Chapter 19: Pivot
A Practical Guide to Evil [Book 1 Stubbing August 2nd]
âPlease, do keep digging your own grave. I look forward to your splendidly inevitable demise.â
â Dread Emperor Benevolent the First
âCOMPANIES! SALUTE!â
Two hundred swords rose up in the air, both companies standing at attention in the plain below the hills where a bell ago my band of survivors had been making their desperate last stand. Hakram grinned at me from where he stood in the ranks and I winked back as Ratface and I walked towards Juniper. The orc in question looked like sheâd been force-fed a barrel of lemons, but she was pressing on gamely. The Taghreb captain had earlier informed me be there was a ritual involved to the declaration of victory and that I should follow his lead until I learned how it went. Nauk had seemed surprised when Ratface had told the officers of Rat Company Iâd be with him during the process, the lot of them exchanging meaningful looks I wasnât quite sure what to make of.
âHellhound,â he greeted Juniper as he clasped her arm. âNot how we expected this one to go, huh?â
First Companyâs captain growled under her breath.
âGonna be a while before I live this down,â she replied frankly. âI might have to break Morokâs nose again if he gloats. Letâs get this over with.â
She turned towards her legionaries, unsheathing her sword.
âOne sin,â she called out abruptly.
âDEFEAT,â they thundered back
Ratface took out his own blade, facing our men.
âOne grace,â he yelled.
âVICTORY,â they chorused back, slapping their swords against their shields with an enthusiasm that drowned out everything else.
The scowl on Juniperâs face was the stuff of nightmares as she handed her blade to Ratface, handle first. The handsome boy took it but, after a heartbeat, handed it to me. There hadnât been any mention of this in the books but then they were about the Legions themselves, not the College. Silence fell over the crowd until Rat Company burst out in another roaring cheer. My eyes flicked to my captain, whose face was an odd mixture of resignation and amusement.
âHand it back to her,â he whispered.
I did, and Juniper slammed it back into her scabbard before striding away. We were⦠done, I guessed? I turned to Ratface.
âSo we just head back to Ater, now? Seems anticlimactic,â I mused.
He grinned. âSilly greenie,â he replied. âNow comes the fun part. We spend the night here, and the extra rations should have arrived.â
I raised an eyebrow. âExtra rations?â
He smirked. âEver tried aragh, Callow? Thereâs a reason us Taghreb arenât fucking miserable all the time like the Soninke.â
â
Night had fallen, and the site of Rat Companyâs original defeat had turned into a giant feast. Fire pits had been dug and entire pigs put to roast while barrels of dark ale flowed freely. Legionaries from both companies mingled freely, clustering around great bonfires. Nobody seemed to be holding grudges over beating each other bloody during the game, which I supposed made sense if they were held every week. I took a sip from the cup of milky white liquor Iâd been handed and immediately started coughing, much to Naukâs amusement.
âGods Below, what is that stuff?â I croaked out.
âWe call it dragonâs milk,â the other lieutenant replied, easily polishing off the rest of his cup. âIf you drink enough itâs possible to set your breath on fire.â
âBullshit,â I decided, pulling at it again. It was easier to swallow the second time.
âI tell no lie,â the massive orc laughed. âSome mage from Vulture Company did it last year, had to spend three weeks with the healers to get her throat fixed.â
I snorted.
âPeople made dragon noises whenever she came into a room for the rest of the year,â Ratface grinned from his seat on the other side of the fire.
âIf you think this is hard stuff, you should try orc liquor some time,â Hakram weighed in. âSome sappers use it as cleaning fluid for the catapults.â
âI havenât been in this company for a week and my sergeant is already trying to kill me,â I mourned.
