606 lines
28 KiB
TeX
606 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-60-zwischenschach}{%
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\section{Chapter 60: Zwischenschach}\label{chapter-60-zwischenschach}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``In war and politics, we are all as men sharing the same dark
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cave and stumbling along blindly. The keys to victory in either matter
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are patience and seeing just a little further ahead than your
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opponents.''}
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-- Luc Monseiller, thirty-second First Prince of Procer, largely
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remembered for the Great War that followed his assassination
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\end{quote}
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A brawl. The last blows of the battle not even an hour past, and now
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they were \emph{brawling}.
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Sometimes I sympathized with Cordelia Hasenbach, for though I had fought
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her tooth and nail to keep the Truce and Terms from being beyond the
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reach of temporal laws I didn't entirely disagree with her when it came
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down to it. I bent the rules for Named all the time, didn't I? I'd made
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them beyond the authority of all but two of their own kind, allowed them
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to wield power over others and invested them with weighty
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responsibilities. But sometimes, Gods sometimes, they just went and did
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something that made it feel like I was biting down on a mouthful of
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embers. I knew the names and the Names, could discern the source of this
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stupidity, but to understand was not to excuse.
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If they'd been soldiers under my command, this would end with a flogging
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and a demotion. If it had been allied officers, even nobles, I would
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have had them removed from command and sent away. But Names were rarer
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than noble blood, the power they gave more highly prized than titles in
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these days where the end times were howling at our door, so instead I
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would have to be \emph{lenient}. To chide and discipline, as if dealing
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with children instead of hardened killers empowered by Creation. What
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hope was there for the Liesse Accords, when not even the Dead King at
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our gates was enough to force reason onto us?
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I wrestled my mounting fury down as I limped through the dusty grounds
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of our camp, knowing calm would serve me better. It was exhaustion and
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anger talking, I told myself. There would be good days and bad ones in
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the era to come and no treaty could change that. It'd never been their
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purpose to fix the world, for that was too ambitious a charge for
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anything made by my hand. The Accords would do what they were meant to,
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and Calernia would muddle along with a few less atrocities splattered
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across the pages of its history. That alone would already be a better
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legacy than I had any right to claim, some would say.
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In the distance, as I turned a corner, I heard cheering. The Night
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boiled in my veins, answering the livid streak of anger that seized me,
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and the closest legionaries shivered. I'd sent for a full company of
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armed soldiers, phalanges one and all, to accompany me. They were to
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serve as either escort or mailed fist, depending on my orders, and my
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mood was feeling more and more like clenching fingers. The cheering
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itself wasn't bad, it was what it meant: that Named had decided to
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fucking brawl in public in front of any soldier that cared to watch. On
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the same day as a bruising battle with the Kingdom of the Dead, our
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corpses not even all burned. My fingers \emph{clenched}.
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Well, at least one was going to be one of mine so maybe flogging wasn't
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off the table yet.
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It was with that hard stomp particular to soldiers meaning business that
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my company entered the picture. A large crowd of soldiers -- a few
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hundred, a thousand? -- had gathered in a great ring. By their looks and
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armour they were from half a dozen different armies and oaths, a clean
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slice of our coalition shouting hoarsely as five Named brawled and coin
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changed hands. A quiet fell in the immediate surroundings of the
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phalanges, soldiers paling and hastily getting out of the way of
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authority having come to call. There was just enough of a quiet I
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finally made out one particular thread from the cacophony. An old ditty
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I'd learned as kid in Laure, beautifully sung by a cold-blooded monster.
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\emph{``Maiden Mary, fair and merry}
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\emph{Your tears make poets sigh}
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\emph{But for a smile given sweetly}
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\emph{Tall banners will kiss the sky.''}
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The Rapacious Troubadour had a nasty sense of humour, it seemed. `Maiden
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Mary' was a children's song, but it dated back to the War of the Cousins
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-- the civil war that'd put on the throne the same branch of House
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Fairfax that my father had later ended -- and the Mary in question was
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Mary the Claimant. Queen Mary the Third, most scholars called her, as
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her Eastern Bells had won over the Southern Bells just long enough for
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her toddler son to die a crowned king and another cousin succeed him. I
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would have been impressed about the Troubadour knowing the song at all,
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if he'd not also been the same shit playing a song about civil war while
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Named fought in front of a crowd of rowdy soldiers.
