577 lines
28 KiB
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577 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-54-kings-fianchetto}{%
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\chapter{King's Fianchetto}\label{chapter-54-kings-fianchetto}}
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\epigraph{``That there is little reason to war should be no surprise, for
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war is never the choice of reasonable men.''}{Basileus Stavros Trakas of Nicae}
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It wouldn't be cheap.
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The pair from the adjunct secretariat had been dismissed, leaving me
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with a pile of papers where the words `maybe' and `should' came up
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uncomfortably often. While the phalanges who'd spoken to me -- an orc
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and a Callowan, nice touch that -- had been well-versed in the details,
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looking at the plans I recognized the careful method that lay behind
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them. This was Hakram's proposal, and not one he'd begun working on
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recently. Too much groundwork had been laid, and some of those numbers
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would have taken months to get. I was honestly astonished he'd managed
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to get his hands on estimated fighting strength for the greatest of the
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Clans, as the Jacks were completely blind in the Steppes.
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As far as proposals meant it was well-crafted, and made it clear that
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not only was propping up an orc state in the Steppes achievable but it
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would benefit Callow in several practical ways. Establishing treaties
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with orc leadership and trading ties with western clans would ensure
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that raiding of my kingdom did not resume down the line, while a mutual
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defence pact would mean that if the Dread Empire turned on us both Wolof
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and Okoro would be knocked out of the war before the first sword was
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drawn. The Clans weren't rich in much besides amber and fur, but trading
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those goods south in Mercantis would mean steep profits for Callowan
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traders given the demand for both.
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There'd be no need for actual Callowan military involvement either, as
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simply arming the Red Shields and the Howling Wolves up to Army of
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Callow standards would allow them to sweep through Malicia's allies in
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the Clans and become a thorn in the Tower's side in northern Praes. From
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there different manners of support could be offered, grain and cattle
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and craft goods, while the Clans stabilized as an independent polity and
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pressured the Wasteland with their raiders.
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But there were\ldots{} issues. For one, orcs didn't have a great record
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when it came to keeping to treaties -- especially treaties binding
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multiple clans, considering the independent bent of their chiefs. The
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trade outlined would become profitable in the long term, yes, but in the
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short one it was a drain on the already strained treasury of Callow.
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It'd also represent an escalation of our current manner of war with the
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Tower, struggles abroad through intermediaries, to something
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significantly more aggressive. There was a difference between backing
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rival parts of the League and arming rebels in Malicia's backyard. This
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\emph{would} prompt retaliation, one that Callow was currently
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ill-equipped to handle.
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And the truth was that, in the end, I couldn't be sure the orcs even
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would stay an independent nation for long. If Black claimed the Tower
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then given his popularity up north he shouldn't find it overly difficult
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to bring the Clans back into the fold. Meaning I would have pissed away
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gold, political capital -- it was going to be a difficult sell in Laure
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to arm greenskins largely at our expense, to say the least -- and risked
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retaliation all to strengthen soon-to-be Tower loyalists. Sure they'd be
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a pain in Malicia's neck for a while, but was that small a gain really
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worth such a significant investment? Much as I would have preferred for
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the answer to be a different one, deep down I knew it was not. I sighed
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and leaned back into my seat, the lights of the camp around me dimly
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visible through the entrance flaps of my tent.
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I poured myself a finger of brandy, and tried to think of a reason for
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me to back this that wasn't just making Hakram happy. He'd been good,
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for a very long time, about never putting me in a position like this --
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having too choose between him and duty. So damned good I'd allowed
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myself to forget he wanted things at all. That was a dangerous thing to
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ignore in my right hand, the keeper of so many of my secrets. But I
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couldn't just empty my kingdom's coffers just to please him, could I?
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Gods I rather wanted to, if only so things between us could go back to
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normal, but it wouldn't be that simple would it?
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No, I suspected that if anything accepting when I had so many qualms
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would only make things worse.
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I cast a baleful look at a sheet of parchment detailing the costs and
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benefits of arming orcs in Callowan steel instead of sending them
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shipments of dwarven armaments bought in Mercantis, passing a hand
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through my hair. I'd refrained from calling on Akua when considering
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this, wanting no contrary opinion tainting my thoughts, and forced
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myself not to send for Scribe -- even though she'd likely have better
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force estimates for the Clans than anything my people had been able to
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dig up, on top of the lay of the more recent politics.
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``I can't accept this,'' I admitted to myself quietly.
