705 lines
29 KiB
TeX
705 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-18-release}{%
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\section{Chapter 18: Release}\label{chapter-18-release}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The trick isn't to win battles, it's to let your opponents lose
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them.''}
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--Aretha the Raven, Nicaean general
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\end{quote}
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General Sacker came to meet me with a company of a hundred heavies and
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three lines of mages, the lot of them glittering with at least half a
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dozen defensive enchantments and shield spells at the tip of their
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hands. Well, would you look at. The Rebel Legions had grasped the
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reality that I might be somewhat cross at them. It was almost like
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they'd taken my coin and supplies for years before turning on me at the
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first opportunity. I wasn't going to be forgetting that, or any other of
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their small slights.
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``Hail, Black Queen.''
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A mere twenty knight stood fanned out behind me. What need did I have
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for a larger escort than that?
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``Sacker,'' I said. ``Fancy seeing you here.''
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The goblin general had only walked up to the edge of the defensive
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enchantments and not a step further. I would have been offended by that
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if I hadn't seriously considered slaughtering the entire contingent and
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ripping her plans out of her mind on the ride here. Only the certainty
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that it would push the rebels to allying with the Black Knight, however
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temporarily, had stayed my hand.
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``You were warned of our march,'' General Sacker replied. ``We have
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dealt openly with you.''
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``Debatable at best,'' I flatly replied. ``But let's pretend I buy that,
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just for a moment. Keep up that alleged streak and tell me what you lot
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came here to do.''
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``We aim to engage in talks with Marshal Nim,'' Sacker said. ``We have
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no intention of fighting you save if you force our hand.''
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I snorted. General Mok's plan to talk the Black Knight into deposing
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Malicia was still their play, then. They were fools if they thought it
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would get them anywhere. Nim was in deep with the Tower, she wasn't
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going to defect now. Malicia would string them along until she no longer
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had a use for them, a situation I could only assume was imminent.
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``And your stance regarding Sepulchral's forces?'' I asked.
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``If arrangement is reached with the Black Knight, there will be either
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surrender or war,'' Sacker said. ``If not, the situation remains fluid.
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Regardless, we will not attack unless first provoked.''
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Mhm. Then they weren't all in on Mok's plan yet. The vanguard in the
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northern Moule Hills was being used as threat on the flank of the
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Loyalist Legions, one they had no intention of removing before a deal
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was struck with the Black Knight. An alliance with the Rebel Legions
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wasn't on the table -- wouldn't be unless Marshal Nim refused their
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entreaties outright, which she wouldn't because she wasn't a fucking
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idiot -- so there was no point in aiming for that. I could, though, aim
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for a smaller concession.
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``Then I'll ask for your promise to stand aside should I intervene to
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prevent Marshal Nim wiping out the vanguard,'' I said. ``If not your
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help outright, which I would take as a sign of good faith doing much to
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restore your trustworthiness in my eyes.''
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She hesitated.
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``They are a rebel force,'' General Sacker hedged. ``The Black Knight's
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duty is clear.''
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I met her eyes and let all pleasantness drip down from my face.
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``My tolerance has limits,'' I said, tone so very mild.
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``We are not in your service,'' the goblin general snorted.
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``No,'' I replied, ``but so far you have toed the line when it came to
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being my \emph{enemy}. You might want to consider the price of crossing
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it, before you offer me another half-hearted platitude.''
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``I am a general of-''
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``You \emph{were} a general,'' I coldly interrupted. ``Now you're a
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vagrant that twice bit the hands feeding you. You're out of chances,
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Sacker. With me, with the Tower, with everybody else.''
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``Threats will not sway me, girl,'' General Sacker said.
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I let Night billow in my veins, coming quicker for the anger in my
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blood.
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``A threat?'' I laughed. ``Do you honestly think your little spells
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would stop me if I wanted you all dead? If I wanted to rip out every
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secret from your head and make them dance before my eyes? It's not a
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threat when I warn you, Sacker. \emph{You are not strong enough for my
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words to be hypothetical}. If you get in my way, I will fucking step on
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you.''
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I leaned forward.
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``So I'm going to ask you again,'' I said. ``I want your promise to
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stand aside, should I intervene to prevent the Black Knight from wiping
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out Sepulchral's vanguard.''
