637 lines
28 KiB
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637 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-65-cross-check}{%
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\section{Chapter 65: Cross-Check}\label{chapter-65-cross-check}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Victory lies in understanding the intentions of the enemy.
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Therefore, a general with no intentions cannot be beaten.''}
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-- Isabella the Mad, Proceran general
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\end{quote}
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``So what is this place called again?''
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``Maillac, my queen.''
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I idly glanced at the man who'd replied to my question. Sir Brandon
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Talbot, Grandmaster of the Order of Broken Bells, had not been much
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changed by the war. I was often surprised by that. His once-long hair
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had been cut short but the beard and the strong build remained just the
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same as when I'd first met him, sitting in a cell where Juniper had
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tossed him. Many of the great officers of the Army of Callow and other
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hosts strained under their burden of their position, but on the contrary
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Brandon Talbot had taken rather well to this war. It helped, I
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suspected, than this was all simpler the kinds of war he'd known before
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-- be it the Folly, where he had fought to maintain Praesi rule under my
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banner, or the Tenth Crusade when he'd followed a homegrown villain
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against invading heroes.
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There was no one alive who could bring horrors to bear that would rival
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the Dead King's, but for all the madness this was the kind of war that
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my people were most comfortable waging: black and white, no truce with
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the Enemy. I sometimes envied that he was not in a position to truly
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grasp the kind of ugly dealings necessary to keep something like the
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Grand Alliance afloat. A great good too often came at the costs of a
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hundred petty evils, like a saint standing on a pedestals devils had
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paid for.
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``Gods, and to think someone believed it a sound notion to build a
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village here,'' I said. ``They must have been drunk.''
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The dark-haired nobleman -- one of the few of the breed I caught myself
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occasionally liking -- let out a small amused noise.
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``Some of the land north of Harrow is not so dissimilar, I am told,''
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Brandon Talbot said. ``I was taught as a boy that the people there are
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usually poor but skilled hunters and fishermen. As bowmen they have a
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high reputation in certain parts, though the Deoraithe are a hard shadow
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to escape in that art.''
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``Not much left to hunt or fish here,'' I replied. ``Usually isn't,
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after the Dead King had a go.''
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If the Second Army was to make a stand against a wildly larger amount of
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enemy soldiers without getting butchered and overwhelmed, picking the
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ground it was going to make that stand on was crucial. We'd dug through
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maps and records as well as the officers from Hainaut that Princess
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Beatrice had leant me before picking the abandoned village of Maillac,
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and for all that the place was a hole in the ground for our purposes it
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was perfect. See, for all that undead had less trouble with difficult
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terrain than living soldiers they didn't actually get to ignore that
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terrain. Swamps, bogs, or other combination of mud and scrum water and
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crawling things were easier for undead to go through because unlike
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people they wouldn't get cold or tired or sick -- or even attacked by
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animals, usually.
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But in no way did that mean a swamp was something \emph{easy} for undead
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soldiers to march through.
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The skeletons still wore armour, still weighed heavy, and as a rule
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tended to be significantly less deft and agile than living soldiers
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besides. Marching through a mire would wreak havoc on their lines and
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they'd be damned slow going through mud -- or, if they weren't, would be
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so lightly armoured that our priests would scythe through them like
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wheat with volleys of Light. It was a comparative advantage the undead
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had, not an absolute one. And that meant that a place like Maillac made
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for very good grounds to defend: the village had stood on a relatively
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large peninsula surrounded by swamplands in every direction but the
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southeast, and with few trees in the immediate area that would obscure
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line of sight when the dead came from the west.
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We wouldn't be able to fit the entire Second Army on the peninsula that
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locals apparently called `the Boot' -- seen from a high hill in the
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distance it looked vaguely boot-like, I'd been told after asking -- as
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ten thousand soldiers would be much too many, but we could fit at least
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half and then position the rest on the broader solid grounds behind the
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peninsula, which were thankfully rather difficult to access. To the
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north and south there were rock formations and deep water, both of which
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would screw with enemy advance even worse than the swamps. That meant
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that open grounds around the Boot would be the best approach for the
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dead, short of circling rather far around.
