713 lines
34 KiB
TeX
713 lines
34 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-2-perplex}{%
|
|
\chapter{Perplex}\label{chapter-2-perplex}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``People are never easier to fool than when they believe they're
|
|
fooling you.''}{King Alistair Fairfax, the Fox}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When was the last time I'd gone even six months without sleeping in a
|
|
tent?
|
|
|
|
The thought amused more the more I thought about it. Elizabeth Alban,
|
|
the ol' Queen of Blades herself, had conquered the closest thing there
|
|
ever was to a Callowan empire before the Watch slit her throat in her
|
|
bed. My war record had led people to compare us on occasion --
|
|
apparently there was a ballad and everything -- but I actually figured I
|
|
had more in common with her successor: Richard the Elder. They only
|
|
started calling him the Elder in later histories, see, after he named
|
|
his eldest son Richard as well. At the time they'd called him `Richard
|
|
Saddlesore'. The sobriquet was well-earned, considering he'd spent
|
|
nearly all his reign moving from one side of his realm to another
|
|
putting down rebellions.
|
|
|
|
Most everything the Queen of Blades had conquered west of the Whitecaps
|
|
rose up the moment she died, and then Callowan nobles afraid of the
|
|
growing power of the Albans promptly crowned his cousin the moment he
|
|
crossed the mountains to handle said revolts. Praes had inevitably
|
|
thrown its hat into the ring when they smelled blood, of course, never
|
|
mind that they'd \emph{just} gotten whipped back into the Wasteland
|
|
under Regalia II. King Richard the Elder had actually done pretty well
|
|
at staving off the collapse of his inherited `empire' for a generation,
|
|
only ceding independence to a few western territories, but by the time
|
|
he'd died in his late thirties it'd been almost a decade since he'd last
|
|
set foot in his own capital.
|
|
|
|
It'd been much shorter than that, for me, but I couldn't deny that I'd
|
|
spent most of my reign as Queen of Callow outside my kingdom. There was
|
|
always another fire to put out, wasn't there? I raised a small cup of
|
|
wine in the air, drawing a raised eyebrow from Akua.
|
|
|
|
``You and me both, Richard,'' I muttered. ``May we rest our buttocks in
|
|
the next world.''
|
|
|
|
There was a moment of silence.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not touching that,'' Vivienne decided.
|
|
|
|
Hakram, the sole loyal soul in this nest of traitors, raised his cup of
|
|
water to match my toast and we drank. The four of us had convened in my
|
|
tent, around the beautiful table that Indrani was still adding to. The
|
|
last relief was parts of the Battle of Hainaut, and I was always careful
|
|
to sit on the other side. Robber would have loved the sight of him
|
|
striking a match and the Dead King's plans going up in flames, but I
|
|
still couldn't look at the carved goblin face without my gut clenching.
|
|
There were quite a few seats prepared, since even before most of us
|
|
stayed for the upcoming war council we had a report to entertain. We
|
|
couldn't really finalize our plans for the night without Masego's seal
|
|
of approval.
|
|
|
|
The phalanges had notified us he'd returned through the Ways and Zeze
|
|
wasn't the type to go wash and change before reporting, so I wasn't even
|
|
halfway done with my cup by the time he swept in past my guards. His
|
|
informal pupil followed, my waved hand stopping the legionaries from
|
|
taking issue with it, and I rolled my eye at Masego as he dropped
|
|
himself into the seat across from me. The black robes he still wore had
|
|
a subtle gold filigree, nowadays, but aside from that little of him had
|
|
changed since he'd first become the Hierophant.
|
|
|
|
He still bore the same long braids inlaid with trinkets, wore the same
|
|
black silk eyecloth over his burning glass eyes -- nowadays a match to
|
|
the one I wore over the eye the Hawk had taken from me -- and wore the
|
|
same comfortably worn old boots. The only change was that he'd begun to
|
|
grow a beard: still glorified stubble, for now, but it rather suited his
|
|
face and made him look older. A little like his father, actually, though
|
|
the Warlock's beard had been much fuller. He looked tired but in a good
|
|
mood, which I took as a good sign.
|
|
|
|
``The warding scheme has changed from what you outlined, Akua,''
|
|
Hierophant said.
|
|
|
|
Behind him, already forgot, his recent shadow was shuffling about on her
|
|
feet awkwardly. The Apprentice, the young Ashuran mage known as Sapan,
|
|
was coated in dust from head to toe and visibly exhausted. He'd probably
|
|
made her do all the groundwork, I thought with a twinge of amusement.
