2234 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
2234 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
From WHITEJL@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU Tue May 12 09:06:41 1992
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Date: Tue, 12 May 92 09:03:22 EDT
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From: "SilentElf" <WHITEJL@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU>
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To: RITA@EFF.ORG
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Status: OR
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1 /
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DDDDD ZZZZZZ //
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D D AAAA RRR GGGG OOOO NN N Z I NN N EEEE ||
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D D A A R R G O O N N N Z I N N N E || Volume 3
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-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
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D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E || Issue 10
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DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
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\\
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\
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 10 08/03/90 Cir 957 --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Contents --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Ghosts of the Past Max Khaytsus Nober 15, 1013 and
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Janis 16-17, 993
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Campaign for the Laraka II John Deucette & Yule 6-12, 1014
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Carlo Samson
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 Ghosts of the Past
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by Max Khaytsus
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<b.c.k.a. khaytsus@tramp.Colorado.EDU>
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"Sir!" a young guardsman ran into Captain Koren's office.
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Captain Koren and Lieutenant Kalen Darklen exchanged a look of
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irritation.
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"Did they ever teach you the polite way to deal with a closed
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door, soldier?" Lieutenant Darklen stood up.
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The guard quickly straightened himself out -- it was obvious he
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had run a long way -- saluted his two superiors and asked for
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permission to speak.
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Kalen sat back down. "I want you to take a night shift for the
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next two weeks," he said. "Perhaps I can inspire some manners in you
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by keeping you near by. Hopefully you will remember that you should
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knock before entering. You will start tonight."
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"My current shift ends at sunset, Sir," the young guard
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protested.
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"When I was your age," Captain Koren finally spoke, "and Dargon
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was half the size it is now...and there was twice as much crime, we
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had a shortage of guards and an abundance of criminals. I remember
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moving into the guard house to supplement man power day and night. Now
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report before I decide to give you a years worth of night shifts!"
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Kalen hid a smile as the guard straightened out into exemplary
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posture of attention.
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"Sir, after last week's fire by the docks, the old building was
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completely torn down and yesterday the men rebuilding it started
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digging up the old foundation to put in a new one..."
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The passive `so what?' expression on his superiors' faces made
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the guardsman hurry up with his report. "This morning one of the
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workers stopped the patrol I was with and showed us what they found.
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There were skeletons under the foundation...and this..." He stepped
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forward and handed Koren a metal pin.
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Turning the pin in his hands, Koren stood up. "Kalen, have you
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ever seen this before?" He handed it to his friend.
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Kalen took the pin and examined it. "It's the same as the plaque
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in the entry way."
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"Do you know what it is?" Koren asked the guardsman.
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"No, Sir. I recall hearing a noble once lived in this building,
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before it was given to the town guard. I assumed that the pin belonged
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to a noble... maybe one of those bodies."
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"This building," Koren said, "belonged to the Ducal General, Sir
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Connall Dargon, brother to Duke Anton Dargon. He gave it to the town
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guard when he was awarded the Barony of Connall in 889, as at that
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time it stood taller than most buildings and was made of stone.
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"The pin and the plaque are symbols that the town guard once
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used. They were changed over to the new ones on New Years Day, in the
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year 1000."
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"But wasn't Fionn Connall the brother of Clifton Dargon the
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second?" the guardsman asked. "Wasn't he the one awarded the Barony of
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Connall?"
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Koren sighed, disappointment deep within him. "And after your
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patrol tomorrow, I want you to go down to the hall of records and find
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out the history of the Barony, now County of Connall. I will be
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expecting your written report in two days. If I feel it lacks quality,
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we will discuss this further, understood?"
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"Yes, Sir," the guard answered, no longer willing to talk or
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argue. His mouth has gotten him into more than enough trouble for one
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day.
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"That body has to be at least fourteen years old," Lieutenant
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1Darklen said when the Captain of the Guard looked back to him. "I'd
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like to take a look."
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Both men stood up and followed the young guard out of the office.
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"You don't have to go, Kalen," Koren said, remembering Kalen had been
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taking the night shift ever since the trouble with the provincial Mob
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began. "You've been up for a while..."
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"I am curious," the Lieutenant said. "Sounds like an old case."
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Koren chuckled. "Then get my horse ready. I will be right there."
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He stopped by a desk in the lobby. "Where is Lieutenant Shevlin?" he
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asked the guardsman sitting there.
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"He left on patrol a while back, Sir," the man answered. "He is
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patrolling the market."
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"And Lieutenant Milnor?"
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"She hasn't come in yet, Sir."
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Koren thought for a moment. "If either of them shows up, have
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them meet me at the tavern that burned down last week."
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"Yes, Sir," the guardsman nodded.
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"Oh, and has there been any word on finding that crazy mage,
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what's his name?"
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"Cefn an'Derrin," the guardsman said. "Lieutenant Shevlin filed a
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report yesterday. The owner said he was paid enough to rebuild and is
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not interested in charging anyone."
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"Listen to what I say, not to the owner," Koren answered. "If
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he's spotted in this town again, I want enough men watching him to
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make the King's personal guard look like a cadet convention! I don't
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want crazies running around my city, setting fires to seedy joints.
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Next thing you know, they'll be burning down the keep!"
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"We didn't touch anything, Captain," the work foreman said,
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taking Koren directly to the skeletal remains. "We couldn't. Your men
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told everyone to leave and remained in the pit. I hope you can finish
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this soon. The fresh lumber will be brought tomorrow and we're already
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a day behind schedule."
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"Stop rambling, Tarnak," Kalen told the foreman.
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The group came up on a narrow wooden stair leading into a ten
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foot pit.
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"You'd better go first," the foreman said. "They drew steel on me
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when I tried it."
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Kalen tested his footing on the stairs and went down first. He
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was met by two guards who saluted him and remained at attention until
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Captain Koren stepped down. "Which way?" he asked, brushing the dust
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from the stairs off his uniform.
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"Right this way, Sir," one of the guardsmen pointed to the
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opposite wall.
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"Lead on," Koren told him.
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"When was this building built?" Kalen asked the foreman as he
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edged past the remaining guard on the stairs.
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"I don't exactly know," the man said. "Depending on who built it,
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there should be records in the town library or in the archivist's
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possession in the keep. Judging by the design and condition, I'd say
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about twenty years ago."
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"That sounds right for what the Captain was saying."
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Koren and the two guardsmen with him reached the shallow pit
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first. It was some ten feet across and three deep. In it lay two
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skeletons. Koren hopped down into the hole and started looking around.
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The other four men stood on the edge waiting.
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"What was this?" Kalen asked.
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The construction foreman shrugged. "A grave, no doubt. This all
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was covered over by the foundation. It's not even necessary for the
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building. Wood a good foot deep was used to cover this over, to take
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1the weight. Whoever laid it knew there were bodies under here."
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"Kalen!" Koren called out of the pit. "I want a doctor to look at
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these skeletons and a mage too."
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Kalen gave an order to one of the men and jumped down into the
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pit after his Captain. "What did you find?" he asked.
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"Nothing," Koren shook his head.
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"Tarnak says whoever built this building knew the people were
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under it," Kalen reported. "I hope they were already dead."
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"I hope so too, Lieutenant, but we may never find out. Right now
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I want to check when this tavern was built, by whom and if any
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disappearances are recorded for that time. Guards in particular."
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"Tarnak guesses it was built twenty years ago," Kalen said. "Did
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many guards disappear back then?"
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"No more than now," Koren said. "Maybe one or two a year. It
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happens. This is a dangerous line of work we're in."
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Kalen knelt next to his superior, studying one of the bodies.
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"Did you find something?"
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"Look at the forearms on this one," Koren pointed.
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Kalen took a closer look. "His hands were cut off!"
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"So we've got two dead men, one quite possibly a guard, buried
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under a building twenty years ago. Which one had the pin?" Koren
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called up to the guard on the edge.
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"Neither one of them really had it," the man said, jumping down
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into the pit to show Koren where the pin was found, but at that time a
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woman in a uniform similar to Kalen's appeared at the edge of the pit.
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"Captain Koren," she called down. "I was told to drop by here
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before going on patrol."
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"Ah, Lieutenant Milnor," Koren looked up. "Are you with your
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men?"
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"They're up on the street waiting for me."
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"Do you have a medic among them?"
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"Yes, Sir. Is someone hurt?"
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"Everyone's fine. I just want him to take a look at these
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bodies."
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Ilona Milnor looked down the side of the pit, seeing how to get
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down best without getting her uniform dirty. Kalen hurried to her aid.
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"Right here," he said, reaching up. The woman accepted his hands and
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jumped down.
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"Get Moor for me," she told the guard in the pit.
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The guard nodded and after telling Koren where the pin was found,
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climbed out and ran off.
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"What happened here?" Ilona asked, looking at the two skeletons.
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Kalen quickly told her the story of the mornings events while
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Captain Koren examined the area again.
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"Anything?" the two younger officers joined their superior.
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"Nothing," he shook his head. "The clothing is too old to tell us
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much," he said, pointing to a mostly decayed rag lying by a wall.
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Kalen attempted to pick it up, but the cloth crumbled into dust
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at his touch. Beneath it he scooped up a few rusty buttons and handed
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one to Koren.
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The Captain again shook his head. "Upper class, definitely. I
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wonder which of these bodies it belonged to..."
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There was sound of running footsteps and two guardsmen appeared
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at the side of the pit. Jumping down, they saluted the officers and
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awaited instructions.
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"Moor, I want you to take a look at those bodies and make a
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report before they are moved," Koren ordered. "Urone, go find records
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for when this place was built and by who."
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The two men started at their respective tasks. Koren thoughtfully
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looked on as the medic examined the remains. He turned over in his
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1hands the broken forearms of one body, all along shaking his head,
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then took a closer look at the skull.
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"Sir?" Kalen put his hand on Koren's shoulder.
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"Uh? Yes?" The man turned around. "What is it?"
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"Just the way you looked, Sir," Kalen said.
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"Oh, it's nothing," Koren sighed. "I was just wondering if that
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was someone I knew once. It will be twenty-five years this winter
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since I first came here, you know. All those boys who never came back
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home from their patrols..."
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"It's a dangerous job," Kalen said. "You said it yourself. It
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could happen to any of us."
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"That it could," Koren sighed again and went over to the medic.
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Behind him Kalen felt Ilona wrap her arms around his torso. "It
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scares the hell out of me when he starts eulogizing like that," she
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whispered.
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Kalen turned and put his arms around her. "Don't let it get to
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you. Let's go see what they're doing."
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"I don't know about this skull," Moor was saying to Koren. "It's
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missing teeth, but I don't know if they fell out or got knocked out. I
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don't even feel competent enough to guess..."
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Kalen knelt by the second skeleton before Moor got to it. This
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one did not appear to have any broken bones and the teeth seemed to be
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all in place.
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"I can tell you this one is male," Moor went on. "Or rather used
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to be..." He turned to the second body and looked up at Lieutenant
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Milnor. "A lot of help I am," he smiled.
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"I already sent for a doctor," Koren said, "but you may as well
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take a look first. One learns to take initiative in this job."
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Moor got back to work and Ilona bent down next to Kalen to better
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see what was being done. She leaned with her hands on the ground to
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keep her balance and immediately brought them back up. "Oh!"
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Everyone looked at her as she picked something up from the
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ground. It was a finger bone with a silver ring still around it. She
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removed the ring, turned it over in her hand and gave it to the
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Captain. He examined it, turning it over; a silver ring with a crimson
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red stone and small letters engraved on the side. It struck him as
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very familiar and then a deep pain made it obvious what it was. He
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turned away from the others, kneeling on the ground, tears building in
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his eyes. There was only one person that skeleton could have been.
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Kalen and Ilona exchanged a look of confusion, then Kalen got up.
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"Captain? Are you all right?"
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Adrunian Koren wiped his eyes and brushed back his grey hair. It
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was not fitting for his men to see the Captain of the Guard this way.
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He turned. "I am fine," he said. "Lieutenant Milnor, resume your
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patrol. Darklen, go home. Get some rest. The Duke doesn't like having
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to pay extra." He walked over to the other side of the pit and started
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pacing.
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Ilona stood up and walked over to Kalen. Moor got back to
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examining the skeletons, pretending he did not see the exchange.
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"Go ahead," Kalen told Ilona. "I'll make sure he is fine before I
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leave."
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She kissed him quickly and he helped her out of the pit. "I'll
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come for you after your shift."
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Ilona Milnor left in the direction of a lone guard pacing by the
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staircase.
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Kalen turned and leaned against the edge of the pit. His
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relationship with Ilona was more than professional, but Koren never
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seemed to mind that. Kalen even suspected at one time that Koren
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promoted her because he did not want stories of a Lieutenant seeing a
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mere guard. Ilona, of course, proved competent in her position and
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1affair between equals wasn't enough for others to gossip about.
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Kalen watched as his Captain measured the pit back and forth,
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wondering what that ring Ilona found was. Could it have belonged to a
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lady Koren loved? He couldn't recall any useful stories about the
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Captain's past and saying a quick prayer to the Goddess Randiriel for
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Ilona's safety, walked over to Koren.
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"Sir?"
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Koren looked over. "Didn't I tell you to go home?"
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"Yes, Sir," Kalen said, "but I was wondering if you had breakfast
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yet."
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Koren shook his head. "I eat over paperwork."
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"So that's where the stains on my reports come from..."
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Koren smiled grimly.
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"Would you care to join me for breakfast?"
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The Captain grumbled for a bit, but with some more convincing on
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Kalen's part, finally accepted the offer and they went to a small
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tavern a couple of blocks away.
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"Kalen, I know what you're trying to do and I am very grateful,"
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Koren said after placing his order.
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Kalen ordered as well. "Do you wish to talk about it, Sir?"
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"Just Adrunian," Koren said. "We're not on duty." He fell silent
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for a moment, then started talking again.
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"Let me tell you a story..."
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***
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Deanir knocked on the boss' door and entered. Seadon Rohden
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followed him in. "Lord Rohert," Deanir said, bowing to his uncle, "the
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shipment just left."
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Jaipena Rohert, a grey haired man in his sixties, looked up from
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the book he was reading. "Any trouble?"
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"One sailor said he would report us to the town guard when he
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found out what the cargo was," Seadon reported. "The Captain promised
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to throw him overboard when they get far enough out at sea."
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"Fine, fine," Rohert said, laying the book down. "Now I want you
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two to put together the group to raid the caravan leaving tomorrow.
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Deanir, I want you to make sure Seadon knows his way around. We'll be
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doing this a lot now."
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The two men bowed again and left. "How big is the caravan?"
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Seadon asked outside in the corridor.
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"Twenty wagons at last count and still hiring guards. I had
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Liriss sign up on it. He'll keep us informed until we're ready."
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"Can we do it in one day?"
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"No. We have to be ready in a few hours. I was thinking of
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ambushing them."
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"I don't think we'll make it," Seadon groaned. "Do you want me to
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sign on as well just in case?"
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"No, no. That's all right. "One man is fine. I'd rather put
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together the party that will ambush them. I'll start gathering the
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people right away. I want you to find Liriss and see how the caravan
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is doing. Meet me after sunset at the Hungry Shark. Alone."
