648 lines
31 KiB
TeX
648 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-47-methods}{%
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\section{Chapter 47: Methods}\label{chapter-47-methods}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A plan of war is the inevitable victim of circumstance; methods
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of war are superior, for they are the mother of many a plan.''}
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Extract from the `Ars Tactica', famed military treatise of Dread Emperor
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Terribilis the First
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\end{quote}
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Seventeen fantassins from three different companies hung from nooses,
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the wind making them swing slightly as the sun rose. \emph{Bloody
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fools}, I thought at the sight of them, not a single speck of sympathy
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emerging even at this late hour. The lot of them had been from three
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middling companies, not one of them numbering a thousand men and each of
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them with several cases of corruption on their record. It'd not been
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difficult to track them with what the Concocter had told us, not once
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Adjutant put his army of helpful hands to the task. Names were obtained
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within the first bell, though I had to send in armed companies to make
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the arrests as the mercenaries were reluctant to give up their own.
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Interrogations had been brisk, and hadn't even required much coercion.
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The idiots hadn't known they were trying to rob shipments earmarked for
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a Named, they'd thought they were just skimming Arsenal equipment. The
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part that'd infuriated me was when I'd realized that guards had been
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bribed for the fantassins to get access, and some of those had been
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mine. Two Callowan legionaries were being flogged as we spoke for
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trading shifts without officer permission, and the Third Army had lost a
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sergeant when it turned out she'd been in on it from the start. I'd let
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her captain handle the discipline, but I did not need to look to know
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she'd be hanging from our own gallows about now.
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The regulations were crystal clear.
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``I do not question the justice of this, Your Majesty,'' Princess
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Beatrice said, ``but it will not help relations with the companies.''
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The Princess of Hainaut was a better rider than me, though given
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Zombie's undead placidity an outside observer would have found it hard
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to tell when we weren't moving. I'd not expected that when I first met
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her, as Beatrice Volignac was also very much overweight. My people did
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tend to look down on those wasteful enough to grow fat, but I'd since
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revised that first opinion of her: while I didn't share Prince Klaus'
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high opinion of her as a general, it couldn't be denied she was a fine
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lance and probably the finest cavalry commander in Hainaut. She was also
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my intermediary with Proceran mercenary companies, at the moment, so I'd
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best not ignore her warning.
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``They had to hang,'' I bluntly said. ``They broke into sealed crates,
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if they \emph{didn't} hang the effects on discipline would be
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disastrous.''
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``I'll not argue this,'' the Princess of Hainaut agreeably replied,
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``but it plays into common fears that you intend to treat the fantassins
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as you would legionaries, subject to the same rules. It is a highly
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unpopular prospect and there has been grumbling of contract breaches.''
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My brow rose. If they tried to pull that it'd not go over well, since
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the Highest Assembly had decreed that abandoning mercenary contracts
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during this war would be legally considered the same as desertion, but I
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knew better than to ride unwilling soldiers too hard. Pressure on
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soldiers with good spirits got results, but it broke those who were
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already demoralized.
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``I have limited concessions to offer them,'' I admitted. ``I'll not
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compromise in ways that weaken us ahead of hard battles. Can their
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appointed representative in my councils not address their troubles?''
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The Princess of Hainaut only smiled politely, which I took to mean she'd
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tried to lead me to a conclusion and I'd failed to get there on my own.
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``If I might make a suggestion, Your Majesty?'' Princess Beatrice asked.
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\emph{Yup}, I amusedly thought. \emph{Definitely missed a hint there.}
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On the other hand it meant she was treating me much like she would
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Proceran royalty, which was good even if I was missing subtext that
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royalty would grasp. It spoke to a degree of respect, which was a good
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sign coming from a woman in whose hands I'd placed a lot of influence.
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``Please do,'' I said.
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``An appointed representative is a Callowan manner of approaching
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this,'' she delicately said. ``Orderly and efficient, but relying on
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trust that is absent. Expanding the fantassin seats in your war council
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to two and allowing the companies to elect those who will fill them
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would do much to assuage fears of\ldots{} overstep.''