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Which sounded like a good idea for them, at first glance, as it would
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allowed them to attack us from solid land an attempt an encirclement of
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our army divided between the Boot and the broader shore. I almost hoped
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they made the mistake of attempting that, though, as the amount of time
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it would take them to both gather large enough forces and circle around
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us meant my army would get to delay the dead long enough for Prince
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Klaus to get away and then escape ourselves without even giving battle.
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While I might have chosen Maillac as a battle site first and foremost, I
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wouldn't complain if we got to evacuate it without first having fought
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said battle.
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Not that we'd be so lucky. I'd stripped ten thousand legionaries and my
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finest horse from the rest of the army before dangling them like juicy
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bait out here in the wilds, the Dead King wasn't going to miss the
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opportunity to bloody us a bit. Still, I'd not come this far by leaving
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things to chance.
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``I can see little use for the Order in the battlefield you have chosen
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us, Your Majesty,'' Sir Brandon admitted. ``Yet it is not your habit to
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act without purpose, so I must presume there is one.''
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``The swamp would be hell on the horses, and you're much too heavy,'' I
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agreed. ``But I don't actually intend for you to fight \emph{here},
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Talbot.''
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Blue eyes brightened with understanding.
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``We are to go a'raiding, then,'' the Grandmaster smiled.
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``And I with you,'' I agreed. ``We'll be taking the Twilight Ways. Once
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the Second Army has begun setting up here, you and I are going to make
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such a nuisance out of the Order in these parts that Keter will
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\emph{have} to come and give us a fight.''
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``To vex the Enemy is always a pleasure,'' the bearded knight said,
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sounding pleased. ``Even more so if we confound him into an even greater
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defeat.''
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I looked at him, for a moment, and glimpsed the part of his kind that my
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people had loved for so long. That fearless, hardy breed of nobles
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that'd known sword and spear just as well as dances and laughed as the
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charged under the banners of the Fairfaxes and the Albans to turn back
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the invaders of the east and the west. War wasn't a trade to him, I
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thought, not like it was to the Legions and so many in the Army. War was
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part of who he was, just as much as his name or his blood. \emph{War
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isn't just what we do, Catherine, it's what we are}, Juniper had once
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told me. She'd been speaking of her own people, that night, but so often
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I found that Praes and Callow were more deeply intertwined than either
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care to admit.
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``I mean to do more than just vex,'' I said. ``Half the world still sits
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up when our war horns are sounded, Talbot. I mean to brand that fear
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anew in the legions of the dead.''
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His fist struck his breastplate over his heart, the thump pleasantly
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solid to the ear.
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``We are at your command, Queen Catherine,'' the knight said.
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For a few years yet, I thought. It would be enough.
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I would \emph{make} it enough.
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---
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Sapper-General Pickler, whose notion of the decorum due to her rank
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usually varied between `sounds like Commander Waffler's problem' and `if
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I'm not covered in dust I'm no doing this right', crouched down on the
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shore and dipped a crooked green finger in the mud. After taking a long
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sniff, she licked it and hummed.
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``So?''
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``Rich silt,'' Pickler told me. ``Good material. Mind you, mudbricks in
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this humid a locale would be foolish. There's clay, though, and we can
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use that for fired bricks. The trees in this dump aren't for much of
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anything, though. I'll need companies out foraging for decent firewood
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if we're going to be cooking bricks.''
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It was in moments like this that I was awe at what something like the
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War College actually stood for, what it achieved. That little exchange
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we'd just had alone was something that'd be impossible to have in most
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armies of our age. See, there were engineers in the ranks of Procer and
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the Free Cities with knowledge much like Pickler's. Neither goblins nor
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Praesi had a monopoly on such things. But none of these had the
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\emph{rest}. Pickler had been taught about mages, so she understood that
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we couldn't just use spells to make her fired bricks: we'd half-kill our
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mages with exhaustion before we were anywhere done. Pickler had been
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taught about defensive tactics, so she knew how quickly I'd need the
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bricks and that if I didn't get enough making any was a waste of time:
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that meant making many fires, and firewood.
