613 lines
30 KiB
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613 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-71-eschatology}{%
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\chapter{Eschatology}\label{chapter-71-eschatology}}
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\epigraph{``An enemy may suffer a hundred defeats yet avoid being defeated;
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seek not victories, only victory.''}{Extract from the `Ars Tactica', famed military treatise of Dread
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Emperor Terribilis the First}
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I'd barely set foot back in Creation and already I was itching to return
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to the Ways.
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The Second's outriders had run into a patrol of Prince Klaus', bringing
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back the uplifting news that the Iron Prince had crushed the dead in a
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decisive engagement. Soldiers had named it the Battle of the Pools, as
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it'd been fought near a dry bog where the mud had hardened and stagnant
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water remained trapped in pools. Way I heard it told, Old Klaus had
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baited the dead into open grounds with bold skirmishing by Dominion
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slingers and then forced a clash of shield walls while his cavalry went
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to hit the flanks. It'd been a close-run thing even so, before the
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reinforcements I'd sent under Princess Beatrice were found by the White
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Knight and led into a charge that hit the enemy in the back and
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completed the encirclement. That'd secured a full wipe of enemy forces,
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which had numbered more than thirty thousand. It was the kind of clean
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successes that came rarely in this war.
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It'd brought some cheer back to the Second Army, as had the prospect of
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soon being reunited with the rest of the coalition forces. Klaus
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Papenheim's reputation as one of the finest military commanders of our
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age had been proved as well-deserved once more, considering he'd led his
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beleaguered army in securing two major victories against numerically
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superior enemy armies -- and the first time the dead had even been
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entrenched! I'd expected that it was a triumphant war camp we'd link up
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with, perhaps even with ale rations having been let loose in celebration
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of the victory. Instead, as the Second Army began to cross back into
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Creation, the word that trickled back to me was that of a somber, tense
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camp. The fantassin companies with the Iron Prince were, I was told, on
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the verge of mutiny. They were refusing to march until officers that had
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been arrested were returned to them.
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There'd been trouble, it seemed, within the other column. I got the lay
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of the land before crossing, wary of putting forward my foot without a
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good idea of what it was I was headed into. Apparently the Battle of
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Juvelun, where Prince Klaus had pushed the undead out of the eponymous
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village where they'd dug in, had been a rough affair for the fantassins
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and gotten Prince Etienne of Brabant killed. The dead had retreated from
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the defeat with some semblance of order and began to muster further into
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the valley for a counter-attack, which had forced the Iron Prince to
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strike at them before they could mass enough to prove a threat. Except
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part of his army had balked at the order. The mercenaries felt they'd
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been ill-used and might be once more, while the Brabantine conscripts
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weren't eager to march out tired into another bruising engagement when
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they'd lost their prince in the last one.
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There had been stirrings of unrest, so the Iron Prince had arrested or
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slain the potential mutineer officers and promptly forced a march
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against the enemy before the situation could further worsen. It'd
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worked, at least to the extent that this kind of measure could work.
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They'd fought, for lack of allies or other options, but the moment the
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dust had settled the mutineer sentiment returned -- only twice as
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hardened, as they'd been browbeaten last time and were wary of a repeat.
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The conscripts had been settled somewhat, temporary Lycaonese officers
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having been forced on them while their formations got mixed -- to
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prevent cliques sticking together -- and separated in different parts of
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the camp. It'd not entirely worked, though, as some clever soul had
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found a loophole in Proceran desertion laws. It was, technically, no
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such thing if you signed on with a fantassin company sworn to the same
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fight. There'd been an influx of fresh `recruits' after word was spread,
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which had only raised tensions.
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Still, while I saw the sense in some of the grievances voices my
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sympathy was significantly dampened by the fact that the fantassins had
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effectively slowed Prince Klaus' march west to a crawl for several days
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before refusing to march entirely. What little time we'd managed to gain
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on the enemy through bloody losses and use of the Twilight Ways had been
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effectively lost. Even if we began the march on Hainaut city this very
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evening, we wouldn't arrive there more than a few days before the dead.