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It was a stark enough admission that I punctuated it by guzzling down
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the brandy, the burn in my throat and belly distracting from the
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unpleasantness. I wiped my lips afterwards, reaching for a quill and
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inkwell, and pawed around until I found a sheath of parchment I could
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use. I couldn't accept this, I thought but I could at least make it
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clear why I couldn't accept it. It was better than just refusing, and
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letting silence have the day. The words came easy, when I got into it,
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and I found further reasons to hesitate even as I wrote.
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For one, the Clans were currently dependent on Praes for many goods and
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the northernmost Soninke holdings much closer than Callow -- how could I
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be assured the Steppes wouldn't just be pulled back into an eastern
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alliance down the line by simple dint of needing what the Wasteland
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could provide quicker than my people could provide it? Callowans were
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not known as great merchants, and there was no port up the Wasiliti for
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our river barges to land that wasn't in Praesi hands. I needed answer to
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more than a dozen questions just as crucial, and so I asked them all.
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\emph{I cannot in good conscience commit to this proposal at is stands},
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I added at the end. \emph{I would, however, be willing to entertain a
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revised one addressing my concerns.}
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I bit my lip, a few drops of ink dripping down as my hand hesitated.
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\emph{I look forward to seeing your work}, I began, then crossed it out.
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\emph{I expect I will soon see\ldots{}} No, I thought, and crossed it
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out again. \emph{I hope that}, crossed. \emph{I believe that there is
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merit to this}, I finally allowed, \emph{and look forward to} \emph{the
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improvements.}
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The queen would not allow the woman to say sorry, so this was as close
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as I'd ever get to saying the word to Hakram.
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---
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I slept uneasily and woke up already tired.
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Though we both knew he'd read my answer, Adjutant did not speak a word
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of it as we ate breakfast and I did not press the matter. While I'd
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slept the campaign had continued, the ten thousand Firstborn still with
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my army hunting down nearby wandering bands of undead in the lowlands
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and wiping them out under moonlight. They'd retreated back to camp
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before dawn and were now sleeping through it as the remainder of our
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column prepared to resume the march. I'd be leaving the Third under
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General Abigail to protect them while our march picked up again, the
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Levantines once more serving as vanguard.
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I'd pulled at the leash yesterday and gone out to fight, but I'd not get
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such an opportunity again anytime soon. There was no Juniper for me to
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hand command to as I went hunting for trouble, much to my displeasure --
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it was my command, for better or worse. The detachments of fantassins
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and drow we'd sent out yesterday had dug in through dawn but would begin
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sweeping the region clear of undead soon enough: I got regular reports
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from both Ivah and Captain-General Catalina about their progress. It
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looked to be slim pickings, with the enemy force holed up in Luciennerie
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having sent no raiders down the blue road that we could find.
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That worried me.
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Why was the Dead King not reacting to our advance? There were three
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forces that were in position to prove a threat for the offensive. First
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was the hundred thousand army ahead of my column, no doubt well on its
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way to Lauzon's Hollow by now. Another of at least one hundred thousand
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was holding Juvelun to the east, but we were trying to bait it out with
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Prince Klaus' army. A force at least as large as the others was in
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Luciennerie, though, and while Princess Rozala was supposed to send
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raiders out to worry it the absence of reaction from there was raising
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my hackles.
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Luciennerie was a fortress, it wouldn't be easy for raiders to take even
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if a few dozen thousand dead were sent down to march on our defensive
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lines north of Arbusans. It was what I would have done, in the Dead
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King's place: mounted a large enough assault on that defence that my
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column was forced to strip away detachments to reinforce. It'd weaken us
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before the clash at the Hollow, and in the worst possible case the Dead
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King would break through the fort and force our arriving reinforcements
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from Callow and Procer to face him in a costly field battle before his
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marauders were driven back.
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So why was there only silence from the northwest?
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My Lord of Silent Steps had correctly estimated that east of Julienne's
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Highway was the region I wanted cleared most thoroughly, and it had
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acted consequently: the Firstborn had gone out there in force overnight
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and savaged the enemy warbands in the area thoroughly. They'd also paid
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particular attention to keeping the connection between the mining roads
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of the east and the Highway clear, which I send a commendation for. So
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long as that road remained open, the Iron Prince could keep sending us
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messengers even when he got into territories where scrying broke down.
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My column's advance went uncontested through the rest of the day, the
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field ours in every direction according to the reports of my scout. Some
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of my commanders came to believe we'd caught the Hidden Horror by
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surprise with our advance, that our timing had been apt.
