604 lines
29 KiB
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604 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-theism}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Theism}\label{interlude-theism}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-theism}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Theism}
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\epigraph{``Seventy-four: if your lover does not have martial training have
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a rescue plan ready and waiting, as the eventual abduction by your
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nemesis is essentially inevitable.''}{`Two Hundred Heroic Axioms', author unknown}
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Klaus breathed out, quashing all hesitation, and struck.
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The axe-blade bit deep into the skull, killing Ratbiter before the horse
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realized what was happening. The Bremen \emph{stampfen} dropped,
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mercifully, but the spray of blood still went high and hot. Messy thing
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killing a horse, even when done right. Some would have said that the
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Prince of Hannoven should have ceded the duty to another, that the arm
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he'd lost in the fall of Hainaut would make a clean kill harder, but
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he'd refused. Klaus Papenheim had ridden that horse through death and
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doom too long to let someone else swing the axe. Wiping the bloodspray
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off his cheek, the prince knelt by his old friend's corpse and laid a
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hand on the unmoving flank.
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``Rest, old friend,'' the Prince of Hannoven murmured in Reitz. ``And if
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there is a place for you on the other side, I will find you there.''
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Klaus Papenheim was, in the end, Lycaonese. He'd miss Ratbiter, but he
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would not burden the army with a lame horse. His people knew well that
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hesitation in the face of the dead only deepened the losses, and the
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virtues of pragmatism had been ground deep into their common soul.
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Sentiment was of no use from the grave, or from the uglier end of
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walking death. The old general forced himself up, feeling his knees
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groan under the weight. Behind him, two bodyguards and a pack of army
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cooks were waiting.
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``Butcher and skin him,'' the Prince of Hannoven ordered. ``Throw the
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bones and offal in the disposal pit.''
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Pitch and magefire would make sure the Dead King found nothing there to
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use. Klaus passed the axe's handle to one of his bodyguard -- Dieter,
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whose scarred scalp had turned white as he became just another boy aged
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too soon by this infernal war -- and strode away. His steps took him
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down the slope, towards the heart of the beleaguered army's camp as his
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bodyguards followed in his wake. His parents would have disapproved of
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it, his leaving. If they'd thought they glimpsed squeamishness they
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would have made him watch, if not take up a skinning knife himself.
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\emph{A Papenheim cannot hesitate}, Father had always said. \emph{A
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crown is a cage of hard choices}, Mother had whispered, tucking him in a
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child.
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Both had set out to burn weakness out of him so that Hannoven would not
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perish under his watch.
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The white-haired prince almost smiled. It'd been many years since he had
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last thought of Ludwig and Sieglinde Papenheim, neither of which were
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remembered fondly by many of their kin. Klaus had come to understand, as
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a ruler in his own right, that much of what had seemed cruelty as a
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child had in truth been cold pragmatism of the breed necessary to
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survive at Keter's gate. He'd even come to be grateful for the hard
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lessons, in time. Yet the passing of the years had not made him love the
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imperious and high-handed pair any more than he had whilst they still
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lived. Ironically enough, he figured neither would have minded: what did
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his aversion matter to them, when their ways had become his just as they
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had wished? Some legacies were insidious, he'd learned, and all the
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harder to shake for their quiet creep.
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There were songs, among Klaus' people, about the love he'd borne for his
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late wife. How even as a man in his prime he'd never considered
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remarrying. The truth was not as clean as that. Part of why Klaus had
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never remarried after Suse's death had been his many failings as a
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father. He had, without even noticing, become his parents come again. No
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wonder Wilfried had pressed that charge too far against the ratlings:
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when had he ever smiled at his eldest save when the boy came back
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bloodied and victorious? And Gregor, his sweet secondborn he'd tried to
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harden for the days ahead, had hidden the sickness until it'd been much
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too late for even the priests.
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Would he have, if he'd not been convinced his own father saw him as a
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weakling?