|
|
She looked hesitant to take a seat at my table without an explicit
|
|
invitation, so I took pity on her and caught her eye before nodding in
|
|
invitation. She bowed her head in thanks, sliding into a chair even as
|
|
Masego helped himself to a pitcher of magically cooled water with
|
|
equally magically obtained lemon quarters floating in it.
|
|
|
|
If you counted sending a cohort of goblins to empty High Lord Sargon's
|
|
orchards as magic, anyway.
|
|
|
|
``It was a possibility, as I mentioned when we discussed the matter,''
|
|
Akua replied. ``Yet the central patterns remained the same, I expect?''
|
|
|
|
Masego drank deep of his cup of water, filling it again almost
|
|
immediately and not noticing Apprentice's hand inching halfway towards
|
|
it before she drew back with a sigh.
|
|
|
|
``More or less,'' Masego agreed. ``They mostly made changes to more
|
|
strongly close off entry by Arcadia or the Ways. Recent modifications,
|
|
about as old as the Arsenal. I imagine the city will have received the
|
|
same work.''
|
|
|
|
We'd expected as much, but it was useful to know both those options were
|
|
off the table if it came to an assault on Wolof.
|
|
|
|
``You managed it anyway,'' I said, half a question.
|
|
|
|
Under the cloth he rolled his eyes at me.
|
|
|
|
``It was not that sophisticated a ward,'' Masego said. ``Of course I
|
|
cracked it, Catherine. It's done, and it was subtle enough they won't
|
|
notice.''
|
|
|
|
He mulled over things for a moment longer, dutiful in his attempt to
|
|
make a report -- though apparently not dutiful enough to ever read the
|
|
text about how to give them the Legions had written. Not for lack of
|
|
opportunity, since Juniper still had a scroll thrown into his tent at
|
|
least once a month. I was pretty sure Indrani was making a pyramid.
|
|
|
|
``Sapan crawled uphill for half an hour under an illusion to place my
|
|
artefact against the bottom of the wall,'' Hierophant noted. ``She did
|
|
well. She should get a raise.''
|
|
|
|
Apprentice look startled and a little flattered, but there was one
|
|
detail wrong there. I cleared my throat, but Hakram took one for the
|
|
team and spoke up first.
|
|
|
|
``We don't actually pay her,'' Adjutant informed him.
|
|
|
|
Masego eyed me skeptically, brow rising.
|
|
|
|
``Is that slavery?'' he asked. ``We're against that, I feel. \emph{I'm}
|
|
against that.''
|
|
|
|
``We're against slavery,'' I confirmed. ``There's laws and everything.''
|
|
|
|
He seemed pleased at me personally, like I actually had anything to do
|
|
about that.
|
|
|
|
``Experience could be considered to be her compensation,'' Akua
|
|
suggested.
|
|
|
|
Well, she \emph{had} been Evil for decades. That was bound to leave
|
|
marks.
|
|
|
|
``Spoken like someone who's never had to pay taxes in their damned
|
|
life,'' I muttered under my breath.
|
|
|
|
Her lips quirked in a sly smile but she did not deign to answer my
|
|
accusation. Gods, now I \emph{had} to pay the girl otherwise
|
|
fifteen-year-old me would have slit my throat over it. Mind you, that
|
|
girl had never been one to mind a bit of knifing so it wasn't as strong
|
|
a remonstration as you'd think.
|
|
|
|
``We'll put aside a stipend for you on top of what the Grand Alliance
|
|
already offers,'' I told Apprentice. ``Your help in this is much
|
|
appreciated, Sapan.''
|
|
|
|
The dark-haired girl licked her lips, nervous, and nodded.
|
|
|
|
``May I -- Your Majesty -- could I\ldots{} trade that for an hour a day
|
|
with Lord Hierophant's grimoires?'' she hesitantly asked.
|
|
|
|
I turned an eye to Masego, who actually looked rather charmed. He'd
|
|
taken well to her since Hainaut, I suspected it was half the reason
|
|
Hanno had agreed to lend her to us -- the other half being Arthur had
|
|
come along too and the two were thick as thieves.
|
|
|
|
``Keep her out of the dangerous stuff,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Of course,'' he immediately agreed, sounding surprised.
|
|
|
|
Ah, my mistake.
|
|
|
|
``Akua,'' I said, ``please go with them and tell him what the dangerous
|
|
stuff is.''
|
|
|
|
``I feel like the situation has gone in someway disastrously wrong, when
|
|
I am called upon as the voice of sorcerous restraint,'' the golden-eyed
|
|
shade noted, but she was still smiling.
|
|
|
|
``Tell me about it,'' I sighed.