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Pickler had been taught about limited manpower logistics, too, and so
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combining all these teachings in a few moments she'd put together a
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proposal. One tailored to the rough amount of people I'd be able to
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spare, and how many would be needed to achieve what needed to done in
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our current time strictures. In effect, several companies of regulars on
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rotation with attached mages for Twilight Ways access.
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Most of the contemporary armies of my allies and enemies had all this
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knowledge, in practice, but none of them had it concentrated in the same
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person. Maybe a few exceptional fantassin captains might have most of
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these competences, or rare Helikean generals, but those individuals
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would be rare. My father had made the War College into a place that
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could make entire companies of those rare individuals \emph{every year}.
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There were many who still thought the Conquest had been an outlier, an
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anomaly made possible only by the genius of the Black Knight and the
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Marshals of Callow. Those people were fools. The Conquest had been won
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in stone classrooms a decade before armies lined up on both sides of the
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Fields of Streges.
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``You'll have them,'' I said. ``How much can you fortify in two days?''
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``The Boot will be walled up, and we'll have platforms for those of my
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ballistas you didn't hand off to your toy general,'' Pickler replied, a
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tad peevishly. ``We'll have to use palisades for the part stretching
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between the end of the boot and the deep waters to the south. We won't
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be able to put up anything else in time.''
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I slowly nodded, fixing the picture in my mind's eyes. The peninsula was
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where I wanted clay walls the most, since it would be suffering the
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brunt of the enemy assault. Palisades to the south would get rough,
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given that Keter usually was capable of toppling those by throwing
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enough corpses at them -- to say nothing of constructs or Revenants --
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but we weren't trying to make an invincible citadel out of this chunk of
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swamp. Favourable fighting grounds would have to be enough.
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``And the northern grounds?'' I pressed.
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The peninsula on which Maillac was built looked like a boot fitted to a
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particularly fat foot, but it wasn't jutting out of perfectly straight
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dry -- well, dryer anyway -- land. To the south a wavy shoreline
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connected to the top edge of the boot kept going for about two hundred
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feet before jutting rocks and deep water made the grounds impractical to
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pass. As Pickler had said, we'd cover that stretch with palisades. But
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from the uppermost top edge of the boot the shoreline instead went
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straight for maybe forty feet before jutting upwards for a hundred feet
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and curving east into the second mass of rocks and deep water that were
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the reason I'd picked Maillac as our battlefield in the first place.
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It meant there was a stretch of water between the Boot and the shore,
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which to make things even worse wasn't even particularly deep. Skeletons
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coming through the mire would use it as a ramp to flood our northern
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flank, it was pretty much a given.
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``If we had a week I'd sink a stone wall and drain it,'' Pickler replied
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with a sigh that rattled through her teeth, ``but we don't. The mud is
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too soft there, Catherine, and unlike the Boot or the deeper shore
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there's no solid layer to steady a palisade on.''
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I grimaced.
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``So we make a fort deeper in and dig in for a rough fight,'' I
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summarized.
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``I can make fortified nests for scorpions, with an eye to firing on
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anything that emerges from the water,'' my Sapper-General said. ``But
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anything beyond that would take more time and hands than we have to
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spare.''
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She sounded almost apologetic, which was rare for her.
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``These are imperfect grounds,'' I said. ``I didn't expect you to wave a
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magic wand and make them into an impenetrable fortress. Already you're
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doing wonders, Pickler.''
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And I wasn't lying for her benefit there: that in the span of a mere two
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days my sappers would be able to turn this defendable stretch of swamp
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into a makeshift fortress was beyond impressive. When I'd made the
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decision to use only the Second Army and the Order as delaying forces,
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I'd been able to make that decision comfortably because I'd known almost
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half of the sapper corps remained with me instead of manning the siege
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engines that by now General Abigail would be using to reduce the Cigelin
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Sisters. I relied on my sappers a great deal, which I knew they took
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pride in, but I would not let the burden of unrealistic expectations
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crush them.