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And so Klaus had decided he would not fail any more children, that
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legacy would die with him. Margaret had been the one to draw him out of
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the darkness of those days, after she gave birth to her own little
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daughter. His sister had been a hesitant mother, and sometimes distant,
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but rarely unkind: in this she had fared the best of the House of
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Hasenbach. All it'd taken was for Klaus to hold that bundle named
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Cordelia in his arms once and he'd been lost, besotted with the little
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blonde curls and at the laughing eyes. She'd been a merry child, his
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niece. Prone to gurgling at strangers and trying to eat her uncle's
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beard.
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More than once Klaus had found his hand reaching for ink and quill,
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after the talk that had buried their closeness. Where the First Prince
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of Procer had sent him to fight and die and Hainaut, ordered him to
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abandon the principality -- the people! -- he'd sworn to defend. Always
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he'd drawn back at the last moment, and only official reports had left
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for Salia. Yet he often found himself writing that letter in his mind,
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when he had a spare moment. Bits and pieces of it. \emph{Sometimes,
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niece, you remind me of your grandfather}, Klaus would write if he took
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the quill today. \emph{When I was a boy of nine,} \emph{Prince Ludwig
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Papenheim ordered the town of Ebelburg burned when he heard ratling
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warbands were two hours away.}
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\emph{If he hadn't, the townsfolk would have insisted on fighting and
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standing their ground}, the white-haired prince wrote in his mind.
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\emph{They would have said the children could not run quick enough, that
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the elderly would not survive the trip. Instead he had torches thrown,
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and four hundred people were saved. They did not thank him for it,
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Cordelia.}
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Klaus still remembered the soldiers talking when they returned to
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Hannoven, the way they'd described his father. Carved in iron, they'd
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said, and it had been as much invective as praise. Yet they had
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respected him for it, he remembered. Even the townsfolk he'd burned out
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of their own homes and brought back to his capital even as a larger
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force assembled to drive back the ratlings. \emph{So I understand it,
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the decision}, Klaus Papenheim silently penned. \emph{It's in our blood.
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But I am the townsfolk of my childhood, niece. I cannot thank you for
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having ordered the torches thrown at Hannoven.} The old prince knew his
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home would have fallen even if he'd ridden out to defend it. He'd read
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the maps, counted the days. Hannoven had been doomed the moment this war
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began.
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And yet Klaus Papenheim had not been there to fight for it, and this he
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could not forgive himself -- or anybody else.
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The old general found his tent nestled near the bottom of the hill,
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surrounded by sworn swords from Hannoven. There the rest of their
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makeshift war council still held session, sifting through heap of
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troubles that the last bloody push to take the town of Juvelun from the
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dead had brought down on them. His second, Princess Mathilda Greensteel
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of Neustria, was sharing the table with Captain Nabila of Alava -- a
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short, stout woman with a heavily painted face -- as the Dominion's man
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and Prince Arsene of Bayeux held down his own corner as the voice for
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the Alamans and the fantassins.
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The last two men stood for smaller forces, but in their own way crucial
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ones: freshly back from healing the White Knight sat with a pleasant
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smile as he methodically ate his way through an apple, commander of all
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Named with the army. For the Damned it was the Barrow Sword that had
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been elected to stand. Klaus counted the man a rogue and a vicious
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specimen of the breed, but he was also solid in a fight and a devil
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against Revenants -- the Prince of Hannoven was willing to forgive much
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in favour of that. The Dominion villain often clashed with Captain
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Nabila, but it seemed more like sparring than the venom Catherine
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Foundling had warned him might ensue.
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The Gods only knew where General Rumena had gotten to, for it came and
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went as it pleased, but in its absence it had left behind a dark-skinned
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drow that spoke perfect Chantant and called itself Mighty Sagasbord. It
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was both habitually sardonic and eerily knowing, which usually made for
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good advice unpleasant to hear.
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``- then we should split our forces and strike now, else the enemy will
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delay us further,'' Captain Nabila insisted.
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``We're still uncertain how many escaped into the valley,'' Prince
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Arsene skeptically replied. ``We could be headed into-``
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``She's right,'' Klaus cut in, striding into the tent.
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The splatter of blood on him got a few surprised looks as he lowered
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himself into a seat at the table, but nothing more. Everyone here had
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gotten their hands bloody taking Juvelun, and if they were to survive
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this trap it wouldn't be the last time.