|
|
|
|
She rose smoothly, offering me an ironic bow I rolled my eye at, and
|
|
linked an arm with Masego as he did the same. They immediately started
|
|
arguing in Mthethwa about what qualified as `safe' -- Zeze was insisting
|
|
that the smiting spell was exactly that, so long as you kept it aimed at
|
|
the enemy -- while Sapan followed suit after affording me a deeper bow.
|
|
|
|
``I'll see to the stipend,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``And extract a fuller
|
|
report out of them while you two handle the war council.''
|
|
|
|
Though the Night had been shattered and broken first by the Dead King's
|
|
sorcery and then Hierophant's even harsher mercy, I had still been bound
|
|
to the power in a deep and intimate way. Night came slower these days,
|
|
and it was granted only by the will of the Sisters where once it had
|
|
flown freely, but the mark of Sve Noc on my soul had not waned. I could
|
|
still sense the coming of night like a sixth sense, through that strange
|
|
instinct that was inhumanly accurate. And what I sensed told me that, as
|
|
usual, Hakram was right. Nightfall was only two hours away, which meant
|
|
we'd be cutting it close if we didn't split to attend to our duties.
|
|
|
|
``Much appreciated,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
We rose to follow the others after scratching a few notes on parchment
|
|
with his bone hand, sending in a few phalanges after him to prepare the
|
|
tent for the war council. Juniper, as was her habit, came in half an
|
|
hour early to make sure everything was to her tastes. I'd forgotten how
|
|
tall she was, in our years physically apart: she still had almost two
|
|
feet on me, and she was built \emph{thick}. With that grim, broad face
|
|
and the sharp white fangs she made for an even more imposing sight than
|
|
before now that we were older. Which made it all the more of a contrast
|
|
when Aisha followed in behind her, the very picture of a quintessential
|
|
Taghreb beauty with her carefully styled hair and elegant smile.
|
|
|
|
``Move the maps away from wine carafe,'' Juniper ordered a phalange in a
|
|
growl. ``Whose bright idea was that?''
|
|
|
|
``Good evening, Catherine,'' Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara greeted me.
|
|
|
|
The faint exasperation at her friend and superior's growling about was a
|
|
worn and beloved habit, almost made a game between them from years of
|
|
use.
|
|
|
|
``Aisha,'' I grinned back. ``Juniper.''
|
|
|
|
She turned to look at us, almost surprised, and nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine, Vivienne,'' she curtly replied.
|
|
|
|
Vivienne was no more offended than I, the two of us well used to the
|
|
Hellhound's ways. At times, though, it felt like she was being twice as
|
|
hard as she used to be to make up for the way she'd been knocked out of
|
|
the war for two years. Even now Aisha had told me that she visibly
|
|
trembled when exhausted and slept uneasily at least a few nights a
|
|
month. I wouldn't have placed her in command if she were any worse, even
|
|
if she would likely never have forgiven me for that, but sometimes I was
|
|
still\ldots{} concerned. I kept it to myself, though. There was no doubt
|
|
in my mind that she'd see it as an insult.
|
|
|
|
Our war council streamed in, either early or on time. General Zola Osei,
|
|
Hune's successor who'd ended up as Juniper's second in the cobbled
|
|
together First and Second Army we'd taken east -- some had taken to
|
|
calling it the Fifth as a jest. Grandmaster Brandon Talbot for the
|
|
Order, and for the Dominion the two lordlings that Tariq had placed in
|
|
my care before his death: Aquiline Osena and Razin Tanja. Named, too,
|
|
though their seats were lesser ones. Alexis the Argent, the Silver
|
|
Huntress, and Arthur Foundling with her. The Concocter didn't usually
|
|
show to meetings like this, but the Barrow Sword did and seated himself
|
|
by Vivienne. Ishaq would have been a good pick to leave out west, but I
|
|
had a purpose for him here: it wasn't a coincidence I kept making him
|
|
work with the Blood. The Grey Pilgrim had asked three boons of me, and I
|
|
intended on seeing all of them through.
|
|
|
|
``Let's not waste time,'' Marshal Juniper of Callow began, voice rough.
|
|
``Night's coming and we have a schedule to keep. We received
|
|
confirmation from Hierophant that the assault on Jinon is feasible, so
|
|
we'll be going through with it.''
|
|
|
|
Wolof was, in part, fed water by an aqueduct whose source was in the
|
|
hills to the northeast of the city -- the Jinon Hills. The place where
|
|
the structure connected with the city walls was fortified, naturally,
|
|
but so was the source in in the hills that the water flowed from. A
|
|
small but solid and heavily warded fortress had been raised there, over
|
|
an underground basin where overflow could be directed to when heavy
|
|
rains struck the aqueduct hard. There shouldn't be more than two or
|
|
three hundred soldiers there but all my officers were in agreement that
|
|
the fortress of Jinon -- I'd yet to get a definitive answer on whether
|
|
the hills were named after the fortress or the other way around -- would
|
|
be a nightmare to assault.
