848 lines
40 KiB
TeX
848 lines
40 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-junipers-plan-redux}{%
|
|
\chapter*{Interlude: Juniper's Plan
|
|
(Redux)}\label{interlude-junipers-plan-redux}}
|
|
|
|
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-junipers-plan-redux}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Juniper's Plan (Redux)}
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``Armies, like water, take the path of least resistance.''}{Dread Emperor Terribilis II}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
They were wildly outnumbered, surrounded on all sides and faced with
|
|
horrors most. It was, Grandmaster Brandon Talbot thought, just another
|
|
day in the Black Queen's service.
|
|
|
|
He was already looking forward to the mad caper that would get -- most
|
|
of -- them out of this alive. He turned to look at the Black Queen, who
|
|
was grinning a hard grin that swept the doubts right off the frame of
|
|
any knight close enough to see it. Confidence rippled out through the
|
|
Order, passed from knight to knight like a whisper. And why wouldn't it?
|
|
How many times had it seen them laugh in the face of death and leave
|
|
victorious, that grin? \emph{Once more}, Brandon Talbot fervently
|
|
prayed. Brandon's queen cracked her neck then sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' the Queen of Callow drawled, ``isn't this a right mess,
|
|
Talbot?''
|
|
|
|
He swallowed a shit-eating grin. It was going to be one of \emph{those},
|
|
then.
|
|
|
|
``Positively uncivilized, Your Majesty,'' he agreed.
|
|
|
|
``Ain't it just?'' she said, the Laure drawl rearing up its head. ``Now,
|
|
looking at this situation before us, I can't help but feel that it's
|
|
missing something.''
|
|
|
|
``So much as a speck of godliness?'' Brandon tried.
|
|
|
|
She snorted, then erupted into a small chuckle like he'd said a joke.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, Talbot,'' she mused, ``the things you say sometimes.''
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat's pause.
|
|
|
|
``What's missing, of course, is \emph{more} monsters that want to kill
|
|
everyone,'' the Queen of Callow nonchalantly told him. ``So let's remedy
|
|
that lack.''
|
|
|
|
Brandon remembered a night when he'd been a boy and he'd snuck out of
|
|
the manor in Marchford with his sister. It'd been summer and they'd gone
|
|
out into the hills, bravely defeating sheep-shaped with wooden swords
|
|
before collapsing exhausted in the grass and looking up at a sea of
|
|
stars. He remembered the breeze, how warm it had been against his skin.
|
|
That was what Night felt like to him, when the Black Queen used it --
|
|
that warm breeze against his skin. There were goddesses behind that
|
|
power and should they frown upon him he thought it might be a terrible
|
|
thing to behold.
|
|
|
|
But they were passing fond, instead, and so he felt a warm summer
|
|
night's breeze against his skin as the Queen of Callow ripped open a
|
|
wide gate into Arcadia.
|
|
|
|
Just in time, for madness was seizing the enemy camp. Monsters were
|
|
tearing into men, howling devils flying through in riotous flocks and
|
|
for some godforsaken reason the Praesi were \emph{still} fighting each
|
|
other. On the others side of the gate Brandon glimpsed a screaming
|
|
blizzard, but when the queen rode into the white he shouted orders to
|
|
follow. The Order formed into a column and went through in good order,
|
|
the edges of their formation hacking away at the monsters and devils
|
|
that were already nipping away their ranks, but it was not long before
|
|
all had passed through. The grandmaster had run regular drills with
|
|
mages to be able to charge in and out of gates at the drop of a hat,
|
|
considering how often it was being used a tactic these days.
|
|
|
|
The whipping winds almost deafened him as he cross, but not so much that
|
|
when he approached his queen he could not hear her shouting. Squinting
|
|
he tried to make out what she was looking at, finding with surprised it
|
|
appeared to be fae. Maybe a half-dozen of them, riding on pale horses
|
|
and looking utterly unconcerned by the cold. Was Queen Catherine making
|
|
a bargain, an alliance? He spurred his mount closer to join her side.
|
|
|
|
``-and that smirk makes you look like an asshole,'' the Queen of Callow
|
|
shouted. ``I could kill you and all you friends with a hand tied behind
|
|
my back, even if I had \emph{no} fucking eyes.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, Brandon thought. The fae were not only pale, they were \emph{utterly
|
|
livid}.
|
|
|
|
``How quick you are to give insult, when still protected by oath,'' one
|
|
of the fae shouted, ``yet if-''
|
|
|
|
There was a flash of boiling-hot Night and half the fae's face melted
|
|
off.
|
|
|
|
``Boring,'' the Black Queen said. ``Hope you have more friends,
|
|
otherwise I won't even be able to work out an appetite for supper.''
|
|
|
|
The fae screamed, which Brandon thought might be something worth
|
|
worrying about before screams answered in the distance and he decided it
|
|
was definitely something worth worrying about. Queen Catherine glanced
|
|
at him, having finally noticed his presence.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, Talbot,'' she said. ``Good, get the Order in formation. We're
|
|
going to have get out of here in a hurry, I can feel at least a hundred
|
|
of them coming.''
|
|
|
|
She frowned, then cocked her head to a side.
|
|
|
|
``Damn, that's a Duke for sure and he feels \emph{pissed},'' the Black
|
|
Queen gleefully said.
|
|
|
|
``I'll see to it, Your Majesty,'' Brandon said. ``Are we to be fighting
|
|
an enemy in particular?''
|
|
|
|
``We're going to take the big tent that looks like a castle,'' Queen
|
|
Catherine said.