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I squinted at her a moment. They could have a dozen seats and it'd give
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them no more influence in the decisions, we both knew, since this was
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very much to be my campaign. On the other hand, it would be a gesture
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and it'd give them a degree of power over their own situation -- which
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the Princess of Hainaut had gently been trying to explain to me they
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were afraid I'd summarily strip away from them.
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``Agreed,'' I sighed. ``Though make it understood I'll not suffer
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foolishness even if it is \emph{elected} foolishness. I expect either
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skill or silence.''
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``A reasonable request,'' Princess Beatrice said, inclining her head.
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``And if I may ask about why the corpses will not be returned to the
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companies?''
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The Concocter had lost several ingredients through the actions of greedy
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idiots, which had caused her to run late on some brews. For that
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inconvenience I'd given her leave to harvest what she wanted from the
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hanged mercenaries before their corpses were burned.
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``You don't really want to know the answer to that question, Your
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Grace,'' I calmly said. ``Actions have consequences, let's leave it at
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that.''
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It was a grim note to start the day on, but no less true for it.
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---
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It would have been a lie to say that particular reunion wasn't one I'd
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been looking forward to.
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``Ivah,'' I smiled, offering my arm to clasp. ``It's been too long.''
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My Lord of Silent Steps's fingers lightly touched my forearm as I
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returned the gesture affectionately, and only then did it retreat a step
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to offer a respectful bow. Ivah had not changed a whit since I'd last
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seen it, still tall and slender with an ageless youth to its face under
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the silver and purple paint of the Losara sigil. Its soft leather shoes
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had not made a sound when it stepped back, and never would: the title it
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had gained during my days of warring against the Everdark had left its
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mark, which would never entirely fade.
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``I am glad to return at your side, Losara Queen,'' it replied. ``It has
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been too long since I warred besides you.''
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``Oh, I don't doubt we have plenty of that ahead of us,'' I drily said.
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I then flicked a glance at the other drow in the tent, who returned the
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gesture with silver-blue eyes and a cocked hairless eyebrow.
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``I see you've yet to get yourself killed,'' General Rumena said. ``Odd,
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given your fondness for the opposite practice.''
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Rumena the Tomb-maker was still a striking sight, in these sense that it
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was one of the only Mighty I'd ever met who actually looked \emph{old}.
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Standing stooped in his ringmail of obsidian, the old drow was a deep
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well of Night as well as one if the finest tacticians of its kind. It
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was also kind of a prick, and one I'd yet to get the better of through
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words.
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``One of these days I'm going to make you into a vest,'' I told the
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bastard. ``Crows know you already look like you're made of leather.''
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It respectfully bowed.
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``It will change nothing, First Under the Night,'' the Tomb-maker
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replied. ``As you have never needed an opponent to lose.''
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In the back of my mind, I heard Komena let out a snort of laughter.
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Godsdamned goddesses, I thought. They shouldn't play favourites unless
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that favourite was me.
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``It's beneath my station to argue with a subordinate,'' I airily
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replied.
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``Your skill in retreat remains unrivaled,'' the old drow praised.
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That fucker. I flipped it off, which only got a cackle out of it.
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``Enough pleasantries,'' I said afterwards. ``I did have a reason to
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call on you two.''
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The old drow nodded.
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``Sve Noc has told me of your pact with the Papenheim,'' General Rumena
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said. ``The sigils are to be split between your armies when we sally
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out.''
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``I don't intend to meddle in the details of assigning the sigils,'' I
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said, ``but you'll be personally leading the third that goes east with
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the Iron Prince.''
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It didn't look surprised.
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``Some of the fighting to the east will be done underground, I
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understand,'' the Tomb-maker said.
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``Once you get to Malmedit, yes,'' I agreed. ``Ideally you'd collapse
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the tunnels the Dead King is using to keep funnelling in troops, but the
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decision will be left to the Prince Klaus' discretion.''
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I couldn't think of a decent reason why we'd not want those tunnels shut
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as quickly as possible, but it didn't pay to tie the hands of your
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commanders before they even set out. The Prince of Hannoven knew his
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business and had been making war on Keter since before I was born, there
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was no need to breathe down his neck.
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``That is pleasing to hear,'' General Rumena said. ``It has been too
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long since we have fought beneath the Burning Lands. Do you intend a
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particular Mighty for command in my absence?''
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``If you don't have a recommendation, I was considering Jindrich,'' I
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said.
