596 lines
28 KiB
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596 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-58-prophylaxis}{%
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\chapter{Prophylaxis}\label{chapter-58-prophylaxis}}
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\epigraph{``One can no more win a battle than one can `win' a hurricane or a
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house fire. It can, at best, be a disaster withstood better than some
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others also suffering it.''}{Dread Empress Sanguinara, the Shrewd}
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The blades had gone back to the sheaths, so as always the generals were
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left to the grim business of counting the corpses.
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With the protective wards set down the rest of our army had crossed into
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Creation and a camp begun being built, but even so General Hune had
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prepared casualty reports by the time I returned. A little over nine
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hundred dead for the fight taking the beachhead, more from the Dominion
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than the Army of Callow. Significantly more wounded, but we weren't low
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on priests so that ought to be a temporary measure in most cases. Given
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that there was sure to be fighting tomorrow, our standard orders that
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mages would not currently offer advanced healing stood. Not too
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unexpectedly, the raid I'd led into Lauzon's Hollow had turned out more
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costly than the first battle of the day.
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Almost twelve hundred drow had died on those grounds, Lord Soln's battle
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claiming the largest share of dead -- it'd run into heavily entrenched
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positions and waiting Revenants. A costly affair, losing more than a
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tenth of our current force of Firstborn on the first stroke, but the
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payoff had been worth it. We couldn't be sure of the enemy's casualty
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numbers but around six thousand at the hands of my raiders was a
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conservative estimate, and that was without taking into consideration
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the targeted objectives we'd gone after.
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On wyrm was destroyed entirely, stormed by a hunting pack of Mighty
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while I'd been gone, and one of the siege engines made essentially
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unusable. Soln had devastated the enemy's fortifications in the front
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and one of its sigil-holders slain a Revenant, while Sudone had done
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more damage than the two of us put together. Three ritual sites had gone
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up in flame along with the mages manning them before it found a fourth
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too well-fortified to assault and turned instead to setting fire to
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every structure in sight. It'd even collapsed the mouth of the pass
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leading out of the Hollow on its way out, which if nothing else ought to
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slow down the enemy's repairs overnight.
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I sat down with Senior Mage Dastardly from the Third to get my rib seen
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to as I heard Hune's assessment of the situation in camp. We were
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building quickly but too fragile for her tastes, not that there was much
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of a choice. While Dominion folk and Procerans -- the Volignac soldiers
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and the fantassins drew lots -- could be put to work digging ditches,
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most couldn't be trusted to raise palisades or assemble watchtowers. It
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just wasn't the way either of their peoples waged war, they had no
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training in it. I called a war council after thanking Dastardly for his
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work, first to reiterate the watch arrangements -- goblins and drow
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would take the first few shifts, but as soon as we had enough torches
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and magelights up the forces that'd not fought today would begin sending
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watchmen -- but secondly to share what I'd learned during the raid.
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``The surrounding hills have been hollowed out,'' I told them. ``To what
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extent I can't be sure, but at the very least the valley where the
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village once lay is significantly larger now.''
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Meaning the enemy would be able to cram a lot more soldiers into it when
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we tried to break through.
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``More worrying is this,'' I continued, pulling at Night.
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I drew out the silhouette of the two siege engines I'd never quite
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gotten a look at.
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``Larger than even goblin works, much less those of the dwarves,''
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Princess Beatrice observed.
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Spoken like someone who'd never seen an actual dwarven army on the
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march, I thought. The stuff they peddled up here was the dregs of their
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arsenals.
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``What does it do?'' Lady Aquiline more bluntly asked.
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``I don't know,'' I admitted. ``Neither fired, and they were slow in
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turning towards us. I'd wager they were being pointed at the grounds in
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front ahead of the Hollow and that the machines are slow to turn.''
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``Not surprising, given the size,'' General Abigail muttered. ``Old
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Bones doesn't usually use this stuff either, Your Majesty, it's all
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monsters and spells. I don't like the looks of it at all.''
