722 lines
33 KiB
TeX
722 lines
33 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-3-wage}{%
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\section{Chapter 3: Wage}\label{chapter-3-wage}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I was privileged to receive audience with a shaman of the Red
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Shields clan, who after receiving gifts was willing to indulge a few of
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my questions. My attempts to understand the lay of her people's
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statecraft, however, were met with a simple laugh and the quote of a
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Kharsum proverb that translates as such: `throw meat or be meat'.''}
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-- Extract from ``Horrors and Wonders'', famed travelogue of Anabas the
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Ashuran
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\end{quote}
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Jinon fell to the Army of Callow at the price of twelve dead and five
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wounded.
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Three wounded and two dead were of ours. One of the former was, I'd been
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told, a legionary from the regulars cohort who'd tripped going uphill
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and broken his foot. He was now being mercilessly mocked by the rest of
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his tenth, who had tried to get him officially commended for `heroic
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injuries sustained in the line of duty'. I was giving it serious thought
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-- laugh aside, playing along with this sort of thing tended to be good
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for morale. Most the corpses and wounds had taken place when my goblins
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infiltrated the fortress, silencing witnesses and taking the gatehouse.
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That left me to handle the two hundred and forty-three members of the
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Jinon garrison that had surrendered, a number that included seven minor
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nobles sworn to Wolof.
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One of them was a branch Sahelian, their head mage, and she'd been
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trying to barricade herself in a fortified room when Hierophant came and
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stomped out the notion by casually wresting her sorcery away from her.
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I'd left him to interrogate her and gone to supervise the movement of
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the prisoners instead. We'd made a gate into Twilight right outside the
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walls and we were herding the disarmed prisoners across by groups of
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twenty, into the tender waiting embrace of legionaries waiting on the
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other side. We'd be marching them straight into a warded prison pit that
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Juniper had ordered dug inside our camp, where the Jacks and the
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phalanges would begin interrogating them for news about the state of the
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city.
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I was now leaning against stone on the same parapet Lady Semira had
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stood on when we'd talked, watching it unfold as I chatted with Captain
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Diara.
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``- moved them to a freehold in the Green Stretch as soon as I could
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afford it,'' she told me, speaking of her parents. ``My brother's still
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out east in one of the Bassa towns, I think, but we haven't talked in
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years.''
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``I hear it's good land down in the Stretch, so long as the levees don't
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break,'' I said.
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``It is, but there are dangers. People were worried it was going to be
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trouble when you first took the throne, Your Majesty,'' Captain Diara
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admitted. ``That's passed, of course. Now they know that even if comes
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to steel there won't be paladins knocking at the doors for `tithes' and
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pointed questions about troop movements.''
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The Order of the White Hand were still considered heroes, back home,
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tragically destroyed by my father in the first stroke of the Conquest.
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The freeholders of the Green Stretch had been significantly less
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convinced of the heroism of said paladins, not without reason. Callow
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had been occupied by the Dread Empire for so long it was easy to forget
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that the Old Kingdom hadn't been saints. It'd not been worse than most
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nations out there, but it'd not been any better either.
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``It's the Tower my dispute is with,'' I said. ``It's the Tower I'll
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settle it with.''
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The captain slowly nodded, expression hard to read. Whatever she might
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have said was not to be, as Masego strode out of the stairway with his
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robes sweeping behind him. He looked in a fine mood, and I could smell
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the scent of power still on him. He was holding magic.
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``Time for me to check on my sergeants,'' Captain Diara tactfully said.
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``It was an honour, Your Majesty.''
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``It was \emph{my} honour to hear you harangue those poor bastards for
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half an hour,'' I replied with a smile. ``See you around, captain.''
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She offered a salute to Hierophant as he passed, which he returned with
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an absent-minded nod before coming to stand at my side.
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``Got anything good?'' I asked.
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``Several of the ciphers the Sahelians use when scrying,'' Masego said.
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``It will be of use when intercepting their communications.''
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``Cutting High Lord Sargon off from Malicia would be ideal,'' I
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admitted. ``It'll be easier to force his hand that way.''