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He might have been focusing his attentions on the offensive against
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Cleves, they said, the one headed towards Trifelin. Our two-pronged
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offensive might have caught him with his forces deployed in the wrong
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places. Some of General Hune's staff argued for us to increase the speed
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of our offensive because of this theory, and the notion was popular with
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Princess Beatrice and her army. They were eager to reclaim their capital
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from Keter, it was a point of pride for them. I stamped down on their
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ardour, as unless their guesswork was confirmed I saw no reason to
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change our campaign plan. Just because we could not see the Dead King's
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preparations did not mean they weren't waiting for us.
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On the third day of the march, early in the morning, I got word from
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Prince Klaus. When he'd sent his messenger his army had just passed
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Juvelun, where to his dismay the enemy army had refused to engage even
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when he'd skirmished provocatively. Our early hopes that the raids on
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his army were the prelude to a greater attack seemed in vain. With the
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hope of baiting the enemy into a field battle easily gone, he'd followed
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our contingency plan and begun a forced march towards Malmedit. That
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would force the enemy army to either follow or risk losing the tunnels
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there, but noted it would not be difficult for him to keep in contact
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with my army form now on.
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He wished me luck, and in silence I wished him the same. It was not
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without risks, marching on Malmedit: it left his supply lines open for
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the enemy to raid, or to block entirely if they decided to leave Juvelun
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and advance against his back.
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It was only half a bell before sundown that I finally got an explanation
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as to why Luciennerie had gone silent. Princess Rozala sent word by
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scrying that not only had Keter begun the expected offensive against
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Trifelin, where she'd fought a field battle and was now suffering a
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siege, but that there seemed to be another attack afoot. The raiding
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detachments she'd sent to harass the army in Luciennerie had been
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ambushed and driven back, but not before catching sight of a Keteran
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host marching towards the fortress they'd come from. The same one
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anchoring her eastern flank, Coudrent. My fingers clenched until the
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knuckles went white when I heard the news.
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If the fortress fell, Cleves was in trouble. The dead would have access
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to the soft underbelly of the principality, and not only would they be
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able to cut the supply lines of the far-flung capital of Cleves but
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they'd also be able to strike at the besieged army in Trifelin from
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behind. It'd be a \emph{crippling} blow. One that could potentially turn
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our currently steadiest front into a howling disaster over the span of a
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bare few months. There were Named in Coudrent, though, and a significant
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defensive force. The fortress would not fall easily. Still, it now
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looked like the Dead King had decided to gamble on breaking Cleves
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before we could retake Hainaut.
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He must have realized that we'd weakened the defences there to
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strengthen our offensive here, in troops and Named. It was a bold
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strategy from an opponent usually more inclined towards patience, but
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then he could afford the losses better than we could: every battle
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refilled his ranks while ours dwindled. It would have been a mistake to
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hide this from my highest officers, so on the same evening I called
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another war council. It was taken with equanimity on the surface, but it
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was only skin deep.
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``It might be best to end the offensive for now,'' Razin Tanja
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reluctantly said, ``and instead reinforce Coudrent through the Twilight
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Ways.''
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I cocked an eyebrow, almost impressed. It'd be a strategic blunder to do
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that, in my opinion, but it showed forethought on his part that'd been
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entirely absent back when we'd tangled at Sarcella. He could recognize,
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at least, that losing Cleves would be a greater loss than winning
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Hainaut would be a gain.
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``The Hidden Horror could be baiting us,'' Aquiline reminded him. ``We
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do not know much of what happened out west for certain.''
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``If anything this reinforces the need to advance swiftly,'' Grandmaster
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Talbot argued. ``If we smash our way up the Highway, the enemy might be
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forced to withdraw the forces they sent out or face losing Hainaut
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largely uncontested.''
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``Beg your pardon, lord, but it's only uncontested if the army in
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Juvelun does what we want and chases the Iron Prince,'' General Abigail
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said. ``Might be we could take that for granted before, but I'm not so
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sure we can now.''
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``Agreed,'' Princess Beatrice said, startling my general. ``Though I
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would suggest that is even more of a reason to push forward quickly.
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Unless we become a serious threat on the Enemy's hold of Hainaut, he has
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no reason to reconsider his offensives. The army in the Hollow needs to
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be shattered, and soon.''