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The caravan grouped in a large camp just outside the town gates.
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People ran back and forth in preparation for the next day's departure.
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There were at least two dozen wagons standing around, together with at
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least that many tents. A few armed men wandered among them.
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Making his way between the wagons, Seadon spotted Liriss sitting
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by a small fire with two other men. A fat pig hung on the spit over
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the flame and periodically one or the other of the men would poke it
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with a stick and then turn it over. Seadon hesitated as to whether he
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1should approach Liriss with other people around, but soon decided it
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would be less obvious if he would call him aside, rather than simply
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stand by a wagon, having people walking by stop and look at him.
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"Liriss?" he called out, approaching the fire.
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The young man turned to look behind him, then recognizing Seadon
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said a couple of words to his companions and got up. Seadon waited a
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few feet away, not wanting to let the other men have a close look at
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him.
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"New plans?" Liriss asked him.
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"No. Just getting last minute information," Seadon answered.
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"We're still leaving at day break," Liriss said. "We're supposed
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to have twenty-eight wagons by then and about forty guards."
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"Forty?" Seadon asked. "Rohert only has twenty-two men total!"
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"Well, I told you last week he's too old for this line of work,"
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Liriss motioned. "Things aren't how they were when he was our age."
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"In this town you either work with him or against him and the
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town guard is after you either way."
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"I want him to retire," Liriss said. "Even if I have to convince
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him myself. I think I can turn this business around, make a big
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profit."
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"That's between the two of you," Seadon shrugged. "My only
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concern is how we're going to take forty men."
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"I've been working on that," Liriss smiled. "The two I was
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talking to are all ready on our side."
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"Rohert won't like you adding people to the take."
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"They're not taking anything."
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"So what did you promise them?"
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"A piece of the action," Liriss smiled, taking the hilt of his
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sword. He pulled it up from the scabbard, "and this is the action." He
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slammed the sword back down. "They'll be of use."
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"We'll need more than two men," Seadon said, "providing they stay
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with us long enough."
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"I also took the liberty of obtaining some poison for the
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guards," Liriss said. "We will need no more than a dozen men."
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"Poison?" Seadon asked. "For forty guards and all the merchants
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and travelers?"
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"Just enough for the guards on the night watch. We only need to
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catch the caravan off guard for Rohert's attack to work."
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"All right then. Make sure you're on duty tomorrow night. I'll
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tell Deanir your plan."
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"Good. I'll be ready."
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Seadon scanned the caravan. There'd be more to take on than
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Liriss thought. "See you tomorrow night."
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The two men walked off in different directions, Liriss putting
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together his plans and Seadon pondering how to stop them. Poison was a
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new twist. He slowly walked through the city gates, looking at the two
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guardsmen patrolling along the road.
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Seadon walked over to the side of the road and slowed his pace.
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One of the two guardsmen started down the road towards him. Seadon
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smiled to himself. "Your place at midnight," he whispered as the guard
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passed by him.
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Seadon made it to the designated meeting later than he should
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have. He spent the evening at the tavern, discussing the plans with
|
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Deanir and later dodged back and forth across town, trying to lose the
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spies following him around.
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|
Seadon Rohden was not a criminal. Just the opposite, he was a
|
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town guard. A new one -- only three weeks on the job -- but none the
|
|
less, a guard. He came to Dargon when a childhood friend, Glenn
|
|
Aposhyan, known here as Adrunian Koren, sent for him a message saying
|
|
1that new guardsmen were needed at this frontier town, to which he had
|
|
come some five years before.
|
|
Seadon, a mere two years younger than his friend, spent his early
|
|
years working as a mercenary for hire and guard for a week. It was
|
|
just the experience needed to become a town guard, particularly now,
|
|
when crime was on the rise and people needed to fight it were looking
|
|
for easier, quicker ways to make money.
|
|
When the Captain of the Guard heard that a trustworthy man,
|
|
unknown in Dargon, was available for hire, it was arranged that a
|
|
guard would meet Seadon in Tench, brief him and leave everything else
|
|
to fall in as a lucky `coincidence'.
|
|
And so Seadon embarked on a month long journey, first to Tench
|
|
and then to Dargon, where he would join the criminal underworld and
|
|
aid the town guard. It all went well, except that a few days before
|
|
reaching town, his wife, Nadya, gave birth to their first child, a
|
|
baby girl.
|
|
Seadon almost turned back to Tench, willing to forget his new job
|
|
and duty, but was reminded by his wife that what he was doing was more
|
|
important and she and the girl would manage. This appeal to his sense
|
|
of duty convinced Seadon to go on to Dargon, but he could not stop
|
|
cursing himself for agreeing to the job when he had a family to think
|
|
about.
|
|
Having set up his wife and daughter in a boarding house in an
|
|
area that happened to be safe, but cheap, Seadon started his job, at
|
|
first by watching the market and the docks and later following people
|
|
he thought were the individuals associated with the local underworld.
|
|
On his fourth day in Dargon, Seadon made contact with a man named
|
|
Liriss, a professional cutthroat in his mid twenties, who, by chance,
|
|
failed at his attempt to relieve a merchant of his gold and was nearly
|
|
apprehended by a pair of guards.
|
|
With a lot of luck and careful timing, Seadon aided Liriss in his
|
|
escape and having made this friend, was soon pulled into the world of
|
|
the underground.
|
|
By this time he had done a couple of jobs for the organization
|
|
and reflected well in the eyes of Jaipena Rohert, an elderly man who
|
|
appeared to be everyone's grandfather on the surface, but on the
|
|
inside was the undisputed boss and practically owner of Dargon's
|
|
underworld.
|
|
Of course Seadon's successes were insured by the town guard. One
|
|
or twice each week he would meet with a Lieutenant or even the Captain
|
|
of the Guard and make a full report, including plans and projections.
|
|
They were all very small, up to now. This was going to be the job in
|
|
which Rohert and his men were to fail miserably. The planned raid on
|
|
the caravan was just the large event that the Captain had been waiting
|
|
for and now, being able to plan for it was going to make all the
|
|
difference in the world. The next two days were to deliver the blow
|
|
that was going to destroy large scale crime in Dargon.
|
|
Seadon walked past the door he was to enter, throwing a careful
|
|
glance back. With the street seemingly empty, he turned back to the
|
|
building and knocked twice. The door was opened by a plump elderly
|
|
woman who quickly ushered him in and rebolted the door. Inside were
|
|
four guardsmen, including Adrunian Koren and the Captain of the Guard,
|
|
a dignified woman in her late forties with lightly greying hair.
|
|
"Where you followed?" she asked Seadon as soon as he was inside.
|
|
"I don't think so," he answered. "Deanir has been sending men to
|
|
follow me all week, but I think it's sheer jealousy. He wants to
|
|
impress his uncle with his good work."
|
|
"Is that how you make a report?" Adrunian mocked him.
|
|
Seadon straightened out to stand at attention and repeated what
|
|
he said, appending a "Ma'am" on the end.
|
|
1 The Captain smiled. Formality was not her concern for the moment.
|
|
She indicated a chair. "Take a seat." One of the guards helped the old
|
|
woman out of the room. She was there only to make it look normal for
|
|
passers by outside.
|
|
Seadon sat down at the desk next to Adrunian and the Captain sat
|
|
opposite to them. The other two guardsmen remained standing.
|
|
"What happened? Are they getting ready?"
|
|
Seadon shifted in his seat. "The caravan is to be attacked on its
|
|
first night out. The plan is to poison the guards and kill those
|
|
sleeping."
|
|
"How many men are involved?"
|
|
"A dozen. Most of them are on their way already. I am to leave
|
|
first thing tomorrow morning. They gave me the night to make an excuse
|
|
to my wife. They don't know she knows."
|
|
"Good. I'll have the caravan master informed tomorrow," Captain
|
|
Byer said. "Anything else?"
|
|
Seadon shook his head. "A dozen men is about half of Rohert's
|
|
resources. If you take them, you'll probably take him...or hurt him
|
|
enough to stop him, in the least."
|
|
"All right. You did well. Go along with their plan until you know
|
|
we're present. Try not to kill anyone."
|
|
"Yes, Ma'am," Seadon answered.
|
|
"Dismissed, soldier," the Captain said and got up.
|
|
Seadon and Adrunian got up as well. "Almost over," Seadon smiled.
|
|
"We'll have a lot to talk about when it is," Adrunian said. "Five
|
|
years is a long time to catch up on."
|
|
"And this time you won't drink me under the table," Seadon
|
|
laughed. "I've learned to hold the liquor well."
|
|
Adrunian chuckled himself. "It's hard to believe you already have
|
|
a daughter. You'll have to age quicker now. Be more responsible."
|
|
"I wish I could be home more often," Seadon sighed. "I feel like
|
|
I'm hurting them by doing this."
|
|
"You best go then," Adrunian told his friend. "You'll be away for
|
|
a few days."
|
|
Seadon looked over to Captain Byer talking to the two guards. She
|
|
nodded her consent for him to leave and he went to the door.
|
|
"Give my greetings to Nadya," Adrunian slapped Seadon on the
|
|
back. "See you at the raid."
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
Captain Koren took a lengthy sip from the glass. "That was the
|
|
last time I saw him."
|
|
"And you never found out what happened?" Kalen asked.
|
|
"We suspected," the Captain said, "searched, asked questions...
|
|
Rohert's nephew had a problem with new people. He was paranoid as
|
|
hell. I guess Seadon was followed that night after all... Strange
|
|
thing is we never heard of Deanir again either. He must have been
|
|
frightened off by the raid."
|
|
Kalen nodded. He had no way to comfort his friend's deep wound.
|
|
"I'm sorry, Sir."
|
|
"Don't call me `sir' in here, Kalen. I chose to have breakfast
|
|
with a friend, not a subordinate."
|
|
Kalen hid a smile by taking a swallow from his glass. "So you're
|
|
sure it's him?"
|
|
Koran dug into his pocket and pulled out the ring he found on one
|
|
of the bodies. "This is Seadon's wedding band. It's identical to the
|
|
one Nadya wore...she was found floating in the ocean a few days after
|
|
the raid. Her ring is in my office."
|
|
"Maybe we'll learn what happened now that we found the bodies,"
|
|
1Kalen said. "We need to identify the other one."
|
|
"I hope so," the Captain said. "I want you to reopen the case,
|
|
Kalen. I want their killer and I want to know what happened to their
|
|
daughter."
|
|
"I'll get on it as soon as we get back to the guard house," Kalen
|
|
said.
|
|
"No you won't," Koren repocketed the ring. "I wasted your entire
|
|
morning. Go home and get some rest. I'll leave you instructions for
|
|
the evening."
|
|
"Yes, Sir," Kalen answered mockingly. He handed the money for the
|
|
meal to a passing bar maid and the two men left the tavern. As they
|
|
passed a table near their own, the man sitting there studiously looked
|
|
down at his half finished meal, then got up, paid and quickly left.
|
|
|
|
"So they finally found them," Liriss smirked to Kesrin. "I'm glad
|
|
you told me. The town guard is so slow these days, you almost forget
|
|
they're out to get you."
|
|
"Just doing my job, Lord," Kesrin answered. "It sounded like a
|
|
story you might want to know...but obviously you already do."
|
|
The crime lord leaned back in his chair, a crooked smile frozen
|
|
on his face. "Let me tell you, Kesrin, I am that story. It was the
|
|
high point of my first few years on the streets.
|
|
"After my parents died, I was left to mingle with the slime in
|
|
the alleys, until one of Rohert's men made the yearly urchin
|
|
collection. Those that could be used were left, myself included; the
|
|
rest were sold or drowned -- no one seemed to mind back then and
|
|
Rohert considered it a public service -- you couldn't get away with it
|
|
these days. The guards keep a firm inventory of the urchins now.
|
|
"After some time of picking pockets and picking locks and
|
|
climbing through open windows, I gained a position of trust and some
|
|
power and started seeing things I did not like. Rohert was soft. It
|
|
was like a mouse doing the cat's job. He lost money and people right
|
|
and left and his nephew, Deanir, a remarkably ambitious fellow of my
|
|
years was just waiting for the family business to fall into his hands.
|
|
"I never believed the old man had what it took to control crime
|
|
and his little heir was far too greedy to expect reasonable
|
|
improvement..."
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
Deanir paced the room in a nervous frenzy, waiting for his uncle
|
|
to appear. It was the middle of the night, a day before the biggest
|
|
job and he just caught a spy in their ranks. It would be hard to top a
|
|
night like this.
|
|
"My Lord," a man entered, "we have the prisoner's wife
|
|
downstairs. Do you want them together?"
|
|
"No, but make sure that they know we have both of them.
|
|
Cooperative prisoners are easier to deal with. Let them know they have
|
|
a lot to lose."
|
|
As the man turned to leave, Rohert entered through a door across
|
|
the room. "You hold on there, Bradan," he stopped the guard and turned
|
|
to Deanir. "What happened?"
|
|
"Seadon Rohden is a spy, uncle," the young man answered, doing
|
|
his best to appear relaxed. "I had him followed to a meeting with the
|
|
town guard."
|
|
"Really?" Rohert paused thinking. "Bring Liriss here. I want to
|
|
know just how this man made it in."
|
|
"He is with the caravan, uncle. He will lose his job."
|
|
"Good. If he loses this one, it will go much worse on him.
|
|
They'll be short handed, so they will hire on someone else without
|
|
1checking him out. Go now! No. You go, Bradan. I need to speak with
|
|
you, Deanir."
|
|
|
|
Liriss nodded grimly to the information Bradan revealed to him.
|
|
The old man was weak, but better not to be crossed. "We have to make
|
|
our move tonight," he finally said, having heard all there was to
|
|
hear. "Take care of Deanir, then have one of the men loyal to Rohert
|
|
take my place with the caravan. The town guard can help me take
|
|
control."
|
|
"What about Rohert?" Bradan asked.
|
|
Liriss smiled. "By morning Dargon will be mine."
|
|
The two men soon reached the building Rohert made his base in and
|
|
went in different directions, each thinking of how best to accomplish
|
|
his task and gain the rewards that a job well done would bring.
|
|
Liriss reached his target first. He found Rohert in his office,
|
|
sitting in his chair, seemingly asleep. `This is too good to be true,'
|
|
flashed through Liriss' mind. He spotted Rohert's eating dagger lying
|
|
on the table and picked it up. He contemplated the irony of dying by
|
|
one's own tools but as he made it to the other side of the table, the
|
|
old man's eyes opened. "You should not leave these unattended, Lord,"
|
|
Liriss handed the weapon to his superior.
|
|
Rohert eyed him, took the dagger, but did not say a word.
|
|
"I was told you wanted to see me," Liriss went on. "Did something
|
|
happen?"
|
|
"Rohden contacted the town guard."
|
|
"Are you sure?" Liriss was surprised at his own surprise. He knew
|
|
the facts. It has been quite a surprise when he heard it himself for
|
|
the first time from Bradan and that he was able to duplicate that
|
|
reaction pleased him.
|
|
"Why don't you tell me a little more about him?" the old man went
|
|
on, ignoring the counter question.
|
|
"He helped me avoid the town guard," Liriss said. "I took him to
|
|
a bar, bought drinks. We talked. He told me he was new in town and
|
|
looking for a job. I arranged a meeting between him and Deanir. He's
|
|
got a wife and daughter. That's about it."
|
|
"Did you check on him before arranging that meeting?" Rohert
|
|
asked, replacing the eating dagger on the table.
|
|
"No, Sir," Liriss said. "I always thought it was the job of the
|
|
man doing the hiring. Besides, he was in town for only a few days.
|
|
There was no one to ask."
|
|
Rohert got up. "And so it is. Rohden is from out of town. He did
|
|
not have a rep. Now he does."
|
|
"How do you want to handle it?" Liriss asked, realizing Rohert
|
|
had no ill plans for him, but it was too late to change his plan.
|
|
Another opportunity may not come any time soon.
|
|
Rohert went over to the window overlooking the market. It was the
|
|
window Liriss would get to know well in the years to come. "We can't
|
|
take the caravan if the guards know..."
|
|
Liriss picked up the dagger off the table and walked over to the
|
|
window as well. "What about the men you sent out yesterday?"
|
|
"Send someone out to intercept them," Rohert sighed and turned.
|
|
The dagger in Liriss' hand found it's way to the old man's stomach.
|
|
"Didn't I tell you not to leave this lying around?" he grinned.
|
|
|
|
Having sent a man to take Liriss' place, Bradan made his way to
|
|
Deanir' personal quarters. In just a few hours these luxurious
|
|
apartments would be his very own. The verdict on the current master
|
|
was all ready out. It was time for a change of ownership.
|
|
As he knocked a young woman opened the door. "Can I help you?"
|
|
Bradan drew his sword. "Guess." He followed the woman inside,
|
|
1only to find Deanir undressed and in bed. The coward gave up so easily
|
|
that there was not even a story left to tell to the grandchildren.
|
|
Everything simply fell into place.