|
|
|
|
Tall and heavy walls, steep slopes all around and there was bound to be
|
|
a heavy mage contingent garrisoned. We \emph{could} take the fortress by
|
|
assaulting the walls, there was no doubt about that. We had the numbers.
|
|
But it would be very costly in casualties and we honestly couldn't
|
|
afford that. We were already going to be starkly outnumbered in the
|
|
latter parts of this campaign, throwing away lives on a hard assault
|
|
would be sheer stupidity. We did need the place, though, in part to
|
|
pressure Sargon and also because it was crucial to some other schemes I
|
|
had in mind. Which was why I'd sat with Juniper and Pickler to plot
|
|
Jinon's fall, and then sent Masego ahead to make sure what we intended
|
|
was possible.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be leading that part of our offensive personally,'' I said. ``For
|
|
that purpose, I'll be taking two cohorts, our false guards and whatever
|
|
warband Lady Aquiline deems fit to grant me.''
|
|
|
|
Which, given how Levantine honour worked, would lead her to\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``I will go myself,'' Aquiline Osena replied without hesitation. ``And
|
|
take my slayers as retinue.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{There we go}, I thought. One of them with me to keep an eye on,
|
|
and I'd pass off Razin to Hakram and the Barrow Sword.
|
|
|
|
``Good fit,'' I nodded, and she straightened her back some.
|
|
|
|
It was true, even if it wasn't the only reason she'd picked her most
|
|
prestigious unit to take into battle with me. Levantines were
|
|
surprisingly good at night work and surprise approaches, I'd found,
|
|
which I really should have expected given that they spent most of their
|
|
time raiding each other back in the Dominion.
|
|
|
|
``Taking Jinon will be tricky work,'' Juniper said. ``It could go badly
|
|
for us if Wolof tries a sortie at our back while it happens. Which is
|
|
why we'll be drawing Sargon's attention elsewhere as that attack
|
|
happens.''
|
|
|
|
She tapped a finger on our map of Wolof and its outskirts, everyone's
|
|
eyes following towards the west. It was the fishing villages by the
|
|
shore of the Wasaliti she was indicating. Sinka, they were commonly
|
|
called. There was no port proper for Wolof -- nowhere near enough river
|
|
trade to warrant it -- so it was all very informal, with the Sahelians
|
|
effectively owning one of the villages and keeping their own barges
|
|
there while the rest of the villages were left in the hands of merchants
|
|
and locals under the loose supervision of an appointed seneschal.
|
|
|
|
``The Sahelians no longer have a significant river fleet, courtesy of
|
|
Princess Vivienne during the Liesse Rebellion,'' Juniper continued,
|
|
which drew some laughs and cheers, ``but Sinka is still a major asset to
|
|
the city. It's a source of fish and lumber -- they send people across to
|
|
cut from the Greywood -- and they import goods from further south
|
|
through it. It will be a blow for them to lose the district.
|
|
Fortunately, its defences are limited. General Zola, if you would?''
|
|
|
|
The dark-skinned woman cleared her throat.
|
|
|
|
``Our scouts have confirmed a garrison of around five hundred, most of
|
|
them household troops,'' General Zola said. ``The walls are mud brick
|
|
and wood, and only three of the five villages have them. The barracks
|
|
\emph{are} reinforced, however, and built to be defended. There are also
|
|
two watchtowers, so we can safely assume we will be seen approaching.''
|
|
|
|
From the corner of my eye I saw Arthur leaning forward, itching to ask a
|
|
question but holding himself back. Going wider, I saw incomprehension in
|
|
the eyes of the Blood and even Ishaq. I raised a hand, stopping Zola
|
|
before she could continue her briefing.
|
|
|
|
``Squire,'' I said. ``Out with it.''
|
|
|
|
His eyes widened for a moment, but he gathered himself quick.
|
|
|
|
``Why are you so sure we'll be seen, ma'am?'' he asked the general.
|
|
``It'll be under cover of dark and we have scrying countermeasures.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, so that was it. I glanced at Zola, silently indicating I was going
|
|
to cut in. I forgot, sometimes, that he was young. And that some of the
|
|
people at this table had never truly had to consider what it would mean,
|
|
going to war with Praesi.
|
|
|
|
``Aisha,'' I idly said, ``would you please put your hand to a candle?''
|
|
|
|
A few people raised their voices to object in surprise and she gave me a
|
|
dry look for the dramatics, but the tent went silent when she placed her
|
|
hand over the open flame without so much as a twitch. She drew it away
|
|
after a few heartbeats, revealing to all smooth skin unmarred by burns.
