near enough,'' Robber said. ``Took all of the quarter they call
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Lanteria and some of the outskirts, but the firebreaks contained it and
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it's dying out.''
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I let out a misty breath and opened my eyes. The shadows had grown
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longer still.
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``Speak with General Abigail,'' I said. ``We'll be holding a Legion
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funeral for all our losses in Sarcella tonight. Work out watch rosters
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so that as many people as possible can attend. I'll speak to the drow
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myself.''
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Yellow eyes considered me, though the question went unasked.
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``What else can we still give him?'' I whispered. ``Or any of them. It's
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a fool war, but they died fighting it. They'll have a pyre and the only
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kind of farewell we learned.''
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He inclined his head in approval, then hesitated.
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``He went out hard, you know,'' Robber said. ``Fangs red.''
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I breathed out shakily.
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``He was Rat Company,'' I replied. ``How else could he have gone?''
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We parted ways, knowing we'd next meet to burn a friend. My legionaries
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followed me into the city in silence. In the end, all my grief could be
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was screaming in the dark: a harsh cry, followed by silence ringing of
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absence.
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I had tricks to ply, and duty did not make exceptions for funerals.
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---
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We'd won the day, or close enough, and that meant I could dictate terms.
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To an extent, anyway. Asking for more than I was costing them might see
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the Levantines write-off their own with cold eyes. They wouldn't know
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how badly I didn't want to be keeping prisoners, so it would at least
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look like I was the one with the good cards in hand. Much as I'd prefer
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not to be fighting the Levantines at all, I wouldn't delude myself into
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thinking they in any way shared that sentiment. The enemy commander
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would be out to screw me as badly as he could, while clawing his way
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back into possession of the troops I'd captured. I could play that game,
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truly, and win it a lot easier than he could. A word on my part would
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have the Tomb-Maker leading a party of Mighty to assault the Dominion
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camp after night fell, and unless the Pilgrim was hiding in a tent in
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there that would lead to a bloody massacre. But I would not compound
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waste with yet more of it, not even if my enemy was itching for that
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very tussle. No, neither corpses nor coin could be my aim here. There
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was going to be a battle in Iserre, soon enough, and I needed to get all
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my munitions in place before someone dropped a torch: this would be a
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part of it, nothing more and nothing less.
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The Levantine envoy was a middle-aged man with a fine mustache and
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stripes of blue and green crisscrossing his face, speaking Lower Miezan
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with an elegant polish. He got to use it just long enough for me to send
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him back to camp with an offer for the enemy commander to meet on the
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bridges in front of Sarcella. He left under protest, which I ignored
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with the ease of someone who'd been pushing paperwork on Hakram for
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years, and I gauged how long was reasonable to wait before getting atop
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Zombie and making for the bridges. The boy would come, if it was still
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the one I'd seen during the day that was in charge. No one with eyes
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that raw would pass on an opportunity to confront someone who'd bled
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them. My escort was tripled in size when I informed the Third Army of
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what I intended, but I paid it little attention. Belles Portes quarter
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was entirely ours, now, and it led directly to the bridges going over
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the river. I'd not specified which one, so on a whim I picked the
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leftmost one -- and ordered my legionaries to remain behind. I wondered
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what it said about my reputation that none of the officers looked
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pleased, but none actually argued.
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My dead horse's hooves cut against the icy stone, sharp sounds like
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flint being struck. The day's warmth was fleeing the coming of night,
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and the wind was picking up. Far in the distance the sun was drowning in
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a sea of purple and red, tinting the snowy fields with enough blood and
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ichor for a thousand wars. My mount eased advancing, halfway through the
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bridge, and my staff struck stone with a dull sound. I could hear crows,
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in the distance, though there was nothing godly about those. Just
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beasts, drawn by the day's corpses. I stuffed my pipe carefully, and
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passed a palm over the wakeleaf with just a hint of Night. Inhale and
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exhale, and then I watched smoke rise up into the sky as I waited for
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the boy who wanted my head to come treat with me.
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It was not long. Riders came, five hundred armed to the teeth and a few
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among them who reeked of something anathema to the Night. Lanterns, I
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assumed. Those I allowed my gaze to linger on, taking in the faces
|
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painted in black and white and wondering which one had killed Nauk. If
|
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it had been only one, or a working of several. Argument erupted, but in
|
|
the end youth and pride won out. Razin Tanja, of the Grim Binder's
|
|
Blood. That was the name our prisoners had given. Soldiers were
|
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soldiers, in the end: offer warm food and booze, and there was always
|
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one in a company willing to sell out their own mother. The boy rode up,
|
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on his beautiful white horse wearing his beautiful red and grey plate.
|
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The patterns of paint on his face had changed from earlier, now mere
|
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stripes of iron and blood on the cheeks. It revealed handsome enough
|
|
features, sharp-boned but bearing the kind of edge you wanted to run a
|
|
hand against. What little I could see of his hair was a dark brown, but
|
|
most was hidden by a tall helmet bearing red feathers. The sword at his
|
|
hip, I could not help but note, had a very pretty wrought steel pattern
|
|
to it. Swirls and vines, in a vaguely arcane pattern. No leather bands
|
|
over it, though. It would get slippery if he got blood all over it,
|
|
become an unwieldy ornament -- and wasn't that nobility put in a
|
|
sentence? He reined in his horse at the foot of the bridge, just close
|
|
enough we could talk without shouting. There was a banner in the colours
|
|
of his paint, held by a clever wooden contraption on his back, that
|
|
jutted up above even his plumage.
|
|
|
|
``You begged audience of me, Black Queen,'' Razin Tanja announced.
|
|
``Speak your piece.''