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I'd been hoping for a significantly larger margin so that we might
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repair the defences of the capital as much as possible before Keter
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besieged us there. Even now, every heartbeat wasted limping through the
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muddy camp grated at my sensibilities. Each beat saw the dead grow
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closer, saw our lead narrow and our hopes of victory dim.
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The chatter died when I hobbled into the pavilion. I leaned on my staff,
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step after step, and felt the eyes of all assembled fall on me. I saw
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the Iron Prince first, at the end of the long table: the white-haired
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general had risen to his feet and he offered a short bow, to which I
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returned a nod. The Heavens had their men as well, a tired-looking Hanno
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of Arwad on his feet besides Tariq. Their greetings were silent and I
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returned them just as quietly. The last man at the table seemed like
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he'd aged a decade since I'd last seen him, as if some capricious god
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had kicked the vigour out of his bones, but the dark hair and elaborate
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moustache of Prince Arsene of Bayeux could not be mistaken. He did not
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seem pleased to be here, I decided, as was only fitting.
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Old Klaus had raised him to his war council with the understanding that
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the Alamans would be able to handle his own people, even the fantassins,
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and in that duty he had failed most utterly. Little of this reflected
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well on him, in either our eyes or those of the officers he'd stood for.
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The Prince of Bayeux had been able to keep his soldiers and reputation
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off the chopping block in this war, until now, but it seemed that at
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last the blade had pricked the skin. He wasn't going to get out of this
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without losing a few feathers, I thought, though it was not my place to
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go pulling at them.
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My eyes then swept to the rest of the men and women in the pavilion, of
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which there had to be at least forty. None of them were seated, though
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neither were they shackled as I'd half-expected them to be. There were a
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few Lycaonese guards around, but not many -- I supposed there would have
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been no point, with the likes of Tariq and the White Knight in the
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pavilion. The arrested officers did not look like they'd been
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mistreated, the only bruises I found being faded, and though they were
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visibly filthy I saw no trace of sickness among them.
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``Your Majesty,'' the Prince of Hannoven greeted me. ``Your return is a
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pleasant turn.''
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``So was the news of the victory at the Pools, Your Grace,'' I replied.
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Only two of my guards followed me in, looming silently behind. I turned
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a steady eye to the assembled prisoners, noting several bowed.
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``Yet this was not,'' I mildly added, ``how I expected my time to be
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spent after our hosts joined again. The request I received was rather
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mild on details, in truth. If one of you would elaborate?''
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``Your Majesty,'' the Prince of Bayeux spoke up, calling my attention
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with a bow of his own. ``If I may?''
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``Do.''
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``At the behest of these officers in the service of the Grand Alliance,
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I carry a plea for your judgement,'' the prince said.
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He had a nice speaking voice, I thought. Practiced, but the smoked honey
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in there was a natural gift. Didn't make me like what I was hearing from
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in the slightest. I cocked an eyebrow.
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``It was my understanding that the Prince of Hannoven, who held command,
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already passed judgement on them,'' I said.
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``This is true,'' Prince Arsene agreeably said. ``However, no formal
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trial was held and as both the supreme commander in Hainaut and high
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officer of the Grand Alliance your authority supersedes his.''
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Meaning they didn't like what Old Klaus had decided, so they were coming
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to me in the hopes of a milder sentence. If not an outright amnesty.
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``In principle that is correct,'' I noted, then glanced at Hanno.
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``White Knight, a question if you don't mind?''
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Hanno slowly nodded.
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``Did these officers refuse to obey a direct order from their lawful
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commander?'' I plainly asked.
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The White Knight looked like he'd wanted to grimace but held back.
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``They did,'' Hanno admitted.
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``Then the matter is settled,'' I coldly said, eyes returning to the
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prisoners. ``Hang them all.''
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There was moment of utter surprise in the room, until the officers began
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to clamour. I picked our pleas, in Chantant and Arlesite, but also
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curses and insults. Some even tried to argue, yelled that there had been
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a mistake, but all I saw when I looked at them was three days lost. The
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deaths that the time pissed away would cost us. \emph{I mutilated the
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Second Army for you, you fucking vultures}, I thought. \emph{And now you
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want to mutiny and wiggle your way out? I'd slit the throat of every
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last one of you and not lose a wink of sleep over it.} The yelling
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continued with no sign of abating, even the guards tried to restore
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order, and I lost what little patience I had left.