|
|
|
|
Ah, the one stinking of magic and heavily defended. He really should
|
|
have been expecting that. The grandmaster of the Order of the Broken
|
|
Bells saluted, and rode away to muster his knights.
|
|
|
|
The storm was getting worse and the fae angrier, leaving soon sounded
|
|
just fine to him.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a graceless thing, this battle.
|
|
|
|
``All this shady shit they've pulled and still it comes down to the
|
|
melee,'' Staff Tribune Ligaia muttered in disdain. ``So much for the
|
|
scheming witches.''
|
|
|
|
Marshal Nim Mardottir grunted back, noncommittal. Her old friend -- as
|
|
much of a friend as a human could be -- wasn't the first one today to
|
|
grumble about the plots of the Empress and the Warlock and how they were
|
|
staining the honour of what should have been a clean battle. She was,
|
|
though, the first one to complain the scheming hadn't been effective
|
|
\emph{enough}. In both cases, the Black Knight tended to disagree.
|
|
Malicia's surgical assassinations and hidden assets had paralyzed both
|
|
the deserting legions and the Sepulchral rebels, though according to the
|
|
Eyes even after being framed for an attempted coup Sacker had wiggled
|
|
back her way to command by swearing to be hard on the Army of Callow. As
|
|
for the Warlock's ritual against the Thirteenth, it had done more to
|
|
improve Nim's opinion of the woman than weeks of smile and pretty talk.
|
|
|
|
It had been both effective and restrained, showing regard for the
|
|
well-being of soldiers that'd served the Dread Empire loyally for
|
|
decades before being led astray. More regard than the Tower had thus far
|
|
shown for the legions that served it, one might argue. If one wanted to
|
|
be hung a traitor.
|
|
|
|
``If we can rout Sepulchral's brats quick enough we can win this battle
|
|
before nightfall,'' the Black Knight rumbled. ``It'll cost us bloody,
|
|
but I can see the writ.''
|
|
|
|
A casual look at the melee raging across the valley showed only men
|
|
dying pointlessly on a field. The deserters to the west, aggressively
|
|
trying to bleed everyone else, while across the valley to the east the
|
|
Legions of Terror and the Army of Callow lost hundreds every hour
|
|
struggling over the same two hundred feet of solid ground. Casualties
|
|
had been mounting all day, the Black Knight had already lost near two
|
|
thousand. It was worse for the Callowans, though. Sacker was going after
|
|
them hard with her siege engines and the Thirteenth's treachery had left
|
|
them underequipped and tired from the night fighting. The Army of Callow
|
|
would be the first to break. The Black Knight's gauntlet closed with
|
|
grinding sound of metal on metal before she pushed down the swell of
|
|
anger. She'd thought better of Jeremiah.
|
|
|
|
What had the Black Queen offered to turn him?
|
|
|
|
Sometimes it felt like she was the only person in Praes who gave a shit
|
|
about the Dread Empire. Malicia was scheming herself into the grave, the
|
|
Carrion Lord was setting fires left and right and all the while nobles
|
|
were at each other's throats like the middle of a fucking invasion was
|
|
the time to settle their grudges. Even the Legions, which should have
|
|
been a pillar of stability, were falling apart. Thousands had deserted
|
|
over the mind control hook. It wasn't that Nim didn't understand the
|
|
disgust, the sense of betrayal, but could Malicia really be blamed when
|
|
half the damned Legions had gone the way of the Carrion Lord a year
|
|
before? It was not madness, if it'd turned out necessary. Mok had argued
|
|
it smacked of slavery, though, and not been wrong.
|
|
|
|
His offered bargain -- returning to the fold in exchange for turning on
|
|
Malicia -- had been a damned silly thing anyway, and one Nim could not
|
|
accept lest the Legions of Terror fall apart entirely. Malicia had given
|
|
the order to keep stringing him along until Sepulchral was in place and
|
|
Nim had done it, with a heavy heart but done it anyway. Mok had been a
|
|
friend, once, but duty was duty. And when all the pieces had been in
|
|
place the Empress had paralyzed one enemy army and turned another
|
|
irremediably against Callow, over a day's span turning the Black Queen's
|
|
position from superior to imperiled. No, the Empress had proved over and
|
|
over that she was an able woman. But she was also one who still had
|
|
implanted commands in the minds of hundreds of her own officers. They
|
|
would only be removed at the end of the war. Nim should not begrudge
|
|
that, given the stained record of loyalty of the Legions over the last
|
|
few years. Should not.
|
|
|
|
Her gauntlets ground again.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, our beloved sorcerous overseer returns,'' Staff Tribune Ligaia
|
|
muttered. ``What glamour, what grace, what a stupid fucking thing to
|
|
wear on a battlefield.''
|
|
|
|
Snorting in an amusement, Nim turned to follow her subordinate's gaze.
|
|
Lady Akua Sahelian, who some already called the Warlock even if the
|
|
Powers had not yet granted her that in truth, was wearing an ornate red
|
|
dress on a field where almost all the Named present were after her head.
|
|
The Black Knight could not think of a goof reason for it, save possibly
|
|
because Soninke highborn were all fucking mad and this one madder than
|
|
most. Nim had yet to parse out Sahelian's game, what stood behind the
|
|
warning about the pattern of three and that convincingly raw tirade
|
|
about the Tower. She'd had confirmed the bit about the pattern, asked
|
|
old friends who'd learned a few pieces of namelore.
|
|
|
|
Nim would have preferred relying on the learned folk of Husse-il-Ossa,
|
|
what humans called the Hall of Skulls, but none of the seventeen kings
|
|
and the thirteen queens had far-lore to share on Names. Unsurprising.