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Malicia had soulboxed him when she'd put him on the High Seat, which
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meant she could effectively torture him with impunity and at will, but
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that was the kind of tool she wouldn't use blindly. If he wasn't
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contradicting an explicit order from the Tower when he surrendered his
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granaries to us, the ruler of Wolof was a lot more likely to fold. There
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wasn't a lot I could threaten him that would be worse than what Malicia
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could do with half an hour and an incantation.
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``It will do Sapan some good to study higher order mathematics,''
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Hierophant mused. ``I'll make her work on the ciphers with me.''
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``Surprised she doesn't know about those already,'' I said. ``Ashurans
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are famous sailors and navigation's all about numbers and stars, way I
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hear it.''
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``She meant to be a healer, so what they taught her of mathematics at
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that academy in Ashur was insultingly limited,'' Masego said, sounding
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peeved. ``Sabrathan sorcery encourages specialization, Catherine, as the
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knowledge overlap between its different disciplines is supposedly very
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limited.''
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I hummed in understanding. For all that Hierophant had always rather
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looked down on the sorcery the Thalassocracy of Ashur practiced, what
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I'd heard of it was rather impressive. They had finer healing mages than
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the Praesi and they could whip up winds and storms out of blue sky.
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Sabrathan magic did seem to have pretty stark limits on what could be
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done \emph{well} with it, though, so I wasn't surprised Masego held it
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in such low esteem. He'd been raised to treat magic as something more
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than just a tool, a philosophical quest for the truth of Creation. There
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was little chance of him respecting people who, in his eyes, willingly
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chose to cripple themselves before even beginning that quest.
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``Tell me how it pans out,'' I shrugged. ``I'm curious how much she'll
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take to your teachings.''
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I was more curious if she was going to end up a long-term threat to
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people or places I cared about, to be honest, but Zeze enjoyed talking
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about his pupil and I enjoyed indulging him. While Masego cordially
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disliked teaching large groups, the way he had when I'd asked him to
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make my Legion and later Army cadres into mages capable of battlefield
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ritual magic, he seemed to be relishing teaching a single highly skilled
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pupil. It was the kind of teaching he was likely most familiar with, I'd
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eventually realized. Just like Warlock had done with him.
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``I will,'' he assured me. ``Though none of this is why I came. You
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earlier mentioned intending to scry Juniper for news of how her warring
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went. Shall we, before I must release the magic I wrested?''
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I'd actually figured it would be one of our mages I relied on for that,
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but if Zeze was volunteering I wasn't going to complain. And if this
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marked yet another instance of him keeping someone's magic in his hands
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just a little longer than was strictly necessary, well, part of loving
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someone was knowing when you needed to avert your eye.
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``Please do,'' I replied.
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It didn't take long to get a hold of my marshal even though the night's
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action was far from over, as she'd been expecting me. After the fortress
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was invested one of our mages had sent word that things had gone well,
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but not gotten much in exchange: the offensive had still been happening.
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After a few moments Aisha's face appeared in the mirror-like circle of
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magic that Masego had drawn in the air, offering me a smile before
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disappearing and being replaced with the Hellhound's thicker features.
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``Warlord,'' she greeted me.
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``Marshal,'' I replied. ``How did the attack go?''
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``We hold Sinka,'' Juniper said. ``The garrison in the villages began to
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retreat after skirmishing against our vanguard and we caught fewer than
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fifty of them. We didn't get any trouble out of the people themselves,
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the seneschal fled after leaving orders to surrender without violence.''
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Huh. That was unusually caring, by Praesi standards. Most Wasteland
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nobles would have sent their people into the grinder without a second
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thought, thinking a few of my soldiers killed a fair trade for bleeding
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the populace of a port they no longer held. High Lord Sargon's orders,
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or the small rebellion of a decent man in a bad position? Hard to know.
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``Any moves from Wolof?''
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``They tried a sortie,'' Juniper acknowledged. ``Two thousand household
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troops, with mage support and about a hundred \emph{walin-falme} for
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vanguard. They hit our screening force head on and withdrew when the
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Order flanked them. They sacrificed the devils to eat the charge and
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retreated into the city.''
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``That looks like a straightforward blunder,'' I frowned. ``Only two
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thousand? It's a large chunk of their forces, but they have to know we'd
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eat that on the field. Especially when we have cavalry and they don't.''