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``\textbf{Shut up},'' I Spoke.
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With a snap their mouths closed, like puppets whose strings had been
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pulled. I felt the gazes of both heroes in the tent move to me in
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surprise, which surprised me in turn. The Pilgrim, at least, should have
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known I could now Speak again. I had disciplined the Silver Huntress
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using the talent. Yet after a glance their way, I saw that it was not
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the Speaking itself that'd startled. His mouth had wavered. Just for a
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heartbeat, I figured, but for the barest of moments my words had had an
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effect on the Grey Pilgrim. It was me who was astonished, as I'd not
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tried to exert my will against him in the slightest. The rules behind
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Speaking were opaque even to me, but usually it only worked on people
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\emph{weaker} than you. Even then it wasn't a guarantee, some sort of
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claim to authority over them tended to make it easier. \emph{And I'm not
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much stronger than the Grey Pilgrim}, I thought, \emph{if I am at all.}
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What that implied\ldots{}
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I withdrew any strand of will lingering against the four men at the
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table, freeing them of struggle. The Prince of Hannoven looked wary, but
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Prince Arsene was outright gasping. He rasped out a breath.
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``Your Majesty,'' he got out. ``This is a mistake. You did not\ldots{}''
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``I see no reason to change my judgement,'' I mildly said. ``Mind you,
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it was never formally requested or given. If this talk of appeal was
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revealed to be only a tasteless jape\ldots{}''
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I shrugged.
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``Then I would walk out of this tent and leave this in the trusted hands
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of Prince Klaus Papenheim,'' I said. ``I imagine you could appeal to him
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for mercy, were he in the mood to grant it.''
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I glanced at the prince in question, raising a questioning brow. He gave
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a discreet nod, to my mute surprise. So he was willing to find a use for
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this lot that didn't involved feeding crows. Fine. They were his, and
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his to deal with as he wished.
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``Perhaps,'' Prince Arsene said, ``that would be best.''
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I watched him, saw how now that his breathing was in order he was once
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more mastering himself. Saw how he was looking around trying to look for
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an angle, for a way to still come out on top. And maybe on another day I
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would have said nothing. Let it go. Procer would be Procer, and not even
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the end of times would make saints out of princes. Instead I found my
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fingers drumming against my leg the first few beats of \emph{Stars From
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the Sky}, and I ground my teeth. I could almost smell the mud and blood
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and ash, hear the screams as the Second Army retreated foot by foot
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under bloody onslaught.
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``Say it,'' I quietly ordered.
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The dark-haired prince blinked in confusion. I met his eyes, unsmiling.
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``Your Majesty, I do not und-''
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``Say it,'' I repeated, and my tone was cold as ice.
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His lips thinned.
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``It was,'' Prince Arsene of Bayeux got out, ``a tasteless jape.''
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I let silence linger a moment so that the embarrassment could properly
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sink it.
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``Don't ever waste my time like this again,'' I said.
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I turned and limped out of the pavilion without speaking another word.
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---
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It wasn't a formal war council in the sense that we wouldn't be tactics
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or arrangement tonight. When it came to that, the crowd of captains and
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commanders involved would require a far larger tent than this. Instead
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it was the keystones of the various forces within the Grand Alliance
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army defending Hainaut that'd been assembled for the talks. For the
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Dominion stood Lord Razin Tanja and Lady Aquiline Osena as well as the
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commander the Lord of Alava had sent to lead his warriors, Captain
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Nabila. For the Principate three royals had come: Old Klaus for the
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Lycaonese, Princess Beatrice of Hainaut and Prince Arsene of Bayeux for
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the Alamans. For the Firstborn, both General Rumena and Ivah had shown
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up. Rounding up the hosts, Calm-faced General Zola stood for the Second
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Army while I held claim on both Callow and Below.