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Still she hesitated, and a ring of red light formed high above me as
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Night kept coming to me. I ripped it out of the sky without even
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bothering to look.
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``So long as no deal has been struck with the Black Knight, you have our
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promise,'' General Sacker finally said.
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``Good,'' I harshly smiled.
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``You are not making allies with your words, girl,'' the goblin said.
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``And still I somehow seem to have more than you lot,'' I replied.
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I cocked my head to the side.
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``And Sacker, one last thing?'' I added.
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She watched me expectantly.
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``Call me girl again and I'll make you eat your own tongue,'' I calmly
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told her.
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Somehow, I saw, the calm gave her more pause than my anger had.
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---
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The Rebel Legions did two things the day they blew into our increasingly
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crowded battlefield. The first was send envoys to both myself and the
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Black Knight. The second was throw their hat in the ring, so to speak.
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The Loyalist Legions and my Army of Callow had dug trenches and raised
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palisades along two thirds of the length of the valley between the
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hills, all the way to the road, but the deserters sent their sappers
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downhill the moment they had a camp up and began digging a trench of
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their own. Facing mine and Nim's, vertical to our horizontal.
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``They're digging a hundred feet past crossbow range, both ours and the
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Legions','' General Zola informed us at council. ``Sapper-General
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Pickler believes their fortifications will end up in a thin crescent
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facing our lines.''
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``We'll need to raise our own trenches facing theirs,'' I sighed. ``Or
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they'll be able to flank us at will.''
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It would turn our fortifications into a straight corner with one side
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facing the Loyalist Legions and the other the Rebel ones, while the
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Black Knight's trench would end up at a much wider angle. Given their
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more numerous sappers, though, I didn't anticipate them losing much of a
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step.
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``We're getting boxed in,'' Grandmaster Talbot said. ``With all these
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walls and trenches the Order will be made useless.''
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``We can't prevent them for raising fortifications of their own without
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forcing a battle,'' Aisha said. ``One at which we will be at a severe
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disadvantage, should the Black Knight reinforce them.''
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Which she probably would. The deserters were still at a full force,
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thirteen thousand and fresh. The Army of Callow numbered a little under
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thirteen thousand, now, and Nim's legions should be around twenty or
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twenty-one thousand. That battle would see us outnumbered more than two
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to one while flanked, which was a recipe for disaster. We couldn't
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afford to start that fight.
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``We do nothing,'' I said, the words bitter against my tongue. ``To
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them, at least. Our sappers need to prepare our flank for the
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possibility of assault now.''
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It was out of my hands, now. All I could hope was that my enemies did
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not yet band together. The day passed quickly enough, laden with bad
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news, but the following warning ended up just as darkened. Scribe had
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requested the war council gather, which was rare enough I did not think
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twice about granting the request. What she had to say was not long, but
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it still hit hard.
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``It cost me most of my agents within Sepulchral's main host, but I have
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found out who plans her campaign for her,'' Scribe said.
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I laid back into my seat, already sensing this was not pleasant news.
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``Instructions are received by letter, which are read out loud over
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scrying ritual,'' Eudokia said. ``The physical letters eventually make
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their way to Sepulchral herself, however, and my people were able to
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forge a decent copy of one before fleeing camp.''
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She set down a letter on the table, which aside from having calligraphy
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small and cramped did not particularly evoke anything in me. Juniper,
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though, breathed in sharply.
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``This is Grem One-Eye's handwriting,'' Scribe said. ``He has been
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planning Sepulchral's campaign for her from captivity in Ater.''
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I grimaced. Well, fuck. Just what we needed, another marshal in the mix.
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My fingers clenched, then unclenched. Wrong way to think about this, I
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decided. Grem wouldn't have had the pull to do this on his own, someone
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had to be helping him. Hells, someone had to have \emph{asked} him to do
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this because otherwise I couldn't see him helping Abreha Mirembe. And
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only two people were in position to do it, Malicia and my father. It
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didn't fit Malicia, though, her way of doing things. Even if she'd been
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helping Sepulchral stay afloat with good advice, she would have cut off
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the flow now. She could no longer afford game this elaborate.
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So it meant I had, at last, found the first trace of what my father was
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up to in Kala.