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
"And that's all there is," Liriss finished telling the story.
|
|
"Rohden was obviously working for someone, though he did not admit it.
|
|
He was a strong man. Didn't even crack when we tortured his wife. I
|
|
finally had him buried alive under a building. I'm sure his character
|
|
made a solid foundation."
|
|
A partial smile escaped Kesrin's lips. "What about the other one,
|
|
Sir?"
|
|
"The other isn't even worth a mention," Liriss said. For some
|
|
reason his voice had a pleasant, self gratified tone. "Deanir got on
|
|
my nerves so much over those few years that I had him beaten until he
|
|
was purple all over, cut his hands off personally and buried him with
|
|
Rohden. Let it be said they died in the same war.
|
|
"I had to let Bradan go after some time as well. He grew
|
|
obnoxiously greedy after a few years. Acted just like Tilden."
|
|
Kesrin smiled. "Whatever works, right?"
|
|
"That's right," Liriss said. "Drowned Rohden's wife and kept
|
|
their girl. My revenge..." He stopped, thinking about the little girl
|
|
that grew up in his care. She was a good girl when she was young...
|
|
"Do you know who the girl is?" he asked Kesrin.
|
|
"No," the man shook his head. The story which Liriss told him was
|
|
a good twenty years old and he had no clue which of the twenty year
|
|
olds working for him it could be. Liriss had a talent for finding
|
|
people, even with the town guard watching his every move.
|
|
"Kera," Liriss intoned, his voice sounding like breaking glass.
|
|
"I made a mistake at the start...but I will have it fixed."
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 Campaign for the Laraka: Part II
|
|
The Juggernaught Unleashed
|
|
by John Doucette and Carlo N. Samson
|
|
|
|
Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
6 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Lord Morion leaned against the hearth, every muscle in his weary
|
|
body crying out for rest. When he was first ushered into the Lord
|
|
Mayor's study, he'd been offered wine and a chair by a very
|
|
industrious servant. Morion declined rather harshly (the poor servant
|
|
had yet to recover from his fright) for he knew that if he stopped for
|
|
so much as a few minutes, he would succumb to sleep.
|
|
"Where is that man?" Morion said aloud. He adjusted his armour
|
|
for the tenth time in as many minutes in a vain attempt to stop its
|
|
chafing. He'd been wearing it ever since the battle on the beach north
|
|
of Shark's Cove on the last day of Melrin that saw Sir Ailean of
|
|
Bivar, Knight Captain of the Northern Marches, and two thousand
|
|
Baranurian soldiers die with another seven hundred wounded in a futile
|
|
effort to repel the Beinison Empire's amphibious landing there. Morion
|
|
was now in command of the twenty-eight hundred survivors he'd led away
|
|
from the battle at Ailean's order. Morion had been ruthlessly driving
|
|
his men and women towards Gateway Keep in the Royal Duchy. It was
|
|
there he intended to make a final stand. Being outnumbered
|
|
nine-to-one, all he could hope to do was delay the enemy long enough
|
|
for Sir Edward Sothos, the Knight Commander, to gather what forces he
|
|
could and prepare Magnus for a siege. Morion knew his chances of
|
|
substantially hampering the enemy's progress were slim, but he must
|
|
try. Magnus lies one hundred twenty-six leagues beyond Gateway Keep,
|
|
less than a three-day forced march. If Morion failed, Baranur was
|
|
lost.
|
|
The door to the study opened and the Lord Mayor of Port Sevlyn
|
|
stepped through to greet his guest. "I apologize for keeping you
|
|
waiting so long, Lord Morion. Urgent matters required my attention."
|
|
"What matters?" Morion snapped.
|
|
"I hardly think that tone is warranted, my Lord. I was seeing to
|
|
the Militia's organization."
|
|
"I'm sorry, Lord Mayor. It's been a long and disappointing week."
|
|
"So your messenger told us," the Lord Mayor said as he crossed
|
|
the room to his desk. "Won't you be seated, my Lord?"
|
|
"Not to seem ungrateful, but no. I fear if I sat in that chair I
|
|
would be asleep in moments. Sleep is a luxury I can't afford."
|
|
The Lord Mayor nodded in sympathy. "I understand." He paused for
|
|
a moment, clearly reluctant to bring up the next point of discussion.
|
|
"When will they arrive?" 'They' referring to the Beinisonian army
|
|
coming up the Laraka.
|
|
"My scouts say three days," Morion said tonelessly. "Perhaps
|
|
more, perhaps less."
|
|
"Three--but we can't be ready that soon! I'll have to order the
|
|
gates shut now! We won't be able to bring in the food or livestock
|
|
from the surrounding farms! Those supplies were necessary to feed your
|
|
men.
|
|
Still, better to have the sheep in the house causing a stink than
|
|
outside feeding the wolves, as they say. We'll just have to tighten
|
|
our belts more than anticipated. I suppose we could try getting
|
|
supplies in by riverboat at night. What do you think, my Lord?"
|
|
Morion had crossed to the study's only window. He stood there
|
|
with his back to the Lord Mayor, looking down on the plaza. There was
|
|
much activity, none of it to do with buying and selling goods. People
|
|
were running this way and that with no apparent purpose other than
|
|
1panic. There were a few who did not panic. The soldiers of the Militia
|
|
were one group. Morion saw a squad from the Regiment based in Port
|
|
Sevlyn tramp hurriedly past on their way to the town's walls, hands
|
|
clutching tightly at longswords or busy adjusting straps on their
|
|
leather armour. The other group that was immediately visible was a
|
|
group of perhaps twenty people energetically loading supplies onto
|
|
carts. Morion could see a grey-haired merchant, and a wealthy one at
|
|
that, directing the chaos with grim efficiency. A man who knows the
|
|
storm is coming and is trying to get what he can to safety, Morion
|
|
thought.
|
|
Morion had become so lost in his own thoughts that he failed to
|
|
notice the Lord Mayor speaking to him. "What was that, Lord Mayor? I'm
|
|
afraid I've got a great many things on my mind."
|
|
"Perfectly understandable. I asked your Lordship's opinion on
|
|
bringing supplies in by riverboat at night."
|
|
"I don't think you will be needing extra supplies."
|
|
"Not need extra--? We must have more supplies, my Lord. There
|
|
simply isn't enough to feed the population and the increased
|
|
garrison."
|
|
Morion turned from the window to face the Lord Mayor. "There will
|
|
be no increased garrison, Lord Mayor," Morion said, the fatigue and
|
|
stress of the past six days evident in his voice. "I only stopped here
|
|
as long as I have to ask you to order the Militia to come with me."
|
|
The Lord Mayor's face went grim. "You mean to abandon us to the
|
|
enemy?" he asked with barely suppressed anger.
|
|
"You forget who you speak to."
|
|
"Forgive me, my Lord," the Lord Mayor said with great sarcasm.
|
|
"It was my understanding the Royal Army existed to protect Baranur's
|
|
citizens from harm."
|
|
"There are reasons for my actions. Not that I am accountable to
|
|
you or anyone save myself. But I do not want it said that I callously
|
|
left the people of Port Sevlyn to the mercy of the Beinisonians.
|
|
You will listen to my reasons, Lord Mayor, in silence." Morion
|
|
explained the situation to the Lord Mayor. Port Sevlyn was simply too
|
|
large for Morion to adequately defend with the force under his
|
|
command. There was nothing else to do but retreat to Gateway Keep.
|
|
"You give us to the enemy as you would meat to a pack of wolves!"
|
|
the Lord Mayor shouted.
|
|
"Yes!" Morion shouted back. "I need time and I'm willing to
|
|
sacrifice Port Sevlyn to get it!"
|
|
"How dare you!" the Lord Mayor practically screamed. "The King
|
|
will hear of your actions. Then let us see how long you keep your head
|
|
on your shoulders!"
|
|
"If I can't delay that army long enough there will BE no King!"
|
|
Morion forcibly quieted himself. "All of Baranur is at stake,
|
|
Lord Mayor," he said in a normal tone of voice. "What happens in the
|
|
next few days will mean the difference between a chance for survival
|
|
and no chance at all. I don't expect unquestioning obedience from you.
|
|
You're not a soldier and I know such a sacrifice is alien to you. Give
|
|
me the Militia and surrender the city. The Beinisonians might be
|
|
delayed half a day figuring out what to do with you. At least it will
|
|
be something."
|
|
The Lord Mayor of Port Sevlyn looked down at his hands for long
|
|
moments. When he spoke, he did so quietly and Morion was forced to
|
|
strain to hear him. "You are right when you say I am not a soldier.
|
|
From the time of my youth I was being prepared for the day when I
|
|
would assume the title of Lord Mayor. For most of my adult life, Port
|
|
Sevlyn has been my world. Now it is threatened and I can do nothing
|
|
about it and that makes me angry. You have reminded me of my higher
|
|
duty to my sovereign. It has been too long since I lived up to that
|
|
1obligation."
|
|
"I am considered an honourable and just man by most," he said and
|
|
then added with a smile: "Even if I drive a hard bargain at times." He
|
|
looked up at Morion. The look in his eyes was one of resignation. "I
|
|
will do what you ask of me. The Militia will stay here. We shall hold
|
|
the enemy as long as we can. And now, if you will excuse me, my Lord,
|
|
I have preparations to make." So saying, the Lord Mayor rose and left
|
|
the study.
|
|
Morion turned back to the window and gazed out upon the doomed
|
|
city. The merchant was still there, over-seeing his own preparations.
|
|
He'd been joined by two women, one of the same age as he with a regal
|
|
beauty that went beyond physical appearance, the other a much younger
|
|
vision of the elder. Morion watched the man as he pleaded with his
|
|
wife and daughter. He won't leave until his life's work is safe and
|
|
they won't leave without him, Morion thought. Finally, after many
|
|
minutes of sometimes heated discussion, mother and daughter left for
|
|
the docks after tearfully embracing husband and father. The man looked
|
|
after them until they were out of sight and then threw himself into
|
|
his preparations once more.
|
|
"I hope you succeed. I wish you luck." Morion put his helm on,
|
|
adjusted his sword and again unsuccessfully tried to relieve the
|
|
chafing his armour was giving him. "You knew this was coming, Sir
|
|
Edward. You sent too few men to Ailean. The responsibility for this
|
|
death and suffering is yours. When next we meet, there will be a
|
|
reckoning." Morion turned from the window and stalked out of the
|
|
study.
|
|
|
|
Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
|
|
6 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Sir Edward Sothos was having a most peculiar dream. He dreamed he
|
|
was in a castle in a kingdom called Baranur and that a very annoying
|
|
person was pounding on his door. Wait a moment, he thought, that's no
|
|
dream. "Come!"
|
|
The door opened and torch-light streamed in, silhouetting a tall
|
|
slender figure. "Edward," the figure said, "a messenger has arrived
|
|
from Lord Morion."
|
|
"All well and good, Jan," Edward said, forgetting in his
|
|
half-awake state to address his friend by her nickname, "but is that
|
|
any reason to wake me from the first sound sleep I've had in two
|
|
weeks?"
|
|
"Sir, I assure you this is important."
|
|
Edward sighed. Another night's sleep ruined. "Well come in then.
|
|
And light a lamp, will you?" Jan closed the door and stumbled over to
|
|
the table near Edward's bed. After a few minutes of fumbling, she
|
|
managed to light the small battered lamp Edward kept as a momento of
|
|
his days as a wandering knight.
|
|
Edward squinted slightly, his eyes not yet adjusted to the light.
|
|
What he saw made his eyes open wide. Jan was dressed in a nightgown
|
|
that did a barely adequate job of concealing her.
|
|
"What's the emergency?" Edward asked.
|
|
"A messenger has just arrived from Lord Morion, sir," Jan said
|
|
tightly.
|
|
"Lord Morion?" Edward repeated, a sense of dread coming over him.
|
|
"Sir Ailean is dead, sir," she said in a subdued voice.
|
|
"Dead?"
|
|
"Yes, sir. Lord Morion reports that the Beinisonians landed
|
|
approximately twenty thousand men. Ailean stayed behind with a
|
|
rear-guard to give Morion time to extricate the bulk of Ailean's
|
|
force. His Lordship also informs you that both Regiments of the
|
|
1Pyridain Borderers are no more." Jan paused for a moment, reading the
|
|
last of the message. "Sixteen thousand Beinisonians are marching down
|
|
the Laraka. Heading for Magnus."
|
|
"What!?" Edward flung the bedclothes off him and just as quickly
|
|
reclaimed them. The shock of hearing of his former squire's death made
|
|
him forget he wasn't wearing anything. Jan, blushing furiously,
|
|
quickly turned around.
|
|
"Commander," Edward said with embarrassment, "perhaps you should
|
|
return to your own quarters so that both of us might more
|
|
appropriately attire ourselves."
|
|
Jan blushed even more furiously than before as she realized what
|
|
she was wearing. "Yes, sir," she said and then fled the room, her face
|
|
the colour of her hair.
|
|
Several minutes later, Edward had just put on his robe when a
|
|
nock sounded at his door. "Come!" The door opened and Jan entered the
|
|
room, this time attired in a heavy gown she had picked up years ago
|
|
during her first and last visit to Dargon City.
|
|
"Much less distracting, Coury," he commented, causing Jan to
|
|
blush slightly. Edward frowned. Jan's been acting strange lately.
|
|
We'll have to talk later. Edward retrieved Morion's message from the
|
|
table and sat in a chair while quickly scanning it.
|
|
"Nehru's Blood," he cursed softly. "What have I done?"