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``I want to do more,'' Pickler admitted, to my surprise. ``There won't
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be another war like this in my lifetime, Catherine. This is the one I'll
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get to fight, the one I'll get to make my teeth on.''
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She clicked her teeth, the flash of needle-like row betraying what had
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to be genuine irritation. Goblins were easier to read than humans, in
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some ways -- most didn't bother to hide their body language the way a
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deceitful human would, since most of my race never learned goblin body
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subtext.
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``I work with imperfect tools, the way all my predecessors have,''
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Pickler said, ``but it\ldots{} irks, that I know we could be better.
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That we could match Keter blow for blow, if we had the time and the
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coin.''
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I hid a fond smile. Leave it to my Sapper-General to be irked by being
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on the lesser side in an arms race with the Hidden Horror. Even most
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heroes, those chosen few blessed with the belief of promised victory,
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usually limited their ambition to survival and eking out a win when it
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came to the Original Abomination. Yet Pickler of the High Ridge tribe
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had been forged of goblin steel tempered in Wasteland fire, kept sharp
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by the whetstone of the Uncivil Wars. When faced with dreadful might,
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the Sapper-General of Callow's nature was not to cower but to crave to
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surpass it.
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``War's not over,'' I said. ``One day it will take us to the gates of
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the Crown of the Dead itself, Pickler.''
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I offered her a smile.
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``On that day, I expect you will find your coffers filled to burst and
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few requests beyond acquiescence,'' I said.
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``Gobbler grant me breath until then,'' Pickler of the High Ridge tribe
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grinned, all teeth and malice, and offered a quick bow. ``I'll get
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started on the work, Your Majesty.''
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I nodded back, mind already moving. The Order of Broken Bells was
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already mustering for the raids, picking out targets with General Hune
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and Hakram, and now my Sapper-General had assignments and hands to see
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it through. It was time, then, to see to the\ldots{} irregulars.
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---
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I'd begun with Masego because I'd figured it would be less unsettling to
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look at than whatever it was that Akua wanted the Rapacious Troubadour
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for, but alas it seemed that hubris had come around to bite me in the
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tit. That Hierophant would be standing atop a flat floating stone was
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sadly not unexpected, nor were the smaller rocks circling around him
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with visibly shifting runes carved into them. That the Grey Pilgrim
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would be stand with him there, though, head cocked to the side as if he
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were listening to someone talking as he \emph{corrected} some of the
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runework, very much was.
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``- being very helpful,'' I heard Zeze say, tone appreciative. ``I could
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talk to Catherine about remuneration, if you'd like, or draw from
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Arsenal discretionary funds.''
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Well, that was nice of him.
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``A kind thought,'' Tariq drily replied, ``but the Ophanim require no
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compensation for their help.''
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Wait, had he been talking about paying the Choir of Mercy? Godsdamnit,
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Masego, we \emph{definitely} didn't have room for that in the budget. I
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cleared my throat as I got closer, as it seemed both of them were too
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involved with their work to be paying attention to their surroundings.
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``Catherine,'' Hierophant greeted me. ``Come to have a look?''
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``You might say that,'' I replied. ``Pilgrim, always a pleasure to see
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you.''
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I did not bother to specify that I'd not actually expected to see him,
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though, as it was pretty much implied by his mere presence here.
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``And you,'' the old man said, sounding amused. ``We have been lending a
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hand to the Lord Hierophant, you see, as his work has proved to
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have\ldots{} surprising provenances.''
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``I figured out how angels smite people,'' Zeze said, sounding very
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pleased with himself. ``More or less. When the Ophanim tried to kill us
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all at Lyonceau I got a good look.''
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``That was not their intent at all,'' Tariq sighed. ``The death of the
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Tyrant of Helike -- a necessity, I'm sure you'll agree -- was all that
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was sought.''
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``By smiting,'' Masego helpfully specified. ``Which I am now
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reproducing, only without the angels.''
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``Are you now,'' I faintly said. ``How lovely.''
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I looked to the Pilgrim, expecting an elaboration but receiving only a
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blithe shrug.