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Several people leaned forward as the Callowan general, famed for her
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sharp military instincts, expressing such wariness. They'd not been
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taking it all that seriously until now.
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``Do we have a way to silence it before the assault?'' Lord Razin asked.
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``We can't take horses up those hills,'' Grandmaster Talbot said. ``Gods
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know we tried, last year. We never found any proper paths for soldiers
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to go up, either.''
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``I intend to send Special Tribune Robber into the hills to see if there
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are paths to use,'' I said. ``But I'll not pin great hopes on the
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attempt. The area will be swarming with undead, regardless: even Mighty
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in the fullness of night were unable to seize those positions.''
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I hadn't been able either, and lost Zombie in the process, but I
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wouldn't admit to that in front of these people. The myth of my
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unconquered strength was much too useful to begin chipping at now.
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``It might be worth trying a second raid will the full strength of the
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Firstborn when the detachments return,'' Captain Reinald suggested.
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``Playing the same trick on Keter twice always ends the same way,''
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Razin Tanja firmly said.
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\emph{Good boy}, I thought. He was learning, our Lord of Malaga.
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``The detachments will begin arriving tomorrow afternoon at the
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earliest,'' General Hune said. ``And it would be ill-advised to attack
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before the following morning. We still have time to consider other
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methods.''
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``The Dead King won't wait until then to begin attacking,'' I said.
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``Don't rely entirely on the common watch, you should all keep your own
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as well. Tomorrow we'll begin bombardment of the entrance to prevent
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fortifications from being raised again, but in essence our position
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remains defensive. We are preparing for a decisive thrust, not spending
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our strength.''
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The trouble would be figuring out how to make our thrust decisive, I'd
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already gleaned. The Dead King had struck with all his might against
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Cleves in the west, betting that he could break through there before we
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could reclaim Hainaut, so he wouldn't be looking to outright win the
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battle here: just delaying us for too long would be victory enough. It
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was hard to dislodge a skilled enemy waiting you out in a fortified
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position like the Hollow even when they \emph{weren't} outnumbering you,
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and attempting to force the pass would be bloody business. There would
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be a need for some cleverness here.
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The only good news so far was that there was no hint our enemy had
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caught on to our reserve using the Twilight Ways to strike directly at
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the Cigelin Sisters, behind our current tussle. I was actually temped to
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just trade artillery shots with the undead here until the Sisters were
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seized, actually, since their fall might force the enemy to move from
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the Hollow. That was just me getting squeamish about casualties, though,
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I suspected. At the moment time was more precious to us than soldiers,
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ugly as the truth was. I called the war council to an end shortly after,
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exhausted but not yet done with my duties.
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I held back Princess Beatrice, since I had a question for her.
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``Ever heard of a Chosen named Adehard Barthen?'' I asked. ``He would
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have been a White Knight.''
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``I have not, Your Majesty,'' Beatrice Volignac admitted. ``Though
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history was never my strong suit. The name sounds northwestern but that
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might not mean much: the Principate is not a small realm.''
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``It was worth a try,'' I sighed. ``Kindly ask around if you know anyone
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of such scholarly incline.''
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Might be worth sending word back to Neustal to see if Salia or the
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Arsenal could dig up anything for me. It'd been a while since I'd lost a
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fight that badly, and this White Revenant wasn't even supposed to be the
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main threat here: that would be the Prince of Bones and his Grey Legion,
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neither of which had yet made an appearance. Which was worrying me. The
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Headhunter had not been able to confirm their marks were still there, as
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I'd not risked Named too close to the enemy defences yet. The last
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fucking thing I needed was a fresh Revenant with knowledge of my war
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plans.
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Hakram was in not long after, the Apprentice trailing his shadow as
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agreed. The Ashuran was young, and her face of a cast too hard for
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people to call it pretty. I sympathized, having been there myself at her
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age -- only without magical powers to make up for it, unless you counted
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compulsive mouthing off as one. Adjutant came with a mug of hot tea --
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sweetened with honey -- and reports I'd been wanting. I drank of the
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first, enjoying the warmth seeping into my bruised lips, while gesturing
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for him to summarize the second.