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As the heroes had sent both the White Knight and the Grey Pilgrim, I'd
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also called for the Barrow Sword to stand for villains -- as far as I
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was concerned he'd proved himself as a lieutenant during his tenure as
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part of the Iron Prince's army, and I fully intended to keep using him
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in that capacity. In other circumstances such a gathering of the
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prominent would have led to an inevitable amount of chatter and
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hobnobbing, but not this evening. All of us felt the cold breath of
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Keter against the back of our neck and it had cut through the usual
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practices. Already skirmishing with undead warbands was starting, a sure
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sign it was time to get the Hells out of here and into the Twilight Ways
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before we had another battle on our hands. One we might not win, this
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time. I cleared my throat to call for attention, the panoply of warlords
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and royals granting it.
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``We're all here, so let us begin,'' I briskly said. ``No one in this
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room requires introduction, so we'll directly attend to the matter at
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hand.''
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Adjutant had arranged for our maps of the principality of Hainaut and
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its outskirts to be sent, and attendants had artfully displayed them on
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the great table around which all of us were arranged. Much of where the
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enemy was shown by markers to have armies was now guesswork, considering
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three battles had been fought in quick succession over the last week --
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General Abigail's assault on the Cigelin Sisters, the Second Army's
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holding action at the Battle of Maillac's Boot and the Iron Prince's
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fresh victory at the Battle of the Pools. We still didn't known if
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Abigail had taken the Sisters, but given her forces and the
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reinforcements involved she ought to have succeeded. Casualties involved
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on either side were unknown, while the Second hadn't exactly had the
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time to count corpses as it retreated into the Ways at the end of the
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battle.
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By now the great valley of central Hainaut, a great bowl in which the
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capital of the principality stood near the centre, would be a tumultuous
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mess of warbands and marching columns and smashed undead armies. Out
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east the great undead army of at least two hundred thousand that'd
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pursued the Iron Prince since his ill-fated march on Malmedit was
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gaining on us, likely past the village of Juvelun by now. Our reunited
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army needed to get moving and fast, if it wasn't going to get stuck
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between the great force coming from the west, which the Second had bled
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to delay, and the even greater army pouring down the heights of Juvelun.
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The only question that remained to be answered was where our coalition
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army should march to. I believed the right answer to that was the city
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of Hainaut, the capital itself.
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Yet while in principle I had the authority to simply give the order to
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march and expect to be obeyed, in practice trying to cram my plan down
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the throat of the people in this tent was only possible if they were
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inclined to swallow. That meant convincing them, or at least settling
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their most pressing objections.
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``As all of you can seen, the valley of Hainaut is swarming with
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undead,'' I bluntly said. ``Soon there will be a strict minimum of about
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four hundred thousand corpses running around the region. Remaining where
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we are now encamped is a recipe for disaster, as it would ensure we
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would be harassed and ultimately encircled by a massively superior enemy
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force.''
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None argued the fact, as it was plainly on the maps and markers to any
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eye practiced in the trade of war. I swept the council with my gaze.
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``More concerning is the fact that we are now running low on supplies,''
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I said. ``The column under Prince Klaus was entirely cut off from its
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supply lines for over a week, so it burned through its entire reserves.
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The forces I brought north will be sharing our own supplies, naturally,
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but that's not a solution -- it's throwing a cup of water at a
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bonfire.''
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And that was after we'd even cheated a little when it came to supplies.
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Unlike us General Abigail was still going have access to the supply line
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coming up from our defensive lines to the south, so I'd stripped the
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larders of the Third Army and its fantassin helpers dangerously bare
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before marching north through the Ways. It'd felt like kicking her in
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the ribs at the time, but I was now rather pleased I'd decided to play
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it safe.
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``The adjunct secretariat, after collating the numbers given by all you,
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believes we have around six days before rationing becomes necessary,'' I
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said. ``After that, we have perhaps a week at half-rations before our
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larders are empty.''
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``And if we begin rationing from the start?'' Prince Klaus asked.
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``Three weeks, maybe a little more,'' I replied.
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Half-rations, though, meant that our people wouldn't be at their
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sharpest. Given that our main advantage against the dead lay in the
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qualitative superiority of our rank and file against theirs, that was a
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bold gamble to make.
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``We must act, and act now,'' I told them. ``That much can't be argued
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with. What must be done, however, deserves a degree of argument. The
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floor is open to any who wish to speak.''