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``It's not an inaccurate description,'' Tariq said. ``They're very
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interested in seeing if it works.''
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``Are they now,'' I said, tone grown even fainter. ``That's nice.''
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``Now,'' Masego said, ``I know what you're thinking.''
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He tried to lean against a rotating stone but mistimed it and almost
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stumbled off the floating stone, the Pilgrim discreetly pulling at his
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robes so he wouldn't.
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``I doubt that,'' I noted, ``but go on.''
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``If a Choir does not power the smiting, what \emph{does}?'' Hierophant
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enthusiastically asked.
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``The bone-deep existential dread of all who witness your works?'' I
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suggested.
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``Too narrow, but you're along the right path,'' Masego encouraged me.
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I glanced at Tariq.
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``I thought you Light-wielding types had objections to blasphemy,'' I
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said.
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And this felt, like, maybe two or three steps past simple blasphemy. I'd
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say we were uncovering fresh new heretical horizons, but that was always
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a hard claim to make for anyone remotely familiar with Praesi history.
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``Smiting is being used as a purely technical term here, with no
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religious connotations,'' the Grey Pilgrim serenely replied.
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\emph{Tariq, you shit}, I uncharitably thought.
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``Besides, if this endeavour succeeds it may be possible to reproduce it
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purely using Light,'' the old man airily continued.
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Meaning that Zeze's brain was being utterly terrifying, as usual, but
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that in this particular case it might lead to a skill usable for heroes
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down the line -- and Crows, wasn't \emph{that} particular prospect worth
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a fucking shiver or two? -- so he was willing to not only refrain from
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objecting but actively help. I narrowed my eyes at the smiling old man,
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knowing Goods might just be getting the better bargain here. There was
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no guaranteed that Hierophant would ever be able to pass this down to
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anyone else on my side, so the knowledge might very well die out. The
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Choir of Mercy, though, would not forget a damned thing.
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And the Ophanim were not, in my experience, shy about handing out this
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sort of knowledge to their favourites.
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``How fortunate,'' I replied with a grunt. ``What is it you're using,
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Masego?''
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``I had thought to use Night, at first,'' the dark-skinned mage idly
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said, ``but Sve Noc did not seem willing. So instead we will draw on
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Arcadia for power and use runework to give the power shape.''
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I blinked.
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``And that'll work?'' I asked
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``Should it not, I expect the result will be a large explosion followed
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by temporary instability in the weave of Creation on a local level,''
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Tariq noted.
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``We can use that too,'' Masego happily told me. ``So there's really no
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downside.''
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I closed my eyes and breathed out. Well, he wasn't exactly \emph{wrong}.
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Mind you, Zeze tended to be very reasonable even when suggesting utter
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lunacy so that wouldn't be a first. And this seemed like a functioning
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weapon, if an unstable and dangerous one. I opened my eyes.
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``This won't hurt our own?'' I asked.
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``No,'' Masego replied, tone serious. ``Precautions were taken. It will
|
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not kill your soldiers.''
|
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``Then all hail the mighty smiters,'' I drily said. ``Have fun, you two,
|
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and try not to bring down Arcadia Resplendent on our heads.''
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Which might have been a tad hypocritical of me to say, I mentally
|
|
acknowledged as I limped at and left them to their work, since \emph{I}
|
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was the one who kept stealing lakes from there.
|
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|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I caught a few bits of the song on the wind before I saw either of them,
|
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the almost mournful tone of the Troubadour's voice matching the sad
|
|
strums of his cithern. The tent was wide open, leaving the song to take
|
|
to the sky unhindered.