|
|
"Sir?" Jan asked, confused. She sat next to Edward. "Have I
|
|
missed something?"
|
|
Edward smiled ruefully, the expression softening his scar's
|
|
effect. "When Marcellon and I 'found' Luthias in Pyridain, Luthias
|
|
told us that he was tortured for information regarding the Laraka's
|
|
defenses. He said Beinison was planning a large invasion of the
|
|
Laraka. Just how large he wasn't sure. I notified Sir Ailean, may he
|
|
know The Reaper's Acceptance, and instructed him to prepare a
|
|
reception for the Beinisonians."
|
|
"I never thought they would attack so soon. I was certain they
|
|
would wait until the storm season was safely past. Just as I thought
|
|
they wouldn't attack until spring."
|
|
"Surely you can't mean you blame yourself?"
|
|
"I am the Knight Commander. Ultimately, EVERY act the Royal Army
|
|
undertakes is my responsibility. But in this case...in this case, I
|
|
waited too long before ordering the Militia to join Ailean. And now we
|
|
face the greatest crisis of the war thus far."
|
|
Jan didn't argue with Edward's answer; it was in accordance with
|
|
everything her instructors taught her at the Royal Academy. "What are
|
|
your orders, sir?"
|
|
"Send a messenger after Luthias," Edward said after only a
|
|
moment's pause. "Order the General to turn 'round and make for Magnus
|
|
with all haste." Edward stood and walked over to a cabinet. He opened
|
|
it and sorted through the various maps until he found the one he
|
|
wanted.
|
|
"Here, Coury. Hold this up against the wall, would you?"
|
|
Stretching her arms wide, Jan held the map up while Edward poured over
|
|
it. Lost in thought, Edward did not become aware of the intimate
|
|
nature of their stance for several minutes. When he did, he quickly
|
|
disengaged himself and put the map away.
|
|
"Hmmm. Yes. Well. Send a runner to General Wainwright are you
|
|
getting all this?"
|
|
"Yes, sir," Jan replied. "Sorry, sir."
|
|
"Send a runner to General Wainwright. Have him put the garrison
|
|
on alert. And wake the King."
|
|
"Now?"
|
|
"Yes. Now. If the situation becomes any worse, I may have to ask
|
|
for the Edict. Go. We don't have much time."
|
|
1 "At once, Your Excellency."
|
|
|
|
Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Lord Morion galloped to the front of the column stalled before
|
|
the entrance to Gateway Keep. He'd given instructions for his force to
|
|
enter the small fortification situated on the fork of the Laraka where
|
|
its mountain tributary joined the larger body of water while he
|
|
scouted the surrounding terrain. He'd just finished the two-hour-long
|
|
reconnaisance and was looking forward to a hot meal and a warm bed for
|
|
the first time in many days. The sight that greeted him now was not
|
|
one to gladden his heart or soften his anger.
|
|
"What's the delay, Commander?" Morion called as he reigned
|
|
sharply in.
|
|
"The Castellan refuses to open the gate, my Lord," the senior
|
|
Regimental Commander replied.
|
|
"Refuses to--have you told him who we are?"
|
|
"Yes, my Lord. He says he has orders from the Lord Keeper not to
|
|
let us in."
|
|
"Ho, Castellan!" Morion shouted up at the wall. "Open this gate!"
|
|
"Who's that?" a man called from the battlements.
|
|
"Lord Morion of Pentamorlo. Now open this damned gate before I
|
|
break it down!"
|
|
"I cannot, my Lord. The Lord Keeper has decreed you are not to be
|
|
allowed admittance."
|
|
"In the name of His Royal Majesty," Morion said through clenched
|
|
teeth, "I ORDER you! OPEN THE GATE!" Morion could see indecision on
|
|
the Castellan's face. The man turned and sent a runner off to the gods
|
|
knew where. After several increasingly tense and angry minutes of
|
|
waiting, a young man dressed in robes appeared on the wall next to the
|
|
Castellan.
|
|
"What seems to be the problem, Lord Morion?" the green-eyed man
|
|
asked in a neutral tone.
|
|
"My men and I require entrance and this fool won't open the
|
|
gate!"
|
|
"Then what is the problem? Castellan Ridgewater is following my
|
|
orders. I do not want you inside Gateway's walls nor on my lands. Take
|
|
your force and leave."
|
|
"Perhaps you do not understand the gravity of the situation,"
|
|
Morion said, trying hard to remain calm. "There is a large Beinisonian
|
|
force headed upriver and they shall surely attack Gateway. Let us in
|
|
and perhaps we can hold out long enough for reinforcements to arrive."
|
|
"Gateway has no need of your assistance, Lord Morion, we are
|
|
quite capable of defending ourselves. If His Majesty scolds you for
|
|
not being here, feel free to inform him I acted on my own authority."
|
|
Morion straightened somewhat in his saddle. "Lord Keeper, you are
|
|
defying the King's order! If you force me to, I will storm the gate."
|
|
"I highly doubt that, my Lord. I believe your force would be more
|
|
concerned with their own safety," Ne'on said. His nostrils flared and
|
|
he seemed to swell with power. In an instant, the ground under
|
|
Morion's men turned to molten lava and men and women screamed as the
|
|
searing-hot liquid ate at armour and flesh. Then, as suddenly as it
|
|
appeared, the lava ceased to exist. "Don't you agree?" Ne'on added, as
|
|
the panic among the assembled Regiments subsided. The white-robed
|
|
Keeper with the ghostly appearance spoke inaudibly to the Castellan,
|
|
and left the wall for his own quarters.
|
|
Morion cursed in rage. He could not fight magic as powerful as
|
|
this. Nine days he had driven the two thousand eight hundred men and
|
|
women under his command at a brutal pace in order to reach Gateway
|
|
1Keep ahead of the enemy. And now, all that effort, all that hardship
|
|
was for naught. Not knowing what else to do, Morion ordered the senior
|
|
Commander to turn the men around and make camp on the south bank by
|
|
the ford they'd crossed over the Laraka's tributary.
|
|
The Beinisonian juggernaught was coming and Morion's last hope
|
|
had been snatched away. When the enemy arrived, he and the men and
|
|
women who followed him would die.
|
|
"I wish you were here, Kimme. Just to see your face once more."
|
|
|
|
Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
The Main Body of the Beinisonian Expeditionary Force flowed over
|
|
the fields and meadows towards its destination: Port Sevlyn. The Lord
|
|
Mayor stood on the battlements and watched them come, rank after rank
|
|
after endless rank, the morning sun glinting off weapons and armour.
|
|
An unstoppable juggernaught that wanted Port Sevlyn for its own. "But
|
|
I shall deny you this city for as long as I am able," the Lord Mayor
|
|
said aloud. "You will find us an expensive morsel."
|
|
The men and women of the Militia Regiment head-quartered in Port
|
|
Sevlyn watched the enemy come as well. All were frightened. Most had
|
|
never even trained together, at least not in Regimental strength. They
|
|
were light infantry, their armour and weapons their own. Their tunics
|
|
were the only pieces of equipment the Royal Army supplied. They faced
|
|
an enemy who outnumbered them thirteen-to-one and far out-classed them
|
|
in terms of armour. An enemy who knew war because it was their
|
|
profession. For all their shortcomings, for all their lack of
|
|
professionalism, one very important thing could be said of the
|
|
Militia. They didn't run. That said something about the depth of
|
|
feeling each had for their homes and family.
|
|
|
|
Joachim Vasquez lowered the spyglass. They can't have more than
|
|
one thousand men, he thought. And light infantry, to boot. This should
|
|
be easy. "So why do I have this feeling?"
|
|
"Sir?" Colonel Conti asked.
|
|
"Nothing, Colonel. Merely thinking out loud." Vasquez sat his
|
|
horse for several moments more, staring at Port Sevlyn's walls.
|
|
Perhaps they'll listen to reason. "Colonel Conti, get us two shields.
|
|
We're going to parley with them."
|
|
|
|
"My Lord Mayor!" the Commander of the Militia called out. "Two
|
|
riders approach under shield of truce!"
|
|
The Lord Mayor hurried back up to the walls he had so recently
|
|
left. The Beinisonian army had halted it's advance half a league from
|
|
the city. Detachments were making their way around Port Sevlyn to the
|
|
north. The city would be completely surrounded in an hour.
|
|
Two riders bearing white-painted shields rode unhurriedly toward
|
|
the walls. The rider on the left wore a scarlet cape. That and the
|
|
gilding on his breastplate suggested he was a high-ranking officer.
|
|
The second rider, from his appearance, was only slightly inferior to
|
|
the first.
|
|
The two stopped just inside earshot. The higher-ranking of the
|
|
two shouted in barely adequate Baranurian, "I am Field Marshal Joachim
|
|
Vasquez, commander of this army. Who commands Port Sevlyn?"
|
|
"I do. Lord Mayor of Port Sevlyn."
|
|
"Your Worship, will you surrender the city to me?"
|
|
"I think not."
|
|
"Many will die needlessly. I greatly outnumber you. Should you
|
|
force me to attack, I will still take Port Sevlyn. The only difference
|
|
will be the number of young men on both sides who will perish."
|
|
1 "If you want my city, Field Marshal, you must pay the price. I
|
|
assure you it will not be cheap!"
|
|
"You will not reconsider?"
|
|
"I had thought my meaning plain. Or are you hard of hearing?"
|
|
"So be it!" Vasquez wrenched his horse's reins around and rode
|
|
back to his troops. Within minutes, the enemy were on the move.
|
|
Vasquez had committed perhaps the most grievous sin an officer could
|
|
make; he let his emotions get the better of him.
|
|
|
|
Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Conn Alrod stepped back from the wall as the grappling hook
|
|
sailed over the battlements and securely lodged itself. The rope went
|
|
taught with tension. Conn stepped forward and looked down. Two
|
|
soldiers were climbing up the rope. Conn shook his head in wonder at
|
|
their state of mind. He allowed them to get halfway to the top before
|
|
cutting the rope free of the grappling hook. The two tumbled to their
|
|
deaths.
|
|
A ladder clattered against the wall not two feet from where Conn
|
|
stood. He ran to the nearest basket of rocks and man-handled it over
|
|
to the ladder. Grunting with the effort, he strained and pushed,
|
|
finally managing to wrestle it to the top of the battlement. With one
|
|
last push, he sent sent it over. He was rewarded by the screams of the
|
|
Beinisonians climbing the ladder.
|
|
Conn heard a scrabbling sound to his right. A Beinisonian
|
|
appeared, gripping the rope of another grappling hook. Conn couldn't
|
|
deal with the enemy soldier because more were approaching the top of
|
|
the ladder. Cursing in frustration, Conn heaved with all his might,
|
|
trying to push the ladder away. No success. The first Beinisonian was
|
|
almost to the top.
|
|
A soldier of Conn's Company had engaged the Beinisonian on the
|
|
rope, who by this time had gained the battlements. A second enemy
|
|
soldier had already appeared. The first Beinisonian cut down his
|
|
opponent with ease. Conn suppressed an oath. The dead soldier had
|
|
celebrated her nineteenth birthday only days before.
|
|
A third Beinisonian appeared on the rope. Conn glanced to his
|
|
left and saw the first of the enemy soldiers on the ladder reach the
|
|
top. Conn did the only thing he could. He ran.
|
|
|
|
"There! We've gained a foothold!" Field Marshal Vasquez
|
|
exclaimed. "Attacking prematurely has caught them off-guard."
|
|
"I hope so, sir," Colonel Conti replied. "I hope so."
|
|
|
|
The Beinisonian wedge was growing alarmingly. Unless it was
|
|
contained, and soon, the siege of Port Sevlyn would end very quickly.
|
|
Conn shouted frantically for his Senior Sergeant to gather every
|
|
available man. "Hurry, Patrick!" Five Baranurians were trying and
|
|
failing to hold the wedge.
|
|
The Sergeant came running with a squad at his back. He'd had to
|
|
seriously deplete the number of men defending the rest of the
|
|
Company's frontage to gather this many. Conn drew his sword. "Musn't
|
|
keep them waiting, eh, Patrick?"
|
|
"No, sir," the big Sergeant agreed, a wide grin on his face.
|
|
Conn turned to his men. Filling his lungs with air, he shouted,
|
|
"At them, lads! Charge!" Conn threw his band at the wedge with a fury
|
|
born of desperation. He lost his sense of time. Everything seemed
|
|
covered in a red haze. All Conn knew was that he had to reach the
|
|
ladder and push it away. He hacked and stabbed blindly into the
|
|
struggling mass of Beinisonians, Patrick Havercamp beside him,
|
|
1grinning fiercely all the while.
|
|
A sword was thrust at Conn's face. He beat it aside and struck at
|
|
his attacker. He felt the blade bite but could not take the time to
|
|
see if his opponent was dead or merely wounded. A body fell at his
|
|
feet. He stepped over it, concerned only with reaching his goal. A
|
|
Beinisonian appeared in front of him. Conn thrust his sword into his
|
|
enemy's abdomen, twisting his wrist to turn the stroke into a killing
|
|
one.
|
|
Conn ripped his sword free and suddenly, he was at the ladder. A
|
|
Beinisonian reached the top of the ladder and stopped, surprised, when
|
|
he saw not a friend waiting but a foe. He died, Conn's blood-smeared
|
|
blade in his throat.
|
|
Confronted with his goal, Conn came back to himself. He sheathed
|
|
his sword and bent to the task of pushing the ladder away from the
|
|
wall. His back was wide open to attack, but he trusted Patrick to ward
|
|
him as he had done in the past.
|
|
Conn summoned all his strength and still the ladder wouldn't
|
|
budge. He pushed until his face went red and the veins stood out on
|
|
his neck and still nothing. He was about to give up and look for an
|
|
alternate method when suddenly the ladder moved, seemingly on its own.
|
|
It was then Conn became aware that Patrick was beside him helping to
|
|
push the ladder away. Conn also noticed the sounds of battle had
|
|
diminished somewhat.
|
|
"We did it, sir."
|
|
Conn sat against the battlements, chest heaving as he took much
|
|
needed air into his lungs. "Yes we did," Conn gasped out. When his
|
|
breathing was under better control, he heaved himself to his feet.
|
|
"What's the bill, Patrick?"
|
|
"Ten, sir."
|
|
"Damn! Damn damn damn!"
|
|
"Captain Alrod!" a voice called from the right. "They're on the
|
|
wall again!" Cursing fate, the Commander, the gods, Conn gathered the
|
|
ten survivors and led them against the new Beinisonian wedge. It was
|
|
going to be a long day.
|
|
|
|
Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Lord Quillien Thorne sat heavily in his favorite chair. He said
|
|
nothing for several minutes, causing his family to worry. "We won't be
|
|
leaving," he announced to startled gasps. "The Beinisonians control
|
|
the river. Any attempt to leave by ship would be suicide. We'll just
|
|
have to wait out the storm."
|
|
There was a long moment of silence. The concern on the faces of
|
|
his wife Rolanda and his daughter Jannis was plain to see.
|
|
"Quillien," Rolanda asked softly, "will the city hold?"
|
|
Lord Thorne shook his head gravely. "There's not much chance of a
|
|
successful resistance. The enemy is too strong; it's only a matter of
|
|
time."