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It shook its head.
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``I would take Mighty Jindrich with me,'' Rumena replied. ``It is a
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skillful vanguard, and less likely to grow\ldots{} unruly than it would
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away from my gaze.''
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I hummed.
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``I could see that,'' I finally said. ``You have a commander for me,
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then?''
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``Several,'' the old drow replied.
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``All qualified?''
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``It is so,'' Rumena agreed. ``Shall we discuss them?''
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I bit my lip. I wasn't unaware that one of the reasons Sve Noc had been
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on board with the Firstborn serving in Cleves instead of Hainaut was
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that it'd let the drow grow into themselves on the surface without my
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meddling too much in the process. The Sisters could still call on me
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when there was trouble, as they had when the Langevins had been caught
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scheming, but it'd always been pretty clear that I was to be a herald
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and an advisor and not Queen of the Firstborn. Much like with Callow,
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part of my use would be bringing about my own uselessness.
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``Let them choose their own commander,'' I finally said. ``As they now
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choose their own sigil-holders.''
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The grey-skinned general studied me a long moment.
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``You have grown, I think,'' the Tomb-maker thoughtfully said. ``This
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war has done more than simply scar you.''
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``Don't get sentimental on me now,'' I teased.
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It snorted, dismissing me.
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``It will be as you say, Losara Queen,'' Rumena said.
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``Good,'' I sharply nodded. ``Ivah can keep me informed and serve as
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liaison.''
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Though my Lord of Silent Steps had remained silent as I spoke with the
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general, as Firstborn ways\ldots{} discouraged intervening in the
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conversations of one's superiors, it now nodded with visible pleasure.
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``It will be good to resume my duties,'' Ivah smiled.
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---
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I spoke with the White Knight at least once a day as he approached
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Neustal, bringing with him the last few Named who'd join the campaign as
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well as the latest goods from the Arsenal. Much of it was enchanted
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weapons and wardstones, but there were some greater prizes as well:
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Unravellers, tested successfully and so brought to the front by the
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crate, as well as a set of five pharos devices. Most of the latter would
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be going to the Iron Prince's host and the reserves, since they'd be of
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greater use there, but my own forces would get one. It was the kind of
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the trump card that could tip a battle our way, if used well.
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Most of the conversation covered how Named should be assigned, and
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where. Hanno himself would be going with the Iron Prince, but there
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would be villains with that host as there would be heroes as part of
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mine. We wanted to be able to field multiple bands of five should the
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situation on either prong ask for it, but not all Named were field
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capable so in practice the numbers did not quite align even though in
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principle there were twenty-eight Named in Hainaut. Haggling ensued,
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since some of our kind were a lot easier to place in band than others,
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and though on paper I won by securing sixteen Named in reality I got the
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bad end of the stick.
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I'd gotten most the Named who could not fight and two of three
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transitionals, not including the one who was actually good in a fight --
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the Young Slayer, although apparently he might have been trouble with
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Aquiline so it might be for the best -- so my fighting numbers were
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actually smaller than Hanno's in reality. Still, when it came to Named
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it was all about finding a use for talents. At least I'd gotten Roland
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as part of my lot and got the White Knight to take on the Grey Pilgrim
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-- and so the Mirror Knight, his latest pupil -- so it wasn't all bad.
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Archer would be happy I'd secured the Vagrant Spear, too. I'd even
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managed to leverage a half-hearted effort to claim the Witch of the
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Woods into keeping all the heroes that'd spent time on the Hainaut front
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over the last few years, which meant the core of my heroic lineup would
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be one I was familiar with and on decent terms: the Silver Huntress, the
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Silent Guardian and the Sage. A shame I'd lost the Barrow Sword, but the
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logic that Hanno needed someone to lead his villains was hard to argue
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with -- and got Ishaq away from the Blood, which was probably for the
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best.
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By the time the White Knight's convoy left the Twilight Ways and began
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its way up the road to the stronghold, I had already begun to plan the
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best use for my Named. It was not one day too soon, for before long we
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would all be on the march.
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---
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As far as war councils went, I found twelve a reasonable number of
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people to seat. The great table Indrani was still carving for me -- the
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latest addition being Hakram's fight with fae at the Arsenal -- could
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handle that many, though given the amount of maps I'd had stretched over
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the surface of it it'd been necessary to set down smaller side tables
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for drinks.