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That somewhat improved my mood, but it passed quickly. While I'd been
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lost in thought I'd not been paying attention to the table, which only
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claimed my attention again when there was a ripple in the assembled
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council. Juniper had gotten to her feet.
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Without a word, she walked out of the tent and did not return.
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---
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Once more I found the Marshal of Callow standing beneath a sycamore.
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The same as last time, a bone-dry skeleton of a tree hollowed out
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inside. Dead and dying, the limbs having yet to catch up to the
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emptiness at the heart of it. Juniper's escort had stayed far, as
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ordered, and as I limped past them across the dusty ground I found my
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eye dragged above. Sunset was painting the sky in layers, just like the
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stones of the hills to the west: the dark blue of night high above, with
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a distant moon, but then it lightened. Yellowed. Only to deepen once
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more, orange and red and at last a rich purple. Day died and its death
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throes shifted across the stone and dust, shade cutting in fluid slices
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as it swallowed up Creation in a never-sated maw. The Wasteland, for all
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its many dangers, was capable of eerie beauty at times.
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Juniper was not leaning against the tree. I saw that first, even as I
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approached her. I had thought to find here the same hunched and
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self-loathing creature that'd been wearing the skin of one of my oldest
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friends for over a sennight, but this was\ldots{} different. Her back
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might not be straight, but she was not sagging like withered vine.
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Instead she stood there with a lost and thoughtful look on her face,
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looking straight west. I followed her gaze, founding nothing more than
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the sappers of the Rebel Legions at work digging their own trench and
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palisade. They were skilled hands, well-drilled for all that they had
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deserted the Tower's service. The three generals leading them had kept
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them disciplined.
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I hesitated to break the silence. I'd found what I'd thought I would,
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and I was not sure I wanted to interrupt\ldots{} whatever this was. For
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all the intensity of the Hellhound's gaze, I had of late seen in her
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fragility that had me staying my hand. As I wrestled with my doubts, she
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came to a decision of her own. Her voice was rasping when she spoke.
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Dry, and she licked her chops before doing it.
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``The Scribe, she said that Sacker's in command among the deserters,''
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Juniper said. ``Is it true?''
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I hummed.
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``Can't be sure,'' I admitted. ``But the Jacks heard the same thing. I
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think Mok has more pull when it comes to strategic decisions, since he
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has the biggest army, but that Sacker's the lead for tactics.''
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Her eyes never left the sappers digging to the west. I bit my lip, then
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cast aside my hesitation. It wasn't doing me any good.
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``They tell me you've been here more than two hours,'' I said. ``Have
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you been looking at them the whole time?''
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The Hellhound laughed. It was a low, rumbling thing. Not quite amused or
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happy, more like a\ldots{} release. Vented feeling.
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``Yeah, I have,'' Juniper said. ``Because there's this\ldots{}''
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She shook her head.
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``She was like an aunt to me, Sacker,'' the orc said.
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I did remember. It felt like a lifetime ago, but I remembered. I'd never
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seen her as embarrassed as she had been when I'd first seen her meet her
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mother and almost-aunt fuss over her after she became a legate. It'd
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been a memorable sight.
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``Auntie Sacks,'' I idly said.
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``She used to tell me stories,'' Juniper distantly said. ``When I was
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small, Catherine. To make me go to sleep. That was all back in
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Summerholm, before I went home to be raised by my father. Goblin stories
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about gore and raids and little girls that got gobbled up for being too
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slow or too dim.''
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``She seemed close to your mother,'' I said.
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I'd never grown to know either more than shallowly, but it's been
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obvious to be even when I'd been young.
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``She was probably Mom's closest friend in the world,'' she replied.
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``She spent more years of her life with Sacker at her side than she did
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my own father. It showed. Goblins aren't usually\ldots{} good with
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children. Sacker was making an effort.''
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``She seems to have made an impression on you,'' I said.
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Juniper flashed pale fangs at the deepening night.
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``She did,'' the Hellhound said. ``But not just for the stories. Did you
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ever hear she was meant to rise to Marshal in Ranker's place when she
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retired?''
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``There were rumours,'' I acknowledged. ``You know, back
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before\ldots{}''
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I gesture vaguely, meaning a great many things but not in particular.
