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583 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-13-footing}{%
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\chapter{Footing}\label{chapter-13-footing}}
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\epigraph{``To hold a strong defensive position is not enough. You must
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force the enemy to attack it, which is the difference between tactics
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and strategy.''}{Extract from `Considerations on Warfare' by Marshal Grem One-Eye}
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We made good pace.
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The Army of Callow had been hammered into a host that could move on the
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quick by years of campaigning abroad, and for once we weren't too
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starved on trained officers: the combination of the First and Second
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Army that Juniper commanded had benefitted from the officer pools being
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combined. It'd be Hells to split the armies back up when it was done, of
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course, but that was a problem for the future. There simply weren't
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enough potential soldiers left back in Callow for the First and Second
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to be raised back up to full strength separately anyway, they'd be
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staying combined until the end of the war. The `Fifth' Army, as the rank
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and file had taken to calling it, wasn't going anywhere for some years.
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The Levantines under Razin and Aquiline weren't a drag on our pace, the
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way they'd sometimes been in Hainaut. Now that they were relying on our
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supply train instead of their own, the Dominion warriors were as cut
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free from a tether: they were usually \emph{quicker} on the march than
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my legionaries now. The lighter armour and years of raiding had trained
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it into them. The Twilight Ways made for a pleasant reprieve from
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Wasteland weather, even if we'd only ever tasted the outskirts of that,
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and we advanced faster than Juniper had anticipated. We had to slow down
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around the end of the first week, waiting for reports about the march of
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the other armies.
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Marshal Nim and her legions kept to the same brisk pace they had so far,
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which meant in about two weeks both our armies would be forced to emerge
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from the Ways or face the possibility of a contested crossing should we
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be beaten to returning to Creation. The surprising part was that Dread
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Empress Sepulchral seemed to have been gaining on the Black Knight: she
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was in hot pursuit, still a week behind even though the Legions were
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using the Ways and she was not. It seemed impossible, and the Jacks
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confirmed there was more to it a few days later. It was not Sepulchral's
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entire army that'd been keeping up that breakneck pace but instead a
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large vanguard.
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Two thousand household troops and her entire cavalry contingent,
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Vivienne's people believed.
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``She's trying to keep up the pressure on Marshal Nim by having a force
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nipping at her rear,'' Juniper opined. ``They won't engage, but they'll
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raid her supply lines and try to hammer any detachment she splits from
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her main host.''
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``If the Jacks have people in Sepulchral's camp able to learn this, the
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Eyes will too,'' Vivienne noted. ``I have no doubt Malicia informed her
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Black Knight of the plan before it even began.''
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I snorted.
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``Old Abreha's counting on it,'' I said, reluctantly admiring. ``She's
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trying to goad the Black Knight into engaging us hastily.''
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Sepulchral had nothing but gains to make from the Loyalist Legions and
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the Army of Callow getting into a messy, ill-planned battle.
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``It's cleverly done,'' Juniper admitted. ``If Nim sends a force south
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to make the vanguard back off, she has to either leave it there -- and
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weaken herself just before she fights us -- or slow her march so it can
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rejoin. Which would buy time for the slower part of Sepulchral's army to
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catch up.''
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I shared a look with my marshal. It was an inspired tactic, playing to
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the strengths of her army and the weaknesses of the Black Knight's
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positions. It was, in other words, not a tactic that Abreha Mirembe or
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her generals had likely come up with. Sepulchral was a skilling
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intriguer but a solidly average battle commander, looking at her record.
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And as far as we knew neither Aksum nor Nok had any noteworthy military
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talents in their upper ranks. So who was planning Sepulchral's campaign
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for her? I glanced at Scribe, who had been silently keeping notes as we
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spoke.
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``Make it a priority to find out who's been giving out those orders,'' I
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ordered her. ``The last thing we need is for Sepulchral to become a
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genuine threat.''
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``Ime has been concentrating on putting out the last gasps of my
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influence in the Wasteland,'' Eudokia said. ``It might be possible to
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find this out, Queen Catherine, but I will have to burn most of the
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agents I have in Sepulchral's camp.''
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Meaning she would no longer be confident of catching anything going on
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there afterwards. We'd be relying solely on the Jacks, and Vivienne's
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spies had been playing catch-up with the Eyes since the moment they were
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first raised without ever quite touching that prize. I hesitated, then
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turned to Juniper.
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``How confident are you of beating that army if you know who commands
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it?'' I asked.