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My marshal looked pleased, licking her fangs in approbation.
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``It was a pin,'' Juniper said. ``They were tying down our screening
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force while they hit the men I sent to take Sinka. They waited until
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after the surrender, when we'd begun to split the force into the smaller
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garrisons we'll be leaving.''
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My brow rose. That implied they'd managed a night ambush on open grounds
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while we fielded goblins.
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``They had illusions good enough we couldn't see through them?'' I
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asked.
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``The attackers were in the river,'' Juniper grimaced. ``Deep enough our
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first sweep with mages didn't catch them. They had boats hidden on the
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far side of the Wasaliti under illusions and some kind of half-fish
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devil in the-''
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She turned a moment, leaning towards someone I only dimly heard speak
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before nodding thanks.
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``Sahelian sends word the devils are called \emph{nikyana}, and that
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Wolof usually keeps a few contracts but nowhere as many as we saw
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tonight,'' the tall orc growled. ``At least seven hundred of the
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bastards popped out of the river on our flanks and they would have
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caught us entirely by surprise without the Silver Huntress giving alarm
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They don't use weapons but they're quick and strong, we lost almost a
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full cohort before we realized what was happening.''
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I winced. Caught out of formation, my legionaries would have had a hard
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time handling devils. Like with heavy horse, you needed thick ranks and
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spellfire to handle a charge of those.
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``And bleeding us wasn't even the point of the attack,'' Juniper
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revealed.
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My brow rose.
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``They infiltrated a mage cadre with escorts to try to grab Vivienne in
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the chaos,'' Juniper said. ``The Squire and the Apprentice drove them
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off, but apparently it was a close thing. The moment the grab failed the
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entire attack was called off and they retreated into the river.''
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I let out a low whistle. That'd actually been a sharp play from Sargon,
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assuming it really was the young lord's plan. Vivienne was one of the
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few people in my army I couldn't afford not to bargain for, if she were
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taken prisoner. Should Sargon threaten to put her head on a pike unless
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I retreated, he would have me in a very tricky position.
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``Total casualties?'' I asked.
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``Between Sinka and the plain, we lost three hundred and twelve,'' she
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said. ``Cost them at least two hundred where Tanja held command on top
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of the forty and so we captured, so there's that, but they're keeping to
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standard Praesi tactics when it comes to soaking up casualties with
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devils.''
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Forty years ago, before the Reforms, orcs and goblins would have been
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right with the devils eating those Callowan blades, I thought. Bleeding
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so that their \emph{betters} wouldn't. Looking at the hard cast of my
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marshal's face, I suspected I wasn't the only one who'd thought that. I
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quickly went over the fall of Jinon for her and concluded with the
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prisoners now headed her way.
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``Good news,'' Juniper said. ``I have mages and the Huntress following
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the diabolists on the river. We'll try to hit them before they can
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retreat to Wolof.''
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``Take prisoners if you can,'' I said, ``but our people come first.''
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I wanted diabolists, but I didn't need them \emph{that} badly. A handful
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grabbed off the field weren't going to be enough to handle the
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Hellgates, I was going to need a genuine diplomatic concession to secure
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that many. Juniper nodded, offering me a crisp Legion salute before the
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spell died and the magic displaying her face dissipated. I rolled my
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shoulder, sighing. It was already a long night and it was still far from
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over. I turned to Masego.
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``Assuming the prisoners are out, I'll need to help establish our own
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garrison here,'' I said. ``Do you think you could check the wards for
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nasty surprises?''
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The Concocter would be coming along later too, to see if my idea about
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how get into the city was feasible.
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``I will,'' Hierophant said, burning eyes swivelling lazily in their
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sockets, ``but I expect you'll have more pressing matters to attend
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to.''
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``Like?''
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``Aunt Eudokia just walked through the gates,'' Masego said, ``and she
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looks in a hurry.''
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---
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Scribe looked both healthier than when I'd last seen her and deeply
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exhausted. It was the good kind of exhausted, though, the kind you got
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from putting all of yourself into something you loved. Her back was
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straight and though as always my attention slid right off her -- save
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for the same detail, the perennially ink-stained hands -- I got a sense
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of vitality from her that she'd lacked when she had first reached out to
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me in Hainaut. I had come to believe that, more than anything, Scribe
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thrived on being useful. The cause didn't matter much, it was about
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stretching her abilities to the limit. In a way it was like Ranger's
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thirst for worthy fights, though neither woman would thank me for the
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comparison.