|
|
|
|
``This is the Dread Empire of Praes,'' I flatly said. ``We've gotten
|
|
used to having the upper hand in sorcery, fighting out west, but leave
|
|
that behind you: we're now facing the makers of all the spells we
|
|
cribbed. It's in the blood here, Squire. If they don't have a spell then
|
|
they'll have someone whose blood lets them see in the dark, or a monster
|
|
that smells the wind, a pack of flying devils or a hundred other things.
|
|
They'll see us coming, count on it. It's what they \emph{do}.''
|
|
|
|
I'd not meant it to, but I caught a certain amount of pride in the
|
|
bearing of my Praesi officers after the tirade. I couldn't begrudge them
|
|
that, I thought. Where you were born, is stayed with you. Good and bad.
|
|
And in the end, I had not forgotten it was not only my countrymen who
|
|
had joined the voices to the tune of \emph{In Dread Crowned} when we
|
|
marched on Dormer. There was a difference between hating the high lords
|
|
of Praes and hating Praesi. I passed the proverbial baton back to Zola,
|
|
who finished outlining what we knew of Sinka's defences as well as the
|
|
plan of attack.
|
|
|
|
It was a fairly simple straightforward thrust with three thousand foot
|
|
from the south, led by Vivienne but commanded by General Zola herself,
|
|
with a screen of goblin skirmishers up front. Another two thousand foot,
|
|
half of them Levantine and under the overall command of Razin Tanja,
|
|
would move between the city and Sinka to dissuade a sortie. They'd have
|
|
the two thousand horsemen of the Order of Broken Bells waiting in the
|
|
wings for support. We'd keep a loose reserve of three thousand to throw
|
|
at either battlefield, just in case. Afterwards it came to distributing
|
|
Named, and there I took the lead again.
|
|
|
|
``The Silver Huntress will lend her skills to our skirmishers, though
|
|
she will remain an independent command free to act as she sees fit,'' I
|
|
laid out. ``Squire and Apprentice will accompany Princess Vivienne,
|
|
under her authority. The Barrow Sword will go with Lord Razin. The
|
|
Hierophant will be accompanying me, and as usual the Concocter is not to
|
|
be considered a combat asset.''
|
|
|
|
Lady Alexis worked better when left alone when she wasn't the leader,
|
|
I'd found. Not unlike Archer, though both would resent the comparison.
|
|
As for the two young Named, this was as much about them keeping
|
|
Vivienne's head on her neck as it was the other way around. Admittedly,
|
|
when it came to Arthur I did have other motives. Getting him used to
|
|
obeying my chosen successor was a necessary precaution, as far as I was
|
|
concerned, especially now that the Jacks had established that a dynastic
|
|
marriage was a dead end should he become a locus of opposition. Finding
|
|
that out had been relatively simple: we'd sent one of the Jacks around
|
|
his age to make advances, he'd gently let her down by telling her he was
|
|
not interested in women that way.
|
|
|
|
Adjutant had insisted I could have simply \emph{asked}, but this was
|
|
probably safer. The Squire might not easily figure out why he'd been
|
|
asked the question, but he'd know people with stronger insights into
|
|
Callow's politics who very much would.
|
|
|
|
``Expect surprises,'' Juniper gravelled, concluding the council. ``We'll
|
|
be surprising them too, but don't forget for the moment they had the
|
|
same day to plan that we did.''
|
|
|
|
I toasted to that, finally polishing the last of my wine, and to war we
|
|
went.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I didn't like being blind, and I didn't mean in the losing-an-eye-sense.
|
|
|
|
Although, to be fair, I wasn't enamoured with that one either. What I
|
|
meant, though was that I'd gotten used to being able to rely on Night to
|
|
get a good view of the battlefield even as fights were happening.
|
|
Unfortunately, drawing on that kind of power so close to mages of the
|
|
calibre Wolof was going to field would be like unveiling a lantern in a
|
|
black pit. Impossible to miss. Being robbed of that view was making me
|
|
restless, though, especially since I was distinctive enough in
|
|
appearance that I couldn't be on the front seat of either of the large
|
|
ox-drawn wagons going up the smooth hillside path. It was pretty
|
|
comfortable huddled out in the back, at least, except for the part where
|
|
Masego was absolutely demolishing me at shatranj.
|
|
|
|
``How is everyone I know so good at this game?'' I complained in a
|
|
whisper, losing my last mage to a pin.
|
|
|
|
``I still play with Indrani regularly,'' Zeze informed me just as
|
|
quietly. ``Although you have always been terrible at this.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm pretty widely known as a cunning schemer, Masego,'' I told him, a
|
|
little affronted.