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She snorted in amusement.
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``I looked up to her for that,'' Juniper said. ``Even more than I did my
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mother, because my mother was never going to rise higher than she had.
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It wasn't like Istrid Knightsbane I wanted to be when I grew up,
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Catherine. It was like Grem and Ranker and Nim. The Marshals. And
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Sacker, she had the stuff. The marshals knew it, so the Carrion Lord. If
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things had turned out different, it could be her serving as the Tower's
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greatest captain instead of Nim.''
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``A lot of things could have gone differently,'' I said.
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My hand half-rose to the cloth covering the eye sloppiness had cost me
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before I forced it down. Some mistakes stayed with you longer than
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others. I found Juniper's gaze had moved to me, catching sight of the
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aborted movement, and I flushed in embarrassment. Those kinds of regrets
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I preferred kept unseen from even my friends.
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``It's an eye, Catherine,'' Juniper said. ``Just an eye. You could lose
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both and still be who you are. And that's what eats at me. When did you
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know?''
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``Know what?''
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Her gaze was alight with something I could not quite name.
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``Who you were,'' Juniper gravelled. ``We've hung titles around your
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neck like necklaces at a summer fair, Warlord. Countess. Squire.
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Arch-heretic of the East. Black Queen, Queen of Lost and Found, of
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Winter, of the Hunt. First Under the Night. But before that, when did
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you \emph{know}?''
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Half a dozen answers, some flippant and others rote, came to the tip of
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my tongue. I could not get any of them out, not meeting her eyes with my
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last remaining one. Seeing the cast of her face in the last gaps of the
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day, the despair and the hunger that burned in her eyes. I did love her,
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Juniper. My own Hellhound. As deeply as I did the Woe. I'd loved her as
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the hard-eyed foe I had to overcome to prove myself worthy of my
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father's tutelage, when we'd both been children, and I loved her now as
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the woman who'd built a kingdom and an army with me. So I stayed silent,
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for a long moment, and told her the truth.
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``In the Everdark,'' I quietly said. ``There was\ldots{}''
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I swallowed. I'd never spoken of this to anyone, not even Hakram. The
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words did not come easy. Was there a way in any language ever made that
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I could truly explain what they had been, the last moments of the battle
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in Great Strycht?
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``I lost,'' I finally said, tone quiet. ``They carved me open, Juniper,
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and all the power and the death and the madness I'd gorged myself on
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came pouring back out.''
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I looked down and found my hand was shaking a bit. I had come to
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understand the Sisters, and they me, but that had been after.
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\emph{After.}
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``It was like blinders went off my eyes,'' I murmured. ``And Gods, but I
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had done so many horrible things. More of them were all I could see
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ahead, and I was just so fucking \emph{tired}. So I went down.''
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I closed my fingers into a fist, to kill the tremors.
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``And I stayed down, waiting to choke in the snow.''
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I heard the sharp intake of breath.
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``But I didn't,'' I murmured. ``It took too long, you see. Snow melted
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enough I could breathe. And I still wanted to stay down, to sleep, but I
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just\ldots{}''
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I laughed, as mirthlessly as she had.
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``It was a choice,'' I said. ``And there was nothing weighing the
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balance either way. So I ask myself, why not?''
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I tightened my cloak around my shoulders, shivering.
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``And then?'' Juniper quietly asked.
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``And then I got up,'' I softly smiled. ``And I think that's what stayed
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with me, Juniper. The even balance and the question and the choice I
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made. And it's gone to shit since, you know. Death and doom and the age
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falling down on our heads. And every day the same choice is there
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waiting to be made: lie down\ldots{}''
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``Or stand up,'' the Hellhound finished.
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I nodded.
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``I've stayed on my feet,'' I said. ``I will, until I am either
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victorious or I die. I think that's what left of me, when you whittle
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away the rest.''
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Juniper looked away.
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``I thought it'd be victory,'' the Hellhound admitted.
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``It's never the victories that stay with you,'' I tiredly said.
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Large fingers laid against the dead wood.
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``No,'' the Marshal of Callow said, ``I guess not.''
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A moment passed.
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``You're looking west again.''
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``Ranker's dead,'' Juniper quietly said. ``But Sacker's here. Nim is
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here. And Grem uses Sepulchral's army. Everyone who is or could be a
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Marshal of Praes.''