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``Dare we hope for an elaboration, Prince Klaus?'' the Prince of Bayeux
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testily asked.
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``We took the town but the dead retreated in good order,'' the Prince of
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Hannoven replied. ``It could be ten thousand made it out, it could be
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thirty thousand. Either way, every drifting warband in the central
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valley of Hainaut will be headed that way now. If we don't strike before
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the enemy musters up properly, we'll lose the battle ahead of us.''
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It'd taken three days and night of brutal fighting before Juvelun fell,
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the ditches and walls dug by the dead stormed at all too high a cost.
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Yet there'd been no final keep to assail, no last redoubt: instead the
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undead had retreated under cover of night, leaving behind a token force
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for the drow under General Rumena to annihilate. Though their scouts had
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insisted that a hundred thousand undead had been holed up in Juvelun, in
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practice the Prince of Hannoven suspected they'd fought around seventy
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thousand at most. The rest had been kept back, and most likely were down
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in the valley preparing to prevent Klaus' army from linking up with the
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Black Queen's. Should the enemy succeed in that design, no one in this
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tent would still be drawing breath by the moon's turn. They'd make a
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fight of it, the Prince of Hannoven knew, but it'd be a defeat engraved
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in stone.
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``Strike hard, then keep moving,'' the Barrow Sword approvingly said.
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``A sound notion.''
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Dominion officers always thought like raiders, the old general deplored.
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It wasn't always a weakness, as there were similarities between the
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glorified raids that the Levantines called `honour wars' and an
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offensive into enemy territory. But the distances and numbers involved
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meant a lot of their instincts pulled them the wrong way. It'd been too
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long since the Dominion of Levant had been in a real war, one that
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didn't end with a summer's fighting and a few promises traded between
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Blood.
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\emph{They lost the learning}, Klaus thought. The Army of Callow had
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gone through a bevy of rough campaigns and sharpened the skills with war
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schools while Procer had been given a refresher in the art by the Great
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War and the latest round of the Uncivil Wars, but the Dominion had
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nothing of the sort. All their learning was done on the field, with
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bloody costs for every mistake.
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``We're not in fighting fit for a pitched battle,'' Princess Mathilda of
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Neustria bluntly said. ``It's been a day since we took the town and the
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priests are still overwhelmed with wounded. We lost a dozen soldiers to
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\emph{infections} this morning because the healers would have died if
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they kept drawing on Light.''
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``I forced the Stalwart Apostle to drink a concoction that'd make her
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sleep,'' the White Knight admitted. ``She'd still be in the tents
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otherwise, and burned out permanently.''
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She was a good kid that one, Klaus thought. A little soft and with too
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much faith the Heavens would swoop down and fix everything, but prayer
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had never gone amiss when things got dark.
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``Exactly,'' Prince Arsene said. ``Are we to send forces into a battle
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without priests and mages, Your Grace, or consign wounded to death so
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that our hasty vanguard is not bare of protection?''
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\emph{This is why your people lost the Great War}, Prince Klaus
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Papenheim thought. \emph{Why none of you were able to win it, beyond the
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Tower's manipulations.} \emph{None of you were willing to pay what it
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would have cost you.}
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``We will consign wounded to die,'' the Iron Prince flatly said. ``If
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the Enemy still has swarms to spare, we would be facing a potential wipe
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without priests and mages to compensate.''
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``The Witch of the Woods-``
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``- will do what she can, but cannot be relied on,'' Mathilda Greensteel
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interrupted the White Knight, nodding at Klaus. ``If Revenants come
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after her, the protections she has to offer will not be enough.''
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``This is \emph{madness},'' Prince Arsene insisted. ``We are to leave
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our own to die and risk it all on battle with a force we know little
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about?''
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``Would you prefer to be besieged in this lovely ruin of a town?'' the
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Barrow Sword drily asked.
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``\emph{Yes},'' Prince Arsene emphatically replied. ``We still have
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supplies for a few days -- more, perhaps, considering our losses -- and
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if we dig in the Black Queen can come relieve us as soon as she has
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secured the Cigelin Sisters.''