|
|
|
|
I sent a knight forward, hoping to at least make my death throes
|
|
interesting. If I had to lose to him a fourth time in a row, someone was
|
|
going to get killed.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' he happily acknowledged. ``One who just lost her chancellor.
|
|
Kingtip in three.''
|
|
|
|
I cursed, and it was an awfully close thing when I decided against the
|
|
cart suddenly shaking and toppling the board by happenstance. Damned
|
|
thing was enchanted to stick anyway, I wouldn't be fooling anyone. The
|
|
two of us were playing in the dark, since it was as day to our common
|
|
sum of exactly one meat eye. We were nestled between the kind of barrels
|
|
and crates that Wolof used to send oil and foodstuffs up to Jinon,
|
|
though naturally they were actually full of soldiers. Who I hoped we'd
|
|
been whispering quietly enough had not all heard me getting repeatedly
|
|
brutalized at shatranj by my own court wizard.
|
|
|
|
There were only twenty soldiers by wagon, since more would drag
|
|
noticeably on the road, but we had more forces at hand. Some of them
|
|
were even visible. Armours the Callowan treasury had kept since the Doom
|
|
of Liesse had been brought out of the vaults and polished up, meaning
|
|
that the thirty handpicked Soninke legionaries making up our drivers and
|
|
foot escort of the wagons were in genuine Sahelian household armour.
|
|
That ought to sell the illusion some, though I wouldn't be relying
|
|
entirely on it. We had more forces out there in the hills, hidden. Part
|
|
of it was a cohort of regulars we'd walked out of the Ways out of easy
|
|
detection range and then snuck closer to the fortress, while the rest
|
|
was Aquiline Osena's handpicked slayers. Two hundred of them.
|
|
|
|
Those moved around like shadows, probably the finest human sneaks I'd
|
|
seen -- not quite in the league of goblins, but close.
|
|
|
|
Our wagon began to slow and I cast a glance at Masego, whose eyes
|
|
swivelled in their sockets. He nodded. We had arrived. As Hierophant
|
|
began putting away the shatranj board I swallowed a groan of pain and
|
|
began wiggling around until I had my elbows on a crate and could
|
|
discreetly look out the front of the wagon. Sergeant Kadeem was a large
|
|
and bulky man, enough so that I'd heard a few jokes about him being a
|
|
dark-skinned orc, but he was deft with the reins. His family were
|
|
travelling traders, apparently. Moving slightly to the side of him to
|
|
get a better angle, I had my first close up look at the fortress of
|
|
Jinon. Heavy stone blocks, I noted, granite that looked to have been
|
|
fitted together without mortar.
|
|
|
|
No wonder Pickler had been adamant trebuchets wouldn't do much.
|
|
|
|
I studied the gatehouse that'd be our way in closely, as it was the key.
|
|
Two squat bastions crowded a gate wide enough for a cart to pass and
|
|
then some, pale yellow magelights hovering above it. There were two sets
|
|
of gates, both thick wood barded with steel, but they were open: only
|
|
the portcullis in front of them both was down. From above, the gatehouse
|
|
rampart, I hard voices hailing us in Mthethwa. It was Captain Diara who
|
|
answered them -- we'd picked her because she was native to Wolof and
|
|
cold-blooded by reputation -- and she put irritation in her voice as she
|
|
told them to hurry up so she could unload the goods and leave. Masego
|
|
got closer to me and I glanced at him curiously.
|
|
|
|
``My amendment to the wards appears to be intact,'' Hierophant murmured.
|
|
|
|
I nodded. So far, so good. The guards above insisted there had been no
|
|
planned supply run, which was true, but we'd thought ahead: Captain
|
|
Diara waved around papers she informed them were proof, signed by her
|
|
superior in the city. Hakram was a splendid forger and Akua had helped
|
|
get the details right, should they actually bother to look at them. See,
|
|
if we were infiltrating a Proceran fortress then the papers would be
|
|
what they looked at. This was a Praesi fortress, though, so when the
|
|
agitated guards went to get their office the man in question scoffed and
|
|
ordered one of them to go tell a scrying mage to contact the city for
|
|
confirmation.
|
|
|
|
This would be where the plan fell apart, if I hadn't brought Hierophant
|
|
along.