|
|
She had risen high enough among her people to know more had been lost
|
|
over the centuries than the old crowns cared to admit. Human learning
|
|
had been made to serve, instead, and human learning had said Akua
|
|
Sahelian likely saved her life. This was not a pleasant position to be
|
|
in, but these were not times for pleasantness. The Black Knight need
|
|
only look to the three armies in Legion armour hacking at each other
|
|
like animals on a dusty field to be reminded of that.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Black,'' the Warlock greeted her, offering a bow. ``Staff Tribune
|
|
Ligaia.''
|
|
|
|
``The imperial's courts further south, in case you got lost,'' Ligaia
|
|
scornfully said.
|
|
|
|
``As usual, Lady Ligaia, your helpfulness is as a balm upon my soul,''
|
|
the Warlock smiled back with seeming delight before her expression
|
|
sobered. ``I happen to bring more urgent news, Marshal.''
|
|
|
|
The golden-eyed witch -- Powers, that colour was eerie even on humans --
|
|
turned to meet Nim's stare.
|
|
|
|
``The Lesser Breach has been closed,'' Sahelian said. ``That should mean
|
|
either Queen Catherine or the Hierophant are in the camp. I cannot think
|
|
of any other here with the power to so quickly achieve this.''
|
|
|
|
The ogre shook her head.
|
|
|
|
``The Hierophant's still out there,'' the Black Knight said.
|
|
|
|
She could feel him, through \textbf{Survey}. The aspect born out of
|
|
decades of battles had become like an unearthly sense, an ability to
|
|
take a single look at a battlefield and know what all the pieces in play
|
|
were. The Black Knight had taken more than a week to learn to recognize
|
|
the particular pulls at her instinct as being specific Named, but now
|
|
that she had it took only a moment to find them. So long as they were
|
|
`visible', anyway, a nebulous distinction she still sometimes struggled
|
|
with. The aspect had more esoteric applications besides, she'd learned,
|
|
pairing with another to turn a simple trick of power into something
|
|
entirely more deadly, yet such things must be used only with care. There
|
|
were rules to fighting between Named that she was still only faintly
|
|
aware of, no matter how many dreams of Amadeus' life the Powers saw fit
|
|
to send her.
|
|
|
|
``Then it must be her,'' the Warlock said.
|
|
|
|
Nim wondered if the girl knew of the faint undertone of yearning that
|
|
always crept in her voice when the Black Queen was brought up. It was
|
|
the worse kept secret in Praes that the Queen of Callow and the Warlock
|
|
had been sleeping together during their years abroad, but while most
|
|
assumed it had been a coup on Sahelian's part to prepare her later
|
|
betrayal the Black Knight believed otherwise. That break hadn't been a
|
|
clean one, for all that the Warlock had bound her fate to the Tower's.
|
|
|
|
``Take the mage cadres and go support the Eleventh,'' the Marshal of
|
|
Praes ordered her. ``The Mirembe remnants pulling together would be
|
|
trouble. You have my authority to take any measures necessary to ensure
|
|
they do not, Warlock.''
|
|
|
|
``How exciting,'' the golden-eyed witch drawled. ``By your will then, o
|
|
Black Knight.''
|
|
|
|
Nim waved her away irritably. Sahelian was a viper, but she was a
|
|
competent viper. If the Black Knight had to be saddled with a caster of
|
|
that calibre -- which were always trouble, the old Warlock had been too
|
|
-- it might as well be one who knew her business. Her attention returned
|
|
to the battle in the valley, the bloody melee in three parts. The Army
|
|
of Callow had edge ahead in the morning, the Black Knight thought, but
|
|
now that Noon Bell had come and gone it was increasingly on the
|
|
backfoot. An hour ago Nim had allowed free use of munitions on the front
|
|
against the Callowans and the difference in stocks was beginning to
|
|
tell.
|
|
|
|
Juniper of the Red Shields had clearly stacked the western corner of her
|
|
defensive line, knowing it was the weak point, but the Black Knight was
|
|
beginning to think the other woman had made a blunder. Her eastern flank
|
|
was wavering. Already the Callowans had nearly been pushed back into
|
|
their own trench and the pressure was only increasing. Had the young
|
|
Marshal of Callow thinned her eastern flank at the expense of her
|
|
western one, knowing the latter would bear the brunt of the casualties?
|
|
The Black Knight could not deny what her own eyes were seeing, what her
|
|
aspect kept drawing her attention to: there was an opening to take. Nim
|
|
turned an eye to Ligaia.
|
|
|
|
``Pass the word,'' she said. ``The Fourteenth is to mount an all-out
|
|
assault on the eastern flank. Commit the reserves, mages are to turn to
|
|
fully offensive fire and the siege to concentrate for a breach.''
|
|
|
|
It would not matter if Sepulchral's brat had some sense beaten into
|
|
them, the Black Knight thought. Not if the battle to the south was
|
|
already won, and this campaign with it.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Juniper ripped into the dried mutton jerky, swallowing a mouthful of
|
|
meat after barley chewing it. Gods but she'd been ravenous all day. She
|
|
bit off another piece then paused halfway through chewing, turning to
|
|
look at the woman to her side.
|
|
|
|
``Doesn't taste salted,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
Aisha wrinkled her nose.
|
|
|
|
``Swallow, Juniper,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
The Hellhound rolled her eyes but indulged her Staff Tribune. She then
|
|
turned back an expectant gaze. Aisha smiled, pushing back a strand of
|
|
that soft dark hair before answering.