There was a round of laughter and I smiled at the warmth coursing through my veins. Unlike most of the older girls in my dormitory, Iâd never gone drinking on the beach with the guys from the boyâs orphanage down the street. Iâd tasted enough drinks at the Nest that the novelty had worn off, and most of the time I had better things to do. Scraping together enough gold for tuition at the College wasnât going to happen on its own. Still, this was⦠nice. I wasnât sure Iâd call any of the other three friends, but for all that they were easy to like. What does it say about me that I find it easier to laugh with the Empireâs freshest batch of killers than my own people?
âLooking grim there, Callow,â Ratface noted. âThinking heavy thoughts?â
âRemembering home,â I half-lied.
âYouâre from Laure, arenât you?â Hakram guessed. âYouâve got the accent.â
I raised an eyebrow. âI am,â I agreed. âBut how would you know what a Laurean accent sounds like?â
âOur history teacher is from there,â Nauk said. âUsed to be part of the Thirteenth.â
Ah, the famous Traitor Legion. Legio XIII, Auxilia. It had been raised in the wake of the Conquest, made up mostly of former bandits and mercenaries. Every Callowan with a grudge against the throne had flocked to the banner, and theyâd been instrumental in making sure the south surrendered after the fall of the capital â the prospect of that band of armed malcontents sacking their way through the southern cities had been utterly horrifying to the few remaining nobles. Before I could comment on the subject, though, a band of drunken legionaries passed right behind us singing at the top of their lungs.
â- they got a wizard in the West
But no matter how heâs blessed
We got a Warlock in the Tower
Whoâll use his bones for flour
Let them keep their priestly king
Cause no matter how sweet he sings
Weâve got an Empress black as sin
Whoâll take his throne and grin
Weâre the Legion and the Terror
Theyâre in the right but weâre meaner-â
That was perhaps the most horribly sung rendition of the Legionaryâs Song Iâd ever heard, and Iâd heard some pretty bad ones. They continued towards the closest barrel of ale, singing the last couplet until they ended on the customarily yelled weâre gonna swallow the world whole. The old marching song had always been popular with the rank and file, penned by some unnamed legionary during the Conquest. From the unsurprised looks on everyoneâs face, this was apparently a common event.
âThe thing with Praesi,â I started.
Hakram rasped out an amused laugh, biting into his pork, and Ratface rolled his eyes.
âThe thing with Praesi,â I pressed on bravely. âIs that you have so many godsdamned rituals. Like that thing with the grace and sin earlier. What was that even about?â
Ratface grinned, which suited him much better than his usual sour expression. He really was a handsome one, if a little delicate-looking compared to my usual tastes.
âYouâve never heard of the Speech at the Fields?â he asked. âThatâs the thing with Callowans, you always leave out the best parts of history.â
I blinked. âYou mean the Fields of Streges?â
Nauk flashed me a double-row of pearly whites.
âThose are the ones. The Black Knight spoke to the Legions, before the battle,â he gravelled. âEvery kid knows the words.â
âToday we set aside Good and Evil,â Hakram quoted with reverence. âThere is only one sin, defeat. There is only one grace, victory. Everything else is meaningless.â
I sometimes forgot that the man whoâd claimed me as his student was the same one from all the legends. Back home the Calamities were the monsters under the bed but here in Wasteland it was different. All of them were treated like giants among men, the epitome of all it meant to be Praesi.
âHuh,â I mused, taking another sip of dragonâs milk. âWell, I learned something today.â
âThat and I named you captain of Rat Company,â Ratface continued airily.
I sprayed out the alcohol, to the delight of all the assholes surrounding me.
âWhat?!â
Stolen content warning: this tale belongs on Royal Road. Report any occurrences elsewhere.
âWhy did you think he handed you Juniperâs sword?â Hakram asked, cocking his head to the side. âHe was acknowledging it was your victory. No offence, Ratface.â
The olive-skinned boy snorted. âI spent the entire game as a prisoner, Hakram. The truthâs the truth.â
âThis is stupid,â I objected vehemently. âAll I know about the Legions I learned second-hand. Iâve never even set foot in the College!â
The now former captain of Rat Company shrugged.