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There was blood on the floor, I saw, but at least no one was dead yet.
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Archer and the Silver Huntress were both bleeding, and I knew the look
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in Indrani's eyes -- she'd take a killing stroke without hesitation if
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she got the opportunity. The Silent Guardian and the Headhunter were
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both in better shape, the Guardian having nothing but marks on her plate
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while the Headhunter had suffered only a small cut on their cheek. The
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only voice of sanity in there was Roland, even now trying to force
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everyone apart and largely failing.
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``- settles nothing\emph{,''} I caught the Rogue Sorcerer saying. ``You
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are only making it worse for-``
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``Do it to 'em, Lady Archer,'' someone with a heavy Liessen accent
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shouted. ``Callow! The Sword and Crown!''
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``Huntress,'' an Alamans accent shouted back. ``For grace and Heavens,
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Silver Huntress!''
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The crowd roared, the crowd cheered, and the Rapacious Troubadour was
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still playing that \emph{fucking} song.
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\emph{``Maiden Mary, bright and lovely}
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\emph{What groom did you embrace?}
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\emph{Hand in hand, wooing roughly}
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\emph{Your troth is kingdom's grace.''}
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Enough was enough. The mood might still be more joyous than bloody at
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the moment, but crowds were mercurial beasts -- this could turn sour
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very, very quickly. I was still damned winded from the gates Akua and I
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had opened, but not so spent I couldn't muster a resounding thunderclap
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when I struck the ground with the butt of my staff. The clap rolled
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across the ring, drowning out even the cheers, and I limped forward as
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the phalanges roughly shoved aside the few onlookers and gambled still
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in my way.
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``Disperse,'' I said, voice cold as steel. ``\emph{Now}, and I will not
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bother with arrests.''
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A shiver went through the crowd, though my eye was on the fighting Named
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-- which had ceased actively trying to stab each other, but were still
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close and holding weapons -- and the mood was doused rather
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comprehensively. I'd half-expected someone to protest and to have to
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make an example, but instead already the edges of the crowd were fraying
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as people made quiet escapes. Like a crumbling stone, the whole ring
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would fall apart before long. There was a flicker of remembrance, just
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as the edge of my mind, as I recalled when I'd been a slip of a girl in
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Laure and I'd watched Black empty a hall's worth of lords with but a
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handful of words. I'd sworn, that evening, that one day I'd have that
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power too.
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It had taken years, but I'd gotten there. I wondered, though, what that
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wary wild girl from the orphanage would think of the woman I'd grown
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into. I thinly smiled, knowing that she might well have added me to the
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list of monsters in need of killing.
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``Queen Catherine,'' Roland started, ``this is-``
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``Utter stupidity,'' I mildly said. ``But your role in it was minor and
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well-meant. Walk back to your tent, Rogue Sorcerer.''
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He caught my eyes, for a moment, and whatever it was he saw there it
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told him not to argue. My gaze lingered long enough to acknowledge his
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bow, then moved to the four remaining Named. I couldn't see the Silent
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Guardian's face under her helmet, but her stance was sheepish. As for
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the Headhunter, they -- no, he if I understood the face paint correctly
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-- looked rather unapologetic and entirely unembarrassed. \emph{He had
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an excuse for butting in, then}, I decided. Which left the two who would
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have been the spark for the entire mess. Archer and the Silver Huntress.
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``Who struck first?'' I asked.
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``She did,'' the Huntress said, her high-pitched voice grown shrill with
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anger.
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``I scored first blood,'' Indrani dismissed. ``You swung at me first,
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Alexis.''
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``That is true,'' the Headhunter jeered. ``On both counts. And the
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Guardian couldn't resist backing up her friend, could she? Hardly
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sporting, two on one.''