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``Start with the Rapacious Troubadour,'' I said.
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``As ordered, the Vagrant Spear preserved a Bind and delivered it into
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our custody,'' Hakram gravelled. ``The Troubadour then interrogated it
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in his particular manner.''
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``He means the Troubadour ate the soul and went sifting through its
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memories,'' I idly told the Apprentice.
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``That is revolting,'' she said, wrinkling her nose.
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I hummed in agreement.
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``Damned useful, though,'' I said. ``So, what did her get?''
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``Confirmation that the Grey Legion and the Prince of Bones are here,''
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Adjutant. ``Eyes on at least twelve Revenants. He also believes, form
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the movement of troops glimpsed, that the Dead King has been waiting for
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our offensive.''
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I grimaced. Much as I hated to hear that, it fit what we'd seen: the
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strikes to the west into Cleves had come too quickly after the beginning
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of our offensive for it to be a coincidence. He'd waited until our
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armies were committed elsewhere to attack.
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``Speaking of Revenants,'' I said, ``I want you to look into a name:
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Adehard Barthen. White Knight, possibly from the northeast.''
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``I'll see what I can dig up,'' Hakram gravelled. ``Difficult foe?''
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``Couldn't crack him before I withdrew,'' I admitted. ``And Zombie's
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gone.''
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He let out a soft noise of sadness.
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``I'd begun to think that malevolent old thing was unkillable,'' Hakram
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said.
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``So had I,'' I murmured.
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I shook it off, sipping at my tea. This was no time to get sorry over a
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dead horse dying again, there was a war on.
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``Firing platforms?'' I asked.
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``Pickler says they'll be ready by morning,'' Adjutant replied. ``Our
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artillery will be in place by Early Bell at the latest, though come
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daylight she maintains her request for Named spotters.''
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``I'll think about it,'' I grunted.
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I hated to use any Named like that, as it felt like using a magic wand
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as an arrow, but some of our less combat-ready contingent might be
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gainfully used that way. I wasn't going to be sending the Page out into
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the fray anytime soon, for example, so an argument could be made there.
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``The trouble, sir,'' Apprentice reminded him.
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``I had not forgotten,'' Adjutant replied, sounding somewhat amused.
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He was in a much better mood than when I'd last seen him, I noticed, and
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I didn't even know why.
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``The Blessed Artificer went to have a look at our wards,'' Hakram said.
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``Or tried to. Akua sent her packing, in her own polite way.''
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``The Artificer has threatened to lodge a complaint under the Terms,''
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the Apprentice said. ``It's been the talk of the Named in camp.''
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``Akua Sahelian is not Named, which makes that threat utterly
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meaningless,'' I replied, rolling my eyes. ``And if the Artificer wanted
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a look at our wards, she should have sought permission from the
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appropriate officers first. This isn't the Arsenal.''
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``Don't I know it,'' Apprentice muttered under her breath.
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I smothered my amusement. Evidently, while pragmatic about trading the
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assignment as Hakram's bodyguard and assistant for my backing in being
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reassigned to the Arsenal afterwards she wasn't quite as sanguine about
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the trade as she'd been pretending. I hardly minded, if anything it'd
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keep her motivated to ensure Adjutant made it through this in one piece.
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After downing the rest of my tea and dismissing the two of them, I
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crawled into my cot and tumbled straight into a mercifully dreamless
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sleep.
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I woke up much too soon, one of the Night-workings I habitually lay
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around my tent having been tripped. When an attendant came into my tent
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moments later and I slipped back my knife under the pillow, it took his
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announcing of Scribe as the courtesy it was: the villainess would have
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been perfectly capable of coming in without tripping a damned thing, or
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being seen by my guards. The nights were cool enough I'd gone to bed in
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a shirt, which cut down on dressing time, but I'd not washed before
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sleeping so I was unlikely to be smelling of roses. Eh, she'd deal.