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``Queen Catherine,'' she greeted me, shortly bowing.
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``Scribe,'' I replied. ``Pleasure to have you back with us, though I
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expected it would be back at the camp.''
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``There has been a change of plans,'' she said. ``The envoys heard there
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would be an assault on Jinon, and they insisted on speaking with you
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here.''
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I cocked an eyebrow.
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``They want to see if I'm strong enough to beard the Sahelians in their
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own backyard,'' I said.
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Which was fair enough. Nobody liked backing a losing horse. Besides,
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orcs respected strength above all and this bunch was more opportunistic
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than most.
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``How long until they're here?'' I asked.
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``A quarter hour at most,'' Scribe said. ``I requested of Archer that
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she slow their passage through the Ways, but there are limits.''
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``She'll do what she can,'' I muttered.
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My mind was already racing ahead, putting the pieces in place. I would
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have preferred having Vivienne here for this, since any deals made would
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be inherited by her, but that'd be hard to arrange. This wouldn't end
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with a single conversation anyway.
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``Indeed,'' Scribe said. ``A stark improvement on her predecessor in
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every regard, Archer.''
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I eyed the villainess amusedly. She'd been less than fond of Ranger even
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\emph{before} the Lady of the Lake had put an arrow an inch away from
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her heart.
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``Thanks for the heads up,'' I said.
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``There is more,'' Scribe said. ``I received word from my agents in the
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northeast: the fortress of Chagoro has fallen.''
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I took me a moment to place that name in my mental map of Praes. It was
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one of the main fortresses north of the High Seat of Okoro, an important
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strategic position since it was close to the two easiest passes into the
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Northern Steppes. It was the keystone of Okoro's northern defences, and
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supposedly one of the thornier fortresses in the region.
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``Who holds it?'' I frowned. ``It is one of the Clans?''
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High Lord Jaheem Niri was one of Malicia's supporters and his domain has
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been largely spared the depredations that most of Praes had suffered, so
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this was something of a surprise. The Niri could still field one of the
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largest private fighting forces in the Empire, and they wouldn't skimp
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on their northern defences when there was trouble in the Steppes. A
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surprise attack by supporters of Sepulchral, maybe?
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``No one holds it,'' Scribe evenly said. ``It is full of corpses.''
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My thoughts ground to a halt. What?
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``My agents confirmed that the killing was done by blade, over the span
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of less than an hour, and that the assailants took no casualties,'' she
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continued.
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``That's absurd,'' I bit out. ``How many soldiers were there in that
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fortress, Scribe?''
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``A little over a thousand,'' she replied.
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``It can't be the Dead King,'' I frowned, ``he's bound by oath to attack
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neither Praes nor Callow. Who could-''
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I closed my eyes, abandoning the train of thought. It was a dead end,
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there were too many monsters out there in the wilds that I knew little
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about. Capacity for destruction, for killing, was not that uncommon. It
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would instead be much more useful to figure out who gained from Chagoro
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falling. I did, since it made Okoro a lot more vulnerable to attacks by
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the Clans, but this hadn't been a scheme of mine. Sepulchral benefitted
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as well, arguably, since anything weakening a backer of Malicia's helped
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her cause. She shouldn't have assets capable of something this flashy,
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though. Could the Empress herself have done it? She certainly had the
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ruthlessness, but I wasn't seeing a gain for her to make. Even of Jaheem
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Niri had been about to turn on her and she wanted him kept busy, there
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were better ways.
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And this timing, I thought, it was \emph{too} good.
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I wanted to bring the Clans into the war, specifically for them to fall
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on the back of Malicia's northern allies, and the High Lord of Okoro had
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been a major obstacle in that regard. With a major gap in his defences,
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however, there were now chances that orc clans would go raiding even if
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it had nothing to do with me whatsoever. And it was coming at a
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precisely the right time, while I was mauling Wolof with the Army of
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Callow and Malica's armies were still making their way up from down
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south. Okoro stood alone and with its pants down. That wasn't a
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coincidence, it was too precise for that, and-
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``Black,'' I murmured. ``\emph{Black} did this.''