|
|
"But we can't just stay here," Jannis said. "What will we do?"
|
|
"The only thing we can do," Lord Thorne replied. "Hide in the
|
|
vault until this is over."
|
|
"And pray that it will be over soon," Rolanda said.
|
|
|
|
"It's only a matter of time," Commander Karellan said to his
|
|
assembled Company commanders. The six Captains and four Senior
|
|
Sergeants took the news calmly. They had known what the Commander had
|
|
told them since before the battle began. "We lost two hundred men
|
|
today. Among them four Captains and six Sergeants. And that was
|
|
against perhaps a third of the enemy's force. We'll lose a great many
|
|
1more tomorrow.
|
|
I know the situation is hopeless, but you must impress upon the
|
|
men the importance of continued resistance. It is vital we give Lord
|
|
Morion the time he needs to prepare at Gateway. Nothing else matters."
|
|
Karellan sat. "Dismissed."
|
|
|
|
Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Joachim Vasquez was not a happy man. He had lost eight hundred
|
|
men dead or wounded in the day's fighting. And the worst of it, he
|
|
thought bitterly, is that my stupidity is to blame. "I should have
|
|
waited until the city was surrounded before I attacked." Colonel Conti
|
|
refrained from commenting.
|
|
"The scouts report no sign of enemy activity in the countryside,
|
|
sir. They don't even seem to be making an attempt to relieve the
|
|
garrison."
|
|
"These Baranurians are more ruthless than I thought. They know we
|
|
must take Port Sevlyn. We can't afford to leave a threat to our supply
|
|
line unmolested."
|
|
"Then why didn't they reinforce the garrison?"
|
|
"Simple, Colonel. They're setting up defenses further along our
|
|
route of march. They need time. And they are quite willing to
|
|
sacrifice one of their cities to do it." Vasquez looked Conti full in
|
|
the face. "We may be in for a longer war than we expected."
|
|
Vasquez stood and began pacing back and forth in the small
|
|
confines of his tent. He had a most difficult decision to make. The
|
|
strain was evident on his face. Finally, after many minutes of
|
|
agonized indecision, Vasquez had reconciled his warring emotions.
|
|
"Colonel," he said, voice grim, "we must make an example of Port
|
|
Sevlyn. As much as I detest this order, I must give it to you. The
|
|
Baranurians must be shown the price of resisting us."
|
|
"What do you mean, sir?" Conti asked, a cold sensation creeping
|
|
up his spine.
|
|
"When the city falls, the survivors of the garrison and half the
|
|
populace are to be put to the sword."
|
|
Conti closed his eyes.
|
|
"May Sanar forgive us," Vasquez whispered.
|
|
|
|
Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
|
|
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
"With all due respect, Sire, this is not the time for this
|
|
discussion."
|
|
"It is the only time for this discussion, Edward. If Lord
|
|
Morion's report is accurate, the Beinisonians will have reached Port
|
|
Sevlyn by now. For all we know, the city may be in enemy hands as we
|
|
speak."
|
|
"Exactly my point! If Port Sevlyn has fallen, Connall won't be
|
|
able to reach Gateway in time to prevent it falling as well. And if
|
|
Gateway goes, the enemy will be knocking at Magnus' gates next."
|
|
"Yes. Which is why we will discuss this now. While we still have
|
|
time."
|
|
"Yes, Sire." Edward took a seat in the War Room, formerly used to
|
|
house last Nober's Council sessions.
|
|
Haralan occupied the seat next to Edward, his long-time friend
|
|
and advisor. "Edward," Haralan began, "this is personal. That's why I
|
|
wanted us to be alone. You and Commander Courymwen have been seeing
|
|
quite a lot of each other lately, haven't you?"
|
|
"What do you mean?" Edward asked even though he had a fair idea
|
|
1of what Haralan was getting at.
|
|
"People--important people--have taken notice of you and Commander
|
|
Courymwen's `visits' to some of the taverns and inns in Magnus. There
|
|
has been talk. I see you understand the situation. These people have
|
|
suggested that your mind isn't on the war."
|
|
"That's absurd! Have I not embraced Baranur as my homeland? Did I
|
|
not reject my birthright in Galicia? What more must I do to prove I am
|
|
no outsider?"
|
|
"Easy, Edward. This is me. I know you are loyal to Baranur. But
|
|
there are powerful nobles who would like to see you gone and their
|
|
candidate in your place. Edward, they may be able to turn your
|
|
friendship with your aide into the kind of rumors that destroyed my
|
|
niece's marriage. If they succeed, you could well lose all
|
|
respectability as Knight Commander. When that happens, you cease to
|
|
become an asset. Indeed, you become a liability."
|
|
"Is Your Royal Majesty ordering me to terminate my friendship
|
|
with Commander Courymwen?" Edward asked formally.
|
|
"That would be my last resort. But I will so order if I am forced
|
|
to," Haralan said with regret.
|
|
"May I be dismissed, Your Royal Majesty?"
|
|
Haralan sighed. "Yes. You may" --the sound of a door slamming
|
|
interrupted Haralan in mid-sentence-- "go." Haralan sighed once more.
|
|
"This is a problem I can do without."
|
|
|
|
Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Conn woke to a perfectly sunny day. He'd had a difficult time
|
|
sleeping. Lying on hard stone, in leather armour, was not terribly
|
|
conducive to a good night's rest. He groaned and wearily hauled
|
|
himself to his feet. He turned to look out over the battlements. The
|
|
camp fires of the enemy ringed Port Sevlyn. Just over twelve thousand
|
|
men were stirring, preparing to once again throw themselves at the
|
|
hopelessly outnumbered defenders.
|
|
Patrick came over and silently offered his commander and friend
|
|
some cheese and half a loaf of bread. Conn ate his breakfast in
|
|
silence, staring at the bodies piled up at the base of the wall.
|
|
"Today or tomorrow, Patrick."
|
|
"Yes, sir."
|
|
"I wish I knew if Fayonna was safe."
|
|
"Yes, sir."
|
|
Suddenly, Conn stiffened. He turned to order the stand to, but
|
|
Patrick was already off. He'd seen Conn's reaction and had guessed its
|
|
cause. The Beinisonians had finished breakfast and now they wanted to
|
|
play.
|
|
|
|
Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Vasquez's heavy infantry Regiments marched out one hour after
|
|
dawn. Conti had passed on the order to make an example out of Port
|
|
Sevlyn. The men of the Regiments that had suffered during the previous
|
|
day's unsuccessful attack were eager for revenge. The remainder of the
|
|
soldiers accepted their orders because they had been trained to.
|
|
|
|
Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Conn delivered a backhand chop to the throat of his adversary
|
|
that sent the Beinisonian staggering back, his life pouring out onto
|
|
1Port Sevlyn's walls. The Beinisonians had attacked with their entire
|
|
force, twelve thousand men. The eight hundred or so defenders were
|
|
hard pressed to hold them. But by some miracle, hold them they did. It
|
|
was already past noon and the third assault on the walls was well
|
|
underway. Conn had been fighting for seven hours. To him, it seemed
|
|
like an eternity.
|
|
The enemy had established fighting wedges at several points along
|
|
the wall. Conn and the other Company commanders spent virtually all
|
|
their time and energy leading their small reserves against a wedge
|
|
whenever one was started. All Conn knew was what was in front of him.
|
|
And that was the five or so survivors of the newest wedge on his
|
|
Company's section of wall.
|
|
"Forward!" Conn snarled and led his fifteen men and women against
|
|
the five enemy. His blade seemed a part of him, an extension of his
|
|
hand. He reached out towards an enemy soldier, felt resistance, and
|
|
then his arm was red up to the elbow.
|
|
"Well struck!" Patrick said. Conn hadn't even been fully aware of
|
|
what he'd done. It was as if his body was on automatic. He looked
|
|
around, leaning on the battlements to give his weary, aching body some
|
|
kind of reprieve.
|
|
Through a strength born of sheer desperation, the men and women
|
|
of the 2nd Quinnat Militia Regiment were keeping the Beinisonian
|
|
invaders from gaining a lasting foothold on the walls. But at what
|
|
great cost. Many a young Baranurian lay sprawled in death. Many more
|
|
were grievously wounded.
|
|
Trumpets sounded to the north, east, and west; three notes rising
|
|
in successive octaves. The Beinisonians withdrew from the walls,
|
|
formed their Regiments into line-of-march, and slowly proceeded to
|
|
their encampments surrounding Port Sevlyn, the setting sun casting
|
|
shadows over the battlefield. Port Sevlyn had survived another day.
|
|
|
|
Gortholde's Hall, East Quarter, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
|
|
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
A large group of soldiers from the Huscarl Regiment known as
|
|
Magnus' Maniacs had cleared a space in the centre of the common room
|
|
and were heavily involved in a drinking contest that could only be
|
|
described as monumental. Thunderous cheers issued from the group
|
|
periodically as the contest neared its zenith. None of the other
|
|
patrons of the tavern seemed to take notice; it was best not to
|
|
attract the Maniacs' attention unless you could fight well, drink
|
|
large quantities of ale, and had a somewhat warped sense of humour.
|
|
Even then it was usually better for all concerned if you were involved
|
|
with them for as brief a time as possible.
|
|
Seated in a shadowy corner away from the rest of the patrons was
|
|
a man wearing a black tunic over a battered suit of chainmail armour.
|
|
A very expensive-looking amulet hung from a chain about his neck. A
|
|
tankard sat untouched on the table in front of the dark-haired man.
|
|
Incredibly, the man was asleep, completely oblivious to the noise
|
|
surrounding him.
|
|
A tall, red-haired young woman wearing the blue-and-gold uniform
|
|
of The King's Own over a suit of chainmail entered the tavern. She
|
|
nodded a greeting to the proprietor as she walked over to the bar to
|
|
speak to him.
|
|
Gortholde was an aging, retired warrior who had gambled his
|
|
life's savings to buy the tavern. The gamble had paid off handsomely
|
|
and now Gortholde was well-off, if not wealthy. Most of his customers
|
|
were soldiers. Gortholde had a soft spot for those who served in the
|
|
Royal Army. Any soldier who frequented his establishment could expect
|
|
good drink for low prices. Gortholde's Hall was THE spot for off-duty
|
|
1soldiers to relax and unwind after a day's work.
|
|
Gortholde stiffened to almost-attention as he answered the
|
|
red-haired woman's questions; she wore a Commander's uniform and old
|
|
habits do die hard. He pointed in the direction of the black-clad man.
|
|
The woman thanked him and proceeded to thread her way through the
|
|
revelers, tankard of ale in hand.
|
|
She pulled up a chair and sat facing the dark-haired man. Only
|
|
then did she realize he was asleep. Smiling and shaking her head, she
|
|
rose and went around the table to waken him. "Edward," she said
|
|
shaking his shoulder, "wake up."
|
|
Edward Sothos woke with a start. "What? Oh. Coury, it's you," he
|
|
said with relief.
|
|
Jan laughed. "Of course it's me." She returned to her seat. "So.
|
|
What do you need to say to me that can't be said at the Castle?"
|
|
"Gods, I'm tired."
|
|
"You look it. Why don't we go back? You need sleep. This can wait
|
|
'till tomorrow, can't it?"
|
|
"No. I have to check on the supply situation and brief the King
|
|
and his advisors tomorrow. That will keep me busy all day and most of
|
|
the night."
|
|
"All right then. So?"
|
|
"We've known each other for...three years now?"
|
|
"Four last month."
|
|
"Four years. You're...twenty-four, aren't you?"
|
|
"Last Janis," Jan replied.
|
|
"Twenty-four and a Commander already. That is quite an
|
|
accomplishment for one so young."
|
|
"Edward, I'm only eight years younger than you are."
|
|
"Not 'till Yule seventeen."
|
|
"Okay, so you won't turn thirty-one for another week. Edward, I
|
|
don't see where all this is going."
|
|
"You are a good officer and I won't--I can't--do anything to harm
|
|
your chance for success."
|
|
"What do you mean?"
|
|
"Jan, there's been talk," Edward said quietly.
|
|
"Talk?" Jan repeated, feeling wary. Edward called her Jan only
|
|
when he was discussing something serious.
|
|
"About us. Certain people have noticed we've been spending time
|
|
together recently. There has been gossip that...that we--"
|
|
"That we've been sleeping together???" she asked, astonished.
|
|
"Yes," Edward said, face lowered. "I'm sorry, Jan. It seems that
|
|
some nobles would prefer another Knight Commander and they are willing
|
|
to go to great lengths to discredit me. You were caught in the middle.
|
|
I am to blame."
|
|
"But surely no one would believe these...rumors?"
|
|
"They have reached the King's ears. He pointed out that truth has
|
|
nothing to do with this situation. If this developes further, a
|
|
scandal such as that surrounding Lysanda's marriage could ensue."
|
|
"You'd be stripped of your office!" Jan said hoarsely.
|
|
"That isn't what I'm concerned about."
|
|
"What then?"
|
|
"You. I won't have your reputation sullied in this manner."
|
|
"What will you do? What can you do?"
|
|
Edward stared at the cold fireplace. "If we were in Galicia, my
|
|
course of action would be clear."
|
|
"What?"
|
|
"It doesn't matter. This is not Galicia."
|
|
"I want to know. What would you do if this was Galicia?"
|
|
Edward turned his head to look his friend straight in the eyes.
|
|
"Marry you."
|
|
1 Jan nearly dropped her ale. She sat back, too dumbfounded to
|
|
speak.
|
|
"As I said, this is not Galicia, so the whole idea is moot. I
|
|
shall handle matters." Edward rose. "We should go back now."
|
|
"I think I'll stay here a while," she said slowly and carefully.
|
|
"Are you certain?"
|
|
"Yes," she said looking up at Edward. "Go get some sleep."
|
|
"Good night, Coury."
|
|
"Good night." Jan remained sitting in the dark corner long after
|
|
Edward had left, her ale untouched. Edward's statement left her with a
|
|
great deal of confused emotions and thoughts to reconcile. Jan stayed
|
|
until Gortholde locked up. She went to sleep hours later in her
|
|
quarters, nothing resolved.
|
|
|
|
Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
|
|
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Edward stood in front of the wall-map of Baranur in the War Room.
|
|
He faced the assembled nobles and began his briefing. "My lords, the
|
|
situation in the south is grave. The line from the Westbrook-Pyridain
|
|
border south to the sea has been completely shattered." Edward paused
|
|
as gasps of astonishment raced through the room. "The Beinisonians
|
|
attacked with seventy thousand men, according to the reports. I must
|
|
point out, however, that many of the despatches arriving from the
|
|
field are confused. Any organization that once existed is now gone.
|
|
"Just how bad is it?" a minor scion of House Tallirhan asked.
|
|
"The only organized force in the Southern Marches is comprised of
|
|
what little forces are in Duchy Westbrook. The remaining Royal Army
|
|
forces are running north and west. Lord Kinsley has informed me of his
|
|
intention to deny Pyridain City to the enemy to the last. He has the
|
|
Duchy's Household troops and the remnants of the Assault Brigade. The
|
|
three Regiments fled to the city when the main line broke.
|
|
In addition, I have relieved King's General Tegran of his command
|
|
in Pyridain and placed all troops under Lord Kinsley's orders." Again
|
|
Edward paused, waiting for the storm to break. His wait was a short
|
|
one.