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``I''' generously assume you woke me for good reason,'' I bluntly said,
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sliding into a seat.
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``News from the west,'' Scribe replied. ``From Princess Rozala.''
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I grimaced. Yeah, that was well shaving an hour off my bedrest for.
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``Hit me,'' I sighed.
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``You might recall that the diversionary force Princess Rozala sent out
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of Coudrent to pin the enemy army at Luciennerie was routed,'' Scribe
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said.
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``Not before seeing the Dead King was on the march, though,'' I said.
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``I take it the siege of Coudrent has begun?''
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``It has not,'' Scribe calmly corrected. ``In fact, the last reports
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from outriders insist there is no trace at all of an offensive against
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Coudrent.''
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I blinked in surprise. Wait, what? It wasn't that a feint was impossible
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there -- I could think of half a dozen ways it could be done without
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even using magic -- but rather that if that one hundred and fifty
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thousand strong army wasn't headed west, where the Hells \emph{was it}?
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``Is it coming down the blue road instead?'' I asked.
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Vivienne was in for a ride, if that was the case. We had a stronghold
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straddling the blue road, north of Arbusans, but even with
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reinforcements holding it against such numbers was going to be rough. I
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frowned before Scribe even replied, already suspecting what the answer
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would be.
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``There have been warbands, but no sign of an army,'' Eudokia said.
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Less than three bells ago, I'd been convinced that the Dead King's plan
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had been to strike hard into Cleves while delaying us in Hainaut so that
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whatever gains we might make were made worthless by an entire front
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collapsing to our west. \emph{But that only makes sense if he attacks
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along both lines}, I thought. Even if Trifelin fell right now -- and it
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was by far a harder fortress to force than Coudrent at the moment, to
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boot -- Cleves would be able to rally and mount a defence.
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Which meant I had been gravely, utterly wrong about what Neshamah's
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campaign plan was.
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``\emph{Fuck},'' I cursed. ``We were had. I don't know \emph{how} yet,
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but we were had.''
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Dragged into full wakefulness by dread, I turned a hard eye to Scribe.
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``Wake up Adjutant,'' I said. ``I want my full war council up and here
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within the hour.''
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The Scribe nodded, but did not immediately depart. My brow cocked with
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impatience, as I probably needed to get some pants on if I was going to
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be entertaining royalty. I had fond memories of doing otherwise,
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admittedly, but it was best left as a one-off.
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``I hear you have been asking about an Adehard Barthen,'' Scribe said.
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I gestured curtly for her to go on, since it was a rhetorical question
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we both knew the answer to.
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``Though I cannot speak to this Adehard in particular, the House of
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Barthen is ancient Proceran royalty,'' Eudokia said.
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``Unless I missed a name when I made myself memorize the Highest
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Assembly -- and I did not -- you mean ancient in a very literal sense,''
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I noted.
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``Relatively so,'' Scribe hedged. ``It preceded the House of Goethal on
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the throne of Brus, but collapsed after the death of nearly all adults
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of the line in the Sixth Crusade. In the short-lived civil war that
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ensued, the Goethals seized power while having essentially no real claim
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to the throne save force.''
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Well, I thought, that was something.
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``Anything related to them and a greataxe?'' I asked.
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It was an unusual enough weapon for an Alamans noble it was worth
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asking. She stilled a moment, as if deep in thought.
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``The heraldry of House Barthen was a white axeman on green, wearing
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armour,'' Scribe finally said. ``And their words translated roughly to
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`None May Mar'.''
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My eyes narrowed. I'd not scored so much a single wound on the dead
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White Knight, had I? And my inability to damage his plate -- mar it, so
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might say -- might have a deeper source than simple sorcery.
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``Talk with Hakram,'' I said. ``Look into it together. Artefacts like a
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set of pale plate and a greataxe would be details of interest to me.''