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There was a beat of hesitation, as if no one was quite certain they
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wanted to be the first to put a foot forward.
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``You will have a plan, Losara Queen,'' Ivah said. ``As is ever your
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way.''
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``I do,'' I agreed. ``But this council is meant to be a fair hearing for
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any of you with an answer to give.''
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Captain Nabila, who I could not help but notice was only a few inches
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taller than me -- if significantly broader and more stockily built --
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cleared her throat.
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``I was told that Abigail the Fox took the Cigelin Sisters, along with
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the forces we had held back until now,'' she tried.
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``We can't be sure she did, but the odds are good,'' Prince Klaus told
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her.
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``Then we should thrust westwards, towards Cigelin,'' Captain Nabila
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said, tone firming. ``The dead are in disarray, and we have great
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numbers. We can smash lesser warbands on our path, and when we arrive at
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the Sisters supplies can flow in from the south again.''
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The Princess of Hainaut stirred.
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``They'll tarpit us if we try that march, Captain,'' Princess Beatrice
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said.
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``I do not understand your meaning,'' the painted Levantine frowned.
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``They will fight like barrowmen,'' Aquiline Osena clarified. ``Throw
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corpses at us to slow us down until they gather a great enough force to
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slay us in one stroke.''
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The captain hummed in understanding, nodding decisively.
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``If we stay in the countryside we'll be going through bogs and
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swamps,'' Princess Beatrice added. ``We'll be moving slow regardless.
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And if we cut to Julienne's Highway as quickly as possible, our line of
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attack becomes glaringly obvious.''
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And predictable tended to get costly, when you fought Keter.
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``It seems wise to cede the grounds,'' Razin agreed, eyes narrowing.
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``We cannot take or hold them. Yet the westward march itself is a sound
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idea, I would argue. If we retreat to the Cigelin Sisters through the
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Ways, we can muster with the forces of General Abigail and prepare for a
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decisive engagement there.''
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``Keter will not grant it,'' General Rumena said. ``It will withhold the
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blow and leave hunger to disperse us without a single blade being
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raised.''
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Razin, I thought with a degree of approval, had good instincts. If
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smaller armies had been involved, his answer would have been a good one.
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The problem was that, as the Tomb-Maker had pointed out, we wouldn't
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actually be able to \emph{feed} that army if it was gathered together.
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It was one of the reasons we'd split our offensive into two columns in
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the first place -- the force I'd originally advanced with, some seventy
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thousand soldiers, had been stretching the limit of what our logistical
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train was physically able to provide for. All armies involved had taken
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losses, sure, but at the end of the day we'd still be asking of that
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same apparatus that'd struggled with my column alone to now also handle
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the second column and our reserve on top of it. No, Razin had good
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instincts but it showed that the Levantine wars he'd been raised to
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fight just didn't involve the same scale of armies being dealt with.
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``Turning back towards Juvelun would be suicide,'' Prince Arsene said.
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``No doubt our pursuers from Malmedit have already restored the
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fortifications there. We would have to take those grounds from a larger
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army once more, only this time while being struck at from behind as
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well.''
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``Juvelun is lost ground,'' Prince Klaus agreed. ``And it no longer has
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strategic value even if we did take it -- we forced that gate to be able
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to march into the valley, but it's too late to try and keep it closed
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for the army that pursues us.''
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``We could still attempt a strike at Malmedit,'' General Zola said.
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That got the attention of most everyone here, including myself.
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``If the burden of numbers is too much for our supply train, we must
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split our forces again,'' the dark-skinned general said. ``A large
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detachment can be sent to strike in surprise at Malmedit and collapse
|
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the tunnels, as was originally meant, while we consolidate the rest of
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our forces at the Sisters. If this draws the dead to us at the Sisters,
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as seems likely, that same detachment can then march in haste to Juvelun
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and seal the valley around the dead.''
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|
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|
There were some murmurs of approval, and I cocked my head to the side.