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That Adjutant would be seated at my side was a given, but occupying the
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rest of that side of the table were the foremost officers from the Army
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of Callow that'd hold command in the coming offensive. General Hune of
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the Second Army, towering above us all with those intelligent eyes set
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in a brutish face. General Abigail of the Third Army, already into her
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second cup of wine and her third attempt to let Hune represent the
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entire Army of Callow contingent. Last but not least Grandmaster Brandon
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Talbot of the Order of Broken Bells, ever impeccably groomed and
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currently eyeing the fantassin part of this council with barely-veiled
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contempt.
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For the Dominion stood the rulers of two lines of the Blood, Lord Razin
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Tanja and Lady Aquiline Osena, in full war paint and armour. Both of
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them were taking this seriously enough that they'd even ceased flirting,
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which was nice to see. By them sat the representative for the drow,
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silver-eyed and calm. My suggestion that the Firstborn elect their own
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representative -- it was only fair, if the fantassins got to as well --
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had paid unexpected dividends when they'd chosen an old friend: my own
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Lord of Silent Steps, Ivah of the Losara Sigil. The intricate beauty of
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the paint on its face was a rival for that of the Dominion pair, to my
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quiet sastisfaction.
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As in most things the Procerans ended up the complicating part, for
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while Princess Beatrice Volignac of Hainaut held sole speaking rights
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for her army the fantassins companies had elected two very different
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people to stand for them. Lady Catalina Ferreiro, a beautiful scarred
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woman in her thirties, was the Captain-General of the \emph{Ligera
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Bandera.} It was the largest of the fantassin companies, numbering two
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thousand and three hundred. Captain Reinald of the \emph{Folies Rouges},
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on the other hand, was soft-skinned nearly as fat as Princess Beatrice
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and his company numbered only six hundred foot. The Folies Rouges were
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an old and respected name, however, and their captain was known for his
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shrewdness.
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Last of all, for the heroes, the Silver Huntress had come. Alexis had
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been the natural pick, even the White Knight had agreed. We'd worked
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together in Hainaut for more than a year without any real trouble
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between us, I'd entrusted her with independent commands out of my sight
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several times and my force's path into Hainaut would be encountering
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more hardened defences than the Iron Prince's -- which would make her
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skill with a bow even more valuable. The Huntress was rather
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plain-faced, a tall redhead with blue eyes who kept her hair in a bun
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and whose nose had visibly been broke several times. She had a
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startlingly girlish voice, high and sweet.
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Archer would be coming with me and the two of them couldn't stand each
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other, so I'd have to be careful to keep them apart, but aside from that
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little complication I was rather looking forward to having the Silver
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Huntress along.
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The first half hour of the council was spent in idle talk, which I
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tacitly allowed. The Procerans lived and died by this stuff, so it'd
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help bring them into the fold, but there was a little more to it than
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that. The officers in my tent would be side by side in the field for
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months, and in a coalition force like mine I'd learned the hard way that
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if a degree of trust and amicability wasn't maintained between the
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leading commanders it led to blunders. I took the moment to study the
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officers myself, noting the ties and attitudes. Both my Dominion
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ducklings got along strangely well with Hune, and had for some time now,
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so they gravitated towards her. To my lasting amusement the two of them
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were also subtly intimidated by Genera Abigail's reputation, and usually
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avoided her. Princess Beatrice was trying to engage the woman in
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question in conversation, which had my fellow Callowan regularly
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shooting me anguished looks as if to assure me that she was not
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committing treason by plotting with foreign royalty.
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Captain-General Ferreiro had worked with the Silver Huntress before,
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which I vaguely remembered hearing about, but I was surprised to hear
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that the heroine was also acquainted with Ivah. A few warbands out
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raiding under the Losara apparently pulled the Huntress' team out of bad
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spot when she'd gone out to Suifat to have a closer look at enemy
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landings -- an early run-in with the Stitcher, by the sound of it -- and
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they'd left on good terms. The other fantassin leader, Captain Reinald,
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approached Brandon Talbot to my surprise. The Folies Rouges, I
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overheard, had apparently fought at the Battle of the Camps.