|
|
"How dare you!" Lord Ethros of House Northfield shouted at the
|
|
scarred warrior. "General Tegran is one of the Kingdom's best
|
|
soldiers. You have not the right to relieve him! Just who do you think
|
|
you are, outlander?"
|
|
"I," Edward replied in a cold voice, "am Knight Commander of the
|
|
Royal Armies. Tegran is a soldier of that Army and thus subject to my
|
|
authority. He was a good warrior once and is now a good administrator.
|
|
Administrators will not win this war. Any man who does not perform is
|
|
useless to me and a boon to the enemy."
|
|
"You are not a native of Baranur! A Baranurian would know how to
|
|
honour brave soldiers. A Baranurian would--"
|
|
The King interrupted violently, slamming his hand on the table.
|
|
"Enough! Sir Edward is not far enough below your station for you to
|
|
speak to him so, Lord Ethros! Bickering such as this will get us
|
|
nowhere and will only serve to aid the enemy. Sit down and be silent!"
|
|
Haralan turned to Edward. "Continue, Sir Edward."
|
|
Edward bowed slightly. "The major calamity occurred here," Edward
|
|
said, indicating a spot on the map eight leagues from the
|
|
Baranur-Beinison border, "at Oron's Crossroads. Best estimates
|
|
indicate an enemy force twenty to thirty thousand strong engaged our
|
|
main concentration north of the crossroads. Our forces numbered
|
|
nineteen thousand five hundred; fifteen thousand Royal Army and
|
|
Southern March Militia and four thousand five hundred House forces."
|
|
"The battle was an even struggle until Dame Martis ordered a
|
|
1withdrawal to a more defensible position. It was at that point that
|
|
some nobles refused to comply. Their vainglory would not permit them
|
|
to follow orders. The result was that the Royal Army units began a
|
|
withdrawal while a significant portion of the House units did not. As
|
|
Nehru would have it, the centre of the battle-line was composed
|
|
largely of House units. The enemy seized upon our confusion and sent
|
|
his cavalry into the breach. The centre disintegrated and the flanks
|
|
were left isolated and exposed. Very few Regiments survived to conduct
|
|
something even approximating an orderly retreat."
|
|
"What's the butcher's bill, sir?" King's General Wainwright
|
|
asked.
|
|
Edward took a deep breath and spoke in a voice devoid of emotion.
|
|
"The Combined Host of Baranur has suffered eleven thousand dead,
|
|
wounded or captured. The 8th and 10th Baranurian Regulars, 16th and
|
|
19th Baranurian Archers, and 1st Pyridain Militia have been wiped out
|
|
to the last man and their Colours taken. In addition, the forces of
|
|
Houses Equiville, Bivar, Redcrosse, and Othuldane are gone." Only two
|
|
men remained unaffected during Edward's recitation of the casualties
|
|
suffered; General Wainwright because he was an old soldier and had
|
|
seen much during his long and illustrious career, the Duke of Quinnat
|
|
because his mind was on matters closer to home.
|
|
"Dame Martis gathered what she could and retreated into Duchy
|
|
Westbrook. All told, seven Regiments moved into Westbrook. Most are
|
|
well-off. The 4th Pyridain Militia is little better than an expanded
|
|
Company and has been attached to the 3rd Pyridain Militia to make up
|
|
for that Regiment's losses. The 2nd Pyridain Militia has been
|
|
destroyed. Their remnants have been attached to the 1st Baranurian
|
|
Rangers.
|
|
The officers of the Regiments not involved in the battle seem,
|
|
for the most part, unable or unwilling to halt their units and face
|
|
the enemy. I trust in the ability of the various King's Generals to
|
|
bring such action to a halt, but the process will take some time.
|
|
Rumors have spread word that the defeat was worse than the men are
|
|
being told and the mens' morale has fallen sharply. Rebuilding it will
|
|
take some time."
|
|
"Aside from the forces under Dame Martis and Duke Araesto's son,
|
|
what force have we to oppose the Beinisonians?" the King asked.
|
|
"The Equiville and Leftwich Militias and a very few Royal Army
|
|
Regiments."
|
|
"Good God!" Wainwright exclaimed.
|
|
"We may yet need the gods' assistance before this war has run its
|
|
course." At that moment, the great double doors opened and a slightly
|
|
nervous Daniel Moore entered and slammed to attention. "What is it,
|
|
Captain?" Edward asked with a slight trace of concern in his voice.
|
|
"Sir, the sentries at Southgate report a sizeable force
|
|
approaching the city."
|
|
"How large?"
|
|
"Regimental strength, sir. Eight hundred to a thousand men, sir."
|
|
"How could they have slipped so large a force this far north
|
|
un-noticed?"
|
|
"It's got to be the vanguard of a larger force, sir," Wainwright
|
|
commented, "otherwise the 6th would have dealt with them."
|
|
"The 6th--Nehru's Blood! That's who they are! I must have
|
|
forgotten to inform the garrison Commanders in the confusion over the
|
|
landings on the Laraka."
|
|
"Speaking of which," Lord Ethros said, the scorn in his voice
|
|
apparent, "what exactly IS the situation?"
|
|
Edward ignored Ethros' tone. "Your Grace?" he inquired of Duke
|
|
Quinnat. "Would it please Your Grace to make your report?"
|
|
Quinnat looked at Edward with tired eyes. When he spoke, his
|
|
1voice betrayed weary exhaustion overlying the pain of seeing his lands
|
|
occupied. "No, Sir Edward, it would not please me." He sighed. "But I
|
|
shall do so. My Ducal Guard and I made a wide sweep to the north of
|
|
Shark's Cove. A Regiment garrisons the town and there are two more on
|
|
the border with Kiliaen. The Beinisonians are using the town as a
|
|
staging area for their Navy as well as the invasion. I had not the
|
|
force to attempt an attack so I journeyed to Port Sevlyn. It is under
|
|
siege. By how many men, I do not know; we ran into a Battalion of
|
|
light infantry, skirmishers. We clashed briefly and I was forced to
|
|
retreat further east before swinging south to Magnus. I lost one
|
|
hundred and fifty good men that had been serving me for years. I could
|
|
gain no other intelligence regarding the enemy."
|
|
"Nor have I," Edward commented, resuming control of the briefing.
|
|
"The last report I have is from Lord Morion five days ago. He states
|
|
that he expected sixteen thousand men to march on Magnus. Given Duke
|
|
Quinnat's observations, we can approximate the force besieging Port
|
|
Sevlyn at thirteen-to-fourteen thousand. The garrison numbers one
|
|
Militia Light Infantry Regiment. I believe we can assume that the city
|
|
has fallen and that Gateway shall come under attack very soon."
|
|
"Why would they not attack the Crown City directly?" the young
|
|
lord of House Tallirhan asked.
|
|
"Because Gateway is too large a threat to leave in their rear, my
|
|
Lord", Wainwright responded. "Even were they to besiege it, Gateway's
|
|
catapults would make the river a death-trap for any ship trying to
|
|
sail to Magnus. Indeed, that is the only reason Beinisonian warships
|
|
are not anchored off Kheva's Bridge."
|
|
"What have we that could stop them?" Ethros asked.
|
|
"Lord Morion has taken the survivors Sir Ailean's command to
|
|
Gateway. He has the better part of three Regiments. I have ordered
|
|
Count Connall to return to Magnus at once. Upon his arrival, he will
|
|
be made Knight Captain of the Northern Marches and sent north with the
|
|
Hussars.
|
|
The Huscarls, Militia, and Legion of Death shall remain in the
|
|
city as a safeguard should the Beinisonians by-pass Gateway and
|
|
attempt to take the city by storm. That concludes the briefing, my
|
|
Lords."
|
|
"Thank you, Knight Commander," Haralan said.
|
|
"Sire," Edward said, "the 6th Regulars shall arrive shortly. May
|
|
I suggest a parade? The 6th have fought the Beinisonians well and I
|
|
think they deserve the accolade."
|
|
"Very well. We shall meet you at the Warrior's Way in two hours?"
|
|
"That would be fine, Your Royal Majesty. Captain Moore?"
|
|
Moore, who had been standing unobtrusively behind his commander
|
|
since bringing the news of the 6th's arrival, snapped to attention.
|
|
"Sir?"
|
|
"Have Commander Courymwen turn out the garrison for a formal
|
|
parade to take place in two hours. I expect both of you to be
|
|
present."
|
|
"Sir!"
|
|
"Off with you, then."
|
|
Moore saluted and left. Haralan stood and those assembled stood
|
|
with him. "Good day, gentlemen," he said and departed, the rest bowing
|
|
to their sovereign. The nobles left to conduct their personal business
|
|
leaving Edward and Wainwright alone.
|
|
"What, Artemus?"
|
|
"You're pushing yourself too hard. I wasn't going to say
|
|
anything, but I must now. You've got to get some sleep."
|
|
"Sleep? Sleep?! Artemus, how can I sleep?" Edward turned and
|
|
pointed at the wall-map. "Look at it, Artemus! The Beinisonians are
|
|
pouring across the southern frontier and I've got nothing to throw at
|
|
1them except some Militia units. And up north, they've landed twenty
|
|
thousand men on the Laraka. For all intents and purposes, Duchy
|
|
Quinnat is under Beinisonian rule. And if that wasn't bad enough,
|
|
Magnus is cut off from the sea. I don't know how long the overland
|
|
trade routes will be able to handle the city's needs. And you tell me
|
|
to sleep?"
|
|
"Edward, you must sleep. If you don't, you won't be much use to
|
|
anyone. I've watched you since you assumed your post four years ago.
|
|
You're good. Very good. But I sometimes wonder if you were cut out for
|
|
all this. It seems to me that you would much rather be a simple knight
|
|
serving your lord than responsible for warding an entire Kingdom."
|
|
"There is some truth to that," Edward admitted. "There are times
|
|
that I long for simpler duties and responsibilities. All my life, my
|
|
only dream was to serve the Emperor as a Knight of the Imperium. I
|
|
suppose that has something to do with it. But that doesn't mean I
|
|
don't want this as well. I'm not just serving my King, Artemus.
|
|
Haralan is my closest and dearest friend. As long as he wants me as
|
|
Knight Commander, I shall gladly fill that role."
|
|
Edward paused for a moment and went to stand in front of the huge
|
|
map. "Artemus," he said, gazing intently at the huge depiction of
|
|
Baranur, "the Kingdom is in grave danger and I don't know that I can
|
|
save it." He turned. "I shall die, if need be, to save my friend's
|
|
lands, but just between the two of us...we're going to lose this war."
|
|
Edward turned back to the map. "And there's not a blessed thing I can
|
|
do to stop it."
|
|
|
|
Wainwright sat his horse, back ramrod straight, his eyes raking
|
|
over the massed ranks of the 6th Baranurian Regulars as the
|
|
grey-haired veterans paraded through Southgate. The Warrior's Way was
|
|
lined with troops. The King's Own in their blue-and-gold dress
|
|
uniforms; The Royal Horse Guard, their dark blue dress tunics giving
|
|
them an arrogant air; the three Huscarl Regiments in their white
|
|
tunics, battle-axes gleaming; the four Militia Regiments standing out
|
|
in their scarlet uniforms. All stood rigidly to attention as the eight
|
|
hundred and thirty-seven members of the 6th marched by.
|
|
The Regulars halted. Speeches were given. The Knight Commander
|
|
spoke of the unmatched quality of the 6th and the often over-looked
|
|
benefits experience can bring. King Haralan spoke of the admiration
|
|
all Baranur had for the brave soldiers of the 6th who alone had fought
|
|
the Beinisonians to a bloody stand-still before they were forced to
|
|
withdraw.
|
|
Wainwright watched Edward all through the proceedings. Just
|
|
before they had left the War Room, Wainwright had managed to persuade
|
|
Edward to get some rest immediately after the parade. The knight's
|
|
revelation to Wainwright that he felt the war lost was probably just
|
|
the result of a much delayed, much needed slumber. Wainwright prayed
|
|
that was the cause. As a Baranurian, Wainwright refused to accept the
|
|
notion that his Kingdom might be conquered. As a soldier, he was
|
|
forced to admit the situation looked desperate. Everything hinged upon
|
|
events taking place on the Laraka. If Gateway Keep fell, the
|
|
Beinisonians could lay siege to Magnus, thus cutting the capital off
|
|
from the rest of the Kingdom. And that would mean the death of
|
|
Baranur.
|
|
The speeches were concluded. The 6th resumed its march, turning
|
|
right and passing through the huge gate in the final wall barring
|
|
access to the King's Keep. As Wainwright passed through the massive
|
|
gate, his thoughts drifted north.
|
|
|
|
Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
1
|
|
Conn paced back and forth on Port Sevlyn's western wall. He
|
|
glanced for the fifth time at the little group huddled at the base of
|
|
the wall near a small inn. Patrick saw his commander's glance and gave
|
|
him a gesture of reassurance. Conn waved back, secure in the knowledge
|
|
that Patrick had Conn's Company ready to move at a moment's notice. My
|
|
Company, he thought sadly. Conn's Company had diminished frightfully
|
|
since the siege began. There were scare one score left out of the
|
|
hundred Conn had led into battle two days previously. Most of the 1st
|
|
Quinnat Militia's companies were in the same state.
|
|
Commander Karellan had placed Conn in command of the west wall
|
|
and given him one third of the Regiment's remaining strength to defend
|
|
it. He'd done the same with the two other surviving Captains. All
|
|
told, three hundred exhausted men and women warded Quinnat's capital.
|
|
They were pitifully few compared to the horde encamped on the plains
|
|
before the city.
|
|
Port Sevlyn had been a city untouched by the ravages of the
|
|
world. One might have said there was a slight touch of innocence to
|
|
the place. No longer. War had come to Port Sevlyn and left its brutal
|
|
mark. On the walls and the fields near the base of the walls lay one
|
|
thousand three hundred corpses, Baranurian and Beinisonian. The blood
|
|
of Port Sevlyn's children stained her battlements and towers. The
|
|
city, and its inhabitants, would never be the same again.
|
|
Conn was growing irritable. It was late afternoon and still the
|
|
enemy had not come. He couldn't understand why the Beinisonians had
|
|
not attacked. Strangely, he felt himself growing angry that they did
|
|
not come. The gut-wrenching fear as a grappling hook thudded home and
|
|
the odd joy of battle seemed so much a part of him now that he almost
|
|
wished the enemy would attack.
|
|
Conn caught a sign of movement from the enemy camp. The
|
|
Beinisonian Regiments were on the move again. They marched slowly,
|
|
almost sedately, toward the city. Each Regiment was drawn up in three
|
|
tightly packed ranks. And waving from stout poles of polished oak flew
|
|
each Regiments' Colours, the very heart and soul of a Regiment.
|
|
Guarding the Colours were each Regiments' best warriors. Conn counted
|
|
the Colours of four Regiments coming at his section of wall. The day's
|
|
work was about to begin.
|
|
|
|
Patrick Havercamp hacked and slashed at the enemy, his face a
|
|
mixture of anger and worry. His friend, Conn Alrod, was somewhere
|
|
ahead and in trouble. When the Beinisonians had gained the battlements
|
|
in two places, Patrick had known it was time to commit the small
|
|
reserve Conn had placed under the Sergeant's command.