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It was the answer of a classic War College general, I thought. Strategic
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|
goals had been sent and were to be met, using our relative advantages --
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|
mobility by the Twilight Ways, in this case -- over the enemy, and
|
|
concentrating strength at where we were weakest to negate the enemy's
|
|
advantages. It was the kind of war that Black and Grem One-Eye liked to
|
|
fight, measured and clever and very well-organized. Her answer, however,
|
|
was also wrong. General Zola Osei understood war through the eyes of a
|
|
professional, so it was only natural that it was the complete opposite
|
|
that would find the fault in her answer.
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|
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|
``That's a dead end,'' Aquiline Osena said.
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|
Surprised eyes turned to her, several disapproving. The Dominion had
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|
impressed with the bravery of its warriors, during the war, but not the
|
|
acumen of its generals.
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|
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|
``She's right,'' I agreed.
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|
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|
Aquiline offered me a smile that might have passed for grateful, if you
|
|
squinted a little. I winked back.
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|
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|
``It's a clever trick, but it doesn't \emph{win} us anything,'' the Lady
|
|
of Tartessos said. ``The tunnels at Malmedit are useless now, there's no
|
|
army left to go through them -- we know where all of them are. Even if
|
|
it works and we close the valley by holding Juvelun, what does it get
|
|
us? The dead are already where they want to be.''
|
|
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|
``It's an approach that tries to mitigate the damage, not achieve
|
|
victory,'' I agreed.
|
|
|
|
If we were trying to mitigate though, it was a solid plan. It would
|
|
secure us a very advantageous position for an offensive next year and
|
|
ease the burden of our defense by giving us chokepoints to defend
|
|
instead of a long line in the lowlands. The issue was that the payoff
|
|
would come next campaigning season. See, Black and Grem they'd taught a
|
|
generation of officers to fight their way -- as I'd thought earlier,
|
|
measured and clever and very well-organized. Except that we couldn't
|
|
\emph{afford} to fight this clean, this careful. If that bride up north
|
|
got built, we'd be losing Hainaut. We needed to win the campaign now,
|
|
before winter came, and that meant we'd have to take risks. The same
|
|
kind of risks that my father abhorred, that would have gotten him killed
|
|
if he'd tried them against a hero at my age.
|
|
|
|
But I wasn't him, and the war I was fighting wasn't the same either.
|
|
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|
The Iron Prince sighed, looking at the maps.
|
|
|
|
``Agreed,'' he finally said. ``If we don't win this campaign now, we
|
|
might not have the warm bodies to do more than hold come next summer.''
|
|
|
|
Grim, but he wasn't wrong.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Can} victory still be achieved?'' Princess Beatrice calmly
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
If anyone else here had spoke those words, I thought, half the people in
|
|
the tent would have marked them a coward. None dared, though, when the
|
|
woman speaking them was the princess of this very land we stood on. Few
|
|
of us here had more burning hatred for the dead, or lost more at their
|
|
hands. Idly I wondered if she was asking the question because she had
|
|
genuine doubts, or simply because she'd recognized that if she didn't
|
|
ask it no one else would dare to.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' I calmly replied.
|
|
|
|
``Then where is that that you would have us march exactly, Black
|
|
Queen?'' Prince Arsene impatiently asked.
|
|
|
|
``Hainaut,'' the White Knight quietly said. ``The capital, that is.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno had remained silent for so long I figured half the people in here
|
|
had forgot he was even there. As for Tariq, as far as I could tell he'd
|
|
spent more time using that nosy little aspect of his to have a look at
|
|
the insides of the people than actually listening. I smiled mirthlessly
|
|
at the hero, knowing that it wasn't military learning that'd led him to
|
|
the conclusion. After all, it was not only strategy that'd led me to
|
|
decide the capital was our shot at winning this.
|
|
|
|
``The capital is where I would have us march,'' I agreed. ``As soon as
|
|
possible -- tomorrow at least, tonight if at all possible.''
|
|
|
|
``Would the issue of supplies not remain?'' Razin Tanja asked. ``The
|
|
grounds between the Cigelin Sisters and the capital are still in the
|
|
hands of the dead, and I had thought it impossible to arrange a supply
|
|
line through the Twilight Ways.''