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``Ranger is powerful, but not so powerful as that,'' Scribe objected.
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He shouldn't have the resources to pull off something like this, that
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much was true. It was pretty much just him and the Lady of the Lake out
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there, wasn't it? He'd not even picked up that nice army of deserters
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waiting for him in the Green Stretch -- though I had my doubts about
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that, it seemed a little too convenient -- and taken them in hand.
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Archer and Akua had believed, I recalled from the last time we'd
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discussed the matter in council, that he \emph{couldn't} take up such a
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position. It would be a death trap to be visible, since Ranger was being
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hunted by the Emerald Swords. My thoughts stalled for a moment after
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that, as the realization sunk in, because surely he hadn't.
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It was the kind of reckless play I would have made, nothing like the
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calculating and cold-blooded man who'd taught me. And yet.
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``Eudokia,'' I quietly said. ``Your agents, they said it was done with
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blades. Did they get a read on the number of assailants?''
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``No,'' Scribe admitted. ``All they could give me was that it looked
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like halfway through the fight soldiers began fleeing and they were run
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down to the last.''
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And that wasn't much, wasn't a confirmation, but it fit.
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``Fuck me,'' I said. ``He used Ranger as \emph{bait}, Scribe. The
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Emerald Swords did this. He drew them there to clear out the fortress.''
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She blinked in surprise, then after a long moment sighed. Tellingly, she
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did not disagree. Silly me, how could I not have expected my father
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would find a way to turn his sole companion being hunted by ten of the
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most dangerous people on Calernia into an \emph{advantage}. I'd come by
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my bastardry honestly, I shouldn't have forgot. And against my better
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judgement, I found my lips twitching. \emph{Welcome to the war, Black.
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Finally making your move, are you?}
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``So he wants the Clans going on the offensive too,'' I mused.
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``Interesting.''
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What exactly my father wanted and how he intended to achieve remained
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unclear to me, and likely would for some time. If he'd wanted to speak
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with me, he would have by now. I cast a look at Scribe, who had remained
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silent as I thought.
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``If you offered your services again,'' I said, ``I'm not sure he would
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refuse you a second time.''
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I was under no illusions that our months of collaboration in any way
|
|
trumped decades of close friendship. The Calamities had been tightly
|
|
bound, before they began dropping dead.
|
|
|
|
``You worry of my loyalties,'' Scribe said.
|
|
|
|
``I don't,'' I said. ``I know exactly where they lie. And it's not empty
|
|
words when I say that there would be no rancour, should you-''
|
|
|
|
``I am not a good or pleasant woman, Catherine Foundling,'' Eudokia the
|
|
Scribe said and for a heartbeat I saw brown eyes flashing with anger,
|
|
set in a tanned and freckled face. ``I do not pretend otherwise. I have
|
|
little use for the morals you espouse or the causes you champion, save
|
|
when they intersect with my own diversions.''
|
|
|
|
``But,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``But I am a woman of my word,'' Scribe said. ``I believe in contracts
|
|
and the worth of promises. Even should I decide to leave your side --
|
|
and if I do it will not be like \emph{this}, like some beaten dog
|
|
crawling back to her master's feet -- even then, I would no more reveal
|
|
secrets learned in your service than I have revealed you those I learned
|
|
in his.''
|
|
|
|
I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them. How much of that had been
|
|
truth and how much of it a lie? It was the proportions that made the
|
|
difference between poison and medicine.
|
|
|
|
I was going to be betrayed at least once before the month was out, but
|
|
would Scribe make the second?
|
|
|
|
``I believe you,'' I lied, and we prepared for our guests.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Sometimes diplomacy was about making a point.
|
|
|
|
That was why, when five orcs passed through the gates of Jinon following
|
|
Indrani, they stopped and stared at the sight awaiting them for a beat.