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``What impressive eagerness to die,'' Mighty Sagasbord noted, laying its
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chin on its palm. ``Your confidence surprises, Prince of Man. We took
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this Juvelun from a numerically superior force, yet you now believe that
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should we be besieged by an enemy many times our greater we will
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prevail?''
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``Our men are worth easily three of the dead,'' Prince Arsene harshly
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said, pride clearly stung. ``\emph{Ours} anyway, dark elf.''
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``No Firstborn will ever take your life, Prince of Man,'' Mighty
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Sagasbord smiled, without a single speck of friendliness to it.
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The Alamans prince looked surprised and confused, but those more
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familiar with the ways of the Firstborn winced at the bald insult. The
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drow ate the skills and knowledge of those they slew, Klaus knew, so the
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Mighty had been implying that there was nothing worth taking from Arsene
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of Bayeux. Best to step in before this went further astray, the Prince
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of Hannoven thought.
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``We might be able to hold the down, if we can put up defences before
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the dead arrive,'' Klaus admitted. ``For a few days. But they won't
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fight us, Prince Arsene. They will surround us and wait us out instead.
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The Hidden Horror is patient, he will starve us into the grave.''
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The army that'd come out of Malmedit like devils pouring out of a
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Hellgate was not far behind them. Three, four days at most. If Klaus'
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army stayed in Juvelun, it risked annihilation: the enemy in the valley
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would pen it in from the west, the great host of Malmedit from the east.
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If that happened, even using a pharos device to escape wouldn't be
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enough. The dead would strike in force the moment the gates opened, on
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both flanks, and the more of Klaus' soldiers made it into the Twilight
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Ways the higher the risk of those staying in Creation being overwhelmed
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by sheer numbers and horrors.
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They'd ran the games, him and the Marshal of Callow. Any army trying to
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evacuate through the Twilight Ways while giving battle was facing at
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least half its number in losses, and more frequently up to two thirds.
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There came a tipping point early in the process that made it impossible
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to maintain cohesion in the ranks, and the moment panic set in a
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massacre was inevitable. No, Klaus Papenheim would not allow the enemy
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to slip that noose around his neck. Better the wounded perish today that
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a hundred times their number tomorrow.
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``The Black Queen's column will relieve us,'' Prince Arsene pointed out.
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``With her numbers-``
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``She does not have the supplies to feed us, Your Grace,'' the White
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Knight calmly said. ``Her force is even larger than ours, and stretched
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the Grand Alliance's capacity to supply. Even if she empties all her
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stores, all she can accomplish is join us in our starvation after a few
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more days.''
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The Prince of Bayeux's face soured, but he argued no further. The man
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was overly cautious, but not a fool. He understood what a combined army
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of over a hundred thousand, surrounded and far behind enemy lines
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without any supply lines, meant in practice. The Prince of Hannoven's
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insistence to take Juvelun had not been, contrary to what some wagging
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fantassin tongues insinuated, out of desire for a victory to gild his
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name. The other choices had all been worse: either turning back to the
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defensive line, and so tossing the Black Queen's army to the wolves, or
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allowing a massive army of two hundred thousand to march down on
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threadbare defensive lines.
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By taking Juvelun and smashing the army holding it, Klaus had forced the
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Malmedit army to pursue him west into the valley. He'd bled his army
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achieving this, but it was better than the disaster that would be the
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destruction of Catherine Foundling's army or the end of Procer that the
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defensive lines breaking would represent.
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``I have voiced my thoughts on what must be done,'' Captain Nabila said.
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``And I do not take back these words. Yet I add this: if there is no
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appetite for the fight, we must withdraw. Take to the Twilight Ways and
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leave. I will not swear the warriors of Alava to a desperate end in
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Juvelun.''
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Prince Klaus kept his face calm. That had been, however delicately put,
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a threat that if the army stayed in Juvelun the Levantines would take to
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the Twilight Ways and leave them all behind. His control over the
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coalition was slipping, the old general realized. Eyes turned to Prince
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Arsene of Bayeux, whose face had grown conflicted. The man, Klaus knew,
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did not enjoy being at odds with most of the table when it came to
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making war plans. But he saw it as his duty to speak not only for the
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soldiers of Bayeux and Brabant but also for the fantassins companies,
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which meant espousing their causes even when they were unpopular with
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other commanders.
