388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-concourse-iv}{%
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\section{Interlude: Concourse IV}\label{interlude-concourse-iv}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A victor has a hundred friends, every last born yesterday.''}
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-- Helikean saying
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\end{quote}
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Abigail of Summerholm -- still a general, despite her best efforts --
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had finally figured it out. As the Gods despised her for reasons known
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only to them, her attempts at mild incompetence had instead been reward
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with successes that'd earned her a reputation as a `tactical prodigy'.
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Her continued protests that she was not such thing were being taken as
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humility instead of desperation, to the extend that Marshal Juniper had
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commended her for being `grounded' and `not letting acclaim go to her
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head'. Abigail had never seen anything half so horrifying in her life as
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the Hellhound attempting an approving look, and she'd had goblin stew.
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Which was made by goblins and not \emph{of} goblins, as she really
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wished someone had told her before she'd eaten a bowl out of fear of
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offending a whole swarm of sappers. Ah, but it'd been naïve of her to
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assume that simply trying to pass on her responsibilities to literally
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anyone else would be enough to see her demoted back to a set of
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responsibilities less gallows-adjacent. Indeed, from the towering
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heights of her fresh understanding she now grasped how guileless and
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green that manner of thinking had been. But she'd learned, oh yes she
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had. They were going to sweep her under the rug quietly, maybe even
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enlarge her retirement pension so she kept her mouth shut for the rest
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of her life, which as far as she was concerned was the ideal state of
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affairs. Of course, her most cunning plans still hinged on the Deadhand
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not getting them all killed before Morning Bell.
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Which was, unfortunately, looking less likely by the moment.
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``Six hundred, at least,'' the Adjutant calmly said. ``Personal armsmen
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of the Blood, by the looks of their equipment.''
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The tall, broad-shouldered villain spoke in that way orcs often learned
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to after they'd been out of the Steppes for a few years: slower than
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they would in Kharsum, and careful to avoid being too loud. You could
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tell how long they'd been out of the homeland by the way they talked,
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since those fresh out of the Clans hadn't usually yet figured out that a
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big orc speaking loud and harshly in a hard-to-understand accent tended
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to make humans a \emph{mite} twitchy. Hakram Deadhand struck Abigail as
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the kind of person who went around spending a lot of time thinking about
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what other people thought before acting all cold and measured. She'd
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known folks like that more than once, they were the traders who'd done
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the best under the Praesi at Summerholm. Those who'd not choked on pride
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when it came to getting trade permits from the easterners, who'd not
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balked at serving legionaries and greasing the palms of Wasteland
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scribes. They usually weren't nice people but they did tend to be able
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to afford nice meals, which in Abigail's humble opinion was a lot more
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useful a trait.
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``The Tartessos and Malaga captains were hard in a scrap,'' General
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Abigail replied. ``And they're not even the people known for having
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heavy foot.''
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\emph{Please, Lord Deadhand}, she silently prayed, \emph{do not ask my
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two cohorts to take that damned hill.} Four hundred legionaries, even
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veterans, trying to dislodge those armsmen would be like swinging a
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trout at a wall: amusing, except for the trout. She'd seen those
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bastards in Sarcella taking a run at sapper-dug positions and still make
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a dent, since they refused to die even when shot repeatedly and didn't
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seem to have a single self-preserving bone in their bodies. It was
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always worse when one of their nobles was around, too, it put an
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unnecessary amount of additional steel to their already-steely
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countenance in the face of danger.
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``That would be the Alava warriors, whose colours are also flying,'' the
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Adjutant said. ``I receive your point, general. An assault before
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reinforcements are had would be difficult.''
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Huh. She'd not expected that to work. Did praying to people actually
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change things? She'd heard that there was talk about making the odd
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offering to the Crows these days, which she didn't entirely disapprove
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of. The Gods Above asked for a lot, birds were probably \emph{much}
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easier to bribe as far as deities went. Alms took hard coin, but you
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could get dead rats from any poorly-kept cellar.
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``Haven't been told why we set out either, sir,'' Abigail said. ``Er,
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lord? My lord?''
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``Adjutant will do,'' the ivory-fanged villain told her.
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Ugh, he'd even done the fucking grin just like Krolem did. Someone
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really needed to have a sit down with all these orcs and explain to them
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that some big muscled bastard displaying enough sharp teeth to fill the
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mouths of at least three jackals wasn't ever going to be taken as
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\emph{reassuring} by anyone with any sense. At least the goblins were
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aware they were horrifying as all Hells when they did it.
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``We are to serve as the escort for Her Majesty's return to Creation,''
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the Adjutant said.