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She did not answer immediately, considering the question seriously.
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``Seven parts in ten,'' Juniper of the Red Shields finally said.
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I nodded. Good enough for me.
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``Do it,'' I ordered Scribe.
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Aside from that little surprise, the beginning of our southern offensive
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was trotting along nicely. As the second week since we'd left the
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outskirts of Wolof began, it looked like as if our preferred outcome
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would come to pass: a decisive pitched battle with the Loyalist Legions
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at least a week before anyone else was close enough to intervene.
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There'd been no real hiccup to our advance so far, which only made it
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natural that Creation would then promptly snatch the ground out from
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under our feet. Unlike some of the past instances of the Gods pissing in
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my morning gruel, however, this time the snatching was not a fucking
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metaphor.
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Half-past Morning Bell, as we marched along the Twilight Ways, the
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ground \emph{literally} fell out under my army.
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Great cracks spread across the ground, fast enough my officers had time
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to do little more than shout warnings, then great chunks of the Ways
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fell down into Creation like shattered glass panes. It was all the more
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hellish for the suddenness of it: there'd been no warning, not ominous
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sign. In thirty heartbeats my army had turned from a smoothly marching
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column into a groaning and wounded beast, spread out in chunks in the
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middle of a particularly vicious Wasteland dust storm. There was enough
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order in my ranks that I managed to rustle up two mage lines and
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Hierophant to form a shaky protective ward around the column, keeping
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the whipping dust out of our faces long enough that priests from the
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House Insurgent could begin seeing to the wounded and dying.
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I ran around trying to get proper wardstones in place, hindered by the
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fact that they'd been built to protect the shape of camps and not
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columns, but before I got anywhere the storm suddenly died. It'd lasted
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perhaps half an hour after my army fell, and just as suddenly as it had
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come it was gone. Clenching my teeth, I got to finding out the damage.
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It'd been a short fall down, at least. That'd taken off the edge some.
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Hardly more than four feet in most cases, and the Order of the Broken
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Bells had been in the vanguard ahead of the fall so it'd mostly been
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remounts that'd broken their legs falling.
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The grassy grounds from the Ways that'd fallen with us began to decay
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quickly and the emanations were somewhat toxic so we had to move away
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and reform, but order was getting restored as lieutenants saw to their
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lines. Numbers for casualties and wounded quickly made it up the chain,
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eventually getting to Juniper and myself: only seventy-nine dead, but
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almost three hundred wounded. We'd also lost enough horses for the Order
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that their staying power was compromised for longer-term engagements.
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Not necessarily an immediate concern, but by the time we got to Ater any
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knight who lost a horse would be fighting the rest of the campaign on
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foot.
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There'd been more painful damage in a strategic sense.
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``We're paralyzed for at least two days,'' Juniper bluntly said. ``That
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we still have \emph{any} supply wagons capable of moving is a miracle,
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and if the healers can't fix the oxen pulling them we're going to have
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to kill the beasts.''
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Which would further slow us, for all that it'd add to our meat reserves.
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We could compensate by putting the Order's remaining remounts to work
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pulling the wagons and arranging relays of legionaries -- mostly orcs,
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given their greater body strength -- but it'd still be a blow to
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mobility. Hopefully our healers could salvage at least some of the
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beasts of burden while our sappers repaired the broken supply wagons.
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The only silver lining was that Pickler's obsessive care for her field
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engines meant they'd been insulated from shock well enough the fall had
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caused need only for minor repairs and replacements. We wouldn't be
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headed into battle with the Legions of Terror without working war
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engines.
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``We need to find out where we are,'' I sighed. ``And if returning to
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the Ways will just see this happen again.''
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I'd already asked Masego to look into it. Wasteland weather was
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infamously dangerous for good reason, but ripping an army out of the
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Twilight Ways was going too far. My instincts screamed enemy action, but
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\emph{which} enemy?
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``I've sent out scouts,'' Juniper said. ``I'll send someone to fetch you
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when they begin coming back.''
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``I'll see what Hierophant has for me, then,'' I said, groaning as I got
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back to my feet.
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I'd almost lost Zombie the Sixth to this mess. He'd broken a leg and
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bucked me off, but the priests seemed to think he could be made better.