|
|
|
|
We waited for some time, Masego's eyes on the sky, and eventually there
|
|
was a subtle ripple of power as Hierophant \textbf{wrested} the scrying
|
|
spell the slightest pit, pulling apart the magic so it failed. Thrice
|
|
more they tried it, and Masego played it artfully: on the second try he
|
|
let it pass through for a moment, severing the connection late. We were
|
|
pretending that the city was under magical attack, that it was why the
|
|
spells weren't working. Captain Diara, meanwhile, pretended to grow
|
|
increasingly agitated. She asked for names, claimed she would speak to
|
|
her relatives in the High Lord's service about this, cursed them for
|
|
lazy incompetents. I was impressed, she was definitely getting a
|
|
commendation. We'd been at this for more than half an hour now, so the
|
|
officer who'd ordered scrying fell back on the tried and true method of
|
|
all career soldiers: he kicked the problem up the ladder.
|
|
|
|
``Describe me the armour of the officer they went to get,'' I asked
|
|
Masego.
|
|
|
|
He did, quietly, and my lips thinned. That was the fortress's commander,
|
|
for sure. They'd not wasted time going to the top, then. The woman in
|
|
question, who introduced herself to Captain Diara as Lady Semira, proved
|
|
to be a calming presence. She ordered for soldiers to take position
|
|
behind the portcullis and then told Diara to come forward alone with the
|
|
papers proving she was truly here under orders. \emph{So now we're
|
|
putting Hakram's forgeries to the test}, I thought. Diara didn't
|
|
hesitate, passing the papers before the portcullis closed anew and they
|
|
were sent up to Lady Semira.
|
|
|
|
``These appear to be in order,'' Lady Semira said, looking down from
|
|
above.
|
|
|
|
If I bent, I could make out a glimpse of her standing above. Tall and
|
|
imperious, with eyes a hue between yellow and brown.
|
|
|
|
``Is there a particular reason, Captain Diara, that this run was not
|
|
handled by Tabansi instead?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
I tensed.
|
|
|
|
``Didn't ask, my lady,'' Diara replied. ``If it doesn't help me get back
|
|
into bed, it's not my concern.''
|
|
|
|
``So I see,'' Lady Semira replied, tone amused. ``It will only be a
|
|
moment, captain.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out. Had we gotten away with it?
|
|
|
|
``She is gesturing at soldiers,'' Masego told me, studying the scene
|
|
with his eldritch eyes. ``One just went towards the barracks. Others are
|
|
being told to\ldots{} head towards the gate?''
|
|
|
|
Evidently we had \emph{not} gotten away with it. It was the second
|
|
string to our bow that'd make or break this.
|
|
|
|
``Progress?'' I quietly asked Hierophant.
|
|
|
|
``Not there yet,'' Masego replied.
|
|
|
|
Sighed. That meant there was only one thing for me to do. I cracked the
|
|
side of my neck and dragged myself up.
|
|
|
|
``Signal me when the time comes,'' I asked him.
|
|
|
|
I dropped into the front seat next to Sergeant Kadeem, who hid his
|
|
startlement well. I pulled the Mantle of Woe tight around me and went
|
|
rifling through the pockets, finding my pipe with a little noise of
|
|
satisfaction and unceremoniously beginning to stuff it with wakeleaf. I
|
|
handed Kadeem a match and he gallantly struck it on his arm before
|
|
lighting my pipe for me. Good man.
|
|
|
|
``Tell everyone to be ready to fight,'' I murmured around the rim.
|
|
``Soon.''
|
|
|
|
He froze then nodded, retreating into the back of the wagon and leaving
|
|
me to pull at my pipe under the stare of the soldiers up on the rampart.
|
|
I breathed in deep the of the acrid smoke, letting it sear my lungs
|
|
before I spat it back out in a stream. Up there, behind the crenelation,
|
|
Lady Semira was watching me through narrowed eyes as her fingers
|
|
tightened around the stone until the knuckles paled. Even out east it
|
|
seemed that my reputation preceded me.
|
|
|
|
``Black Queen,'' the commander greeted me, voice laudably even. ``It
|
|
seems we now dispense with the deceptions.''
|
|
|
|
I shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``What was it that gave it away?'' I asked, genuinely curious.
|
|
|
|
``Captain Tabansi was publicly drowned last week, for having stolen
|
|
Sahelian goods and sold them on the black market,'' Lady Semira said.
|
|
``The entire garrison was made to watch.''
|
|
|
|
Which, admittedly, would make it difficult to lead a supply run. Not
|
|
impossible, mind you. This \emph{was} Praes.
|
|
|
|
``That'd to it,'' I ruefully said.
|
|
|
|
If we'd had Scribe with us I might have heard of even a relatively minor
|
|
incident like that, but I'd sent her off with Archer. It had paid off in
|
|
other ways, but there were costs to everything.