|
|
|
|
``I had it washed and dried again,'' Aisha said.
|
|
|
|
Juniper, like most orcs, preferred meat without seasoning. It was a
|
|
small thing, but it was those that spoke loudest. Juniper felt a sharp
|
|
swell of fondness, one of those moments that always brought her
|
|
dangerously close to thinking about biting that smooth neck and a
|
|
hundred more things after that. Years of control kept her body from
|
|
moving, though she noticed that Aisha had caught the glance to the neck
|
|
and her lips quirked. Nothing was said of it, but the shared knowledge
|
|
hung between them in the air. Dragging her eyes away, Juniper of the Red
|
|
Shields turned her attention back to the battle in the distance. A look
|
|
into her Baalite eye confirmed the trend she'd seen forming over the
|
|
last half hour: the Fourteenth had committed to an all-out attack and
|
|
the eastern flank was buckling.
|
|
|
|
As it should. She'd ordered General Zola to thin it.
|
|
|
|
``It's time,'' Juniper said, licking her chops. ``Have the fallback
|
|
order sent.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha briskly nodded, rising from her seat to pass the order as Juniper
|
|
stayed in her own and watched the eastern flank through the Baalite eye.
|
|
Concentrated ballista fire had torn through chunks of the palisade and
|
|
the Fourteenth, though green, was well-trained. Their backline was
|
|
already bringing wooden planks to the fore that'd serve as makeshift
|
|
bridges to cross the trench and allow legionaries pour through the
|
|
breaches. Flags and sorcery had Zola informed now was the time to pull
|
|
out and the general did what she could. Her legionaries had been getting
|
|
pushed back into their own trench by the Fourteenth and that didn't
|
|
leave a lot of room to maneuver. She got out those she could and began
|
|
pulling away from the palisade.
|
|
|
|
The Fourteenth, howling and victorious, followed the retreating Army of
|
|
Callow. Against most armies Juniper's counterstroke would have resulted
|
|
into a rout, but this was the Legions of Terror. The young legionaries
|
|
were not baited into a hasty pursuit, instead getting shouted back into
|
|
line by sergeants and lieutenants, so when sixty feet behind the
|
|
palisade they found the Army of Callow reformed into a shield wall the
|
|
did not get scattered. Instead the Fourteenth formed its own shield wall
|
|
in time and the lines collided. Juniper sucked at her teeth. It would
|
|
hold, she decided. The Fourteenth needed to cross a trench and blown-up
|
|
chunks of palisade to reinforce its own shield wall, effectively slowing
|
|
its advance to a crawl.
|
|
|
|
The Fourteenth would be tied down there for hours with little to show
|
|
for it, should nothing change. Good.
|
|
|
|
The Baalite eye moved to the northwest, where the Seventh Legion was
|
|
marching down the road to reinforce. Nim would be sending her legion to
|
|
back up the Fourteenth, the Hellhound knew, unless she found a better
|
|
opening. Juniper just have to give her that opening, to heat up that old
|
|
veteran's lizard blood and bait her into going after a victory. Juniper
|
|
rose to her feet to give the order herself, the one that'd most matter
|
|
in this entire battle. It would be a rider that carried it, not flag or
|
|
sorcery. Otherwise the Black Knight might smell the trap. And away the
|
|
rider went as Juniper returned to her pavilion and her seat in the
|
|
shade, Baalite eye tight in grasp and Aisha returned to her side.
|
|
|
|
``This is it,'' Juniper gravelled. ``The knife's edge.''
|
|
|
|
The moment that would make or break the Battle of Kala. Even as the
|
|
situation on the eastern flank stabilized, the breaches stopped cold,
|
|
the western corner began to waver. It'd been hammered at all morning
|
|
from two sides by engines and legionaries, assaulted relentlessly.
|
|
Thrice rituals had been aimed at smashing the palisades, only the
|
|
Hierophant's intervention keeping the magic from breaking the stalemate.
|
|
Bravely the legionaries of the Army of Callow had held, but now they
|
|
were wavering. Their eastern flank had just been punched through by the
|
|
Fourteenth and enemy soldiers were spilling around the shield wall, the
|
|
Black Queen was nowhere in sight and the pressure was only increasing.
|
|
They broke, first in singles and then in clumps.
|
|
|
|
That was, at least, what Juniper was trying to sell.
|
|
|
|
And that was the danger, the knife's edge, because a feigned retreat
|
|
could so easily turn into a real one. Once soldiers got running, no
|
|
matter the reason, it was hard to get them to stop. Juniper had built
|
|
her box, even though its walls could not yet be seen, but it might yet
|
|
be blown apart by the same men she meant to hold it. Pickler's sappers
|
|
did what they were meant to, carpeting the grounds with smokers that
|
|
obscured everyone's line of sight as legionaries ran and legionaries
|
|
pursued. Not only the loyalist but after a few moments the rebels as
|
|
well, a chunk of wall in front of them just as undefended. Sacker,
|
|
Auntie Sacks, would order it. She couldn't afford to let Nim take those
|
|
fortifications, else her plan of bleeding both sides would go up in
|
|
flames.
|
|
|
|
The last thing the Rebel Legions wanted was to be penned in by the
|
|
Loyalists Legions, meaning they had to take that palisade so the Eighth
|
|
could not.