|
|
|
|
I pulled at my pipe and said nothing, only breathing out. The smoke went
|
|
up and I admired the play of light and shadows on it.
|
|
|
|
``Is this a riddle?'' the boy said through gritted teeth. ``Are you
|
|
making a game of me?'
|
|
|
|
The anger was out, pouring out of every pore. It could be useful, anger.
|
|
It'd gotten me through some very bad scraps, and should mine ever go out
|
|
I figured there wouldn't be much left of me. But there was a trick to
|
|
it: you had to learn when to keep it sheathed. It was like a sword, if
|
|
you just swung it around night and day it would grow dull. \emph{You}
|
|
would grow dull, and someone who'd learned the trick would cut out your
|
|
throat. Tanja was letting his anger dull him, right now. I'd let him
|
|
keep swinging as long as he wanted, because behind that anger there was
|
|
fear and shame. The longer he swung and hit nothing, the more harshly
|
|
those would bite.
|
|
|
|
``Have you become a mute, villain?'' the noble sneered. ``Or is it fear
|
|
of my father's army that stills your tongue?''
|
|
|
|
Another stream of smoke, and then finally I replied.
|
|
|
|
``It stings, doesn't it?'' I mildly said. ``Knowing that after all this,
|
|
all you have to threaten me with is your father's shadow.''
|
|
|
|
His fingers tightened into fists, his face flushed.
|
|
|
|
``A single battle does not win a war,'' Razin Tanja said. ``Tricks will
|
|
not save you twice.''
|
|
|
|
I hummed, considering him.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not going to threaten you,'' I decided. ``There's no point, is
|
|
there? When you have enough hate, it becomes a kind of courage. Madness,
|
|
too, but that line's always been thinner than people like to admit.''
|
|
|
|
``I will not be condescended to by a heretic,'' the boy snarled. ``If
|
|
you have called this meeting only to mock me-''
|
|
|
|
``You mock yourself,'' I gently said, ``by pretending today did not
|
|
happen. It did. Learn from it, or die in a ditch somewhere blaming
|
|
everything but yourself. But that's not my burden to bear, Tanja, and
|
|
I've no inclination to try. You're here because I hold your people, and
|
|
you want them back.''
|
|
|
|
``There are treaties pertaining to the treatment of war prisoners,'' he
|
|
said. ``To break them would-''
|
|
|
|
``See the Grand Alliance declare war on me?'' I drily said. ``Perhaps
|
|
lead your priesthood to declare me something of a heretic, even.''
|
|
|
|
There was a moment of embarrassed silence.
|
|
|
|
``That's the problem with turning the screws early,'' I said. ``It
|
|
doesn't leave much room for escalation.''
|
|
|
|
``I will offer the appropriate ransom for the captains,'' Razin Tanja
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
He was reaching, and knew it. The tinge of desperation in his voice was
|
|
making that much clear. \emph{Ah}, I thought. \emph{We both know you
|
|
fucked up today, but it looks like you might actually be held
|
|
accountable for it.} I wondered if it'd be his father, or the other
|
|
noble Captain Elvera answered to. \emph{Are you worrying you'll be the
|
|
sacrificial lamb to make peace between Malaga and Tartessos after your
|
|
mess cost everyone steeply?} Victory had a thousand fathers and mothers,
|
|
but defeat did tend to be attributed to a single pair of hands. I
|
|
wondered if he might actually be killed over this. Levant kept to Good,
|
|
it was said, but it was rough country. I might have more leverage than
|
|
anticipated, then.
|
|
|
|
``I've no interest in coin,'' I said. ``What I want from you is an
|
|
oath.''
|
|
|
|
``An oath?'' he said. ``I will not serve Below, villain, in this life or
|
|
any other.''
|
|
|
|
``I've not asked you to,'' I said. ``You hold command of the vanguard,
|
|
Razin Tanja. It will stay camped outside Sarcella for three days and
|
|
three nights -- on this I require your oath.''
|
|
|
|
``And you would return the captains, for this?'' the boy pressed.
|
|
|
|
The wakeleaf filled my throat and lungs, burning pleasantly. It left me
|
|
tingling when it passed my lips.
|
|
|
|
``I'll return every Levantine soldier captured today, including
|
|
officers,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
``Agreed,'' he immediately said.
|
|
|
|
He had absolutely no intention of keeping his word, did he? I sighed.
|
|
After dealing with Praesi and fae, the Levantine was almost painfully
|
|
transparent.
|
|
|
|
``I'll want the oath made to the Heavens and on the honour of your
|
|
Blood,'' I coldly said. ``Made in front of every remaining captain in
|
|
your army.''
|
|
|
|
``You dare question my honour?'' he replied, puffing up.
|
|
|
|
``You test my patience,'' I calmly said, as if we were discussing the
|
|
weather. ``Do not mistake my restraint for vulnerability. If there is no
|
|
fair bargain to be made\emph{,} I will put your fucking head on a pike
|
|
and use it as a warning for your replacement.''
|
|
|
|
Hate and fear, I mused, watching the war in his eyes. The sun was more
|
|
dead than dying, by now, and I think that was what settled it -- the
|
|
shadows winning out, the same kind that I'd wielded to drown his
|
|
soldiers even under afternoon sun.
|
|
|
|
``You will pay for this, Black Queen,'' Razin Tanja said. ``All of it.
|
|
The Heavens will see to it that your horrors are given answer.''
|
|
|
|
I grinned around my pipe, face wreathed in smoke.
|
|
|
|
``They'll take their swing,'' I said. ``Watch. \emph{See where it gets
|
|
them}.''
|
|
|
|
Night fell before I got my oath, but I did get it.
|