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My gaze returned to Silent Guardian, who took off her helm and revealed
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a tanned and dark-haired head. While she looked like she rather wanted
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to smash in the Headhunter's skull, to me she bowed in apology.
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``You only intervened after blood was drawn?'' I clarified.
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She nodded. I hummed, eyeing the Headhunter.
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``And you intervened out of your abiding love for fairness, I take it?''
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I mused.
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``You have me pegged,'' the Headhunter grinned.
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``You tried to stab me in the back, you-``
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The word the Huntress used was in tradertalk, but by the tone it wasn't
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a compliment.
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``You're both dismissed,'' I said, ignoring the Huntress. ``For having
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participated in a brawl, you're both docked pay for five months and
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you'll be assigned menial work under an officer of my choosing.''
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The Headhunter glared at me, opening his mouth, but his gazed dipped to
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my side -- where my fingers, without my notice, had taken to clenching
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and unclenching. His mouth closed.
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``\emph{Dismissed},'' I coldly repeated.
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The Silent Guardian offered a bow first, which I returned with a nod.
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The Headhunter did not go quite as politely, elbowing some of the last
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remaining soldiers in his way as he went. Of the Rapacious Troubadour
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there was no sign, I noted. The clever little shit had made good on his
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escape before I could rap his knuckles. Indrani and the Huntress were
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still facing each other weapons in hand, long knives for Archer and the
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spear for her old acquaintance. I cocked an eyebrow.
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``Is there a particular reason you two are still holding weapons?'' I
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mildly asked.
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I saw Indrani suppress a wince. She knew better than the Huntress that
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particular tone of voice did not herald a good mood on my part.
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``If she puts away her blades,'' the Silver Huntress began, ``I will-``
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``If I must make it an order, Alexis the Argent,'' I lightly
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interrupted, ``I might just lose my temper and fucking drum the two of
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you of this army before the eyes of gods and men.''
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With a quiet sliding sound, Indrani's long knives went back into the
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sheaths. I turned a dark eye on her: she'd timed that, I knew, just so
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that the Huntress would look like a recalcitrant malcontent and she the
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obedient subordinate. Unlucky for her, I wasn't buying it. The Silver
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Huntress blinked in discomfort, then reluctantly stabbed her spear into
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the ground. She folded her arms over her chest, looking rather
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defensive.
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``I'm going to ask you two questions,'' I said. ``You will reply to them
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calmly and concisely, without interrupting each other.''
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I got nod. Indrani's almost playful, as if it were set in stone she'd
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get out of this without losing any feathers. My irritation spiked.
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``Huntress, why did you attack an ally?'' I bluntly asked.
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She grimaced, though I'd wager more from the phrasing than remembrance
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of the punch thrown. The Lady of the Lake had not raised those girls to
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shame easily.
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``She got Lysander killed,'' Alexis the Argent harshly said. ``Same old
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story: Indrani has a lark and one of us bleeds for it. Only this time it
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didn't stop with \emph{bleeding}.''
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The anger in her voice was a hard, cold thing. I found the hate threaded
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in it unsettling, as it was too strong to be a fresh -- this was an old
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poison, just brought to the fore with a fresh wound.
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``I assigned her to the Third Army myself,'' I evenly said. ``And by the
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reports I've read, she fulfilled her duties admirably. As for the death
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of Beastmaster, I understand she fought and had an arm broken trying to
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prevent it.''
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The Silver Huntress' eyes hardened, turning to Archer.
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``Ranger, Black Queen, it makes no difference,'' Alexis bitterly said.
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``You'll always find skirts to hide behind, won't you?''
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``Say that again,'' Indrani hissed, hand going for a knife.
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``Watch your tongue, Huntress,'' I sharply said. ``And Archer, I ordered
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you not to interrupt. Don't make me repeat myself again.''
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She looked mulish but did not argue. She'd been more interested in
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protecting her pride than my `honour' there, I thought, so my sympathy
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was limited. I felt a faint breeze against my neck, gone in a moment,
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but did not let it distract me.
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``Archer,'' I said. ``You were struck with a fist. Why did you answer it
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with a knife?''
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Indrani's lips thinned.