|
|
|
|
Smoke rose into the sky in great swaths and Juniper clutched the Baalite
|
|
eye so tightly her knuckles paled. What would win out, the Marshal of
|
|
Callow wondered. The fear, the instinct to run and keep running, or the
|
|
trust? The Army of Callow had grown to trust its commanders, fighting on
|
|
foreign fields, but the fear had grown too. Hadn't Juniper felt it
|
|
herself, that poison that spread through the veins and blackened
|
|
everything? More than just felt, she had wallowed in it. She'd glimpsed,
|
|
though, a light on the horizon. A way to settle it all at last. The
|
|
Hellhound leaned forward, jaw shut tight as she looked at her soldiers
|
|
move. \emph{Haven't you ever wondered? Where we stand, compared to the
|
|
best. We've fought Procerans and rebels and corpses, but this? This is
|
|
the standard. The reigning champion. The mother we must murder to
|
|
surpass.}
|
|
|
|
``Come on,'' the Marshal of Callow murmured in Kharsum. ``It can be
|
|
done. We can beat them. Trust me and we can \emph{beat them all}.''
|
|
|
|
Soldiers ran, past the lines and the officers waiting with their
|
|
whistles and shouts. Juniper's heart leapt up in throat, but it wasn't
|
|
done. The same hard iron that'd seen the Army of Callow through the
|
|
Camps and the Graveyard, through the Boot and Hainaut and dozen more
|
|
battles, it told. Some kept running, but some fell into line. And that
|
|
was all that was needed: a few people standing. Men gathered to them
|
|
like a standard, lines firming, and Juniper began to laugh. In the
|
|
distance, sappers began to raise mantlets. A box, formed out of the
|
|
eastern corner of trenches and palisades and the second corned the
|
|
sappers were now making of wood. A box filled with smoke, and soon to be
|
|
filled with only Named and her enemies. Juniper rose to her feet,
|
|
passing the Baalite eye to Aisha.
|
|
|
|
``Juniper?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``Look into it,'' the Hellhound said. ``Northwest.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha did.
|
|
|
|
``The Seventh Legion,'' Juniper stated, ``is no longer moving to
|
|
reinforce the Fourteenth. It's moving to reinforce the Eighth.''
|
|
|
|
The dark-haired woman put down the Baalite eye after a moment, smiling.
|
|
|
|
``It is.''
|
|
|
|
The Hellhound flashed her fangs at the horizon, triumphant.
|
|
|
|
``Where's that wagon with the roof again?'' she asked. ``I need a nap.''
|
|
|
|
Aisha started in surprise.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine is not back from Sepulchral's camp, we don't know-''
|
|
|
|
``She chose me,'' Juniper said. ``I choose her. She'll get it done, and
|
|
that means the last decision that matters in this battle has already
|
|
been made.''
|
|
|
|
Juniper of the Red Shields, Marshal of Callow, walked out the pavilion
|
|
with steps lighter than they had been in years.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``What the fuck is happening in there?''
|
|
|
|
Ligaia wasn't asking anything that the rest of the general staff wasn't
|
|
silently wondering. The Black Knight surveyed the movement of her own
|
|
troops, but she found nothing but the obvious. The Eighth Legion had
|
|
entered the smoke and was engaged in a brutal melee against the Army of
|
|
Callow and the deserters, Sacker pouring her soldiers into the grinder
|
|
to make sure she wouldn't get enveloped by any single force. The Seventh
|
|
was reinforcing, but the truth harder to swallow was that those
|
|
reinforcements were \emph{needed}. Between the casualties of the
|
|
Thirteenth's treachery and the brutal blind fighting in the smoke the
|
|
Eighth was getting mauled. Nim watched the movements of the troops,
|
|
towering above her officers, and her fists began to grind.
|
|
|
|
``Ma'am,'' Senior Sapper Licker said, catching her attention. ``We're at
|
|
risk now. The deserters are still hitting our trench but we can't spare
|
|
the men to hold it unless we send reinforcements from the Seventh. The
|
|
flank's getting stretched too thin.''
|
|
|
|
``Your recommendation?'' Nim asked.
|
|
|
|
``Deploying goblinfire,'' Licker evenly said. ``They'll answer in kind,
|
|
but it'll lock down that entire front. We can focus our efforts on the
|
|
breach in the smoke.''
|
|
|
|
The Black Knight hesitated. Already she could make out currents in the
|
|
battle. The Fourteenth was deadlocked, while her legions were pouring
|
|
their strength into the smoky breach. So was Sacker, and with the main
|
|
front of contention between the loyal legions and the deserters the
|
|
tendency would only increase. \emph{We have the advantage}, Nim reminded
|
|
herself. The Seventh were fresh and the Army of Callow stretched thin,
|
|
while Sacker's rebels were tightly packed -- it would be difficult for
|
|
them to mount a harder push because there simply wasn't enough room at
|
|
the bottom of the hills for them to muster. Senior Sapper's Licker was
|
|
going to make the breach into the fulcrum of this battle, but it was a
|
|
fulcrum the Legions were best placed to triumph in.
|
|
|
|
It would get bloody, but it would get done.
|
|
|
|
``See it done,'' she ordered.
|
|
|
|
And with all of it resting on one breach, there was only one thing left.
|
|
Nim would have to head into the smoke herself, lead the Seventh
|
|
personally. Tempted as she was to \textbf{Delegate} one of her personal
|
|
guard and guide them through \textbf{Survey}, her instincts ran against
|
|
it. Half-hearted commitment here would be punished, she dimly felt.
|
|
|
|
``Ready the Warhammers,'' the Black Knight ordered. ``I'll lead the push
|
|
into the breach personally.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Duke of Boreal Lights had been helpful enough to die taking out the
|
|
Hellgate, but Brandon found the man's retinue decidedly less obliging.