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``I'm not certain if an order to march towards another battle would be
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followed,'' the fair-haired prince admitted. ``My men will follow me,
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but the Brabant conscripts have been unruly since Prince Etienne died
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and half the fantassins are mutinous. They were hard used with the
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breaches on the second day, and have not forgot it.''
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``Alava led the charge on the first, and the Lycaonese on the third,''
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Captain Nabila harshly said. ``What sets them apart from us, I wonder?''
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The appearance of cowardice was like throwing red meat at a starving
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dog, for Levantines. They couldn't resist sinking their teeth in it, and
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they were especially quick to point those fingers when it came to
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Alamans.
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``The hardest defences to assail were the second day's,'' the Iron
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Prince acknowledged. ``And their losses were significant. I have not
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forgotten that.''
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The other prince looked relieved.
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``It is not mutiny, Your Grace,'' Prince Arsene said. ``Your command is
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not contested. They have simply reached their limits.''
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It \emph{was} a mutiny, whether the other man wanted to admit it or not.
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It was simply not yet an open one, not that illusion would survive his
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giving an order. The rank and file did not understand why they were here
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fighting and dying, could not grasp the broader theatre of war. That was
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why trust between soldiers and generals was so important: they had to
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trust in the person commanding them to steer them right even if they
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could not understand what was being done and why. It now seemed like
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trust in Klaus Papenheim was running out. What was it that'd done him
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in, he wondered -- the darkly comical march to and away from Malmedit,
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or the brutal fighting taking a heavily defended town seemingly in the
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middle of nowhere? Either way, the horse had grown lame from the hard
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riding.
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``They must be made to understand what is at stake,'' the Iron Prince
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said. ``Gather the officers for me, Prince Arsene. I will address them
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personally.''
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The other man looked unconvinced. Klaus did not have a reputation as
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much of an orator, it was true. The only vote he'd ever personally cast
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in the Chamber of Assembly instead of letting an \emph{assermenté} do it
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for him had been the one that'd put his niece on the high throne. Still,
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Prince Arsene nodded in assent. Likely he figured that after the old
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general failed to sway the vacillating captains discussion of a
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compromise could begin in earnest.
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``Let us part ways until then,'' Klaus said. ``There is no need for
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further discussion.''
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The Prince of Bayeux took his leave, and after a lingering look Captain
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Nabila did the same. Mathilde slowed as she passed by his seat.
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``Veitland?'' the Princess of Neustria asked.
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``Hauptberg,'' the Prince of Hannoven replied.
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She nodded, and strode away without another word. Nothing more needed to
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be said. Klaus found that the Barrow Sword was looking at them, eyes
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considering.
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``Nabila is young to the Lord of Alava's service, did you know,'' the
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bearded Damned casually said. ``Only a decade as one of his captains,
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most of them spent far from Yannu Marave himself. She rose to her
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position on merit, not closeness or years.''
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``She has proved a fine officer,'' Klaus replied, for it was true.
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``There's a reason she held borders, back home, and did not stay at her
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lord's side,'' the Barrow Sword smiled. ``In Levant, authority flows
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from either Blood or blood.''
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The Prince of Hannoven met the other man's gaze, unblinking. It would
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take more than cryptic talk from a mouthy grave robber to impress him.
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``I do wonder how you'd do there, Iron Prince,'' the Damned chuckled.
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Someone, Klaus thought, ought to have beaten the smugness out of that
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mean by now. He gave no reply to the villain, who seemed to take it as a
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victory and left the tent. Behind stayed only the White Knight, whose
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look of unruffled patience had not changed a whit.
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``You have something to say?'' Klaus asked.
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``The Enemy breathes down our necks,'' the White Knight said. ``I do not
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understand its great designs, for I am no general, but the jaws of the
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trap are closing on us. That much I can sense.''
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``We reach the turning point soon,'' Klaus quietly agreed. ``One way or
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another. There is a battle taking shape in Hainaut that will decide the
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fate of the Principate.''