|
|
Now, Patrick and his men were attempting to push the second wedge
|
|
back and link up with the small group of soldiers, led by Captain
|
|
Alrod, who were valiantly struggling against twice their number some
|
|
twenty yards distant.
|
|
A Beinisonian lunged at the Sergeant. Patrick side-stepped neatly
|
|
and slammed his knee into the man's groin. The Beinisonian doubled
|
|
over more from surprise than real pain, but the result was the same.
|
|
Patrick grabbed the Beinisonian's chin-strap and roughly bent his head
|
|
back. A quick jerk of Patrick's sword and the man's life poured out
|
|
his severed jugular.
|
|
"Keep at the scum, lads!" Patrick shouted at his men as he tipped
|
|
one enemy soldier over the battlements to fall screaming to the ground
|
|
below. Patrick scanned the scene of battle and caught a brief glance
|
|
of his friend. He was about to shout encouragement when he saw Conn go
|
|
down.
|
|
Fear and rage chased each other across Patrick's face. He and
|
|
Conn had been friends since childhood. When Conn's wife Fayonna gave
|
|
1birth, Patrick became the boy's godfather. Patrick had always
|
|
protected his friend from danger during their youth and the tendency
|
|
naturally extended into adulthood.
|
|
Roaring like an enraged bear, the big Sergeant launched himself
|
|
toward his friend. He hewed his way through the enemy ranks as a
|
|
farmer harvests grain. Some few Beinisonians tried to stop him but he
|
|
beat them down and ripped their life away as if they didn't exist.
|
|
Their comrades, terrified of this seemingly unstoppable
|
|
gore-splattered apparition unleashed in their midst, broke and ran.
|
|
Those following behind the Sergeant raised a mighty cheer and
|
|
surged forward. There was not a single Beinisonian left alive on the
|
|
wall within the space of five minutes.
|
|
Patrick knelt beside his friend and gently, carefully removed
|
|
Conn's helmet. Patrick gave a heartfelt sigh. The wound that had
|
|
felled his Captain was superficial. Patrick leaned over and ripped a
|
|
strip of cloth off a dead Beinisonian's tunic and used it to bind his
|
|
friend's wound. "Conn," Patrick called. Nothing. "Conn," he called
|
|
more forcefully.
|
|
Conn groaned and stirred. "Who's there?" he called in a voice
|
|
groggy with pain.
|
|
"It's me, sir. Patrick."
|
|
"I can't see," he said. He reached for his eyes but the Sergeant
|
|
restrained him.
|
|
"Nothing to worry about, sir. Just a little blood, is all. Be
|
|
still and I'll clean it off." Patrick wiped the blood off his friend's
|
|
face, making Conn flinch when Patrick came too close to the cut on
|
|
Conn's scalp. "Sorry, sir."
|
|
Conn waved Patrick's apology aside. "Help me stand." Patrick
|
|
lifted Conn to his feet with a gentleness surprising for a man his
|
|
size. "Thanks."
|
|
"You all right, sir?" Patrick asked with concern.
|
|
"Just let me get my strength, Sergeant." Conn rested against
|
|
Patrick's bulk, letting the throbbing of his head wound slowly lessen.
|
|
After a minute or two, he pushed himself away from Patrick. "Okay,
|
|
Patrick. Let's get back to work."
|
|
Patrick grinned. "Yes, sir!"
|
|
|
|
Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
"Sit, Captain, sit," Commander Karellan told Conn. "How's the
|
|
wound?" he asked not unkindly.
|
|
"Fine, sir," Conn lied. He felt as if someone was taking a
|
|
sledgehammer to his head.
|
|
"Good," Karellan said then lapsed into silence.
|
|
That can't be the only reason he called me here tonight, Conn
|
|
thought. "Sir?"
|
|
"Yes?"
|
|
"Was there something specific you wanted to speak to me about?"
|
|
Karellan sighed. "Yes, Captain, there is." Karellan paused again.
|
|
When next he spoke, he looked at a set of figures on a scrap of paper.
|
|
"The casualty count's just come in. One hundred twenty-three
|
|
effectives including one Senior Sergeant, one Captain and myself." He
|
|
looked up at Conn. "Not a very formidable force, is it Alrod?"
|
|
"Enough to give those bastards something to remember, sir!"
|
|
"That's the whole point, isn't it? Make them pay in blood for
|
|
this city."
|
|
"It's not going to be pretty when they take the city, is it,
|
|
sir?"
|
|
"No, Captain, it's not." Karellan ran his fingers through his
|
|
1greying hair. "We can't hold the walls any longer. Come daybreak,
|
|
we'll pull the men back and wait for the enemy to come." The Commander
|
|
rubbed his eyes in a vain attempt to banish some of his weariness.
|
|
"Alrod, I'm charging you with holding the gate."
|
|
"But if we abandon the walls--?"
|
|
"What use is there holding the gate? As long as we hold the gate,
|
|
and the keep for that matter, we make it that much more difficult for
|
|
the enemy to move through the city. They'll be forced to spend the
|
|
time to destroy us."
|
|
"Yes, sir," Conn replied without much enthusiasm.
|
|
"Take Sergeant Havercamp and forty good men and hold the gate,
|
|
Conn. Hold it as long as you can and when you think you can't hold any
|
|
longer, hold some more."
|
|
"Where will you be, sir?"
|
|
"The Lord Mayor and I and the rest of the garrison will barricade
|
|
ourselves in the keep. We may not last long, but we cannot disgrace
|
|
the Duke by giving his home to the invaders without a fight. That's
|
|
all," he said, rising from his chair. He gripped Conn's hand in a firm
|
|
hold. "Good luck, Captain."
|
|
"And to you, sir."
|
|
|
|
Rolanda Thorne looked up as her husband came through the door.
|
|
"Well, Quillien?"
|
|
"The news is not good," he said, putting his cloak away. "As I
|
|
expected. You'd best have Jannis come in and hear this."
|
|
Lady Thorne went to get their daughter. The look on her husband's
|
|
face and the tone of his voice frightened her more than she cared to
|
|
admit.
|
|
|
|
"Would it be all right if Tassy and Garrett stayed with us?"
|
|
Jannis asked after her father had explained the situation as explained
|
|
to him by the Lord Mayor.
|
|
"I thought they'd left town, but I heard from Rayna that they
|
|
were still here."
|
|
"Of course they can stay with us," said Lady Thorne. "Rayna too,
|
|
if she wants."
|
|
"Okay. I'll go over right now and tell them."
|
|
"Be careful, Jannis," Lord Thorne warned. "Take your dagger
|
|
along."
|
|
"But the invaders haven't gotten into the city yet, Father,"
|
|
Jannis replied.
|
|
"These are dangerous times," said Lord Thorne. "Do it anyway."
|
|
"Just a moment," said Rolanda. She went over to a display cabinet
|
|
and took an object off one of the shelves. "Take this."
|
|
"Your sundagger?" Jannis asked, accepting the enchanted blade
|
|
from her mother.
|
|
"When Brynna gave me this I never thought I'd need it," said Lady
|
|
Thorne. She instructed her daughter on how to invoke the magic of the
|
|
dagger; Jannis listened carefully, then left. Lady Thorne watched her
|
|
from the window, wishing that they all were someplace far away from
|
|
the conflict.
|
|
|
|
Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Vasquez stood outside his tent gazing at the pre-dawn sky. Storm
|
|
clouds loomed and a chill wind was blowing from the north. A fitting
|
|
omen for today's work, Vasquez thought. Today would be the last day,
|
|
of that he was certain. Vasquez had lost four hundred more men
|
|
yesterday and he knew the defenders had paid dearly also. He expected
|
|
1no more than two hundred would face his Regiments when the attack went
|
|
in. And then would the soldiers of the Beinisonian Emperor take their
|
|
revenge on those sheltering behind Port Sevlyn's walls.
|
|
The young Field Marshal splashed his face with cold water and
|
|
returned to his tent to finish drafting the report he must send the
|
|
Emperor on his reasons for giving the order to destroy Port Sevlyn. As
|
|
he set pen to paper, he could hear the shouts of the Sergeants calling
|
|
the men from their slumber. The final day of the siege had begun.
|
|
|
|
Main gate, north wall Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
Patrick gently shook his Captain awake. "It's morning, sir. Time
|
|
for breakfast."
|
|
Conn sat up slowly and carefully. The pain from his scalp wound
|
|
had lessened only slightly during the night. "What's the fare this
|
|
morning?"
|
|
"Campaign rations, I'm afraid, sir."
|
|
"Well, I suppose it's better than nothing at all."
|
|
"Only just, sir."
|
|
Conn bit a chunk off the slab of thrice-baked bread and washed it
|
|
down with a large mouthful of water. "Have you checked the men?" he
|
|
asked his friend.
|
|
"I have, sir. They're scared, the lot of them, but they'll do
|
|
fine when the time comes, sir. They know this will be the end of it
|
|
and there's a few wondering what the enemy's going to do once they're
|
|
over the walls."
|
|
"Well, let's hope that Vasquez character rides tight reign on his
|
|
troops."
|
|
"From your lips to God's ears, sir."
|
|
"Right, Patrick," Conn said, getting to his feet. "Let's see if
|
|
we can get an inspection done before they hit us."
|
|
Conn and Patrick walked throughout the barbican, talking to the
|
|
men and women, reassuring them that they would fight bravely and well
|
|
and reminding them that every second's delay did harm to the enemy.
|
|
They were on the wall between the two towers of the barbican when
|
|
the Beinisonians began to move. "Okay, Patrick," Conn said turning to
|
|
the Sergeant, "down you go."
|
|
"But, sir! Don't you think I should stay with you?"
|
|
"No, Sergeant. I need a good man to hold the gatehouse. That's
|
|
the weakest part of the barbican."
|
|
"Yes, sir." Patrick drew himself erect and threw his life-long
|
|
friend a salute with parade-ground precision and then hurried down to
|
|
the gatehouse.
|
|
Conn surveyed the enemy formations closing on the walls. From his
|
|
observations, he guessed that no more than one Regiment would attack
|
|
the gate. He laughed at the thought. He was so used to fighting off
|
|
three and four Regiments at once that one Regiment of a thousand men
|
|
hardly seemed worth noticing. War can be absurd at times, he thought.
|
|
|
|
Main gate, north wall Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
|
|
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
|
|
|
|
"You five! Come with me!" Conn said, leading half the men he'd
|
|
put on the wall between the two twenty-foot diameter round towers on
|
|
either side of the gatehouse down to the gatehouse itself. With only
|
|
forty men to defend two towers, a twenty-foot section of wall, and a
|
|
thirty by twenty-foot gatehouse, all of which were collectively named
|
|
a barbican, Conn could do nothing but divide his men evenly, ten men
|
|
to each area. The towers were holding for the moment and no one as yet
|
|
1had thought to assault the wall, preferring to try and batter down the
|
|
stout gate below the battlements. The gatehouse, on the other hand,
|
|
was in serious trouble.
|
|
The enemy had scaled the walls in three score places and were
|
|
pouring into the city. The Regiment assigned to wrest the gate away
|
|
from its defenders had completely surrounded the barbican and was
|
|
concentrating its efforts on the gatehouse. The eleven defenders were
|
|
barely holding only because those clamoring to gain entrance outside
|
|
the walls were being thwarted by the iron-reinforced oak gate, thus
|
|
allowing the commander of the gatehouse to use his entire force
|
|
against those Beinisonians who had scaled the wall and were slowly
|
|
forcing the portcullis. Even allowing for the confined spaces of the
|
|
gatehouse, eleven could not hold out long against one hundred.
|
|
Conn led his five into the gatehouse. The enemy had forced the
|
|
portcullis halfway up and were getting through in larger and larger
|
|
numbers. Four of the defenders were down. The remaining seven were
|
|
being slowly pushed back towards the gate. "Follow me!" Conn shouted
|
|
and led his men into the fray to bolster the defenders. "Patrick! To
|
|
me!"
|
|
Patrick cut down his opponent and joined his Captain. "Nice of
|
|
you to join us, sir!"
|
|
"Can't let you have all the fun!" Conn shouted over the smithy's
|
|
din of combat. Conn's head was pounding in time with the blows of the
|
|
battering ram being used on the gate.
|
|
"What's it like topside?"
|
|
"We're holding. Barely, but holding."
|
|
|
|
Commander Karellan backhanded one Beinisonian with his gauntlet,
|
|
sending the man staggering with blood flowing from his broken nose. A
|
|
second enemy soldier rushed the disarmed Militia Commander, hoping for
|
|
a quick kill and the prestige of defeating the enemy leader.
|
|
Karellan backed up and quickly ripped his cloak from his plate
|
|
armour and wrapped it around his right arm as a makeshift shield. The
|
|
Beinisonian charged, his sword sweeping in a gleaming arc towards the
|
|
ex-Royal Army officer. Karellan brought his cloak up to meet the
|
|
attack. The Beinisonian's sword cut into the thick cloth and Karellan
|
|
quickly entangled his enemy's sword in the now-useless cloak.
|
|
Before the Beinisonian could recover and free his sword, Karellan
|
|
grabbed the man by the back of the neck and rammed his opponent's face
|
|
down into his knee. The enemy soldier fell, stunned. Karellan raised
|
|
his foot and smashed his boot down on the unconscious man's neck,
|
|
killing him instantly.
|
|
He looked around and saw the man whose nose he'd broken coming
|
|
after him. Karellan put his shoulder down and charged. He collided
|
|
with the man's chest, the momentum of the charge carrying both men to
|
|
the edge of the keep's battlements. The Beinisonian scrabbled at the
|
|
stone trying to keep from falling. Karellan recovered first. He
|
|
planted his hand on the man's chest and shoved, sending him to his
|
|
death below.
|
|
He stepped back from the battlements' edge and picked up a sword
|
|
discarded in the fighting. Not quite what he would have preferred, but
|
|
it would serve. Karellan allowed himself a minute of rest before
|
|
re-joining the fray. His vantage point afforded him an unobstructed
|
|
view of the gate. From the keep, it looked as if the barbican was
|
|
being buried in ants. "That's it then," he said to no one in
|
|
particular.
|
|
|
|
"Get back, Patrick!" Conn shouted. Conn had been forced to pull
|
|
his men out of the towers and off the wall in order to hold the
|
|
gatehouse. Thirty-one men and women, most of them still in their
|
|
1teens, were formed into two fighting wedges, one wedge struggling
|
|
against the Beinisonians forcing their way past the now-upraised
|
|
portcullis, the other preparing to receive the enemy on the other side
|
|
of the battered gate being held closed only by Patrick Havercamp's
|
|
strength and the gods' help.
|
|
The Sergeant turned and ran to the dubious safety of the huddled
|
|
group of defenders. Seconds later, the beam holding the gate shut gave
|
|
way with a sharp crack and the enemy poured into the gatehouse
|
|
shouting a victory paean. Patrick yelled defiance back at his enemy
|
|
and led his group against the foe.
|
|
The Beinisonians far outnumbered the defenders, but in the
|
|
confined space of the gatehouse, superiority of numbers meant nothing.