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Abigail was well-learned in the ways of the Army of Callow, by now, so
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she didn't need to have it spelled out for her. Of course it'd gotten
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worse, it always did it this bloody outfit.
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``It's on that hill isn't,'' she whined. ``With all the warriors on
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it.''
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And any moment now the Dominion was going to be reinforced by a
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battalion of demons, or a legion of angels, and still the Deadhand would
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say: \emph{take me that hill, General Abigail, or no general's pension
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for you.} And that was the thing, wasn't it? Abigail had come too far to
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retire without the pension now, she refused to attend that many bloody
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strategic briefings and not make it out of this damned war set for life.
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``Your intuition is as acute as rumoured,'' Deadhand said.
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The Summerholm girl didn't squint at the villain, because that was a
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good way to get your eyes eaten, but she did wonder how long it'd taken
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the orc to perfect a tone of voice that so perfectly straddled the line
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between serene and sardonic.
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``Thank you,'' she said, cleared her throat. ``Sir lord Adjutant.''
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``As for why you in particular are serving as commanding officer for the
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cohorts instead of a commander or even a legate, it's simple enough,''
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the one-handed orc gravelled. ``You're one of the few people Catherine
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has ever personally promoted. I was curious.''
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Abigail looked up at the sky, casting out her despair for any god
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willing to hear her. How much would it cost, for people to stop getting
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`curious' about her? She was willing to resume attending sermons, if
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that was what it took. Or offer, like, three dead rabbits to the Crows.
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She could probably get a few of those from goblins if she found a gaggle
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around a campfire and put up bottles to trade.
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``I'm flattered,'' she lied.
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She was going to have to implement that plan faster than she'd earlier
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intended, the general thought. Gods forgive her, she might even have to
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accept that dinner invitation Grandmaster Brandon Talbot had sent her.
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Rumour was he extended that to every rising Callowan officer, but she'd
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thought to avoid the whole thing like the plague by claiming that a
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goblin had eaten the invitation. It would have held up, they ate
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basically anything if they got hungry enough or were dared to. Now,
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though, she'd have to use a nice public dinner with important people to
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say something horribly, \emph{absurdly} racist somewhere too many high
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officers were seated for it to be ignored. She was still debating on
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what to say, that was the issue. She wasn't going to start mouthing off
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about greenskins -- not when she had so many of them close to her and
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bearing sharp things -- and going after Wastelanders tended to earn
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retribution. Taghreb officers watched each other's backs, and if there
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was a single Soninke in this damned army that couldn't do magic or
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didn't have a friend who could she'd yet to run into them.
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No, it'd have to be about real foreigners. She'd been mulling over
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arguing that `all Procerans should be eaten, especially the children'.
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If she said that in front of enough people it'd have to be bad enough
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she was encouraged to retire, right?
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``And now Rozala Malanza graces us with her presence,'' Hakram Deadhand
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said. ``This is going to get \emph{interesting}.''
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It was hard to make out much in the darkness, especially at a distance,
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but the Procerans were hard to miss: they'd brought their own torches,
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and not few. Even after the Tyrant of Helike had tumbled them down form
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Arcadia it looked like the princes had been able to put together a
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contingent of horse. Abigail had a hard time guessing numbers, given the
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swiftness they rode with and the movement of the torches, but there had
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to be at least two hundred riders there. Trailing behind at a slower
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pace, men-at-arms whose strength was easier to gauge were approaching in
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a column. Easily five hundred there, Abigail saw with dismay. This was
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about to turn into a bloody godsdamned mess, wasn't it? The Dominion had
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six hundred foot, but it also had the hill and some of those hard
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warrior-priests who'd melted the Princekiller's own plate over him.
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Princess Malanza of Wherever and Whatnot had that light Proceran horse
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and some decent fighting men for a sum of seven hundred but Abigail
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suspected charging up a hill at Levantine armsmen wasn't likely to end
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well for Malanza, horse or not.
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And then there was them, approaching with two cohorts of two hundred.
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One of regulars, veterans from Arcadia and the Doom, and the other a
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lighter force: sappers, mages, crossbowmen. The weakest force of the
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three, if you didn't count that Hakram fucking Deadhand was part of it.
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She'd seen the orc Named thrown like a trebuchet stone at Akua's Folly
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and walk it off before assaulting a rebel bastion near single-handed.
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The Adjutant could turn it into a fight, if not a very pleasant one.
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``Our reinforcements might get there in time,'' General Abigail tried.