|
|
|
|
``Why-''
|
|
|
|
He hacked into the flesh but the blue-skinned fae turned into ice,
|
|
shattering and reforming.
|
|
|
|
``-won't-''
|
|
|
|
Even cutting the bastard thing's head off didn't help. It turned to mist
|
|
and reformed, and then it had the gall to stab at him. Brandon slapped
|
|
away the spear with his shield and stabbed it in the eye because,
|
|
really, where was it getting the bloody nerve? It should have been dead
|
|
six times over by now.
|
|
|
|
``-you-''
|
|
|
|
Oh and now the devils wanted a piece of him as well. The grandmaster
|
|
slice through the wing of the howling monkey-creature and deftly led his
|
|
charge to kick it after it fell, turning to parry a spear blow and
|
|
smashing the fae's face with his shield with a grunt.
|
|
|
|
``-\emph{bloody}-''
|
|
|
|
Oh, the broken nose didn't even come back even after it turned to mist.
|
|
Brandon snarled, smashing its head repeatedly with his shield as the fae
|
|
rocked back in pain and dismay.
|
|
|
|
``-DIE!''
|
|
|
|
The bottom of his shield went into the creature's skull with a wet
|
|
squelch and finally it dropped to the ground. Panting but vindicated,
|
|
Brandon turned to have a look around. The rebel Praesi had finally
|
|
stopped fighting each other, after \emph{only} half an hour of still
|
|
hacking at their kin while the world went to the Hells, but the Eleventh
|
|
Legion had reached the camp and even with the truce the defence was too
|
|
disunited to drive it back. Outnumbered almost four to one, the
|
|
legionaries were still making meat of the rebels -- though it helped
|
|
that the devils flying around everywhere avoided them like the plague
|
|
and it'd started raining acid on their foes. That wasn't Brandon
|
|
Talbot's problem, though. Now, where was the queen?
|
|
|
|
Ah, there she was. Near the castle-tent, fighting what looked like a
|
|
pitch-black land octopus with suckers that spat out an acidic goo. A
|
|
tower of black flame took care of that as Brandon rode to her side,
|
|
pulling back his knights with him as he did -- there was danger in
|
|
stretching themselves too thin even of the rebel Praesi seemed to be
|
|
avoiding fighting them -- but by the time he arrived she was tossing a
|
|
dead fae in the path of a devil belching vivid red flames while trying
|
|
to fend off what looked like\ldots{} a hippogriff? No, not quite. He
|
|
might never have seen one of those outside heraldry, but while the
|
|
creature had horse's legs and tail it instead of a hawk-like appearance
|
|
it had great crow's wings and head.
|
|
|
|
It also bit off the head of the queen's horse, before she stabbed it in
|
|
the neck.
|
|
|
|
Brandon rode at a gallop, smashing into a devil that tried to fall upon
|
|
the queen as she leapt with a loud grunt of pain from her dying horse to
|
|
the monster and Night bloomed like a sickly wind. With a satisfying
|
|
crunch he smashed the bloody thing's skull with the pommel of his sword
|
|
even as another clawed at his armour with screams of pain and the hymns
|
|
burned bright. By the time he was done, the queen was sitting astride
|
|
the dead crow monster with a smugly satisfied look on her face. No, not
|
|
dead Brandon saw. Undead, for it blinked and let out a happy screech
|
|
that had him wincing in pain.
|
|
|
|
``This is mine now,'' the Black Queen happily announced, and a heartbeat
|
|
later she was aflight.
|
|
|
|
Godsdamnit, Brandon thought, that was going to be just as bad as the
|
|
damned fae flying horse. It'd been impossible to catch up to her when
|
|
she rode that one, and at least that bloody thing hadn't had
|
|
\emph{claws}. He looked up, saw she was still headed for the great
|
|
pavilion and rode after her with a sigh. Some Praesi household troops
|
|
were in the way but it was nothing lances and a gallop couldn't
|
|
disperse. He saw the queen disappear into the pavilion, which was a
|
|
relief until he heard the fighting in there. He charged in with a wedge
|
|
of a hundred behind him, smashing into what looked like a three-way
|
|
brawl over a corpse. Sepulchral's squabbling heirs and a company of
|
|
Legion heavies, led by-
|
|
|
|
Oh, the most beautiful woman Brandon had ever seen in his life. Would
|
|
ever see in his life. He ought to dismount and kneel, to pledge service
|
|
and love and-
|
|
|
|
``General Lucretia, if you don't stop glamouring my knights I'm going to
|
|
feed you to my horse.''
|
|
|
|
The warmth went out of the world. Brandon came back to himself, sweat
|
|
drenching his back, and realized with shame that he'd been halfway out
|
|
of the saddle. Many of his men had been no better. His fingers clenched
|
|
around his sword. Another abomination best put to the sword, this
|
|
smiling woman among the legionaries.
|
|
|
|
``Black Queen,'' the general spoke in a honeyed voice, ``there is no
|
|
need for-''
|
|
|
|
``I warned you,'' Catherine Foundling said, voice echoing of distant
|
|
caws. ``\textbf{Bite off your tongue}.''
|
|
|
|
Power rippled out, and while the dark-skinned general shrieked and fled
|
|
in a flap of dark wings as she spurted blood many of her legionaries
|
|
ended up struggling with the same order. Brandon looked around and
|
|
smirked. Some of the Praesi seemed to be struggling as well, but not a
|
|
single knight of the Order had been affected.
|
|
|
|
``Forward,'' he shouted. ``Forward and drive the Legions out!''