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``I was insulted beyond reasonable expectation of restraint,'' she said.
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``You lying-'' Huntress began.
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My anger, never far, burned cold and sharp as once more an order I'd
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given within my rights was disobeyed. This, this I was done tolerating.
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The breeze came back, but it'd never been a breeze at all: it was a
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breath. Warm, coming through an open maw.
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\textbf{``Be silent,''} I Spoke.
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The Silver Huntress fought it. But as the Beast leaned over my shoulder,
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hacking out a laugh, even as she struggled her mouth snapped shut. I
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felt a vicious twinge of satisfaction that I did not indulge, but did
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not ignore. Archer's face was slack with surprise.
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``The two of you are damned disgraces,'' I said. ``On the same day where
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thousands fought and died turning back the Enemy, you attacked each
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other like drunken bulls before we'd even finished burning the corpses.
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\emph{Shame on you both}.''
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Indrani reared back like I'd slapped her. With a twist of will, I peeled
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back the order I'd Spoken at the Huntress. Her lips parted and she
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breathed out in pants.
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``Huntress, you are no longer commander for the heroes in this army,'' I
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said. ``The Rogue Sorcerer, who tried to put an end to this bout of
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idiocy, will take your place. The White Knight will handle the rest of
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your disciplining. I offer him this as a courtesy, but should you break
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the Truce again I will have no choice but to cease being polite.''
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My eyes moved to the other offender.
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``Your pay is docked for this entire campaign,'' I told Archer. ``You
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are not to speak with any hero outside of official duties without the
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explicit permission of the Rogue Sorcerer or myself. If you draw a blade
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on an ally again, I'll send you south like the child you insist on
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acting as.''
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Her hands clenched, but she stayed silent.
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``You've also lost the right to refuse assignments for six months,'' I
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finally said. ``You'll be accompanying the Firstborn on the raid
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tonight, so return to your tent and prepare.''
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Both of them glared at me sullenly, in that heartbeat eerily resembling
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each other for all their starkly different appearances. Grief was a
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bitter brew, I knew that better than most, and they were both fresh off
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the death of someone they'd cared for in a very complicated way. I
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understood why it'd come to this, I really did. But I was also a high
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officer of the Grand Alliance, sworn to enforce the Truce and Terms --
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which they had just broken in a spectacularly public and untimely
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manner. My duty was clear, and my anger not faked in the slightest. I
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stared them both down until they left, not bothering with a proper
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dismissal. The moment they left the Beast brushed against my shoulder,
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almost affectionately, and without a single lingering wisp it was gone.
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I could Speak again, I knew. It hadn't been a fluke. I could feel the
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way my will once more struck against Creation like a queen's decree.
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\emph{One step closer}, I thought, and breathed out. To what I did not
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yet know, but the shape I was beginning to discern was not unpleasant to
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my eye.
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---
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``Bleed them,'' I ordered the Firstborn. ``Under this moon, your only
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mandate is the reaping of deaths.''
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With nightfall had come our opportunity to savage the Dead King's forces
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badly enough that tomorrow's fighting would be the final stroke of
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annihilation. The Twilight Ways would allow the drow the harass the
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enemy's camp on the other side of the pass from every direction, all the
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while staying out of the jaws of the trap that'd been sprung on us the
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previous night: here would be no wards to keep us penned in, this time.
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Only skirmishes in the manner that'd been the lifeblood of the Everdark
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for a millennium, perhaps the only manner of war in which the Firstborn
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could be said to be the most accomplished of all Calernian peoples. And
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out the sigils went, under the command of Ivah and its subordinate
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sigil-holders.
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We went with them, a band of Named under my own lead. Archer, naturally,
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for I meant to keep her out of trouble and the camp for a span. To some
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a place in such a raid was considered a prize and so I awarded it
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accordingly: the Vagrant Spear came with us and the Headhunter as well.
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Roland I'd dragged along mostly on account of his expertise in breaking
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magics, knowing it was never wise to bet on Keter not having that one
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last trick up its sleeve. The choices had also been a balancing act,
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which naturally some noticed.