|
|
It was not the throne that caught their eye, though shaping it out of
|
|
roiling Night had lent it a certain imperious look. It wasn't the
|
|
deadwood staff across my knees either, or crow-shaped shadows perched
|
|
above my shoulders. It was the piles of arms and armour that filled the
|
|
courtyard, glittering and ornate Praesi armaments spread around like a
|
|
carpet of steel. Hundreds of swords and shields, of cuirasses and
|
|
helmets, and not a corpse anywhere around to be seen. Only steel and
|
|
silence, with the moon high above and dark walls around us.
|
|
|
|
That was my point: \emph{I took this fortress, and I did not even bleed
|
|
for it.}
|
|
|
|
Archer was hiding a smile as she walked to us through the path. I had a
|
|
small honour guard around me, a simple line of regulars, and though
|
|
Hierophant was somewhere above on a parapet it was Scribe who stood
|
|
behind me on my left. There were five seats awaiting, for the five orcs
|
|
that the clans I'd reached out to had sent. Scribe whispered the names
|
|
into my ear even as they approached, their body language wary. Asny of
|
|
the Graven Bone Clan, taller than even Hakram and sister to her clan's
|
|
chief. Valborg of the Stag-Crowned Clan, stooped but strong and eldest
|
|
raid leader of the Stag-Crowned. Skarod Longaxe, the small but nimble
|
|
husband to the chieftain of the Blackspear Clan. The twins Sigvin and
|
|
Sigvun of the Split Tree Clan were the last, rumoured to both be shamans
|
|
and shapeshifters.
|
|
|
|
It was the clan I needed on my side the least that'd sent two envoys,
|
|
ironically enough. The Blackspears, the Graven Bone and the Stag-Crowned
|
|
were the three largest southern clans, but that wasn't actually why I'd
|
|
reached out to them. I had decent relations with the Red Shields and the
|
|
Howling Wolves -- Juniper and Hakram's clans -- and they were among the
|
|
great orc powers too. No, those three were here because Malicia had
|
|
raised them over other orcs by ennobling their chiefs as Lords of the
|
|
Steppe and empowering them to collect tribute on behalf of the Tower.
|
|
The Split Tree twins, on the other hand, were here for slightly more
|
|
complicated reasons.
|
|
|
|
Their clan was respected and well-connected, boasting a number of
|
|
genuine spellcaster shamans, and it'd made the Split Tree Clan an
|
|
important part of the alliance that'd formed around the Lords of the
|
|
Steppes. Those three clans had\ldots{} mixed reputations. The Split Tree
|
|
being part of the alliance lent it respect it badly needed, considering
|
|
when the Howling Wolves -- currently the largest and most well-respected
|
|
of the clans -- were at the head of the alliance opposing the Lords of
|
|
the Steppe. For me that meant having them on board was much to be
|
|
preferred, if a bargain was to happen, but they weren't strictly
|
|
required. Archer left their side after offering me a grin, coming to
|
|
stand at my right. As the orcs approached a legionary came forward with
|
|
a plate holding a large cut of salted pork and a mug of beer.
|
|
|
|
``I offer you meat and drink from my table,'' I spoke in Kharsum.
|
|
|
|
They each took a bite and a sip -- I noted that the Blackspear envoy,
|
|
Skarod Longaxe, went first -- and only then did the wariness leave them.
|
|
I'd just formally given them my hospitality, and though the custom was
|
|
not as ironclad with orcs as it was with Taghreb it wasn't something to
|
|
lightly cross.
|
|
|
|
``Good, we're done with the shite then,'' Asny of the Graven Bones
|
|
grunted, spitting to the side. ``Hail, Black Queen.''
|
|
|
|
``Hail, Asny of the Graven Bones,'' I replied, faintly amused. ``And to
|
|
you all.''
|
|
|
|
It got growls in answer, rough acknowledgement.
|
|
|
|
``You wanted to have talks, Black Queen,'' Skarod Longaxe said. ``Talk,
|
|
then. You're not the only one with a war on.''
|
|
|
|
``That one's her war too, unless she's stopped trading weapons to our
|
|
enemies,'' Valborg of the Stag-Crowned peevishly said.
|
|
|
|
I hadn't. Hakram's revision of the proposal that'd troubled me so much
|
|
had proved viable in arming the clans we wanted armed in the Steppes.