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I studied her, but her expression was hard to make out and her eyes
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stayed west.
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``There's this thing I see, Catherine,'' she confessed. ``The lay of it.
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Two hours I've watched the sappers, how quick they work. How quick the
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work will be done. And I know how quickly Nim's will work, and
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\emph{ours} and\ldots{}''
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``And what?'' I quietly asked.
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``And there is a box,'' the Marshal of Callow said. ``Where the battle
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will happen. I see it. It's where it'll all happen and we can shape
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it.''
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I could smell it the air, now. Victory. Yet Creation did not shiver,
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fate did not ripple like a lake in the wind, because this was not the
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writ of any Gods. It was just Juniper of the Red Shields, looking at a
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dusty field in the middle of nowhere and being the woman I'd glimpsed in
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her at seventeen.
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``You want to fight,'' I said.
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It was not a question.
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``Sacker hasn't seen it,'' Juniper said, sounding disbelieving. ``She
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can't have, not if she's raising those walls. Sacker hasn't seen it, and
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she could have been a Marshal.''
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Large fingers clawed at the thin bark of the dying sycamore. She turned
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to me.
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``I could be wrong,'' she told me, tone anguished. ``I could be just
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seeing what's not there. I've\ldots{} these have not been good days,
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Catherine, and I did not stand up in the face of them. I need you to
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know that \emph{I could be wrong.}''
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I would have answered, but she was not done. The words were spilling out
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of her like broken barrel.
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``I feel like my entire life I've been drawing a bow,'' Juniper said.
|
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``And ever since I've been your marshal, I've just\ldots{} stood there.
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And my hand's been trembling. But this? This place, this box, these
|
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foes?''
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The hand left the tree and she pushed away, straightening her back.
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``I can release the arrow,'' Juniper of the Red Shields said, pleaded.
|
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``I can win this. \emph{Please}.''
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|
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And I could have taken her by the arm, brought her close and told her
|
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that she did not need to win back my trust because she'd never lost it.
|
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But I knew, sure as dawn, that it was not what she wanted. Needed. And I
|
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was my father's daughter, so I offered her the very same grace I was
|
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once offered. My wrist snapped out and metal slapped against my palm.
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I handed her a knife, pommel first.
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``If you mean the words,'' I replied, ``commit. Carve them.''
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Incomprehension, first, but I saw her eyes clear as she matched my gaze.
|
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I did not mean the plea, or the apology that came unspoken with it.
|
|
Those were between us. What I wanted from her was conviction. The
|
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Hellhound leaned close to the tree, reaching inside, and carved. The
|
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strokes shook, at first, but grew certain. Her hand did not tremble. And
|
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when she withdrew, deep in the hollow of a dead tree waited these words:
|
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\emph{Marshal Juniper wins here.} I smiled, startled.
|
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|
``Here?'' I asked, amused. ``Exactly?''
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``This tree is where we win,'' the Marshal of Callow said, tone even,
|
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``and everyone else loses.''
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She offered me back the knife, pommel first. I took it.
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``Let's go home,'' I said. ``It's getting late.''
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``Yeah,'' Juniper said, eyes red. ``Let's go home, Catherine.''
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We'd left alone. We came back together.
|
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|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``First, we shape the box,'' the Marshal of Callow said.
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|
|
It was a surprisingly simple thing, when it came down do it. We had our
|
|
palisade and trench from Kala Hills to the half-road, so the only way to
|
|
go was south. The assumption in my head had been that it'd turn into a
|
|
right angle facing the Rebel Legion line, but Juniper had seen
|
|
otherwise. Sacker and her fellows had been clever in putting themselves
|
|
between two forces that did not want to fight them, forcing them to dig
|
|
in and confirm their position of kingmaker of this battlefield. The
|
|
downside, though, was that the sappers of the Rebel Legions needed to
|
|
dig their trench in both directions \emph{simultaneously}. So we took
|
|
advantage of that.
|
|
|
|
We began building westwards instead of south, a sloping line of defence
|
|
headed towards Moule Hills. Immediately the Rebel Legions began trying
|
|
to force us back by cutting through our path, keeping at the same
|
|
distance neither of us had yet dared to break, but when they focused
|
|
their efforts south the Loyalist Legions began pushing at them instead.