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I'd be stuck borrowing a mount from the Order until he was fit to ride
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again, though. Masego wasn't hard to find, considering he was still
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exactly where I'd left him. The hastily raised tent was kept standing
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more by wards than wood, not that he seemed to notice. Earlier he'd been
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using scrying rituals with some difficulty, going through the
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Observatory, but now he was instead running spells on the storm dust
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he'd sent Apprentice out to gather. Though the outer ward would have
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warned him of my entry he did not immediately turn. I left him to his
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spells, waiting in silence as I leaned against my staff. He turned to me
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when he was good and ready.
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``It was a ritual,'' Hierophant said.
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I glanced at the dust but he shook his head.
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``This is simply dust,'' he said. ``We are near the Gust Ribbon from
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what I gathered while scrying, so the dust storm itself was drawn out of
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it by the first part of the ritual and only then empowered. There are
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striations in the magic saturation of the dust that make the sequence
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plain to see.''
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Near the Gust Ribbon wasn't saying much, as it was a winding and moving
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region that stretched across the northwest third of the Wasteland.
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Wasn't overall reassuring, though, considering it was called that
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because it was plagued by sudden and powerful storms that had a nasty
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tendency to spill out in every direction. It wouldn't be safe to stay
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here long even if we didn't get hammered by another ritual.
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``So someone leashed a dust storm, empowered it with a spell and sent it
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our way?'' I asked.
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``It was quite brilliantly done,'' Masego said. ``The dust, you see,
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solved the issue of air being able to hold too little magic for most
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large-scale ritual work. The storm was turned into an array that thinned
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the boundary between the Ways and Creation -- which is already
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\emph{very} thin -- until it was on the very edge of shattering.''
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``Are you telling me that the \emph{physical weight} of my army is what
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shattered the Twilight Ways?'' I flatly asked.
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``As I said,'' Masego smiled, ``quite brilliantly done.''
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I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
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``This is Malicia,'' I said.
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It had to be. People had been telling me again and again that weather
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sorcery was the specialty of Taghreb, and there was only one army out
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there that fielded a significant amount of high-calibre Taghreb mages.
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More than that, we'd known for months that while High Lady Takisha of
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Kahtan had played coy with sending the Tower actual troops she'd not
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been shy with providing mages instead. It'd take more than just a few
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cadres of talented mages to pull off something like this, though. I knew
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that and so did he.
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``This is Akua Sahelian,'' Masego corrected, confirming my fear. ``There
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are maybe four other practitioners in Praes capable of such a ritual,
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but there appears to have been an uncontrolled surge in the middle of
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the span -- I suspect mages grew exhausted and their replacements had
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inadequate control -- that was masterfully redirected instead of allowed
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to collapse the entire working.''
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He paused.
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``I would be capable of this,'' he said, without a hint of a boast. ``My
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father was, and so was Dumisai of Aksum. I would not bet on Naziha
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Sarrif being so capable, however, and she is the finest mage in the
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south. There is only one woman in all of Praes with the talent and
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schooling to do it.''
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His face was calm.
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``I have already told you her name.''
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That was what happened, I told myself, when you let someone as dangerous
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Akua go to your enemy's side. She didn't stop being dangerous, it was
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just turned on you instead. I breathed out, suddenly tired. I had
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seventy-nine names to learn. I owed that, and truthfully more than was
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possible to repay.
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``I found something interesting, however,'' Hierophant said. ``The way
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the boundaries of the ritual array were defined was\ldots{} peculiar.''
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I cocked an eyebrow at him, silently urging him to continue.
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``Much more of the Ways fell than was necessary,'' Masego said.
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``Without looking at the equations myself I cannot be certain, but it
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seems to me that the power could have been made\ldots{} narrower.
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Concentrated on ensuring there would be a faller from higher up instead
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of such a large swath of territory.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``What are you saying?'' I asked.
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``That no one capable of crafting such a ritual,'' Hierophant evenly
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replied, ``would have made such a mistake in ignorance. It was a
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choice.''
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A pulled punch, he was saying. Seventy-nine dead, my entire army
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paralyzed, and still a pulled punch. Not without reason had we once
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named that woman the doom of an entire city. I silently nodded, at loss
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for words. Glowing, fiery eyes studied be from beneath the eye cloth.
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``I do not understand why she is no longer with us,'' Masego admitted.
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``Is this about revenge? Indrani tells me that in Hainaut you had the
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opportunity to let her go to her death. I had thought -- and she -- that
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you refused because you were letting go of all this long prices
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business.''
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He paused.
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``She is no longer here,'' Masego plainly said, ``and so I am
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confused.''
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``One hundred thousand dead, Zeze,'' I quietly said. ``She doesn't get
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to have that swept under the rug. Nobody does.''