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``I'm sure it's just a coincidence,'' Archer sardonically murmured,
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``that your picks are even on both sides of the fence. Ever the
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diplomat, eh?''
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It was not an approving tone. Even the band was a good one, well-fitted,
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I suspected that in her eyes politics having had a say in making it
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tainted it irremediably.
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``Are you complaining I'm calming waters you helped unsettle?'' I
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replied.
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``I didn't pick that fight,'' Indrani told me flatly.
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``You still fought it,'' I said. ``You could have taken the lump, walked
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away.''
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Her face tightened with genuine anger.
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``I don't owe you that,'' she said. ``I don't owe \emph{anyone} that.''
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``Then spare me the comments,'' I curtly replied. ``I'll take shit for
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you, Indrani, but I won't take it \emph{from} you as well. If you want
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to talk of things owed, best remember that.''
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Not the most pleasant exchanges to precede going into battle, though
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only Roland seemed to notice the tension between us as we sidled through
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the Twilight Ways. He did not ask, that very Alamans instinct for
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discerning when a question would not be well-received sparing me the
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irritation of having to offer even a cursory explanation. Before long we
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were back in Creation, anyhow, and the raid claimed everyone's full
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attention. I'd left the command in Ivah's hand, knowing my Lord of
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Silent Steps was perfectly capable of leading sigils in war without my
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breathing down its neck, so I had the freedom to pick where I wanted to
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meddle. I had some thoughts already.
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I rather itched to get rid of the Pale Knight, if it could be done
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without paying a ruinous price.
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That plan went the way of dust, though, the moment we emerged from the
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Ways and found that the enemy was \emph{retreating}. The pass was still
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in the hands of undead forces, and if anything the northern end of the
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passage was more heavily defended than before, but we'd come out to the
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north of the enemy's camp -- in the flat plains between Lauzon's Hollow
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and the Cigelin Sisters -- so it was impossible to miss that there were
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departing columns. I sharpened my eyes with Night, seeking numbers.
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Maybe ten to twenty thousand massed to hold the pass in case we struck
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overnight, but the rest were mobilizing to leave. Hells, there were
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already scouting detachments north of us in the distance.
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``Leaving?'' the Headhunter sneered. ``Fools. We'll catch up through the
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Ways.''
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She -- it was she, tonight -- would have been right if our soldiers were
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things of stone instead of flesh and blood, but it wasn't the case.
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``I'm not sure we can,'' the Rogue Sorcerer replied. ``Not after today's
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battle.''
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One of these days, I was going to have to ask Roland exactly what kind
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of an upbringing had forged a man like him. He was surprisingly well
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learned in a variety of subjects, including quite a few that mages in
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the Praesi mold would have considered beneath their notice.
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``He's right,'' I said. ``Our army's fit to battle, tomorrow, but not to
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march.''
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Practically speaking parts of the army would be -- the Second Army and
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the Proceran detachments freshly returned, as well as a healthy chunk of
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the Dominion's warriors -- but it'd be risky to engage in pursuit with
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low numbers and it'd leave the force behind us very vulnerable. Unlike
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us, though, the Dead King did not have to give a shit about wounded or
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exhaustion or supplies. He could just order the march. There were three
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days between the Sisters and Lauzon's Hollow, so if we took a day to
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recuperate and immediately marched maybe we'd arrive at the Sisters
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before he did. \emph{Maybe}. But it'd be risky. If the Cigelin Sisters
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had been reinforced, we might end up walking into a positional disaster.
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``Then what is to be our purpose this night, Black Queen?'' the Vagrant
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Spear asked.
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I chewed on my lip. I wasn't comfortable risking a night battle with
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Keter, even assuming I could muster enough of my army to wage one
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alongside the Firstborn. That left only one logical move.
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|
``We'll not be hunting Revenants, after all,'' I said. ``Damage is our
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|
purpose. We thin their numbers as much as we can -- Binds over Bones,
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constructs over anything else. We avoid Revenants unless they're alone
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and keep close as a band. Understood?''
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|
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Archer, even after our terse exchange, remained entirely dependable.