|
|
|
|
\emph{``- we of steel,}
|
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|
|
\emph{Forged in the east}
|
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|
|
\emph{As turns the wheel}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And carrion feast.''}
|
|
|
|
I knew precious few Praesi songs, unless you counted Legion ones, but
|
|
this one I'd heard of before. \emph{The Tyranny of the Sun}, it was
|
|
called, an old war song from the days of the Sixty Years War. It'd been
|
|
banned since, but banning a song only rarely succeeded at stamping it
|
|
out. Making it forbidden tended to raise interest, if anything. The few
|
|
Praesi tunes I'd heard -- \emph{Count the Nights}, \emph{Upon All the
|
|
World} and \emph{Burning Kiss} -- tended towards the boastful or the
|
|
romantic, not the almost wistful beat of this one. It was, I suddenly
|
|
recalled, a favourite of my father's. Given that this had to be a
|
|
request if Akua's, I almost smiled at the thoughts.
|
|
|
|
Neither of them would be particularly pleased to hear they had something
|
|
in common, even something as small as a liking for a song.
|
|
|
|
I found the both of them seated inside. The Rapacious Troubadour was
|
|
sprawled indolently in a chair, long crooked fingers dancing across his
|
|
cithern as he smiled. Dark-haired and pale, the man would have been
|
|
handsome if nor for the too-red lips and insincere eyes. Though he wore
|
|
armour when battle was at hand, he rarely bothered without immediate
|
|
danger to move him: his tunic and cloak were of tasteful cut and good
|
|
make, in shades of purple, while both trousers and boots were leather.
|
|
He'd been looking at Akua with something like hunger in his gaze when I
|
|
entered, though he immediately averted his eyes. \emph{Ah, but is it the
|
|
looks or the soul that draw your attention?}
|
|
|
|
The shade herself had claimed a small table and a folding chair, leaning
|
|
forward with quill and parchment in hand -- which bared an interesting
|
|
expanse of smooth skin, given the generous neckline of her red dress
|
|
patterned with what looked like peacock feathers in blue. I'd seen
|
|
enough of Akua actively trying to appeal to suspect she wasn't even
|
|
trying to be enticing at the moment. She was just good-looking enough
|
|
that even at work it looked like she was posing for a painting.
|
|
|
|
``Dearest,'' the devil in question said, raising her head to smile at
|
|
me. ``How kind of you to visit.''
|
|
|
|
The Troubadour eased into an interruption of the song, the notes fading
|
|
naturally, and then offered me a short bow.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' Lucien greeted me. ``Ever a pleasure.''
|
|
|
|
``Is it now?'' I mused. ``Good to know.''
|
|
|
|
``Do not bully my singer,'' Akua chided me. ``He has been singing the
|
|
loveliest songs.''
|
|
|
|
``The Tyranny of the Sun?'' I asked, cocking an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Somewhat maudlin, I know,'' she smiled, ``but it has such a pleasant
|
|
melody.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled at her, knowing something she did not and amused by the secret.
|
|
|
|
``Got anything out of it?'' I asked, glancing at her parchment.
|
|
|
|
A magical formula, by the looks of it. I could recognize certain parts
|
|
of it from our lessons -- wait, no, this was a ritual but it was meant
|
|
to be used with Night. It just looked like sorcery because she was
|
|
basing its workings on Trismegistan principles. I leaned in, frowning as
|
|
I took a closer look. The scale of the power used would be large, since
|
|
she was using the notations that meant every number mean should be
|
|
multiplied by a thousand, but the duration would be\ldots{} short? Maybe
|
|
just a few breaths. And I wasn't recognizing the end of her formula at
|
|
all, there wasn't even a boundary strength or an allowed variance.
|
|
|
|
Mind you, for all my lessons I was still essentially a drunken monkey
|
|
trying to decipher the works of one of the greats of our age so my
|
|
incomprehension should not be a surprise.
|
|
|
|
``I believe so,'' Akua smiled. ``It occurred to me, my heart, that the
|
|
strengths of Night lie in its flexibility. Yet this comes at the price
|
|
of a weakness, namely that it is only ever second best in all the many
|
|
things it can accomplish.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{If even that}, I thought. I called it the power of a thief for a
|
|
reason. She wasn't wrong, though, and if anything she was underselling
|
|
it: given equal Night and Light on both sides of a struggle, Light would
|
|
win ten times out of ten. Entities wielding Light and Night weren't
|
|
necessarily bound to that outcome, mind you, but in a straight fight it
|
|
had to be said that Light always won. Considering that the prevailing
|
|
theory was that Light had been made by the Gods Above when Creation was
|
|
first built and that Night was only indirectly the work of the Gods
|
|
Below, that made a great deal of sense to me.