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The Grandmaster of the Order admitted to recognizing the banner, and
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visibly warmed to the conversation when the mercenary good-naturedly
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admitted having been whipped by Nauk's soldiers on the right flank -- to
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his luck, he claimed, as he'd pulled out just before the Hellhound's
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water trap and goblinfire ate up the company that'd advanced in his
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stead. Reinald then adroitly manoeuvred the conversation to the
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respective merits of the Liessen charger and the Aisne destrier as a
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fighting horse, correctly betting on Callowan nobility's endless
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appetite for speaking of horses, and my brow rose. That man bore
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watching.
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Hakram's wheelchair was not great in such small spaces, despite Masego's
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best efforts, so he was limited in speaking to the Army officers and the
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Blood. I put my trust in his eyes to catch anything I'd missed and went
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around. I traded an anecdote about shortly fighting the Stygian Spears
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at First Liesse with the Silver Huntress and Captain-General Ferreiro,
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since it turned out the Ligera Bandera had fought against Stygia when
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the League invaded in the run-up to the Graveyard. I commiserated about
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College war games with Hune to the amusement of the Blood.
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Apparently Hune's tenure at the head of Tiger Company had been a mixed
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bag, as an early winning streak had seen her consistently targeted by
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rivals afterwards.
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Eventually Adjutant caught my eye and I heard the unspoken signal that
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we'd tarried long enough, moving back to my seat at the carved table.
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The most socially aware among the gathering -- which included all three
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Procerans, to my mixed amusement and exasperation -- followed suit,
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which was enough to begin a chain of the same. Within moments most
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everyone was standing before their seats without my having had to say a
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word.
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``I'll spare us a meandering speech,'' I said. ``We all know why we're
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here. Not all of you will be aware, however, that we're to set out early
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next week.''
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I flicked a glance across the lot of them, finding mostly practiced calm
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and the occasional sprouts of eagerness.
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``I will be holding the command for our section of the Grand Alliance
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forces,'' I said. ``And so it is my responsibility to brief you as to
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the nature of this offensive.''
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I waited a beat, then pulled my chair to sit and gesture for all others
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-- save one -- to do the same.
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``I can't and won't claim to be the mind behind our campaign plan,'' I
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told them. ``It was crafted through the labour of many of our
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strategists, foremost among them Marshal Juniper of Callow and Prince
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Klaus Papenheim.''
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``Your humility does your honour, Your Majesty,'' Princess Beatrice
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said, ``but the Iron Prince has claimed your hand to have been as much
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as work here as his own.''
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My brow rose in genuine surprise. The old flatterer. I'd helped tinker
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with this some, but I'd not consider this plan to be my baby. Mostly I'd
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served as a bridge between him and Juniper.
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``Far be it from me to contradict Old Klaus, then,'' I drily said.
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``Especially if he was in a pleasant mood.''
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That got some laughter, though most of it polite, and at least one
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muttered saying in Tolesian about `something Lycaonese tooth iron
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something'? My Tolesian was, well, to be honest it mostly \emph{wasn't}.
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``The forces represented by the people in this room will number around
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seventy thousand souls,'' I said, ``but we are to be only a single prong
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of the offensive. The other will be commanded by the Prince of Hannoven,
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while a third force will remain behind as a strategic reserve under
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General Pallas of Helike.''
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Under was a bit of an exaggeration, since no one had really wanted to
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give her command over their own countrymen, but I'd left the Fourth
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behind with orders for General Bagram to support her within reason.
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``Apologies, Your Majesty,'' Captain-General Ferreiro said, ``but I was
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under the impression that the sum total of soldiery in Neustal numbered
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one hundred and fifty thousand?''
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``One hundred and sixty,'' I corrected, ``but yes, you've put your
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finger on the pulse of this. Our will be the largest force of the two
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setting out by a fair margin, because we're expected to be hitting the
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harder targets.''
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Also because seventy-five thousand was the apex of what we believed to
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be capable of feeding through our supply lines. And that was an
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estimate, so when the Princess of Hainaut had come to me with slightly
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fewer fantassins than expected -- none of the smaller forces were worth
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the effort, in her opinion -- I'd not argued against it. Best to have
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too many supplies than too few.