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If I was going to be fighting this one again, I wanted all the knowledge
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I could on my side. Scribe took my words like the dismissal they were,
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leaving me to limp around looking for a clean pair of trousers and
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quickly wash myself of the worst of the dried sweat from the night's
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fighting. My hair went into a loose ponytail and I went looking through
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my desk's drawers for nuts and dried raisins, which while far from a
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meal would have to suffice until something more filling could be
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arranged. I unrolled my maps of Hainaut on the carved table, setting
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down painted iron blocks for the forces once more.
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I wasn't seeing the solution, and it was like an itch I couldn't
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scratch. I honestly couldn't make sense out of the Dead King's campaign
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plan here. The army here in Lauzon's Hollow to stop us made sense, no
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arguing with that, but the rest wasn't adding up. There were too many
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little details going against the grain. Like Prince Klaus' best efforts
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to bait out the army holed up in Juvelun failing even though at first
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his advance had been harassed quite aggressively, for one. The way that
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attack on Trifelin, which Princess Rozala had turned into a bloody
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fortress, had been obvious enough in coming we'd \emph{known} it would
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for weeks if not months.
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And not the supposed march on Coudrent turning out to have been a feint,
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which made some sort of sense, but less so that there'd apparently been
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\emph{no follow-through}. Where had the army in Luciennerie gone? It
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should be hurrying down the blue road at breakneck pace right now, in an
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attempt to move quickly enough even through the Twilight Ways we'd be
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too late to reinforced. Instead an army of hundred and fifty thousand
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had disappeared. In principle, going into the countryside and off the
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roads it was possible to cut through the hills and reach Cigelin or the
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capital from Luciennerie.
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In practice, that same lack of roads meant that the journey would be so
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slow that if my army broke through Lauzon's Hollow in the next three
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days we'd still get to the capital ahead of the Luciennerie
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reinforcements, and with time to spare. My host was capable of beating
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such a force on the field, especially from a fortified position like the
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walls of Hainaut. Would the army in Juvelun move to the Cigelin Sisters
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and try to slow us down there instead? \emph{But that'd be throwing away
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another army}, I thought. Neshamah had bones to spare, but he wasn't
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exactly in a position to be pissing away armies like this either.
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Honestly, even just taking Hainaut back up to the Cigelin Sisters while
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sealing the Malmedit tunnels out east and investing Luciennerie to the
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west would be a major victory for us. It wouldn't deal with the bridge
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up north, which would still need to be destroyed, but that could be
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attempted from our new fortified lines -- which would include, for the
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first time since the beginning of the war, a shared frontline between
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Hainaut and Cleves through Luciennerie. That'd be bad fucking news for
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the Dead King, and this entire gamble did not seem like his kind of
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stratagem at all. Which meant I was still missing something.
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It had to be about that force of two hundred thousand, the one still
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missing. It'd last been seen north of the capital, and obviously it
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wouldn't be able to move quickly when it was so large a force, but maybe
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it'd gone west? It might hit Trifelin, still being besieged, as a second
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wave. Hells, it might even try to attack the shore elsewhere entirely by
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going through the bottom of the lake. I clenched my fingers, then
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unclenched them. No, I decided. That wasn't it. There'd be sense in that
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strategy -- the Luciennerie army would then finally attack our defence
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lines after having delayed, forcing us to commit there and not reinforce
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Malanza -- but that was, as the Intercessor had reproached me, still
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thinking like a general. Neshamah wasn't trying to win a war, not like
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we would.
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He was trying to exterminate vermin.
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Battles and strategic victories meant little to him, it was only the
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destruction of our forces that mattered. And he wasn't going to get that
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out west in Cleves, not when so many of the prominent Named and our
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finest armies were here in Hainaut and taking \emph{risks}. The killing
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blow would come here, on this front. I could feel it in my bones, even
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if I still could not discern the shape of the doom to come. My war
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council filed in just as warm meals and steaming mugs of tea were
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brought in for everyone -- Hakram's eye for detail had not failed me --
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and I filled them in as everyone dug in. Not everyone understood the
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trouble we were in, unfortunately.