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I stayed silence, wanting all here to air their thoughts, but I tended
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to side with Beatrice Volignac in this. There were still four days of
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marching between us and the Hollow, if we stayed on Creation, which was
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starting to look like too long. The Dead King wouldn't have made a move
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against Coudrent if he didn't believe he could take the fortress, Named
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or not, and to be honest I was starting to suspect the attack on
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Trifelin was not to take the place -- Rozala Malanza had made it into a
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butcher's yard for anyone trying to take it -- but instead to pin down
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the Princess of Aequitan's army so it couldn't relieve Coudrent.
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``We can't fight a battle with our column spread out as it currently
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is,'' General Hune pointed out. ``We'll need to recall the drow and the
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mercenaries first and that'll take at least a day.''
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A generous estimate. The distances involved were not small, there were
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no real roads to speak of out there and the forces in question were
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significantly spread out. Even if we sent the order in an hour, I
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doubted we'd gather everyone here by tomorrow. I'd bet the morning
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after, the dawn of our campaign's fifth day, if we were lucky and the
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fantassins ran themselves ragged.
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``It will slow us down to wait for them,'' Aquiline pointed out.
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``Attacking an entrenched force with superior numbers without our full
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strength would be foolish,'' Hune bluntly replied.
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``We don't need to launch an assault outright,'' I noted. ``We can set
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up camp facing the Hollow and prepare for battle, and order the
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detachments to catch up to us there.''
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It'd have the benefit of having those detachments sweep through the
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upper lowlands on both sides as they joined us, flushing out undead
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warbands still in hiding.
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``And if the enemy comes out to fight?'' Princess Beatrice asked.
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``Gods, if only,'' I wolfishly smiled.
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General Abigail let out a small trilling laugh, which sounded either
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keen or terrified. Her fear aside, I strongly believed that in a field
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battle we'd smash right through the force the Dead King had sent to hold
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the Hollow. It was one thing to assault a strong position, another to
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face bones and Binds on the plains -- where our cavalry could come into
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play and we could force them to come to us as our engines pounded at
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them.
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``Send out the recall orders, we're to gather directly before Lauzon's
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Hollow,'' I ordered Hune, then turned my gaze to the rest. ``As for our
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column, prepare your forces for a march through the Twilight Ways.
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Morning Bell tomorrow is the timeline for beginning to open the
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portals.''
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Which meant we'd probably start moving around Noon Bell, realistically.
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Even the simplest of things became incredibly complicated to achieve,
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when out campaigning, and time was always the first casualty. My tone
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was firm and there was no argument, the war council dispersing to see to
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their orders. We could all feel it, I thought, how much more had come to
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rest on our shoulders with the latest news. If we failed and Cleves
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fell, then the Principate would follow. Maybe not the same year, but it
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would all be downhill from there.
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``So we don't fail,'' I murmured.
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The words were cold comfort as I went to sleep.
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---
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Noon Bell turned out to have been wildly optimistic. For once it wasn't
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even the fantassins that ended up being a pain in my ass, it was the
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drow. With Ivah gone their discipline had thinned and they dragged their
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legs when it came to getting their supply carts in order. Which in turn
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slowed down the Third Army, which was meant to march into the Twilight
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Wats after them, and when it became clear that halfway to Noon Bell we
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were still far from marching the armies that'd gathered had to be
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released -- we couldn't just make the soldiers stand in the sun for
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hours like scarecrows, hundreds would get heatstroke and discipline
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would break down.
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The upside was that when the Silver Huntress and her party returned from
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their jaunt into enemy territory, just a little after Noon Bell, I was
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still there to take their report. Haranguing sigil-holders had stopped
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being a productive use of my time about two hours ago, so I'd sat down
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for lunch and had covers set for the Named so they could join me as they
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gave their account. Unsurprisingly, the tore at even such plain fare
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with great enthusiasm. I waited until they'd filled their stomachs some
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before nudging the Silver Huntress into starting to talk.
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``We got close to the Hollow,'' Alexis the Argent said. ``It was
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swarming with soldiers, so even sneaking near the road wasn't an option,
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but we went up into the hills to the east so we could have a look from
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there.''
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She paused, swallowing a piece of jerky and washing it down with a mug
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of ale.
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``The Headhunter was the one who found the goat path that allow us to,''
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the Huntress conceded. ``She did good work.''
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The villain in question only grinned at me, showing crooked but white
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teeth.
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``The rise we found overlooked the army, Your Majesty,'' the Vagrant
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Spear said. ``The dead are raising fortifications, making ready for
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us.''