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``None of you are fools,'' I said. ``So you know what that means: we'll
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be going up Julienne's Highway.''
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There was a rippling murmur. Not of surprise, for it'd not been empty
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flattery when I'd gauged that a room of hardened veterans would be able
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to guess our path upwards, but of\ldots{} consideration. Everyone was
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aware there would be rough battles ahead.
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``Prince Klaus' force is to serve as a distraction?'' General Hune
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asked.
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I nodded at the towering ogre.
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``That's part of it,'' I acknowledged. ``He'll be taking fifty-four
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thousand up the old mining roads to the east, and taking his time in
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doing so. The reason for that is the latest scouting report form the
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Silver Huntress, who once more deserves our thanks.''
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The redhead looked awkward when all eyes turned on her, jerkily nodding
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back.
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``I took the Sage and a war party of Osena slayers,'' she said, slowing
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her words so her voice would sound less high-pitched, ``to have a closer
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look at the fortress-town of Juvelun. The withdrawal of the dead towards
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the north was an opportunity to venture further than usual.''
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I offered her a sharp nod.
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``The Huntress confirmed what we've been suspecting for some time: Keter
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has amassed a large force in Juvelun, at least a hundred thousand with
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several Revenants to lead them,'' I elaborated.
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Idly I wondered where I'd put the markers we used for enemy armies, but
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when I turned to look Hakram was leaning over in his chair and handing
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me the black iron blocks. I smiled in thanks as I took, plopping one
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down on Juvelun. By now everyone was starting to put it together.
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Neustal, the stronghold where we currently stood, was more or less in
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the centre of the Hainaut lowlands and sat astride Julienne's Highway --
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which would go all the way to the capital, up north. Meanwhile our other
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army would go up the eastern path of the mining road, further along our
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defensive line, and begin a quick march up into northeastern Hainaut.
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The Iron Prince's target was the small city of Malmedit, since the Dead
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King was using it to funnel troops into our eastern flank through old
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tunnels, but the road would take his army past a branch that led to the
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fortress-town of Juvelun slightly to the west. We were hoping that would
|
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draw the undead army there into a battle, since losing Malmedit would be
|
|
a major setback for Keter. If the dead gave battle, and we expected they
|
|
would, then the force there would not be able to reinforce the closest
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|
strategic location: the city of Hainaut itself, the capital that was the
|
|
ultimate objective for my own push.
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``We've identified four other large Keteran forces,'' I continued. ``One
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is holed up out west, in Luciennerie, where it sits defensively on the
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blue road. We believe it's between one hundred and one hundred fifty
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|
thousand. It's also getting steady reinforcements, and we're not sure
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|
from \emph{where} exactly. ``
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|
I'd simplified a bit there, I reflected as I set down the corresponding
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|
block of iron. While that army was strategically defensive, it was also
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|
the force that kept flooding the western side of our defensive line with
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|
raiders and small attacks. The only reason the Dead King hadn't pushed
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|
further was that if he did there was a risk the armies under Malanza
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|
would sally out from the town of Coudrent, to its west, and try to
|
|
anchor our flanks together. It'd take a lot of pressure out of the both
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|
of us, which was why Juniper had originally wanted to split our forces
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in three and take a swing a Luciennerie as well.
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|
Talks with other strategists and fresh information had since made us
|
|
revise that first plan she'd suggested, but the bare bones of it were
|
|
still essentially the same.
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|
``Another large force is north of the previous and beyond the highlands,
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in Suifat,'' I continued, placing the black iron. ``Though it was
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|
previously around seventy thousand, they've had a flood of
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|
reinforcements and we now believe them a match for the Luciennerie force
|
|
in numbers. Thankfully for us, that army is now on the move and marching
|
|
to try and retake Trifelin.''
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|
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|
It was the Dead King's armies that would be in for a rough time there,
|
|
for once. Malanza has suffered a stinging defeat there early in the war
|
|
for Cleves, so when she'd finally taken back the town she'd fortified
|
|
every nook and cranny of the region. Gods smile on whoever tried Rozala
|
|
Malanza on those grounds, because she ready and she was \emph{angry}.
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|
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|
``We've all been aware of the army waiting between the Hollow and the
|
|
Sister for some time,'' I said, easily plopping down a block there. ``We
|
|
still believe it to be a little under a hundred thousand, and it has
|
|
been keeping a purely defensive stance.''