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``I'll not complain at fighting fewer enemies,'' Captain Reinald said.
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``Let the Princess of Aequitan turn them back from her nice, cozy
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fortresses.''
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|
``The dead will not grow wings, Black Queen,'' Lord Razin said. ``We'll
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find this missing army sooner or later.''
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|
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I eyed him with displeasure.
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``Or they'll find \emph{us}, Tanja,'' Lady Aquiline flatly said. ``This
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is grim news.''
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|
\emph{Good girl}, I fondly thought. She was learning, our Lady of
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|
Tartessos.
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|
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|
``In the worst case scenario,'' General Hune said, ``the force that
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routed the raiders from Coudrent could have been a simple large
|
|
detachment -- fifteen or twenty thousand, enough for a full-scale
|
|
assault to be inferred by scouts -- while the rest was already marching
|
|
east. They could already be closing in on the capital, or even the
|
|
Cigelin Sisters.''
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|
|
|
I hadn't even considered that, in truth. I nodded appreciatively at the
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|
ogre, even though she'd made it plain we might be in more trouble than
|
|
I'd thought.
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|
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|
``Word should be sent to the Iron Prince,'' Princess Beatrice suggested.
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|
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|
``It will be,'' I said, ``but there's no guarantee the messengers will
|
|
make it there, much less back to us with an answer. He'll be north of
|
|
Juvelun and approaching Malmedit by now.''
|
|
|
|
Meaning his back would be very much exposed, and the roads about as safe
|
|
as having a drink in the Tower.
|
|
|
|
``No point in talking much about it, is there?'' General Abigail
|
|
shrugged. ``Only one thing left to do.''
|
|
|
|
I suppressed a grin at the sight of every eye in the room turning
|
|
towards her. See, the thing about that little jewel of a find was that
|
|
while she was deeply paranoid -- a healthy survival trait, in the Army
|
|
of Callow -- and just a little on the side of cowardly, she was also a
|
|
significantly better commander than she believed she was. Her trouble
|
|
was, in essence that her points of comparison were the finest generals
|
|
of our time. She had the stuff, though, the spark that meant you had the
|
|
potential to be one of those. The War College couldn't teach you that,
|
|
and while today Hune might be the better commander in every regard a
|
|
decade from now I'd bet on Abigail of Summerholm nine times out of then.
|
|
Something like anguish struck the other woman's face when she realized
|
|
that her conclusion had not, in fact, been obvious to everyone else in
|
|
the room.
|
|
|
|
``Proceed, General Abigail,'' I drily said.
|
|
|
|
``If we can't figure out what the Dead King's up to, then we have to
|
|
punch through as quick as possible,'' she hesitantly said. ``Doesn't
|
|
matter what his plan is, if we throw a sharper in the middle of it.''
|
|
|
|
She'd put her finger to the pulse of it. Tempting as it might be not to
|
|
act until we'd figured out what Neshamah was up to, it was too late for
|
|
that. The armies were already marching, the bets had been put down. Now
|
|
the only way out was through.
|
|
|
|
``My thoughts exactly,'' I agreed. ``It has now become imperative to
|
|
break through even before the reserve strikes at the Cigelin Sisters.''
|
|
|
|
It'd allow us to secure the lands between the Hollow and the Sisters
|
|
swiftly, and make sure the army holding Lauzon's Hollow was annihilated
|
|
instead of dispersed. I had no intention of allowing chunks of it to
|
|
break off after we won the field and cut our supply lines after we moved
|
|
on. We'd bottle them up in the lands between the two armies and
|
|
eradicate them before moving on the capital together.
|
|
|
|
``Prepare for battle,'' I ordered my war council. ``As soon as the
|
|
artillery is ready to begin firing, we will begin probing for a weakness
|
|
to assault.''