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``Not here in Juvelun,'' the White Knight mused. ``It has not come
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together properly. And you might be surprised, Prince Klaus, by the roar
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of this army should it allow itself to be surrounded here. There is
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a\ldots{} power behind such stands. Even more so when there is salvation
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on the way, awaiting the darkest hour to deliver dawn.''
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``There are not many things I would not trust the swords of the
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Lycaonese to prevail over, White Knight,'' the Iron Prince replied,
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``but steel cannot triumph over hunger. There can be no victory over an
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empty belly.''
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``So I've gathered,'' the dark-skinned Chosen amiably replied. ``And so
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now we must prepare for the storms on the horizon and pray that the most
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terrible of our allies will come to our aid.''
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The old general stared at the other man, wondering at the tone used when
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speaking of the hero's equal and opposite under the Terms. He'd never
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put any stock in the rumours about the Black Queen and the White Knight,
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but like many he'd always been unsettled by the cordiality between the
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two of them. Often the warmth in the voices when they spoke of each
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other had startled him, but now he heard no hint of it in the White
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Knight's words. There had been a distancing there, he thought. Not
|
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enmity, but a cooling of relations. Merciful Gods, what was it that'd
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really happened in the Arsenal?
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The rumours spread by the dozen, each wilder and more fanciful than the
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last, but truth was in short supply.
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``We will have order,'' Klaus Papenheim simply said. ``And we will march
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west, as we must.''
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``I expect we will,'' the White Knight tiredly said. ``I will ready my
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Named for the march, Iron Prince.''
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The white-haired prince looked askance at the other man, almost
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surprise.
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``That is all?'' he said.
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``I do not judge,'' Hanno of Arwad said, rising to his feet. ``This has
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not changed, and never will.''
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The Chosen left the tent after offering a small bow, not speaking
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another word, and Klaus dragged himself upright once more. His day was
|
|
far from over. The old prince attended to the army of Hannoven, speaking
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to his captains and preparing them for what was to come, and awaited the
|
|
word of the Prince of Bayeux. Yet it was not another Proceran who came
|
|
for him first but something altogether more eldritch. General Rumena,
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the only drow in all of the army come south to bear such the title, was
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stooped and old in a way that Firstborn never were. It was ancient,
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Klaus knew, in a way that it was hard to truly understand.
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|
The fucker was also a bastard soldier of the old breed, so Klaus
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Papenheim had never found him difficult to deal with. He'd yet to manage
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|
to talk the other general into no longer invading his tent whenever it
|
|
felt like it, but aside from that their relationship had been rather
|
|
amiable from the start.
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|
``You have something for me?'' the Prince of Hannoven asked.
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|
Complaining about the habitual intrusion would be wasted time in a day
|
|
that already had too few hours.
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|
``We went down to have a look in the valley,'' General Rumena agreed.
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|
``The dead gather, Hannoven Prince. The valley had been stripped bare of
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|
warbands -- Losara Queen's work, I wager -- but the dead salvaged a host
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|
from the fall of Juvelun. Perhaps thirty thousand, though they are not
|
|
yet properly mustered for battle.''
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|
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|
Klaus grimaced at the news. He'd hoped for closer to twenty thousand,
|
|
fool's hope as it had been. That much could have been handled without
|
|
leaning too heavily on the Alamans to supply soldiers for the force that
|
|
would sally out.
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|
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|
``How long do we have?''
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|
The wrinkled and grey-skinned creature considered that a moment.
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|
|
|
``The dusk of tomorrow,'' the drow finally said. ``They will be ready
|
|
for war then, and waiting for you. The disarray from the fall of Juvelun
|
|
will last no longer than that.''
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|
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|
Klaus stiffly nodded.
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|
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|
``My thanks,'' he said. ``Will your sigils be in fighting fit tonight?''
|
|
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|
``We always are,'' General Rumena smiled unpleasantly. ``Chno Sve Noc.''
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|
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|
``So your lot keep telling me,'' the Iron Prince grunted back. ``Get
|
|
ready for a strike after dark. We can't afford to linger here much
|
|
longer.''