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Bad news, but not unexpected ones. The dead tended to do as much when
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they had the time and expected to fight a defensive battles. Unlike the
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Army of Callow, though, Neshamah's undead hordes did not usually have
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dedicated engineers or artisans that could serve the same purpose.
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Sometimes Binds with know-how managed something a little more elaborate
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than raising palisades and digging ditches, but it was rare.
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``Anything to worry about?'' I asked.
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``Ditches and walls, the usual,'' Roland told me. ``They are
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concentrating on where Julienne's High passes, but there were several
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layers being dug when we had our look.''
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All the more reason to move on them soon, I thought. Even without giving
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actual battle, when we got close I'd be able to send raiders to disrupt
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their preparations. I glanced at the Silent Guardian, but though she was
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clearly paying attention she had nothing to add by gesture. There'd be
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no talk out of her, of course. Her Name was not an exaggeration -- she'd
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been born mute, way I heard it.
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``The Grey Legion was there,'' the Headhunter said.
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She grinned at me again, as surprise appeared on the face of her
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companions. Evidently, she'd not informed them.
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``You saw them?'' I asked.
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She shook her head.
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``I have a Mark on two different soldiers of it,'' the Headhunter said.
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``Both were in range.''
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I nodded. She'd always been vague about what her range actually was with
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the aspect, or how many of those marks she could have simultaneously,
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but I'd gathered it was at least several miles.
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``You never said a word,'' the Vagrant Spear indignantly said.
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``I'm not your mother, Bloodlet,'' the Headhunter sneered. ``I won't
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hold you by the hand when you fail.''
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I whistled sharply, which interrupted before \emph{that} lovely little
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spat could escalate.
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``You can wait until I have my report to tussle,'' I bluntly said. ``Do
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you have numbers for me?''
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``Around ninety thousand infantry,'' the Silver Huntress said. ``Mostly
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skeletons, though there was a large contingent of ghouls and we won't
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have seen them all.''
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``Constructs?'' I asked.
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``Two wyrms,'' she grimaced. ``And the usual for a frontline force:
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beorns and tusks, a few vultures and irregular horrors. At least a
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hundred total, and more they'll have kept hidden in reserve.''
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Not as bad as I'd expected, although the wyrms would be a problem and
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the Grey Legion was going to complicate everything just by being there.
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Either Akua or myself would have to be kept in reserve and fresh for
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when they came out, else that was going to be a damned costly battle.
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There just wasn't anything our infantry could do against those things,
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not even my legionaries.
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``Anything else come to mind?'' I pressed.
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``There were Revenants there,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``At least ten.
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And there was a shape in the distance, behind the Hollow, that I believe
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might have been a Crab.''
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That got my attention, since we'd ever only had unverifiable reports
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about those existing.
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``How sure are you?''
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The Headhunter snorted contemptuously.
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``Not sure enough to want to risk venturing too far,'' the villain said.
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``Our orders were to avoid combat,'' the Silver Huntress sharply said.
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``And we obeyed them. As to the Crab, Your Majesty, it was impossible to
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tell if it truly was one from so far. There was magical interference as
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well, we believe.''
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A `Crab' was what we'd called the method the Dead King used to keep his
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armies halfway functional out in the field, when he had no cities to
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support them. It was a massive skittering necromantic construct, but not
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|
one meant to fight: the inside of its armoured shells was supposedly
|
|
filled with forges, workshops and warehouses. A small moving city meant
|
|
to allow repair, the creation of fresh constructs and safely carrying
|
|
necessary goods. Masego believed they were also one of the methods the
|
|
Dead King used to scramble scrying, as a sort of moving ritual site.
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|
We'd never gotten a close look at a Crab, though, as they tended to be
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kept relatively far behind enemy lines and jealously guarded.
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I'd be a significant blow to the Dead King's ability to wage war in
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Hainaut if we destroyed one, though. There wouldn't be a swift
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|
replacement either: Given how expensive and difficult making a construct
|
|
the size of a small city would be, we were pretty sure there were no
|
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more than ten of them in existence. My eyes moved to Roland.
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|
``You didn't answer the question,'' I noted.
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|
He hesitated.
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``I strongly believe it was one,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``The spell
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I used is essentially a Baalite eye made through sorcery, and though it
|
|
doesn't show much at great distances what it \emph{does} show is
|
|
reliable.''
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|
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|
I nodded in acknowledgement, drumming my fingers against the table. I
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|
tended to put trust in Roland's judgement, cagey and tricky bastard that
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|
he was. While bagging the Crab wouldn't be a greater priority than,
|
|
well, actually beating the enemy army ahead of us I'd keep its existence
|
|
in mind. It'd be quite the prize to destroy one of those.