|
|
|
|
There was no arguing with that, so as soon as the meals were finished
|
|
they returned to prepare their men. I'd been blunt with my commanders
|
|
mostly for the sake of clarity, as hurried or not I did not intend to
|
|
throw soldiers into the meat grinder of a straightforward assault of the
|
|
Hollow. It had become undeniable, however, that we no longer had the
|
|
time to be too sly about forcing out the enemy. I was left to rely on
|
|
the possibility that my first leanings might have paid off, so when a
|
|
bone-tired Robber returned to camp an hour after dawn I had him brought
|
|
to me directly. Dusty and bloodied, he still came in with a swagger. It
|
|
did not hold for long when I asked for a report, though.
|
|
|
|
``I've got something,'' Special Tribune Robber admitted. ``But I'm not
|
|
sure you'll like it, Boss.''
|
|
|
|
``It beats the nothing I currently have on the table,'' I frankly
|
|
replied. ``Talk.''
|
|
|
|
``There's no goat paths left,'' the goblin told me. ``Keter got clever
|
|
about it, broke up anything that might serve as a road soldiers could
|
|
use coming from the outside. Went over the hills by climbing, but the
|
|
place is full of ghouls and mages. I lost most of a line to some pretty
|
|
well-hidden wards.''
|
|
|
|
I cocked an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Blew up the dead,'' he said. ``Keter'll get no word out of my lot,
|
|
even in death. It was the sharpers that let us find out what we did,
|
|
actually. You mentioned the hills were hollowed out some, Boss, but it's
|
|
a lot more than that. They made the sides of the pass into a massive
|
|
cavern camp, I reckon.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. I'd not thought that the Dead King would have invested so
|
|
long in building up the Hollow, or that we would have missed it. Hells,
|
|
with work of the scale he was mentioning the dead must have been at work
|
|
even before we seized the pass last year. They'd hidden their tracks
|
|
well, if even heroes had missed them.
|
|
|
|
``You can get in there?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Sure,'' Robber of the Rock Breaker Tribe grinned. ``We know a thing or
|
|
two about digging, goblins.
|
|
|
|
He elaborated further under my questioning. Having assessed that trying
|
|
the hilltops any further would just get more of his people killed to no
|
|
gain, he'd instead spent most of the night getting a sense of the lay of
|
|
the structures under the hills. The malevolent imp had three points of
|
|
ingress for me and a sketch of what he believed the lay of the
|
|
artificial caverns might look like -- a copy of which was already in
|
|
Pickler's hands. Good, that'd spare me sending him to do that
|
|
afterwards.
|
|
|
|
``Taking those would get real messy, Boss,'' Robber told me. ``Legions
|
|
don't do well on grounds like those, not against things like Tusks and
|
|
Beorns. We need an open field for our mages to handle their like.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm aware,'' I mused. ``But if you're right, the enemy will have
|
|
hidden a significant part of its army under the hills.''
|
|
|
|
Waiting to surprise us after we'd taken the hollow, I decided. First
|
|
they'd bleed us taking the entrance, and after we pushed the dead back
|
|
beyond the old village they would have sprung the trap. The raid of last
|
|
night paired with my favourite marauders had sniffed out the jaws,
|
|
though, so we might be able to turn this on them. I drummed my fingers
|
|
against the table, closing my eyes and forcing myself to think. The Dead
|
|
King's army had a superior position, superior numbers and it'd been
|
|
preparing for this fight for long enough it'd still have a few nasty
|
|
surprises up its sleeves. What did my army have that could overturn all
|
|
those advantages?
|
|
|
|
``Maybe they'll turn around and walk home, if we're lucky,'' Robber
|
|
mused. ``Stranger things have happened.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes opened. That was an answer, yes. \emph{Luck and goblins}.
|
|
|
|
Didn't sound like much, but you could do a lot of damage if you used
|
|
those right.
|