|
|
|
|
``It is,'' General Zola frowned. ``Your Majesty, I have seen the same
|
|
numbers as you. We simply do not have enough mages and priests for this
|
|
-- past a certain distance and a certain amount of soldiers, the amount
|
|
of wagons we are able to send at the speed we can send them mean keeping
|
|
the force supplied is not possible.''
|
|
|
|
``That is true,'' I said, ``so long as you need individuals capable of
|
|
making gates to actually take the journey.''
|
|
|
|
Meaning, if we had to send a priest or mage with every wagon -- more
|
|
realistically, a few priests and mages with every caravan of wagons --
|
|
then there came a point where, if we kept sending wagons, all the
|
|
available priests and mages would be in the Twilight Ways. Either headed
|
|
to the place getting supplied, or heading back to the place where the
|
|
supplies were being sent for. If the army was small and where it was
|
|
camped close to where the supplies came from, that wasn't an issue. The
|
|
journey was quick, and you could either avoid having a stretch of time
|
|
where there were no more supplies coming in or make it so short it
|
|
hardly made a difference. The trouble came when the army was large, as
|
|
ours was, and the distance between the origin of the supplies and their
|
|
destination was large. This was, unfortunately, also the case.
|
|
|
|
You got rid of that problem, though, if the gate-opened didn't actually
|
|
need to make the journey. If the wagons could simply get there on their
|
|
own.
|
|
|
|
``But that is needed, my queen,'' General Zola said.
|
|
|
|
``Unless we open a permanent gate within the capital,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The room went still. It would be a risk, I'd not deny it, because if we
|
|
lost the capital afterwards then the Dead King would have a gate into
|
|
the Twilight Ways to study. On the other hand, the capital of Hainaut
|
|
was probably the single most fortified city in the principality and once
|
|
my sappers got to work it'd become even more defensible. We'd also be
|
|
able to feed a \emph{significantly} larger force in the city than our
|
|
physical supply train would allow for. All we needed for the journey was
|
|
for someone to open a gate near wagons somewhere in Procer and thread
|
|
into it the destination of the `Hainaut gate', and those supplies would
|
|
get to the capital eventually. We wouldn't hold the road to the capital
|
|
but it wouldn't matter, because so long as you had a mage around
|
|
\emph{everywhere} was a road to Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
``Those are difficult to make, I was told,'' Prince Klaus said. ``Could
|
|
we even make one quickly enough?''
|
|
|
|
``Us, I'm not sure,'' I admitted. ``But you might remember we have fresh
|
|
allies, since our summit at the Arsenal.''
|
|
|
|
``The Gigantes,'' Princess Beatrice breathed out. ``Is that why you sent
|
|
them with my forces when we relieved the Iron Prince?''
|
|
|
|
In part, though I'd also been worried about exposing them to the dangers
|
|
the Second Army had been about to face -- or leaving them with General
|
|
Abigail, where there would be no Named to pull them out of the fire if
|
|
Revenants attacked in surprise.
|
|
|
|
``The Dead King might not assault the walls even if we seize the
|
|
capital,'' Prince Arsene said. ``A long siege to grind us down would
|
|
suffice.''
|
|
|
|
``A siege with its back to the army at the Cigelin Sisters,'' Klaus
|
|
Papenheim replied. ``And all the while we could sally out at will
|
|
through the Ways, with strong walls to return to after. We can only hope
|
|
they will try what you suggest.''
|
|
|
|
``They will not,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, breaking his silence at last.
|
|
``Mark my words, and that of the Choir I am sworn to: once the gate is
|
|
opened in the capital, the enemy will know no rest until that city is
|
|
razed to the ground.''
|
|
|
|
No one, I noted with grim amusement, saw fit to argue with \emph{that}.
|
|
There was some more talking, afterwards, but I had them and most of the
|
|
people in the tent knew it. By the hour's turn I had the agreement of
|
|
everyone there. So on we went to Hainaut, to the last flip of the coin
|
|
that would decide whether this summer was the dawn of the Grand
|
|
Alliance's victory or defeat.
|
|
|
|
That in the city doom awaited none would deny, but like everyone else I
|
|
rather wished I could know ahead \emph{whose} doom it was going to be.
|