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``Understood,'' Indrani replied, stringing her bow.
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``We hunt,'' the Vagrant Spear agreed.
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Roland sighed, offering a nod, and the Headhunter rolled her eyes.
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``I'll take a kill if it's offered,'' she insisted.
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``By all means,'' I mildly replied. ``Though if you disobey my order I
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will, naturally, discipline you accordingly.''
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The Levantine villain met my eyes and I smiled thinly. I'd killed harder
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women than her, and without too much trouble. After a moment she nodded.
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``Good,'' I said. ``Let's get to it, then.''
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|
It'd be a stretch to say that what followed was boring -- the danger
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|
might be limited, but it still existed -- but it did get\ldots{}
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|
repetitive. And it was dull from the start. Moving on foot we struck
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|
hard at the enemy's columns, targeting Binds and the occasional
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|
constructs or supplies before retreating back into the Twilight ways and
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|
popping out elsewhere. We were quick enough no Revenants came even close
|
|
to approaching us, though part of that must have been from the Firstborn
|
|
being a larger and significantly more damaging threat. We saw, maybe two
|
|
hours in, that things were actually turning starkly in favour of the
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|
drow.
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|
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|
Mighty were burning entire swaths of the enemy with impunity and
|
|
casualties were mounting among the dead with only paltry costs to the
|
|
Firstborn. Some of the sigils got too bold, though, it cost them.
|
|
Revenants, at first, but the struck sigil doubled down and called allies
|
|
-- only for the Grey Legion finally to make an appearance. It was a
|
|
major enough development that I parted ways form my band temporarily and
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|
called a sigil-holder to me for a report. Lord Soln bowed deep, but
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|
talked briskly. It wanted to return to the fray.
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|
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|
``The ironclads unmake the Night, Losara Queen, much as the carved
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|
pillars did during our previous raid,'' Lord Soln said. ``It appears
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|
they have also been invested with a ward that prevents access to the
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|
Twilight Ways. That surprise was\ldots{} costly. Between them and the
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|
Revenants, we were forced to pull back.''
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|
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|
``Give me a look,'' I ordered, extending a hand.
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|
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|
The sphere of Night was promptly offered and my damning suspicions were
|
|
confirmed. I'd seen the Grey Legion before, those hulking dead encased
|
|
in armour so thick it more of a rampart. Those armours had been
|
|
well-maintained and quite distinctive, so it was easy to tell that the
|
|
Grey Legion had been quite recently refitted. \emph{So that's what you
|
|
got out of this, Neshamah}, I thought. \emph{You tested the pillars and
|
|
wards on our Firstborn, and when they proved effective you used that
|
|
Crab lurking around somewhere to refit your Grey Legion into
|
|
drow-killers.} It wouldn't matter much here, where we could harass away
|
|
from their ranks and avoid them, but there would come a time in this
|
|
campaign when the drow would have to stand and fight.
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|
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|
And when they did, the Prince of Bones and his legion tailored to kill
|
|
Firstborn would be waiting for them.
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|
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|
``Go,'' I told Soln. ``Return to the fight. Pass my order that the Grey
|
|
Legion is to be avoided, lest we allow the enemy to further refine ways
|
|
to kill us.''
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|
|
|
It was worse than those troops just being a hard counter to drow, I
|
|
knew. It also meant that two of the three assets we had at hand that
|
|
could possibly deal with the Grey Legion without horrendous casualties
|
|
-- namely Akua and myself -- had just been made equally obsolete. Some
|
|
tricks would work to a limited extent, like flood gates, but I wasn't
|
|
confident in smashing them by myself anymore. And our last answer to
|
|
their kind, the Blessed Artificer, worked exclusively in Light. I was
|
|
not so confident that the Dead King did not have something to counteract
|
|
that as well, considering how much he'd invested in building up this
|
|
army. \emph{Fuck.}
|
|
|
|
Unpleasant as the revelation was, there was nothing to do but to
|
|
continue our raiding. I returned to my band and we resumed our attacks,
|
|
continuing to inflict bloody noses wherever we went until around Early
|
|
Bell. We were all beginning to slow, close calls were getting closer and
|
|
victories getting sloppier, so I called it at an end. The Firstborn
|
|
remained until a full hour before dawn, only then retreating into the
|
|
Twilight Ways. I slept for as long as I dared, which wasn't much, and
|
|
woke all too soon to be presented with corpses. Named and Revenants,
|
|
this time. I took two aspects from the Beastmaster before it grew
|
|
unfeasible to do more, but unfortunately I did not have the rights to
|
|
the Sage's body.