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``So it is revenge,'' Masego mused, brightening for having understood.
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``Why let her go to the Tower and become the Warlock, then? It does not
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strike me as a very good vengeance.''
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``Because she'll hate it,'' I quietly said. ``It will be everything she
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has been taught to want, but even as she gets it every victory will
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taste like ashes in her mouth. And when reaches the end of that line, of
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that dreadful dream, it will not be joy she feels.''
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It would be horror, I thought. Horror at the prospect of spending the
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rest of her life wearing shackles around her wrists that she would have
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put on herself. And the moment she understood that, understood that she
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wanted to be \emph{better} than the girl she'd once been instead of
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simply an older, crueller version of her, I would be there. Waiting with
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an offer that she would accept.
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``And after?'' Masego asked.
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``She trades a broken dream for a broken crown,'' I murmured.
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I did not believe we could destroy the Hidden Horror, not truly. Not now
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and even less after we gifted him the crown of Autumn. So he would need
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a prison and a warden. A box he would surely break in time, a pit he
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would dig himself out of, but a realm of endless paths? That might do
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the trick. There he would be cursed to wander forever alone, as a broken
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queen on a broken throne kept him imprisoned until the end of times. And
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that queen's throne would lie in the heart of the city she had doomed,
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perched atop her very folly as she kept the peace of Twilight. She would
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make the choice herself, willingly and without coercion. That was the
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retribution I owed a hundred thousand screaming souls: an endless vigil
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holding back a greater evil, knowing every part of it was of her own
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making.
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I was Callowan. My prices were long, and paid twice.
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---
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The first scouts returned with word of a town to our southeast. Scrying
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wasn't working well in the region, which Masego believed to be because
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of the same ritual that'd brought us down. To sum up a quarter-hour
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explanation, `much magic in sky dust makes magic in sky difficult'. I
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shared this summary with the table, which prompted him to admit he
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wished he had a way to disown me. On the bright side, he also believed
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that while it was still unsafe to return to the Twilight Ways for at
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least two weeks it was unlikely that we were going to be hit with a
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storm again. The same phenomenon that screwed up scrying would make it
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`astronomically difficult' to get another ritual going. I'd intended on
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going back into the camp after the conversation, but Juniper had notions
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of her own.
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``You're pacing back and forth like a tiger in a cage,'' the Hellhound
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said. ``Make yourself useful instead. Take knights and have a look at
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the town, find out where we are.''
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``I'm not \emph{pacing},'' I reflexively defended, but she had a point.
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I took thirty knights of the Order and Scribe too, since she was the
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woman with the maps. Eudokia didn't recognize the region itself, though
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she did note that the dusty and rocky grounds here would be a good fit
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for certain parts of the Cradle: a rough square of land near the middle
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of the Wasteland that had fairly steady weather but got the spills from
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more\ldots{} exotic parts. We rode out briskly, finding the town the
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scouts had marked in less than an hour. It wasn't anything all that
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impressive, I saw as we got closer. A walled town large enough to hold
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maybe a few hundred souls, surrounded by sparse farms and skeletal
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orchards. We found several wells on the way, though, which was good
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news. Too many of our water barrels had broken during the fall.
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The gates were closed when we got there, an iron-barded set tall as a
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man but too cramped for most carts. No great traders, then. The walls
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weren't anything I'd have a hard time smashing with Night if I put my
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back into it: six to eight uneven feet of stacked stone and mud with
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wooden spikes on top. Over the gates, an old dark-skinned woman in faded
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robes was waiting for us. Spread out further atop the walls were maybe a
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dozen archers and an unarmed pair of middle-aged siblings that must have
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been the town mages. They weren't the ones in charge, though, as was
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made clear when we reined in our horses at the edge of bow range and got
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called out by the old woman.
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``State your business,'' she demanded. ``Are you with the army to the
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north?''
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I blinked. My knights carried the royal banner with them, which usually
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got recognized and took care of most questions before the talking began.
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Not so this time, evidently. Seeing no point in subtlety out in the
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middle of nowhere, I went with straightforward instead.
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``I am Queen Catherine of Callow,'' I called back. ``I only want to talk
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and buy goods.''
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There was some consternation atop the wall, several others coming close
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to the old woman before she angrily waved them away.
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``There's nothing worth burning here,'' the old woman yelled out at me.
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``Go away.''