|
|
|
|
``I am under orders to avoid fighting you if I can, Your Majesty,'' Lady
|
|
Semira told me. ``Your ploy was well-crafted, but it has failed. My
|
|
soldiers are on the walls and my mages awake. I would invite you to
|
|
withdraw, and offer my oath no attempt will be made to hinder your
|
|
departure.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled, because I knew something she didn't. When I'd sat with Pickler
|
|
and Juniper to figure out how we might take Jinon as bloodlessly as we
|
|
could, eventually we'd stumbled unto an interesting question: where did
|
|
the shit go? Jinon had one source of water, and they couldn't foul it.
|
|
It fed right into the aqueduct that Wolof used. So a pit under it? The
|
|
fortress had existed for several centuries, though, it would have filled
|
|
by now. If this were Callow it would be a matter of chamber pots and
|
|
dumping them somewhere far enough the smell wouldn't reach the walls,
|
|
but Wolof was \emph{rich}. Nobles served in its garrison too, people not
|
|
used to roughing it.
|
|
|
|
So instead they'd had built latrines, sophisticated little things that
|
|
dumped their filth neatly outside the fortress into a series of pits.
|
|
|
|
``You're polite,'' I said, approvingly. ``So let me make an offer back:
|
|
if you and your garrison surrender, you will be treated under Callowan
|
|
terms for prisoners. No mistreatment, regular meals and you'll be
|
|
offered up at the first prisoner trade with your sworn lord.''
|
|
|
|
It was Praesi who'd built the latrine, so of course it wasn't that
|
|
simple. They were a paranoid bunch, Wastelanders. The latrines tunnels
|
|
were too small for someone to crawl up and they were warded in case
|
|
someone tried to send devils through instead. The Sahelians had,
|
|
however, made a small mistake. I breathed in the smoke, the end of the
|
|
pipe burning like a red eye in the dark, and when I breathed out I let
|
|
the grey drift upwards. No wind, tonight, so it stayed around me like a
|
|
crown of fumes.
|
|
|
|
``I do not deny your power, Black Queen,'' Lady Semira carefully said.
|
|
``Yet the wards of this fortress are old and powerful. You will not find
|
|
them easy to batter down. And steel will not carry this day if your
|
|
might cannot. I can only-''
|
|
|
|
A hand tapped my shoulder. Masego, giving me his signal. I smiled. I'd
|
|
kept her talking long enough, baited enough soldiers to the walls.
|
|
|
|
``It's over,'' I interrupted. ``You've lost.''
|
|
|
|
Her face tightened with anger.
|
|
|
|
``Close the gates,'' Lady Semira ordered.
|
|
|
|
There was a long heartbeat of silence as nothing happened. Then I put
|
|
fingers to my mouth and whistled, meeting her eyes. Barrels and crates
|
|
cracked open, soldiers crawling out armed to the teeth, and out of the
|
|
dark came marching the first of the two cohorts I'd brought. Aquiline
|
|
and her slayers crept up the hill, still unseen. But the killing blow
|
|
was something else entirely. There was a distant sound of cackling, and
|
|
a heartbeat later the portcullis began rising to the vivid horror of the
|
|
Sahelian soldiers manning the gate. The cohort of goblins I'd sent up
|
|
the latrines had seized the most important room in the gatehouse, the
|
|
one controlling the portcullis and gates. There would be no preventing
|
|
our entry. To hammer that point home, Hierophant came out of the wagon
|
|
to sit by my side and put an end to any hope of wards or sorcery
|
|
stopping us.
|
|
|
|
See, the latrines were too small for \emph{humans} to crawl up them. And
|
|
the wards had been meant to stop devils going up, not goblins, because
|
|
the Grey Eyries were on the other side of Praes and no Sahelian had ever
|
|
had to defend this fortress against them. All it had taken to make my
|
|
cohort's infiltration entirely unseen was Masego disabling the small
|
|
part of the wards that would trigger an alarm if something large entered
|
|
through the latrines, the kind of small detail that it would take an
|
|
in-depth check of the wards to notice.
|
|
|
|
But, as this land of diabolists ought to know, the devil was in the
|
|
details.
|
|
|
|
``Sleight of hand, Semira,'' I told my enemy, not unkindly. ``If you're
|
|
watching me, you're not watching where you should be.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed in deep of the wakeleaf, then blew out one last breath.
|
|
|
|
``So,'' I said. ``Are you going to surrender now, or do I need
|
|
to\ldots{} how did you put it again? Ah, yes.''
|
|
|
|
I met her eyes with my own.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Batter you down},'' I coldly said.
|
|
|
|
The possibility of violence hung in the air, thick as smoke, while the
|
|
noblewoman weighed her chances. She eyed my forces once again, then
|
|
finally grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``Jinon is yours, Black Queen,'' Lady Semira said.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Well}, I thought as my men began cheering, \emph{it's a small
|
|
victory, but it's a start.}
|