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And they might, pretty please, bring with them someone high up enough in
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rank this would no longer be her problem. The low hill the Dominion had
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taken and would allegedly be the Black Queen's stepping stone back into
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Creation was roughly between the camps of Levant, Procer and Callow but
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the dark-haired woman would bet on the Army of Callow's muster over
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anyone else's without batting an eye. No one else drilled battle-muster
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save for the Legions, so if this got out of hand their own legionaries
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should get here quicker than either the Levantines or the Procerans. Of
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course, there were a \emph{lot} more of those around so that'd only go
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so far.
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``Unlikely,'' the Adjutant said, eyes moving across the darkness.
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He could see where she could not, Abigail knew.
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``We're mobilizing faster,'' he acknowledged, ``but they began earlier.
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This is the vanguard for all of us, and it'll have to be by our hands
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it's settled: by the time reinforcements are on the field Catherine will
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have returned and it will be over.''
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\emph{Please don't order me to take that hill, Lord Deadhand sir},
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Abigail desperately thought.
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``I suppose we'll have to take that hill,'' the orc mused, and she
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whimpered a little inside.
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He cast at her an almost knowing look before offering the barest flash
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of fang.
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``Not alone, though,'' the Adjutant said. ``See the banner riding
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towards us? Rozala Malanza seeks audience.''
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---
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Princess Rozala rode her destrier hard, intent on snatching this
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disaster out of Below's ruinous grasp before they all ended up paying
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for it.
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Whatever it was the Blood had been up to in their closed council, in the
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wake of its end they'd not bothered to even acknowledge the presence of
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the messengers she kept sending to their camp. They'd gathered entire
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war parties of their finest warriors, sent for the Lanterns and marched
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out for the hill where Rozala's mages said enough power was currently
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coalescing to burn a town to the ground. The Black Queen's return must
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be imminent, her people had concluded, and its location was beyond
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dispute. Which meant the way the Levantines had made for it without
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missing a beat unlikely to be a coincidence. The riders she'd sent after
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the Dominion forces with orders to try anything short of baring blades
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to get an audience with the lords and ladies had been turned away
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roughly, though at least not in utter silence: they'd been informed that
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this was a sacred matter, and concerning only the Blood. No interference
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would be brooked. Heart clenching, Princess Rozala had sent forward the
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soldiers she'd been able to muster up until then and left Louis to
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assemble the second wave.
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The Callowans weren't blind, of course, so they'd sent out a force as
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well. Just two cohorts from the Third Army, but that force's general had
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something of a reputation: the Levantines spoke of her with a measure of
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respect for the way she'd held on to the city of Sarcella even when
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taken by surprise and outnumbered. This General Abigail was also said to
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have slaughtered like lambs almost a quarter of the Levantine mages
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during the first assault on the southern palisade, which was no small
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thing. Rozala Malanza's ancestors had fought binders often and known
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them to be dangerous foes when moved to war. Still, even led by a superb
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field tactician four hundred legionaries were not a major force. Not so
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great as the one fielded by Levant, at least, or even the hasty party
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the Princess of Aequitan had put together and led forth. Or so she had
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fought, until she'd seen the Black Queen's own banner flying above the
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cohorts: silver on black, a balance bearing a sword and a crown. That
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the sword weighed heavier said much of the woman who'd taken that
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heraldry as her own, and how it was she'd come to be Queen in Callow --
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\emph{of} Callow, Rozala corrected herself. Best not make that mistake
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around Foundling herself, her temper was well-known.
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That the \emph{Sword and Crown} flew could simply be sign that it was
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expected the Black Queen would return under it. Or it could mean that
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the Adjutant was with the cohorts, and that'd \emph{complicate} things.
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In truth, it could be said that Hakram Deadhand was the least dangerous
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of Catherine Foundling's woeful company. He lacked the terrifying great
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sorceries of the Hierophant, the Archer's talent for sudden and
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surprising killing strokes and even the Thief's rumoured endowment to
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steal anything from a fleet or river barges to some fae princess'
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sorcery. The Adjutant was a lesser figure in the stories that'd made it
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across the mountains, as the nature of his Damnation would imply. Yet
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there was one thing all tales agreed on -- of all the Woe, none were so
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implacably loyal to the Black Queen as her Adjutant. The others, Rozala
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felt confident she might have swayed into holding their hand. The Archer
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was drunken sot, for all her lethality, the Hierophant had read through
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then entire peace talks after the Battle of the Camps and the Thief had
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been cautious even before she'd been rumoured to have lost her power.
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The Adjutant, though? Be reputation, he was temperate and even-handed
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sort. Those, in Rozala's experience, always tended to make the worst
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fanatics.
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Few things were as troublesome as an otherwise reasonable man believing
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an unreasonable thing.