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I sighed. Why was it never the useful parts of my reputation that
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preceded me? Deciding to make a point, I murmured a prayer to the Crows
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and let the Night sluggishly wake to my words. I went for something loud
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and dangerous looking over actually dangerous, blasting a chunk of the
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countryside in a whirl of black flames. I let silence follow in that
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sights's wake as it sunk in that I could wield the same power against
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their wall to fairly predictable results. I then politely requested to
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be let in so we could talk and I could arrange the buying of goods,
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which after some arguing between the `warriors' was granted.
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The gates swung open and we were ushered through deserted dirt streets
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to a hall of stone. There the old woman from earlier received us by a
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great fire and extended hospitality in the name of the town, Ogarin. We
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refrained from accepting food or drink anyway. She introduced herself as
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Anan, the current \emph{haku} to the town. Bailiff was probably the
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closest equivalent to the title we had back home, from what I
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understood, as a haku's authority was centred around arranging the
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collection of communal taxes and work levies in the name of the local
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lord. The town was part of the territory of a Lord Abara, she informed
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us, who ruled from a fortress called Kala further to the southeast and
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situated at the bottom of the eponymous Kala Hills.
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``I'll bargain so the town does not get sacked, Your Majesty,'' Anan
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said, ``but we don't have much to trade. We already sent our crop tax
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south to the fortress. There's been a food levy across the Wasteland.''
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I frowned.
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``Who does Lord Abara swear to?'' I asked.
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She snorted.
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``His uncle swore to Wolof, but that was in High Lady Tasia's day,'' she
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said. ``Now he's sworn to no one. It was the Tower that came to
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collect.''
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So Malicia -- more likely the Black Knight through her -- had been
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emptying the Wasteland of food, to feed Marshal Nim army and make sure
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my own wouldn't be able to add to its supplies from the local stores.
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Not without starving towns and villages, anyway, which aside from being
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deeply distasteful to me was likely to mean resistance to my troops from
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locals. No one liked having the table robbed by a foreign invader, as my
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childhood in Laure had intimately taught me. We got a little more out of
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Anan about the region we'd ended up in with some wheedling. Ogarin was
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at the northwestern edge of Lord Abara's lands but linked by a dirt path
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to a better road that Anan called the `half-road'. I asked, naturally.
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It was a name that pretty much demanded it.
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``We're between imperial highways,'' Anan said. ``One of the old Abara
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-- in my great, great grandmother's day -- swore himself to Aksum, and
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to make it stick he planned to connect Kala to the highway between Ater
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and Aksum. It was going to make us rich, he claimed. Only he died before
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it was done. His daughter instead went back to the Tower's protection
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and pocketed the gold, leaving the job half done.''
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The half-road wasn't properly paved, she explained, just made of stone.
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While usable for carts it tended to be rough on the axles. It went
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towards the southeast, eventually coming close to the Moule Hills. Those
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were a bunch of steep slopes, so in practice the road was nestled in a
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valley between the Moule Hills to the south and Kala Hills to the north.
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North of said Kala Hills, she continued, was the small Nioqe Lake and
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the other town sworn to Lord Abara, Risas. Further north than that was
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the southern edge of the large Jini Plateau: all cliffs there, nothing
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we could travel through.
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The way I figured, the sooner we got on the half-road and began moving
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south the better. I'd suggest a detachment head out to Nioqe Lake to see
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to our water situation, but there simply weren't enough water sources in
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the region to sustain the presence of an army as large as mine for long.
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As for trading, strictly speaking it was treason for the town to bargain
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with us while we were at war. I allowed the shadow of a possible sack to
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loom over the negotiations, though, which motivated the town to do it
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anyway. It wasn't my intention to go through with it, but if my
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reputation was black in these parts then I had no qualms in using that.
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There wasn't much food and Anan was reluctant to part with was left, but
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tools and wood were on the table -- armies chewed through those like
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hounds through meat -- and I promised to restrain my soldiers from
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robbing farms or entering the town. I even paid a generous fee for use
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of their wells, which Anan did not need to know was from the Wolof
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treasury.
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When we were done talking I stretched, groaning, and offered her a
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friendly smile. We'd been at this for over an hour now, and I was ready
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to leave. There was still one little detail to take care of first,
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though,
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``So,'' I said, ``how likely is it that some of your dimmer boys and
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girls are outside and planning something unwise?''
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Her creased face tightened.
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``Not unlikely,'' Anan finally said.
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``I still remember what it's like, wanting to put down monster to make a
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name,'' I said. ``So I'll let that go.''