âTwelve losses and you lose the captainship. Thatâs the rule. I didnât win this, Callow. In fact I lost pretty badly. Your win, your claim. Thatâs what that entire scene was about, when it comes down to it.â
âYouâve got other lieutenants,â I pointed out. âWho might feel a little slighted they got passed over for the promotion.â
Ratface turned to face Nauk.
âAre you feeling particularly slighted, Lieutenant Nauk?â he asked.
âWe ainât so thin-skinned as you monkeys, taking offence at everything,â the large orc scoffed before addressing me. âCallow, the reason Ratface ended up Captain in the first place was that none of the lieutenants want to be.â
The boy in question shrugged. âNot that I particularly wanted the job either, but my marks are the highest in the company.â
I was about to muster up another denial when Hakram intervened.
âItâs only for two months, Callow,â he grunted. âWeâre graduating soon, and our points are so badly in the negatives itâs not like you could do much damage anyway.â
I sighed.
âFine,â I surrendered. âBut I want my objections on the record.â
âTo Captain Callow, then,â Nauk toasted, raising his cup.
âMay she manage to have us graduate slightly less in the negatives,â Ratface replied cheerfully.
It was a horrible toast, but we all drank anyway.
I wasnât sure how much time passed when I found myself wandering away from the fire to get my hands on a fresh bottle of aragh. Nauk had disappeared at least half a bell ago when he saw Lieutenant Pickler pass by, running off after her while we all jeered at him and Hakram made some very suggestive comments about his canine length. Apparently that was a thing with orcs? He was replaced almost immediately by Sergeant Nilin. The dark-skinned boy was quiet one, compared to the others, but he had a wry sense of humour that was almost Callowan. I supposed it made sense for Naukâs sergeant to be more grounded, given the large orcâs tendency for impulsive decisions. Ratface passed out by the time weâd polished off our second bottle of dragonâs milk and I was officially mandated by the survivors to get us a new one before we did the same. It hadnât occurred to anyone, including myself, that I had no idea where to get one. I headed for the latrines first anyway, only to find a grim-looking orc waiting for me when I came out.
âCaptain Callow,â Captain Juniper said flatly. âLetâs take a walk.â
â
I followed the Hellhound to the edge of the festivities, too drunk to be nervous but sober enough to be wary. We ended up standing at the top of the tallest slope, where a few bells before Juniper had tried to bury me under an avalanche of logs â the wood in question was still at the bottom of the hill, mostly intact.
âYou have a Name,â the captain of First Company spoke.
It was not a question.
âThatâs quite an assumption to make,â I replied anyway. âFor all you know, my family might have a long tradition of being great jumpers.â
It might even be true, though admittedly the odds werenât that great.
âIâve seen Roles in action before,â Juniper denied me sharply. âDonât take me for an idiot.â
I probably should have put in a little more effort into that parry, I admitted ruefully to myself. Iâd been lulled into a sense of false security by the fact that no one had called me out on the fact that Iâd done something that bordered on the limits of human capabilities â part of it, I assumed, was that few people had been looking at me except for Juniper and her personal line. For something done in broad daylight, thereâd been surprisingly few witnesses.
âEverythingâs possible,â I finally said, deciding that vagueness was still the way to go. Iâd been supposed to keep a low profile, after all. âAre you here to complain that made the fight unfair?â
The orc eyed me like Iâd just sprouted wings.
âThis is practice for a real war,â she said slowly. âFair doesnât factor in it. Anyhow, I should have seen it coming. An unknown stranger with an obviously fake name takes a rank in the lowest-ranked company on the edge of their twelfth defeat? Name bait. I should have sent two lines to bury you on the first night just in case.â
âYeah, that would probably have worked,â I admitted.
The greenskin captainâs eyes narrowed.