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|
|
|
``Do your people not have a saying about the weakest link?'' General
|
|
Rumena mused.
|
|
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|
``A curse,'' Klaus corrected. ``May you be the weakest link in the Chain
|
|
of Hunger.''
|
|
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|
``Yes,'' the old drow nodded. ``That is not us, Hannoven Prince. See to
|
|
your own sigils, before speaking of dragging feet.''
|
|
|
|
And just as boldly as it'd slipping into his tent, the Firstborn
|
|
strolled out after seizing the last word. Klaus could have fought it,
|
|
but what would be the point? Better to let it keep its prize and remain
|
|
pacified. His pride was not so overgrown as to be unable to tolerate the
|
|
occasional pointed quip from a peer. It still took half a bell after
|
|
that for the Prince of Bayeux to send a messenger to him, giving word
|
|
that the other royal had at last gathered the captains in need of
|
|
swaying. The reason for the delay became clear when the Prince of
|
|
Hannoven headed to the pavilion mention by the messenger.
|
|
|
|
That it was a \emph{pavilion} and not a simple tent where the talks were
|
|
to be had said much about the numbers involved.
|
|
|
|
Twenty handpicked Hannoven armsmen followed him inside, his bodyguard,
|
|
but there must have been almost a hundred men and women already packed
|
|
tight within. Fantassins captains, mostly, but many peasant officers
|
|
from the Brabant conscripts as well. Prince Arsene himself stood to the
|
|
side with a handful of bodyguards, as if to make it clear he was not one
|
|
of the wavering souls. From the start Klaus found that the mood within
|
|
was mutinous. He spoke clearly and concisely, avoiding frills and japes
|
|
out of respect for the grim deeds he was asking for, but twice he was
|
|
interrupted by a challenge from a captain and more often than that by
|
|
jeers.
|
|
|
|
``To stay in Juvelun is death,'' the Prince of Hannoven told them. ``We
|
|
will be surrounded and destroyed.''
|
|
|
|
``And where would we go instead, bloody \emph{Keter}?'' a woman called
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
``Retreat,'' another voice called out. ``We must \emph{retreat}.''
|
|
|
|
``We must go west,'' Klaus roared, his voice rising above the din.
|
|
``General Rumena has reported to me that the remnants from the defenders
|
|
of Juvelun are gathering in the valley, and we must strike west to
|
|
disperse them before they can mount a true threat.''
|
|
|
|
The shouts of dismay were deafening, interwoven with jeers and calls for
|
|
retreat or holing up in the town. There would be no convincing them, the
|
|
Prince of Hannoven thought. It was Prince Arsene who called the crowd to
|
|
order, in the end.
|
|
|
|
``Hauptberg,'' the Iron Prince spoke into the silence, ``is the name of
|
|
a town two days away from the Morgentor by horse.''
|
|
|
|
His bodyguards had closed ranks around him when the crowd had grown wild
|
|
and stayed in formation since.
|
|
|
|
``My people,'' Klaus Papenheim said, ``know it as where the first of the
|
|
Iron Kings, Alrich Fenne, was crowned ruler of all Lycaonese before
|
|
smashing the ratling hordes in Twilight's Pass.''
|
|
|
|
There had been seven kingdoms back then, though in time they became the
|
|
four modern principalities of the north. But the first of the Iron Kings
|
|
had not used to sweet words to convince the other royals to kneel to
|
|
him, on that day. The truth was altogether bloodier. On the last day of
|
|
the talks held at Hauptberg, none of the kings had been willing to swear
|
|
to another and stand as a single force against the implacable foe coming
|
|
their way.
|
|
|
|
And so Alrich Fenne had, in the dark of night, killed them all.
|
|
|
|
``Sometimes,'' the old general said, ``someone has to order the torches
|
|
thrown.''
|
|
|
|
He curtly brought his hand down and the head of his bodyguards screamed
|
|
out the order. Like a tide of steel, soldiers of Hannoven and Neustria
|
|
began pouring into the pavilion.
|
|
|
|
``Arrest those who kneel,'' the Iron Prince ordered. ``Kill the rest.''
|