|
|
|
|
A shout forty years too late, but better that than never. Even the
|
|
Praesi rebels gathered themselves long enough to attain usefulness and
|
|
they helped push out the legionaries, which retreated out of the
|
|
pavilion after heavy losses. That did not, unsurprisingly, end
|
|
hostilities. Brandon's queen had led her\ldots{} mount near a corpse on
|
|
a table made of solid gold and pearls, which seemed to rile up the
|
|
Praesi. Two nobles -- they had the look, the attitude and most of all
|
|
the golden eyes -- led the charge, loudly arguing though they refrained
|
|
from violence.
|
|
|
|
``The succession of Aksum is no matter for outsiders, it is-''
|
|
|
|
``It is already decided,'' the boy lord shouted. ``It was made official
|
|
years ago, Sanaa, that I am heir. Your grasping attempts to pretend
|
|
otherwise-''
|
|
|
|
``You are the creature of Nok, not a true Mirembe,'' Lady Sanaa scoffed,
|
|
``and-''
|
|
|
|
``Gods Below, this might be the most terribly tedious shouting match
|
|
I've ever heard,'' the Black Queen said, Night billowing around her.
|
|
``Here's a solution: neither of you are in charge.''
|
|
|
|
The staff of yew she always carried was lightly tapped on the corpse,
|
|
which Brandon now saw was that of an old woman. The pressure of the
|
|
Night went out and the body shuddered. This did not, unsurprisingly,
|
|
seem to please the two squabbling nobles.
|
|
|
|
``It is against law for undead to hold any noble title,'' the young lord
|
|
scoffed. ``Do you think putting strings on a corpse will make it
|
|
otherwise?''
|
|
|
|
``This is absurd,'' Lady Sanaa hissed. ``For once, Isobe speaks truth.
|
|
By what right do you meddle in our affairs?''
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen smiled, pleasant and mild, which had Brandon tensing.
|
|
That was usually the smile that preceded corpses beginning to drop.
|
|
Beneath her the crow-winged chimera stirred, looking up with cruel eyes,
|
|
and in the magelights of the pavilion the dark fringes Mantle of Woe
|
|
seemed to meld into the creature's feathers.
|
|
|
|
``By what right,'' the Queen of Callow softly said. ``You lot keep
|
|
asking me that, don't you? Nobles and officers and even Malicia herself.
|
|
By what right do I meddle in the affairs of Praes, which is not mine to
|
|
rule and a sovereign state beyond my reach?''
|
|
|
|
Her sole eye burned with feverish light.
|
|
|
|
``By what right?'' the Black Queen hissed. ``You dare ask me that, you
|
|
pack of jackals who bleed Calernia as it struggles for its very right to
|
|
exist, who writhe and bite and have a thousand times turned the east
|
|
into a madhouse?''
|
|
|
|
The Praesi flinched away, but Brandon leaned forward with an eager
|
|
smile. His knights too. They knew it well, that weight in the air. Had
|
|
learned to love it, for though it was the herald of terrible things that
|
|
terror was ever turned away from them. She was a queen in black, adorned
|
|
in wrath and dread, but she was \emph{their} queen to the bone.
|
|
|
|
Let all the world fear her, save the sons and daughters of Callow.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{You made yourself my mess to handle},'' Catherine Foundling
|
|
snarled. ``That is my right. The east is your prison and I am your
|
|
fucking warden, rattling the cage until you fall in line.''
|
|
|
|
Brandon felt it then, the\ldots{} pressure. It was suffocating and ever
|
|
soul in the pavilion seemed to be choking on it. The queen through them
|
|
all with her gaze, and wherever she looked knees buckled.
|
|
|
|
``So what will it be, Mirembe?'' the Queen of Callow said. ``How many of
|
|
you do I need to butcher before the lesson sinks in?''
|
|
|
|
Silence was her answer.
|
|
|
|
``I thought so,'' Catherine Foundling quietly said. ``Get up, Abreha.''
|
|
|
|
The corpse did, looking around blearily. As if she'd just woken up from
|
|
a long nap.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the young woman smiled, ``I am that. Now let's get this army
|
|
moving, yes? We have work to do.''
|
|
|
|
``I await your orders,'' the corpse said, bowing her head.
|
|
|
|
``First we're going to slap away the Eleventh,'' the Queen of Callow
|
|
said, ``but after that? Well, we're going to march.''
|
|
|
|
``Where to?'' the corpse of Abreha Mirembe asked.
|
|
|
|
``We're going to visit my old friend General Sacker,'' Catherine
|
|
Foundling coldly smiled. ``And remind her what happens when people cross
|
|
me.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The hammer went down, pulverizing the sergeant and the legionary next to
|
|
him. The Black Knight withdrew the weapon, shaking away the pulp as her
|
|
Warhammers fanned out around her. The melee was turning to their
|
|
advantage, as much as Nim could tell in this maze of smoke, but her
|
|
instinct was pulling at her. Something was wrong. An arrow streaked
|
|
through the smoke, which she tried to swat down but missed by an inch.
|
|
One of her retinue screamed as it went through his eye, dropping to the
|
|
ground and twitching.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Archer},'' the Black Knight snarled.
|
|
|
|
She and the Silver Huntress had been scything through her soldiers and
|
|
her personal guard alike, taking lives and then melting away before they
|
|
could be caught. The sole time Nim had thought she'd caught the Huntress
|
|
she'd run into the Barrow Sword instead, who had somehow managed to scar
|
|
enchanted armour straight out of the Tower's vaults with a bronze sword.
|
|
The Black Knight stomped through the smoke, sweeping away another
|
|
handful of legionaries with a blow but finding no trace of the Archer.