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Escort riding close around her even as the rest of her vanguard advanced
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on the hill where the Levantines had taken position, the dark-haired
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princess veered hard to the side when she saw the Black Queen's banner
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split from the rest of the legionaries. An escort of ten, the very same
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number she rode with, made for her direction at a sedate pace while the
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rest of the cohorts continued marching on the hill. Wary of too sudden
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an approach being taken as a charge, Rozala reduced the pace of her
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mount and shouted for her soldiers to do the same. Within moments they
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were in sight of the enemy envoys, and even before she drew her up reins
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and halted the Princess of Aequitan was silently cursing. There was no
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mistaken the burnt and darkened plate on the tall orc for anything else:
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the Adjutant was there, along with a young woman bearing the marks of a
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general and a retinue of Callowan regulars. The dark-eyed Arlesite would
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have called it a risk taken, bringing but a matching number of
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legionaries when she rode to them with horse, but knew better. The orc
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was Damned, and not fresh to his legend: he could likely kill them all
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without coming to breathe heavier for it.
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``Hail, Lord Adjutant,'' Princess Rozala called out in Lower Miezan.
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``Your Grace,'' the Adjutant replied in the same.
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She flicked her eyes to the side, taking in the sight of the woman who
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was most likely this General Abigail of the Third Army. Black hair,
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tanned cheeks, watery blue eyes. More tavern girl than warrior-queen,
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and what was it with Callow and spawning all those wee dangerous women?
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``I present you General Abigail of Summerholm, in command of the Third
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Army,'' the Deadhand said. ``You may have heard of her.''
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``So I have,'' Rozala replied. ``Well met, general. Your deeds in
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Sarcella drew attention.''
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``That was all Her Majesty,'' the black-haired woman replied almost
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hurriedly. ``Truly, I have done nothing worth remembering.''
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Humble, the Arlesite princess wondered, or trying to remain obscure so
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that she would take her enemies by surprise in wars to come? Either way,
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she was one to watch out for.
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``It appears, Princess Rozala, that the Dominion has seen fit to
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obstruct the return of my queen,'' the Adjutant gravelled in that
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unsettlingly deep voice. ``This seems to me a violation of the truce
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that was struck.''
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``I am sure they merely mean to serve as an honour guard,'' Rozala lied.
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``Though, of course, that honour should be shared between all of us.
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Indeed, I brought soldiers with me for this very purpose.''
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The orc's hairless brow narrowed.
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``A threefold honour guard is your intention?'' he asked.
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``Of course,'' the Princess of Aequitan said. ``Is it not yours? Surely
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the Army of Callow would not seek to break the truce your very queen
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arranged.''
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The Damned let out a noise that was either amused or contemptuous,
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Rozala knew too little of his kind to tell.
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``I've no intention of sharing the honour,'' Hakram Deadhand calmly
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said. ``We'll be clearing out the Dominion by force of arms.''
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General Abigail let out a mocking bark of laughter, though her voice
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made it sound like strangely terrified trill.
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``There is no need for such a thing,'' Princess Rozala insisted. ``I can
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accompany you to treat with the Blood and this can all be achieved
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without breaking truce.''
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The orc studied her for a long moment, and then slowly bared his
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fearsome great fangs.
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``The First Prince ordered you to keep Catherine alive and amenable,''
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the Adjutant serenely said. ``You'd have tried threats otherwise. Well
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now, that's a fascinating turn. How far are you allowed to go to assure
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that?''
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``You assume much,'' Rozala flatly replied.
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``I suppose it doesn't matter,'' the orc said, snorting. ``Send your
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people in a flanking position for the hill, on the eastern side. We'll
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take the other flank. You and I can speak with those Levant lordlings
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from a position of strength.''
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``You overestimate your position,'' the Princess of Aequitan said, tone
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glacial.
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Hakram Deadhand studied her, then laughed.
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``No,'' he said. ``I don't. Glad to have you on our side, Princess
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Rozala. I've great esteem for your campaigning in Cleves.''
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And just like that, he turned and began to walk again. Though anger
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boiled in her stomach, the Princess of Aequitan found she had no means
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to deal it out. What could she do, strike out at the Black Queen's own
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aide or let him lead his cohorts into a fight that could not be won?
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She'd been ordered to avoid provoking Catherine Foundling, and letting
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the Adjutant die would be very much the opposite of that. The Princess
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of Aequitan found that General Abigail was looking at her still, a
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strange expression on the Callowan's face. She reached for something
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within her armour and Rozala tensed, half-expecting a knife, but instead
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it was a dull bronze flask. The general tossed it to her and patted her
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horse's neck with what seemed to be genuine sympathy.
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``I'd tell you it gets better,'' General Abigail said, ``but it would be
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a lie.''
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