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I met her rheumy eyes with mine.
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``If it ends now.''
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She swallowed. Anan preceded us outside, and while there was some
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shouting and a small scuffle it ended without corpses on the ground.
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Three cheers for diplomacy, I thought, and got back on my borrowed
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horse.
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|
---
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|
We got some trouble with the locals the first night after we crashed,
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but not the two-legged kind. Our palisade, which had been hastily
|
|
raised, was hit just after Midnight Bell by what we first believed to be
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|
enemy soldiers but turned out to be a coordinated attack by a pack of
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|
tigers. The unreasonably astute animals actually hit another spot in the
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|
palisade as a distraction while the rest dug their way under, attacking
|
|
horses and cattle. Archer and the Huntress got themselves a few pelts
|
|
for the trouble, but of the dozen tigers that came six still survived
|
|
and ran away with full bellies. It was only to be the beginning of our
|
|
troubles, I found out to my dismay.
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|
A colony of head-sized scorpions took offence to our presence the
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|
following day and began attacking legionaries whenever they stepped
|
|
outside the vermin wards, which thankfully held them back. It only
|
|
stopped when I set out with a mage line and torched their underground
|
|
lair, to a disquieting amount of chittering screams. A decision was made
|
|
not to openly prevent my sappers from going into the charred ruin and
|
|
stealing some eggs, considering scorpion fights tended to be good for
|
|
the morale of the little bastards.
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|
Then the soldiers that went to fill up water barrels at Nioque Lake --
|
|
under the wary eyes of the townsfolk of Risas, whose homes were on the
|
|
opposite shore -- were ambushed by some sort of shrieking freshwater
|
|
squid that dragged two men under before the Squire and the Apprentice
|
|
killed it. Its flesh was apparently considered a delicacy in the
|
|
Wasteland, Aisha informed me, because everyone in this bloody place was
|
|
\emph{completely mad}. I refused to have a bite out of principle, though
|
|
Masego assured me with guileless malice it was delicious.
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|
Archer was having the time of her life, at least, and came dragging back
|
|
the carcass of what looked like a cow-sized lion with bat wings and a
|
|
stinger-tipped tail the following afternoon. Masego was delighted enough
|
|
when she offered him the venom glands that he enthusiastically kissed
|
|
her cheeks, which had her in a terrifyingly good mood the rest of the
|
|
day. I was only glad she'd killed the damned thing while out hunting and
|
|
not after it'd flown into the camp and eaten a few of my soldiers. Not
|
|
that our short turn in luck stopped a flock of blood-drinking bats that
|
|
spat out paralytic venom -- charmingly called something that translated
|
|
`night kissers' by Soninke, Aisha said -- from attacking one of our
|
|
night patrols.
|
|
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|
The entire Wasteland was a fucking death trap.
|
|
|
|
It looked like we were going to be ready to march by Noon Bell on the
|
|
third day, though, so I sat with Juniper to put together a vanguard. Two
|
|
thousand light foot from Levant would do, we decided, with Archer and I
|
|
accompanying them. Razin Tanja, whose forces were chosen to march, was
|
|
pleased to be given the front as Levantines always were when awarded the
|
|
possibility of being the first to be shot by arrows. Took all sorts. The
|
|
Dominion warriors had taken well to the Wasteland, to my amused horror,
|
|
Lady Aquiline even admitted it made her a little homesick. Fewer trees
|
|
here than the Brocelian, she said, but the animals had a lot in common.
|
|
|
|
No wonder Levantines raided so much, I unkindly thought. I'd get out of
|
|
the house as much as possible if my home was full of godsdamned
|
|
bloodsucking bats, and fight for the privilege too.
|
|
|
|
We set out in passably good order just after Noon Bell, largely as we'd
|
|
planned and to the palpable relief of many Callowan legionaries. I rode
|
|
out with Razin and Archer for company, to a surprising chill under the
|
|
afternoon sun. A cold wind was blowing in from the northeast, over the
|
|
Jini Plateau. An hour got us to the half-road and from there we
|
|
quickened the pace going southeast, until we came in distance of the
|
|
Moule Hills and I was forced to call a halt. Not because three hours of
|
|
marching had tired us out, but something entirely worse. On the steep
|
|
northern slopes of those hills a fortified camp had been raised, wooden
|
|
walls bristling with scorpions and catapults as six banners flew above
|
|
them in the wind.
|
|
|
|
One for each of the five legions under Marshal Nim, one for the Tower.
|