|
|
In the distance someone died in a flash of silver Light, the Huntress'
|
|
signature.
|
|
|
|
Nim wouldn't fall for that again. Going hunting for them only ended up
|
|
in her swinging at smoke while she took one arrow after another. None
|
|
had penetrated the armour so far, but the Light would shatter the
|
|
enchantment fully in time.
|
|
|
|
``Forward,'' the Black Knight shouted.
|
|
|
|
Her soldiers shouted back. There were more enemies ahead, full companies
|
|
now, and the sound of sharpers in the distance. The fighting grew harsh
|
|
but they broke through, Nim leading the charge, until she made out
|
|
distant shapes ahead. A wall? A few more steps forward, slapping away an
|
|
arrow from the Archer come for her neck, and she realized it wasn't a
|
|
wall. Not exactly. Mantlets had been placed as some kind of rough
|
|
palisade, and before them she saw a sea of blood and flesh. Munitions
|
|
and crossbow bolts shredded anyone that came close. What was this? She
|
|
took another step forward, but she felt sharp pressure from her left.
|
|
Nim backed away and a spell of blue light passed through where she'd
|
|
just stood.
|
|
|
|
The Hierophant?
|
|
|
|
No, she thought as pressure came from the right this time and she caught
|
|
a blade with her gauntleted hand. The Squire looked up at her through
|
|
his helmet, blue eyes burning, and the Black Knight felt her stomach
|
|
drop. The boy had come for her, as Sahelian had warned. She tried to
|
|
crush the sword but he ripped it free, dancing away from her hammer blow
|
|
with speed he'd not had last the fought. Another arrow needed swatting
|
|
away, and then as she tried to smash the Squire darting close a swirling
|
|
spell of darkness seized her foot. She was pulled off her feet, and
|
|
while she backhanded the Squire away he landed on his feet with his
|
|
sword up. This wasn't a good fight, she thought, they had her swinging
|
|
at ghosts and-
|
|
|
|
The Black Knight breathed in sharply. When had been the last time she'd
|
|
slain a legionary with the marking of the Army of Callow? Often it was
|
|
hard to tell in the smoke, but she couldn't recall. There'd been a few
|
|
at first, isolated, but she'd been fighting for hours in the smoke now
|
|
and it had been \emph{long}. But no, that made no sense, why would
|
|
Sacker commit so thoroughly to this breach if she was losing so many
|
|
men? The Squire came for her from behind but she smashed her hammer into
|
|
the ground, bumping him up and backhanding him away. An arrow wreathed
|
|
in Light streaked for her side but the Black Knight screamed, smashing
|
|
through it, and when a spell that was a blue drill of light struck at
|
|
her armour it dispersed against the enchantments.
|
|
|
|
In the distance power bloomed, once and then twice, and though one
|
|
disappeared the second struck close. Nim was half braced for a betrayal
|
|
by the Warlock, but the magic that descended was not treacherous: a
|
|
massive gale of wind blew, cutting through the smoke. Suddenly half the
|
|
obscured battlefield was revealed, and what Nim \textbf{surveyed} with a
|
|
single glance had her freezing. The Rebel Legions were being routed. Not
|
|
only were their corpses carpeting the ground where the Seventh had
|
|
broken their push, but in the distance smoke rose from where they camp
|
|
was in Moule Hills. Had someone hit them from behind?
|
|
|
|
\emph{Oh}, Nim thought. That was why Sacker had been committing to the
|
|
push her. With her back aflame and only one way out -- the goblinfire
|
|
had closed the other -- if she did not break through here her legions
|
|
were at risk of being surrounded and slaughtered to the last. An arrow
|
|
flew but this time the Black Knight saw it come from far and simply
|
|
stepped out of the way, then punched through a wavy spell and swung at
|
|
the Squire. The boy ducked out of the way and then slid under her,
|
|
scoring a blow against her leg and cutting into her greaves, but she
|
|
kicked him away and he went tumbling. She pursued, trying to end this
|
|
even if lore said she might not, but he ducked behind a blood tree of
|
|
all things.
|
|
|
|
Nim's hammer went right through, wood flying as the rotten thing
|
|
half-collapsed. It was hollow, and though she was already aiming another
|
|
blow at the Squire her aspect tugged at the corner of her eye. Inside
|
|
the dead tree, words had been carved in Lower Miezan.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Marshal Juniper wins here.}
|
|
|
|
Nim breathed in sharply, the Squire retreating as she slowed her steps.
|
|
Looking around, the Black Knight could not see a single company of the
|
|
Army of Callow on the field. Only manning the mantlets to the south and
|
|
west, and in front of them piles of bodies were piled so high they were
|
|
almost a second wall. It suddenly fell into place and marshal felt like
|
|
she was going to be sick. The Marshal of Callow, Nim realized, had
|
|
baited both her and Sacker into pushing their main offensive here,
|
|
through this\ldots{} box. And then she'd withdrawn her own soldiers to
|
|
the edges, and let her enemies slaughter each other under the cover of
|
|
smoke. They'd been fighting each other all afternoon, ruining their
|
|
armies against each other as the Army of Callow mopped up the edges and
|
|
waited. The Legions had lost, Nim thought. Rebel and loyal alike, they
|
|
had lost -- and they would continue losing as long as they fought.
|
|
|
|
There was only one word left to speak, she knew, before this day could
|
|
end.
|
|
|
|
``Retreat,'' the Black Knight shouted, and it tasted like ashes in her
|
|
mouth. ``Retreat!''
|