|
|
We'd taken to buying \emph{dwarven} weapons through Mercantis, which
|
|
while relatively low-quality were cheap and came in large crates. We
|
|
traded them to friendly clans in the north for amber, furs and raw iron
|
|
ore -- which we then traded back to Mercantis at a mark up, making a
|
|
small but tidy profit. We could sustain that trade route for years,
|
|
considering Callow had nowhere enough trading barges to flood either
|
|
market to the extent that prices would lower. The kind of diplomatic
|
|
flourishes I'd gotten used to trotting out in Procer would be useless
|
|
here, so instead I leaned into my natural instinct.
|
|
|
|
``You hitched your chariot to a dying horse,'' I bluntly told them.
|
|
``It's time to cut loose before it drags you down with it.''
|
|
|
|
Asny barked out a laugh.
|
|
|
|
``You've got guts, Queen, I'll give you that,'' she said. ``But it's a
|
|
little soon to make that claim, yeah? Tower's still standing.''
|
|
|
|
``There are many who have fought Dread Empress Malicia, over the
|
|
years,'' Sigvin of the Split Tree said, voice soft for all that she was
|
|
built like barn door. ``Some even had the better of her, for a time.
|
|
None still remain.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled at them, all teeth and malice.
|
|
|
|
``If my armies are at the gates of Ater, what use do I have for any of
|
|
you?'' I said. ``When the Tower falls -- and it will -- what reason do I
|
|
have to care about your enemies butchering every last one of you? If
|
|
you're of no use to me, you're meat. Now is when you earn your worth.''
|
|
|
|
Skarod Longaxe, envoy for the Blackspears, spat to the side on some
|
|
soldier's shield.
|
|
|
|
``So you want us to kneel to your little favourites,'' he said. ``Which
|
|
will you crown, Black Queen, the Howling Wolves or the Red Shields?''
|
|
|
|
He bared his teeth, contemptuous.
|
|
|
|
``Will you make one of your servants chief first, just to tie it up
|
|
neat?'' he mocked. ``Your own little puppet king in the Steppes, ready
|
|
to do your bidding.''
|
|
|
|
``Fuck that,'' Asny of the Graven Bones growled. ``We're too many
|
|
corpses deep in this feud to roll over for the Wolves.''
|
|
|
|
``Little has been offered,'' Sigvun of the Split Tree Clan mildly said.
|
|
``Much has been demanded.''
|
|
|
|
I drummed fingers against the arm of my throne.
|
|
|
|
``Did I ever speak of surrendering to anyone?'' I asked, irritated.
|
|
``The next person to put words in my mouth will be made to swallow
|
|
them.''
|
|
|
|
``We're under hospitality,'' Skarod Longaxe harshly said.
|
|
|
|
``Hospitality keeps you your life, Longaxe, not your teeth,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
Asny and Valborg laughed, though the twins looked unamused.
|
|
|
|
``Are these talks not meant to broke peace between us and the Howling
|
|
Wolves, then?'' Sigvin of the Split Tree asked.
|
|
|
|
``I'm here to broker a war,'' I said. ``If you want to make peace with
|
|
the Wolves, make peace with the Wolves. It's the business of the Clans,
|
|
not Callow.''
|
|
|
|
I stared them down from my throne, the crows stirring at my shoulders.
|
|
The attention of the Sisters was not in the shards, leaving them as
|
|
little more than creatures of shadow, but they still made an
|
|
intimidating sight.
|
|
|
|
``What I want to know,'' I said, ``is why you're fighting other orcs for
|
|
snow and grass when you could be biting deep in the riches of Okoro
|
|
instead.''
|
|
|
|
``We didn't choose to feud,'' Skarod Longaxe snorted. ``The Wolves
|
|
did.''
|
|
|
|
Bullshit. The Blackspears had wasted no time in using the powers Malicia
|
|
granted them to try to extort all their neighbouring clans, they'd known
|
|
it would come to war. They'd just figured they were going to win it.
|
|
|
|
``Okoro's belly is well-guarded,'' Sigvun of the Split Tree pointed out.
|
|
``Much of its armies have remained north, its walls are tall and its
|
|
devils many.''
|
|
|
|
``We could take them,'' Asny of the Graven Bones scoffed. ``If we didn't
|
|
have to keep half our warriors home to fight off raids, we could smash
|
|
through Okoro.''