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|
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|
``Noted,'' I said, then changed the subject. ``Our approach to the
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Hollow has changed, we'll be moving out through the Ways as soon as
|
|
possible and leaving our detachments to catch up to us near the enemy.
|
|
That makes planning our answer to the Revenants and the enemy's trump
|
|
cards -- the Grey Legion and the wyrms -- all the more important.''
|
|
|
|
``There could be more Revenants,'' the Silver Huntress reminded me. ``We
|
|
cannot be sure.''
|
|
|
|
``That's war,'' I shrugged. ``You can never be sure. But we can plan for
|
|
what we do know. I'll want a more detailed report on the Revenants you
|
|
saw once you're done eating, and I'll be calling an assembly of all
|
|
Named with the column tonight.''
|
|
|
|
That got their attention, considering they were all included in that.
|
|
|
|
``We'll be discussing match ups for the Revenants,'' I told them, ``and
|
|
how we might best deal with the constructs you've identified.''
|
|
|
|
Much as I'd prefer not to, we might have to reveal the unravellers to
|
|
deal with the wyrms if we couldn't get a clean kill otherwise. I'd not
|
|
get soldiers killed to keep the element of surprise -- in other
|
|
situations I might be willing to make that trade, but not when
|
|
preserving our strength was so important. The battle ahead of us wasn't
|
|
the last we'd fight this campaign, and likely not even the hardest. I'd
|
|
intended on hearing our suggestions from them ahead of the assembly, but
|
|
it was not to be: before I could prod of them into giving an opinion,
|
|
Adjutant wheeled his way into the tent.
|
|
|
|
I caught his eyes, and he indicated for us to move outside.
|
|
|
|
``You all did good work,'' I told the seated Named, rising to my feet.
|
|
``And brought back knowledge that might be the key to victory in the
|
|
coming battle. The Grand Alliance thanks you all, and you will commended
|
|
at the assembly tonight.''
|
|
|
|
It was easy enough to take my leave, since even the most polite among
|
|
them were hungry and in front of a meal, so I left them to it and joined
|
|
Hakram as he wheeled his way out.
|
|
|
|
``Word from Neustal,'' he said. ``Fresh from a runner. The Gigantes
|
|
wardsmiths have arrived.''
|
|
|
|
Finally, I thought. The Titanomachy had been slow in coughing those out,
|
|
at least when it came to the Hainaut front. Those who'd gone to Cleves
|
|
had arrived almost a month ago.
|
|
|
|
``Good new,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Their leader sent word to ask whether they should follow behind the
|
|
column or stay in Neustal until sent for,'' Hakram told me.
|
|
|
|
I mulled on that a moment. Was it worth the risk? Honestly, yes. I'd
|
|
probably be able to squeeze a few things out of them if they were there
|
|
when we attacked the capital, and until then they'd be useful in
|
|
repairing and fine-tuning the artefacts they'd already sent us.
|
|
|
|
``How many of them are there?'' I finally asked.
|
|
|
|
``Twenty-two,'' Adjutant replied.
|
|
|
|
I let out a low whistle. That was more than I'd expected, at least the
|
|
Titanomachy wasn't being stingy with manpower -- which, if what Hanno
|
|
had told them about them was true, was the single they prized the most.
|
|
There honestly was no way that our troops had missed anything numerous
|
|
or powerful enough to threaten \emph{twenty-two Gigantes} when sweeping
|
|
through the lowlands here, so there went my last qualms.
|
|
|
|
``Send them up,'' I said. ``Though with warnings that this is still a
|
|
war zone, if one we believe secure. If they want to wait until the next
|
|
supply convoy so they can share the escort, they should feel free to.''
|
|
|
|
They'd still get to the city of Hainaut around the same time we did, by
|
|
my reckoning.
|
|
|
|
``I'll see to it,'' Adjutant replied.
|
|
|
|
I opened my mouth, to ask about my answer to the proposal, then closed
|
|
it. I'd already made things worse by pressing too hard once, I thought,
|
|
it might best let him set the terms of engagement going from here.
|
|
|
|
``I'll see you later then,'' I simply replied.
|
|
|
|
It ended up being near godsdamned Afternoon Bell that the last of our
|
|
soldiers entered the Twilight Ways, which was the final nail in the
|
|
coffin of my optimism for this campaign.
|