âSo not a Name thatâs overwhelmingly strong,â she murmured in that smoky voice of hers. âSomething transitional, maybe?â
Juniper, I noticed, did not smell of alcohol at all. Had she been waiting for me to get drunk before we had this conversation? I would have admired that kind of patient ruthlessness, if it hadnât been directed at me.
âSomething thatâs supposed to stay quiet,â I replied briskly.
âYouâre the Squire,â the Hellhound realized after a heartbeat. âYouâre the girl who set half of Summerholm on fire just to smoke out a hero.â
She eyed me up and down, like she had a hard time reconciling what was apparently my reputation with the person standing before her.
âWhy do people keep blaming me for the goblinfire?â I complained, deciding that at his point the deception was so flimsy it wasnât even worth it to keep trying. âIâm not the one who was throwing munitions around!â
âIâm sure you werenât,â Juniper replied, clearly not believing a word of what Iâd said. âSo the Squire, huh. No wonder you ended up being a pivot for Rat Company.â
I really wished people would stop using words out of the blue and somehow keep expecting me to know exactly what they were talking about. It always made me feel like an idiot when I had to ask.
âA pivot,â I repeated, flavouring the words with an invitation to elaborate.
Juniper frowned, which Iâd always thought looked strange on orcs â they had no hair on their brows, only thick ridges of skin.
âYour ignorance offends me on a personal level,â the other captain informed me. âHow can you not know what a pivot is? Itâs basic Name knowledge.â
âHey! Iâm new at this,â I defended myself. âAnd my teacherâs a bit of an ass. He never tells me anything outright. I think me might be physically incapable of not being cryptic.â
âDid you just call the Black Knight an ass?â Juniper replied, aghast.
âHe really is,â I told her frankly.
âLord Black is the best thing to happen to the Empire in centuries,â the Hellhound glared.
I squinted.
âAre you blushing?â I asked. âItâs hard to tell in the dark.â
âYouâre seeing things,â Juniper growled. âFine, Iâll educate you. Names are stories.â
âI do know that much,â I said with a roll of the eyes.
I was familiar with the look she got at that â it was the face someone made whenever they were asking their deities of choice for patience.
âThe stories have been around since the dawn of Creation, meaning thereâs an endless variety of ways they can go. A pivot is a point in time or a decision where the Named pushes her story in a particular direction. It influences the kind of powers you develop.â
Mhm. Had I ever had one of those? My little talk with Heiress, maybe. Otherwise I couldnât think of-
âOh,â I spoke. âOh.â
Juniper frowned.
âWhat?â
âI fucked up,â I admitted out loud. âToday was the first time in weeks Iâve been able to tap into my Name, and I think I just realized why.â
âThat ought to be illuminating,â Juniper sneered. âDo continue.â
âSo a pivot is the beginning of a plot in the story, right?â I mumbled.
âTruly, your insight is an awe-inspiring thing,â the Hellhound commented.
I glared at her, but she was magnificently unconcerned.
âSo take a boy and a girl, of roughly the same age. Theyâre on opposite sides. The boy doesnât take a golden opportunity to finish the girl when he has it, and after she gets her shit together and beats him she also spares him.â
âThe girlâs on the side of Evil?â Juniper asked, eyes much too knowing for my comfort.
âSomething like that,â I grimaced.
âThatâs a redemption story,â the Hellhound opined.
It was. Iâd heard a dozen different tales that went that way, all with the same pattern. Spared on the first fight, an even match on the second and the climactic third meeting ended up with the conflicted evildoer changing sides after an impassioned speech by the hero or the heroine. No wonder my Name threw a shitfit. I looked back on the way Iâd reacted to the hangings in Summerholm, and I could see Iâd been⦠influenced. Not by much: most of the disgust Iâd felt then I still felt, but my reaction had been too strong. Iâd been nudged just a little to the side of my usual mindset, and the realization sickened me. Iâd been pulled by my own mind in two different directions, and the effect had been bad enough Iâd ended up weeping my eyes out in an alley.