|
|
|
|
The way the Headhunter took heads from the foes they defeated fucked
|
|
with my ability to steal aspects, I discovered with displeasure after a
|
|
very frustrating hour pawing at Revenants fruitlessly, but I still got
|
|
two out of the kill the Vagrant Spear had made. Disappointingly weak,
|
|
those two, but I was never one to sneer at having another artefact up my
|
|
sleeve. When the war council held session afterwards, once more with the
|
|
full roster, there was no real disagreement over the decisions to be
|
|
made. The morning's scouting parties and found Lauzon's Hollow
|
|
abandoned, so we'd send out Named to smell out the traps no doubt left
|
|
behind and after them a forward force to hold the end of the pass.
|
|
|
|
The full army would only begin moving tomorrow at dawn, when we took to
|
|
the Twilight Ways in an attempt to catch up to the enemy. If we were
|
|
lucky, our surprise strike would seize the Cigelin Sisters before the
|
|
enemy arrived and we'd be able to pincer the Dead King between the
|
|
fortress and our field army. If not, we'd have to get\ldots{} inventive.
|
|
There were still too many unknowns for a proper battle plan to be made,
|
|
unfortunately.
|
|
|
|
There was a bit of a commotion before Noon Bell when the Gigantes
|
|
delegation finally caught up to us, but the giants were polite and it
|
|
did wonders for morale. I was sent a polite yet firm reminder that the
|
|
Gigantes would not fight unless attacked, and could not be used as war
|
|
casters by my order, but I had no qualms with that. Just as ward-makers
|
|
they'd be worth a dozen times their weight in gold, which would be no
|
|
small sum. The Gigantes, though, had been largely expected. I'd known
|
|
they were coming from the messages received from Neustal. When there was
|
|
once more a commotion at a sudden appearance though, it came as a
|
|
genuine surprise to me. I figured it might have been an early supply
|
|
convoy, at first, but Hakram swiftly send a phalange to inform me
|
|
otherwise.
|
|
|
|
It was Scribe herself who escorted the surprise arrival into my tent,
|
|
helping him into the chair with surprising gentleness. I dismissed her
|
|
with a look afterwards -- Hakam I'd trust with such a conversation, but
|
|
she was not Hakram.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' the Grey Pilgrim greeted me tiredly.
|
|
|
|
Tariq looked a month past exhausted and all too frail even for a man of
|
|
his age, which did not bode well. He was also supposed to be with Prince
|
|
Klaus' army, which boded \emph{significantly} worse.
|
|
|
|
``Tariq,'' I quietly replied. ``Can I offer you a drink?''
|
|
|
|
I did not bother to ask if something had gone wrong, for he'd not be
|
|
here otherwise. To my surprise, he took me up on my offer.
|
|
|
|
``Something stiff,'' Tariq Fleetfoot asked. ``It will keep me awake long
|
|
enough to get through this conversation, at least. I've not slept in
|
|
weeks.''
|
|
|
|
I silently revised my estimate of the trouble from `pretty bad' to
|
|
`fuck' as I poured him a full glass of brandy and pressed it into his
|
|
hand. He drank deep and offered thanks.
|
|
|
|
``We finally learned why the army in Juvelun did not chase us when we
|
|
marched past it towards Malmedit,'' the Grey Pilgrim told me.
|
|
|
|
``Did you,'' I said, already grimacing.
|
|
|
|
``We also found that missing army of two hundred thousand,'' the
|
|
Peregrine mirthlessly smiled. ``It was, after all, waiting for us in the
|
|
latter city.''
|