|
|
Nim wasn't any more interested in giving them leverage than we were,
|
|
after all.
|
|
|
|
``The slopes grow steeper further south of Moule Hills,'' the Hellhound
|
|
said. ``That leaves only a narrow passage through which they can move
|
|
troops into the valley, if they attack. That will shape \emph{where}
|
|
they attack.''
|
|
|
|
``Which we don't want them to,'' I pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed. So while we raise our works we have to delay,'' the Marshal of
|
|
Callow said. ``We must maintain the stalemate until Sepulchral's main
|
|
host arrives.''
|
|
|
|
She had notions as how that should be done, of course. The first was to
|
|
put the Loyalist Legions on the backfoot by poisoning the source of
|
|
water they'd been using since we cut them off from their supply lines:
|
|
Nioqe Lake.
|
|
|
|
``We don't have anything that can poison a lake that large,'' I
|
|
pragmatically said.
|
|
|
|
I'd pretty much kill the town of Risas as well, but I was less broken up
|
|
about that when they'd been providing guides to Legion skirmishers. I'd
|
|
offer them safe passage south through the territory I controlled, but I
|
|
wasn't going to weep about them being driven out if we did it. Which I
|
|
wasn't sure we could.
|
|
|
|
``We do,'' Juniper grunted, ``for the same reason that we had to use
|
|
that lake for water. Arcadian water can't be safely drunk.''
|
|
|
|
A hundred knights, Masego and myself went for a ride. We tore through
|
|
Akua's attempts to stop us and I opened a gate in the sky, making Nioqe
|
|
Lake a third larger and entirely unusable for water supplies.
|
|
|
|
``Then slow the deserters,'' the Marshal of Callow said. ``The moment
|
|
their walls are up they can afford to start provoking us and strongarm
|
|
the Black Knight.''
|
|
|
|
She spent half a day with Pickler out in the field, studying the eastern
|
|
slopes of Moule Hills, before asking me for Archer and the Huntress.
|
|
Ballistas were moved, and then fired at the hillside exactly five times
|
|
with the Named as spotters. The ensuing landslide didn't kill anyone
|
|
that we saw, but it did drop down a least of tone of rock right in the
|
|
middle of the way of the Rebel Legions. They'd have to clear them out
|
|
before they could get back to work.
|
|
|
|
``So we hit the Loyalists, after that,'' I guessed.
|
|
|
|
``It's necessary and they had to be last,'' the Hellhound said. ``By now
|
|
they've used all their sudes to match our wall and the deserters'. But
|
|
we don't want them to be able to keep fortifying over the next few days,
|
|
they would encircle Sepulchral's camp with walls entirely. Thankfully,
|
|
their wood reserves were used to make the ring of forts around the Aksum
|
|
camp, so they are now entirely dependent on the wood cut down in Kala
|
|
Hills.''
|
|
|
|
``So what do we do, drive them out?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``That would be too costly,'' Juniper replied. ``There is another way.
|
|
It hasn't rained in days. All you have to do, Catherine, is live up to
|
|
your reputation.''
|
|
|
|
We set fire to the damned hills. Masego and I with large columns of
|
|
blackflame, but it wasn't only us. Indrani and Alexis shot fire arrows,
|
|
a raiding party with Squire and Apprentice started a swath with torches
|
|
and fire spells. The blaze got out of control when the wind turned,
|
|
burnt a chunk of the hills under our control as well, but for the better
|
|
part of the day the wind had blown north. The Legions weren't going to
|
|
get anything but ash out of those hills.
|
|
|
|
``The Black Knight will dismantle Ogarin for spare parts,'' the Marshal
|
|
of Callow noted, ``but that will take time and the townsfolk will
|
|
resist. It should buy us long enough.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It did.
|
|
|
|
Sepulchral had been six days as well, and we kept the stalemate going
|
|
just long enough. Our wall was anchored on the slopes of Moule Hills,
|
|
facing that of the Rebel Legions, while to the north the Black Knight
|
|
had hemmed them in as well. Envoys had gone back and forth between those
|
|
camps, but no alliance against the Army of Callow had emerged. We'd kept
|
|
them on the backfoot until Sepulchral arrived from the west with the
|
|
rest of her twenty-thousand strong army. The Loyalist Legions had not
|
|
finished their encirclement of the camp up in Moule Hills, and so they
|
|
were forced to evacuate the sole fort in the way of Sepulchral linking
|
|
her forces together late in the sixth day.