|
|
|
|
``Let's say I agree,'' I replied. ``What follows?''
|
|
|
|
``A great deal of power that could benefit from a\ldots{} more defined
|
|
method of channeling,'' Akua said. ``One more deeply aligned with
|
|
Creation.''
|
|
|
|
I studied her for a moment, then discreetly flicked my eyes towards the
|
|
Rapacious Troubadour. Her smile widened.
|
|
|
|
``Huh,'' I said. ``Is that\ldots{} wise?''
|
|
|
|
She read between the lines, catching on to my very delicate question of
|
|
`are you \emph{sure} using the soul-eating villain as a Night-channel
|
|
isn't going to fuck us over?'.
|
|
|
|
``It is my ritual,'' she easily replied. ``It remains in my hands from
|
|
beginning to end.''
|
|
|
|
Meaning that the Rapacious Troubadour would be a ritual component more
|
|
than an active participant. Ah, I was already slightly more comfortable
|
|
with this. Still not exactly eager, but damned few of the tricks we
|
|
needed to win this war were anything that could reasonably be called
|
|
safe.
|
|
|
|
``And you're sure you'll get results,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``I have proved the underlying principles,'' Akua said, and leaned back
|
|
as if to offer me a closer look at her notes.
|
|
|
|
Yeah, that would serve no real purpose. I had an almost decent handle on
|
|
basic Trismegistan spell formulas these days -- might not be able to
|
|
\emph{make} one, but was reliably able to pick out which part did what
|
|
-- but taking a gander at the kind of work that lay behind crafting an
|
|
entirely new ritual, one working and Night and somehow involving a
|
|
Named, would be absurd. I did not have the knowledge to parse the
|
|
knowledge necessary to grasp the principles behind the basics of what
|
|
was involved there.
|
|
|
|
``I'll take you to your word,'' I easily said. ``But what is it your
|
|
ritual will do, exactly?''
|
|
|
|
She gestured for me to come closer and whispered the answer in my ear. I
|
|
drew back with a startled look.
|
|
|
|
``You're sure?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``The effects could be inferior to my expectations, but there will be
|
|
effects,'' Akua calmly said. ``Of that there can be no doubt.''
|
|
|
|
I let out a low whistle.
|
|
|
|
``Well, here's hoping it takes fully,'' I said. ``It would make a real
|
|
difference, and not just in the coming battle.''
|
|
|
|
``I expect Trismegistus will mend the weakness eventually,'' the shade
|
|
shrugged. ``Yet for now we have the element of surprise, so a success
|
|
can be reasonably hoped for.''
|
|
|
|
Mhm. She'd not used that name as a coincidence: it was a veiled reminder
|
|
that there was a reason Praesi magic was called \emph{Trismegistan}
|
|
sorcery. We were using his own methods against him, which meant our
|
|
advantage was likely to be quite temporary.
|
|
|
|
``I'll dare hope for it, then,'' I said. ``Did I glimpse correctly that
|
|
you'll be using a song?''
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' Akua said, sounding pleased. ``Do you have a particular
|
|
preference? Lucien has proved to have a remarkable repertoire at his
|
|
disposal.''
|
|
|
|
I glanced at the smiling man in question. Yeah I figured he would, what
|
|
with all the godsdamned souls he'd eaten.
|
|
|
|
``It's your ritual,'' I said. ``Let it be your song as well.''
|
|
|
|
``You do me honour,'' the golden-eyed beauty said. ``As it happens, I
|
|
did have a thought.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh?''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Stars From the Sky},'' Akua said in Mtethwa. ``It is ancient,
|
|
but remains sung for good reason.''
|
|
|
|
``Never heard of it,'' I replied, ``but I'll look forward to mending
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
She inclined her head.
|
|
|
|
``I will endeavour,'' Akua Sahelian smiled, ``not to disappoint.''
|