âIâm going to smother him with his own intestines,â I spoke into the night, tone cold as ice.
The Lone Swordsman had muddled my free will. Unforgivable. Not even Mazus had tried to rob me from who I was, and heâd hanged for what heâd done. My fingers clenched and I felt hatred twist my stomach. Juniperâs face was unreadable.
âWeâre done here,â she finally said. âGo to sleep, Callow. Weâve got a long march ahead of us tomorrow.â
I stumbled into my tent, my good mood evaporated into thin air. The others would have to soldier on without me, I didnât feel like keeping company with anyone at the moment. Besides, Juniper was right. The hangover I was headed for would already make the march back to Ater a painful affair, there was no need to add to it. My bedroll was where Iâd left it, blessedly unrolled. There was, however, a small bowl next it. I knelt on the ground to take a closer look. It was unadorned wood, full of water and with a small piece of granite incrusted at the bottom. Was it supposed to be symbolic of something, or had someone put it here by mistake? The answer came when the water rippled, the barely-visible reflection of my own face turning into the profile of my teacher as a subtle glow lit up the surface.
âLieutenant Callow,â Black greeted me, his voice sounding like he was speaking from across the room.
âBlack,â I replied, not as surprised as I should have been. âThis is new.â
âLong-distance scrying. One of Warlockâs more useful tricks,â he acknowledged. âI hear the war game is over?â
âPulled off a win at the last minute,â I grinned. âThough you seem to be missing a crucial piece of information.â
His brow rose. âAnd that would be?â
âYou are addressing Captain Callow,â I informed him.
His lips twitched. âWell done. Weâll go over your campaign when I return. Which company did you happen to beat?â
âWho do you think? First Company, of course,â I replied haughtily.
âIt wouldnât happen to be headed by an orc girl by the name of Juniper, would it?â he asked.
âYouâve heard of her?â I blinked.
He laughed.
âIstrid keeps bragging about how her eldest is the next Grem One-Eye whenever she gets into her cups,â he murmured. âWell now. Finally I have a retort.â
âGeneral Istrid?â I said, surprised. âShe never said anything about being her daughter.â
âI imagine itâs not common knowledge,â Black mused. âSheâs rather independent-minded, Iâve been given to understand. Doesnât want to trade in on the family name.â
I could respect that. The orc captain rose up a notch in my esteem.
âHow are things in the south?â I asked, changing the subject. âAre the Matrons giving you trouble?â
âMuch to the contrary,â he replied. âThe situationâs already taken care of. They even sent an envoy to apologize for not catching on before the situation warranted a Red Letter. I should be back in Ater by tomorrow evening.â
âGood to know,â I grunted. âAm I staying in the College even after youâre back? Iâd prefer not to leave Rat Company until graduation, if thatâs possible.â
He inclined his head. âIâm inclined to grant that, within reason. You wonât be attending most of the classes â weâll be continuing our lessons instead.â
I nodded. It was what Iâd wanted anyway: I was sure the teachers at the College were competent sorts, but I doubted what they had to offer compared to one-on-one tutelage by the Dread Empressâ right hand.
âDid you have time to look into what I asked you to?â I asked after a breath of hesitation.
âThe orphanage is untouched,â he replied. âNot a soul missing. A good thing you killed the other claimants in such spectacular manners, I doubt Heiress would have taken you seriously otherwise.â
âThat would have been unfortunate,â I murmured. âBecause I meant every word.â
He smiled. âYouâre beginning to garner enough of a reputation that you can leverage it. Be careful in managing it. Oh, and thereâs one last thing.â
âNow why did you have to say that?â I complained, rubbing the bridge of my nose. âThis conversation was going so well.â
He snorted. âKeep your evening free tomorrow, you already have plans.â
âAm I allowed to know what those plans are?â I asked sardonically.
âOf course,â he agreed. âCatherine Foundling is being officially introduced to the Imperial Court.â
Well, shit.