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|
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|
It would be our first opponent, one way or another.
|
|
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|
``The last known force, and we believe it to be the largest, is
|
|
somewhere north of the capital,'' I continued. ``Two hundred thousand,
|
|
some of the finest troops in the service of the Dead King. We last saw
|
|
them around the Prisoner's Mercy, but we're not sure where they might
|
|
have march since -- save for one detail, we are \emph{certain} they're
|
|
not in the capital.''
|
|
|
|
We had the Augur, the Wise Astrologer and the Enigmatic Prophet in
|
|
agreement on that, aside from our own risky Named scouting through the
|
|
Twilight Ways.
|
|
|
|
``The offensive's basic shape is as follows,'' I said. ``To the west,
|
|
allied forces based in Coudrent will go raiding down the blue road to
|
|
pin down the army in Luciennerie, while a significant slice of the Grand
|
|
Alliances forces of Cleves concentrates in Trifelin to hold it.''
|
|
|
|
It'd be tight, given that Malanza had lost some forces to us, but so
|
|
long as there wasn't a major offensive through the lakes -- and we'd not
|
|
seen the build-up for one, not for lack of looking -- then she would be
|
|
able to succeed at both those tasks.
|
|
|
|
``Out east, Prince Klaus will march up the mining roads and attempt to
|
|
bait out the army in Juvelun,'' I said. ``If it refuses to give battle
|
|
he'll move against Malmedit itself, which will at the very least force
|
|
pursuit by the Juvelun army.''
|
|
|
|
Ideally he'd take the old mining city quickly and then hold it against
|
|
the pursuing dead, but I doubted it'd end up that clean.
|
|
|
|
``Meanwhile, at the heart of it all, we'll be marching on Lauzon's
|
|
Hollow,'' I continued. ``We'll be doing so at the quickest pace we can
|
|
manage, to threaten to take the Hollow before Keter can move its nearby
|
|
army to hold it.''
|
|
|
|
``That stratagem worked last year,'' Lady Aquiline said. ``Which means
|
|
the Hidden Horror will expect it now.''
|
|
|
|
``That's our intent,'' I bluntly said. ``Once that force moves to defend
|
|
the Hollow, it will leave the Cigelin Sisters vulnerable. Our reserve of
|
|
twenty-eight thousand will then strike out from the Twilight Ways and
|
|
seize it.''
|
|
|
|
``If they split their forces?'' Hune asked.
|
|
|
|
``Then we force the Hollow,'' I shrugged. ``They won't be able to bleed
|
|
us with so few.''
|
|
|
|
General Abigail looked at the map and frowned.
|
|
|
|
``What happens if the undead in Luciennerie ignore the raids and attack
|
|
our defensive line instead?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``The reserve defends,'' I said. ``It only needs to hold for some time,
|
|
as we have reinforcements from Callow and southern principalities
|
|
already on the way. Then Keter loses Luciennerie and we pincer the
|
|
attacking force between Cleven reinforcements and our own defenders.''
|
|
|
|
It'd mean a very different campaign, but it was also one we were capable
|
|
of fighting.
|
|
|
|
``It would still mean no reinforcements for the battle at the Hollow,''
|
|
Captain Reinald pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``In that situation,'' I replied, ``we would reassess and consider if
|
|
Prince Klaus' army using the Ways to attack the Sisters instead would be
|
|
feasible. If it is not, our objective would change to securing the east
|
|
and Juvelun in particular.''
|
|
|
|
It'd give us a shot at the capital, and from there we'd be able to
|
|
muster a truly brutal offensive against the Hidden Horror on three
|
|
sides. A siege of Hainaut would become inevitable, it was true, but
|
|
while we'd wanted to avoid that we couldn't always get what we wanted.
|
|
Would that war were so polite. My gaze swept the table and found a great
|
|
many questions, but no one outright disbelieving that this could be
|
|
done. Good, I thought as I cracked my neck.
|
|
|
|
``All right,'' I said, ``if you have inquiries, now is the time. We can
|
|
move on to the marching order afterwards.''
|
|
|
|
It was going to be a long night, but better to talk now than to bleed
|
|
later.
|