|
|
|
|
``The only thing you'd smash in Okoro is your skull on Chagoro's walls,
|
|
pup,'' Valborg of the Stag-Crowned dismissed. ``That fortress has broken
|
|
more warbands than you've had lays.''
|
|
|
|
``Chagoro,'' I calmly said, ``has fallen.''
|
|
|
|
Five pairs of eyes went to me, stillness hanging in the air like haze.
|
|
|
|
``There is nothing left between those walls save corpses,'' I said. ``Do
|
|
I now have your attention?''
|
|
|
|
``You lie,'' Skarod Longaxe accused.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at Scribe, who took a single step forward.
|
|
|
|
``It is the truth,'' she said. ``My agents have confirmed it.''
|
|
|
|
That took the wind out of Longaxe's sails. The Calamities weren't
|
|
necessarily loved by orcs, but they were \emph{respected}. Scribe
|
|
putting her weight behind this wasn't something they'd dismiss. Hells,
|
|
it was the reason I'd sent her with Archer into the Steppes in the first
|
|
place. Indrani wasn't known up there, but the Calamities? That name
|
|
still turned heads, even with most of them in the ground. It'd made them
|
|
take me seriously enough to send envoys in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``That changes things,'' Valborg of the Stag-Crowned admitted, clicking
|
|
her fangs in hesitation. ``Without Chagoro in the way, we could make it
|
|
past the fortress-lands.''
|
|
|
|
``We can't mount a raid worth a goat's spit with the Wolves up our
|
|
asses,'' Asny of the Graven Bones said.
|
|
|
|
``Okoro's wealth isn't worth kneeling to our enemies,'' Skarod Longaxe
|
|
said, but his tone was more careful now.
|
|
|
|
Less hostile, I decided. He still didn't think much of me or my offer,
|
|
but the thought of raiding Okoro's holdings appealed. As I'd thought it
|
|
might.
|
|
|
|
``Offer truce,'' I said. ``If you do, I will back you under threat of
|
|
ending sale of arms.''
|
|
|
|
``Truce isn't peace, but it won't be easy to swallow,'' Asny growled.
|
|
|
|
``Fight for a thousand years, for all I care,'' I snorted. ``But do it
|
|
\emph{rich}. Do it with great herds of cattle, with granaries of grains
|
|
and the wealth of a hundred tributes. Do it wielding enchanted blades.
|
|
You think you're the only ones who want to sink their teeth there? How
|
|
many warriors from the Shields and the Wolves do you think would rather
|
|
raid south than fight \emph{you}?''
|
|
|
|
That was why I was sitting with these five instead of clans I could more
|
|
easily have made allies of, in the end. I could back those friendly
|
|
clans all I wanted, but it wouldn't \emph{cost} Malicia anything. What
|
|
did she care that there was a civil war in the Steppes, so long as it
|
|
didn't spill over anywhere that mattered to her? It wouldn't conclude
|
|
quickly enough to be a threat. I actually suspected she'd meant her
|
|
raising of the Lords of the Steppes to trigger that very civil war,
|
|
since if the orcs were fighting each other they weren't making trouble
|
|
for her. She'd picked clans with badreputations to raise, too, and that
|
|
didn't look like a coincidence to me. They were the same clans that were
|
|
almost guaranteed to have gone raiding at her unprotected back, were
|
|
they not busy defending their noble titles.
|
|
|
|
If I turned these, though, not only would the betrayal be a public slap
|
|
in her face but close to the full might of the Clans would come into
|
|
play in the greater Praesi civil war.
|
|
|
|
``And if this truce was sought by your alliance,'' Sigvun of the Split
|
|
Tree said, ``you would support it?''
|
|
|
|
``I'll even send an envoy at the talks,'' I smiled, hiding my triumph.
|
|
|
|
I said it like it was a concession. Like it wasn't what I'd been after
|
|
from the start. Like the moment the rest of them began to agree, as they
|
|
hesitantly did, I'd not gotten exactly what I wanted: an army that,
|
|
though it didn't know it yet, was going to march on Keter with the rest
|
|
of us.
|
|
|
|
Now I just needed to figure out why my father had wanted this too, and
|
|
if the two of us were at war too.
|