|
|
|
|
And so, at least, everyone was here.
|
|
|
|
``My agents in the Rebel Legion camp tell me that the talks with Marshal
|
|
Nim are souring,'' Scribe told me the same day, in my tent.
|
|
|
|
``She's still not budging?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``She has promised to extract of Malicia promises to make suborning
|
|
officers of the Legions of Terror with mind control spells,'' Scribe
|
|
said, ``but she still refuses to turn on the Tower in any significant
|
|
manner. Now there is division among their generals. Sacker is pushing
|
|
for their force to declare in favour of Amadeus as Dread Emperor, but
|
|
Mok is strongly opposed. He instead argues that if further concessions
|
|
are extracted from Malicia, safeguarding the sanctity of the Legions,
|
|
their reasons for breaking with the Tower no longer exist.''
|
|
|
|
``Jaiyana Seket?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Hedging,'' Scribe grimaced. ``There's not telling which way she'll end
|
|
up leaning.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out. General Mok was arguing to rejoin Malicia's cause,
|
|
essentially. And he'd never bothered to pretend he was anything but
|
|
hostile to my presence in Praes, or indeed the Grand Alliance's concerns
|
|
about the Dread Empire. I'd warned them that my tolerance had limits.
|
|
|
|
``Have assassin kill Mok,'' I said. ``Frame Sepulchral for it if you
|
|
can.''
|
|
|
|
``That should be-'' Scribe began, but she was interrupted when Vivienne
|
|
blew into my tent.
|
|
|
|
I cocked an eyebrow at my successor, who was looking rather harried.
|
|
|
|
``Viv?''
|
|
|
|
``Trouble,'' she said. ``I have a fresh word from the Jacks. General Mok
|
|
was killed an hour ago.''
|
|
|
|
I glanced at Scribe, but she shook her head. I supposed not even the
|
|
Webweaver worked that fast.
|
|
|
|
``Where's the trouble?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``General Seket got killed as well and they caught the people who
|
|
supposedly killed both,'' Vivienne said.
|
|
|
|
I swore furiously.
|
|
|
|
``They caught Jacks, didn't they?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
She nodded.
|
|
|
|
``It's\ldots{} bad, Catherine,'' she said. ``There's been brawls in
|
|
their camp, people are saying this is a coup by Sacker done with our
|
|
backing. That she's planning to sell out Praes to the Grand Alliance.''
|
|
|
|
I swore again.
|
|
|
|
``If I may hazard a guess,'' Scribe mildly said, ``the figurehead of
|
|
this belief will be the senior legate for either Mok or Jaiyana Seket?''
|
|
|
|
Vivienne looked startled.
|
|
|
|
``Mok,'' she confirmed.
|
|
|
|
I leaned back into my seat, closing my eyes and rubbing the bridge of my
|
|
nose. Well, that was a particularly convenient turn for the Tower wasn't
|
|
it?
|
|
|
|
``Fuck,'' I said. ``Malicia played us.''
|
|
|
|
She'd whipped the deserters into a frenzy against us just before a
|
|
battle was to erupt and the seniormost officer with a clean reputation
|
|
was most likely in her pocket. Maybe if there were a few days or a week
|
|
for things to calm down this could be straightened out, but we wouldn't
|
|
get that long. \emph{Ten to one odds she had something nasty cooked up
|
|
for Sepulchral's army too}, I thought.
|
|
|
|
``Tomorrow we have a battle on our hands,'' I plainly said. ``We need to
|
|
pull off your plan \emph{tonight}, Vivienne. Can it be done?''
|
|
|
|
She grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``I would have liked a day or two longer, to make contact with the right
|
|
people,'' she admitted. ``But it is not impossible.''
|
|
|
|
``Then go get your cloak, we move with nightfall,'' I said. ``I'll need
|
|
you to inform Juniper, Scribe, because come dawn the blades will finally
|
|
come out.''
|