|
|
For several moments, the Baranurians in their leather armour pushed
|
|
the enemy steadily backward, the bodies piling up at their feet. But
|
|
it could not last. The defenders took casualties as well, and the
|
|
Beinisonians had many more men to lose. Weight of armour and years of
|
|
experience soon began to take their toll. Now, more and more of those
|
|
falling were Baranurian.
|
|
Finally, the enemy had compressed the defenders into a small
|
|
circle in the centre of the gatehouse. Combat ceased as a figure in
|
|
splendidly gilded armour and wearing a scarlet cape fastened by a
|
|
platinum clasp strode through the gate. The man, only a few years
|
|
older than Conn, made his way to the forefront of his troops.
|
|
He gazed for several seconds at the defiant group of Baranurians.
|
|
His eyes locked with Conn's and the expression in them was one of
|
|
sincere regret and remorse. Slowly, silently, the man raised his sword
|
|
in solemn salute and in that instant, Conn knew that no prisoners
|
|
would be taken. Conn returned the salute and sent his Fayonna a silent
|
|
farewell.
|
|
The man shouted a command in a foreign language and the packed
|
|
mass of Beinisonians surged forward. One by one the defenders fell
|
|
until only Conn Alrod and Patrick Havercamp still stood, fighting
|
|
back-to-back as they had so often done during their shared childhood.
|
|
Conn hacked and chopped and lunged at the enemy. Facing such
|
|
overwhelming numbers in such a small space, he could not help but
|
|
connect. Two men fell dead at his feet and another reeled away
|
|
clutching his arm before the first of the enemy blades struck. He felt
|
|
a sharp stab of pain as an enemy sword bit at his leg. Conn delivered
|
|
an attack that was parried and before he could recover, a second blade
|
|
had lanced through the ribs on his right side. A third blade stabbed
|
|
upward into his face and Conn fell to his knees, the pain unbearable.
|
|
A fourth stroke severed his head from his body, ending his pain and
|
|
his life.
|
|
Patrick felt his friend go down and knew his own time was at
|
|
hand. Thus far, he was untouched, a pile of bodies strewn about him.
|
|
With his friend gone, the enemy now came at him from all directions.
|
|
The big Sergeant flailed about with his sword , but to no avail. He
|
|
fell across Conn's dead body, pierced in three places.
|
|
|
|
With the fall of the gate, the way was now open for the bulk of
|
|
the enemy force to enter the city. Regiment after Regiment streamed
|
|
through the bloody human wreckage of the gatehouse and fanned out
|
|
throughout the city. No mercy would be shown to the inhabitants. Where
|
|
initially this had been due to orders, now the cause was revenge. Men
|
|
whose bloodlust had been fired by seeing their friends butchered and
|
|
bleeding for three days were turned loose on an unsuspecting city.
|
|
Their orders were to put half the populace to the sword; their
|
|
officers would have a difficult time ensuring the blood-letting did
|
|
not go further.
|
|
The Regiment battling for control of the keep in the city's
|
|
1centre had cleared the battlements of the enemy and its soldiers were
|
|
stalking the few remaining defenders through the keep's corridors.
|
|
Within the space of half an hour, the last defender had been dragged
|
|
out kicking and screaming and then executed.
|
|
|
|
Quillien Thorne heard the screams issuing from the direction of
|
|
the city's gate and the realization of what was happening struck him
|
|
like a thunderbolt. He ran throughout the house shouting for everyone
|
|
to go immediately to the wine cellar. Once certain that everybody had
|
|
gone down to the cellar, Lord Thorne followed.
|
|
"What is it Quillien?" Lady Thorne asked with some alarm. "What's
|
|
wrong?"
|
|
"A massacre! The Beinisonians have begun killing people!"
|
|
"Killing people?" Jannis gasped. "Why--what for?"
|
|
"Oh gods," muttered Garrett, clenching his fists nervously. "Pack
|
|
of animals, all of them. I should've been a warrior instead of a
|
|
healer...." His wife Tassy drew close to him and laid her head against
|
|
his chest. Rayna turned pale and brought her white lace fan up in
|
|
front of her face, as if to shield herself from the horrors of the
|
|
situation.
|
|
"We'll be safe in the vault until the worst has passed," Lord
|
|
Thorne said. He crossed the room to a certain wine rack, reached up
|
|
and removed the fifth bottle of Blue Royal from the left. He then
|
|
pushed in on the section of wall revealed by removing the bottle.
|
|
There was a click and Lord Thorne slid the panel upwards.
|
|
The wine rack moved aside to reveal a door on which was set a
|
|
silver handle pointing up. Lord Thorne grasped the handle and turned
|
|
it clockwise through 270 degrees. Next, he pushed in on the handle and
|
|
the door slid silently back, allowing access to the extensive vaults
|
|
in which Lord Thorne had hidden the possessions of his merchant house,
|
|
the Lands' Rim, when he first learned of the landing at Shark's Cove
|
|
twelve days' previously.
|
|
Lord Thorne ushered the group into the entrance-room of the
|
|
vaults and closed the door. In the cellar, the wine rack slid back
|
|
into place. No indication remained that anyone had even been in the
|
|
cellar.
|
|
Inside the vault, Lord Thorne organized the group and had them
|
|
make the entrance-room ready for their stay. The room was thirty-feet
|
|
square and had doors on three walls; the wall through which they had
|
|
just entered the room and on the walls to the right and left of the
|
|
exit door respectively. On the wall opposite the entrance to the
|
|
cellar was a mosaic depicting a lone sailor about to cast a harpoon at
|
|
an onrushing dragon whale. Mounted above the cellar door was a stuffed
|
|
shark's head. Lord Thorne glanced at the head and was satisfied; the
|
|
eyes were glowing white, indicating the secondary magical defense was
|
|
inactive and it was safe to leave the room at any time.
|
|
When the room was presentable, Lord Thorne spoke to his charges.
|
|
"I know you are all frightened. We are safe here, they will not find
|
|
us. We shall wait for a time and then leave Port Sevlyn."
|
|
"Then where will we go?" asked Tassy.
|
|
"Magnus. The King must know of what has transpired here. Now get
|
|
some rest, all of you. When we leave, we must move quickly." As he
|
|
himself made ready to rest, he considered just what burden Fate had
|
|
given him; he and his wife had to shepherd this group of young--oh how
|
|
young they were!--people through an occupied city and two hundred-plus
|
|
leagues of possibly enemy-held and very hostile territory. He was glad
|
|
that his son Brannon and his daughter- in-law Caramina had already
|
|
left Port Sevlyn on the _Sun Hawk_, his fastest trading vessel. His
|
|
other ship, the _Royal Trader_, was on a routine cargo run to Magnus;
|
|
he was certain that when her captain heard the news of the invasion he
|
|
1would take the ship and its crew to safety. His thoughts then turned
|
|
to his oldest daughter Brynna and his young niece Mandi, both of whom
|
|
had left on an expedition to the south about a year ago. He hadn't
|
|
received word from Brynna in months; he prayed that her quest was
|
|
successful, and that her ship wasn't anywhere near Beinison waters.
|
|
He knew he could count on his wife and daughter during the rough
|
|
times ahead, but of the others he wasn't completely certain. Rayna was
|
|
almost the complete opposite of Mandi--quiet, shy, and reserved,
|
|
although she had begun to become more open ever since she met Cydric,
|
|
a young man on Brynna's crew. Of Tassy and her husband Garrett he had
|
|
no idea how they would perform. There were so many details to worry
|
|
about. One problem at a time, he thought. One problem at a time.
|
|
|
|
Several hours later, the group was well-rested and ready for the
|
|
start of their long trek. Lord Thorne walked over to the mosaic of the
|
|
sailor, reached out and pressed the thumbnail of the man's left hand.
|
|
The sound of stone grating on stone issued from the wall and a small
|
|
section swung back to reveal a narrow passage leading to the stables.
|
|
Thorne lifted a torch from its sconce and proceeded down the
|
|
passage, the rest of the group following behind. The passage sloped
|
|
gradually upwards and after a short time, the group came to the
|
|
entrance to the stables. Thorne opened the secret door and motioned
|
|
the rest of his party out of the passage.
|
|
They were immediately assaulted by heat and smoke and the sounds
|
|
of terrified screams. "It's worse than I thought," Lord Thorne said.
|
|
"We'll have to be very careful." Cautiously, he opened the stable
|
|
door. The scene before him was one of horror.
|
|
A vast column of thick black smoke rose from Port Sevlyn's
|
|
northern district. The invaders had fired the poorer section of the
|
|
city and seemed to be driving the inhabitants before them. The screams
|
|
and the fire were drawing ever closer. The stench of burning flesh
|
|
filled the air.
|
|
"We'll try and skirt the eastern edge of the fire," Thorne told
|
|
the group. "Perhaps in the confusion we can reach the gate
|
|
unmolested." The six quickly set off down the street, hoping to avoid
|
|
a confrontation. They were remarkably successful, twice having avoided
|
|
large groups of Beinisonians with bloodied swords. They had just
|
|
turned north for the gate when disaster struck.
|
|
The group was proceeding up a narrow street when four soldiers
|
|
appeared from an alley and quite literally almost ran into Lord Thorne
|
|
and his party. From the look of their armour and weapons, it was
|
|
obvious what the four Beinisonians had been doing in the alley.
|
|
One of the men said something Thorne couldn't recognize. The
|
|
tone, however, was quite clear: "Kill them." Another objected,
|
|
indicating Jannis, Tassy, and Rayna. The first seemed to consider his
|
|
comrade's comment and then said something that made all four laugh.
|
|
During all this, Lord Thorne had attempted to talk his way out of
|
|
the predicament. "Good sirs," he said, knowing they couldn't
|
|
understand his words but hoping his tone would make his meaning plain.
|
|
"Perhaps we can come to an understanding? I have gold and will pay
|
|
quite well were you to forget you saw us."
|
|
The Beinisonians paid no attention, however. The prospect of
|
|
having three young women outweighed any attempt to try and negotiate
|
|
with the old man before them. The flash point occurred when a soldier
|
|
grabbed Tassy.
|
|
Garrett saw the soldier grin wickedly at his wife and immediately
|
|
threw aside everything his training as a healer had taught him about
|
|
respecting human life. He launched himself at his wife's assailant,
|
|
and the two tumbled to the ground.
|
|
The other three soldiers were just as stunned as everyone else
|
|
1and they took a moment to recover from their disbelief and go to the
|
|
aid of their comrade. A soldier was raising his sword to strike
|
|
Garrett's head from his shoulders when an intense flash of light sent
|
|
all three soldiers staggering, their eyes blinded by the bright light.
|
|
Lady Thorne put her sundagger away and stepped away from the
|
|
still-struggling figures on the ground.
|
|
Despite the Beinisonian's armour, or perhaps because of it,
|
|
Garrett worked his way into an advantageous position and had gotten a
|
|
strong hold on his adversary. The Beinisonian struggled, but to no
|
|
avail. Garrett violently and repeatedly smashed the soldier's head
|
|
into the ground; the Beinisonian eventually stopped resisting and went
|
|
limp.
|
|
"Run!" Lord Thorne shouted. "Quickly! Before they recover!" The
|
|
group ran hard for several minutes then slowed to a quick jog. Before
|
|
long, they came in sight of the gate. Soldiers formed a protective
|
|
cordon that would prevent anyone from entering or leaving unless the
|
|
commander at the gate wished it. Thorne brought the group to a halt
|
|
and quickly moved them out of sight of the detachment at the gate.
|
|
"What do we do now, Father?" Jannis asked.
|
|
"Perhaps we can bluff our way through."
|
|
"But how?" Lady Thorne asked.
|
|
Rayna spoke for the first time. "Why not pass ourselves off as
|
|
pilgrims?"
|
|
Thorne looked at the young woman with admiration. "That just
|
|
might work. We'll do it. All right, everyone, pay attention. We're
|
|
going to follow Rayna's suggestion. Let me do all the talking and
|
|
don't lose your heads." The last comment had been directed at Garrett.
|
|
Lord Thorne calmly led the group out onto the street and
|
|
proceeded toward the gate. They were stopped by the soldiers guarding
|
|
the gate. One of them sent for his commander and made it clear to
|
|
Thorne and his party they were to wait and not to do anything out of
|
|
the ordinary.
|
|
Thorne waited with growing anxiety. Now was the moment of truth.
|
|
An officer dressed in impressively gilded armour and wearing a scarlet
|
|
cape walked over to the group flanked by two guards. He spoke briefly
|
|
with the soldiers who stopped the group and then asked several
|
|
questions of Lord Thorne in perfectly fluent Baranurian. Lord Thorne
|
|
grew more and more worried, for it was evident that the officer either
|
|
did not believe Thorne's answers or took offense with followers of
|
|
Stevene. The questions were becoming harder to deal with and Thorne
|
|
knew his party was lost. Just then, the officer questioning the group
|
|
was called away.
|
|
A second officer with gilding even more impressive than the
|
|
first, and whose cape was fastened with a platinum clasp, had called
|
|
the first officer to him and the two were now involved in a low
|
|
discussion.
|
|
"What's the problem, Colonel?" Vasquez asked.
|
|
"They say they are heretics, followers of Stevene on a holy
|
|
pilgrimmage," Conti replied.
|
|
"And?"
|
|
"And...they are heretics, sir. That alone condemns them."
|
|
"Are you saying they should be killed?"
|
|
"No. sir. You know my feeling regarding that subject. But should
|
|
we not refuse them permission to leave the city?"
|
|
"Are they who they claim?"
|
|
"Hard to tell, sir. It is possible they are who they say, but I
|
|
find it too much of a coincidence they should be starting a
|
|
pilgrimmage now."
|
|
"Yes, Colonel. I agree." Vasquez studied the group. From their
|
|
look, he was quite sure they were lying. "I'll handle this, Conti."
|
|
1Vasquez turned and regarded the spectacle of the flaming city before
|
|
him. "Colonel," he said, "the killing has gone on long enough. Round
|
|
up a Regiment or two and bring order to this madness."
|
|
Gow be praised, Conti thought. "What of the fire?"
|
|
"Contain it and let it burn itself out. Have the Regiment
|
|
assigned to the garrison handle that aspect, Colonel. I want to be
|
|
organized and on the march by dawn tomorrow."
|
|
"Yes, sir." Conti saluted and departed to carry out his orders.
|
|
Vasquez walked over to the group waiting patiently beyond the
|
|
cordon. He could see the nervousness on the old man's face. "Go." The
|
|
old man's eyes narrowed slightly; clearly he was suspicious of
|
|
Vasquez's intentions. "Go," Vasquez said again, not unkindly.
|
|
"Thank you, Honored Sir," Thorne said, carefully hiding his
|
|
immense relief. "May Stevene smile upon you."
|
|
Vasquez watched the group make their way through the
|
|
blood-spattered gatehouse and out into the countryside. "Sanar walk
|
|
with you," he said quietly. He watched them for several more minutes
|
|
and then turned to go about his business. Port Sevlyn had cost him one
|
|
thousand nine hundred dead or seriously wounded. With the detachment
|
|
of a Regiment to garrison the city, Vasquez would have just under
|
|
eleven thousand men to complete the march on Magnus. There was much to
|
|
be done by morning.
|
|
|
|
To the southeast of Port Sevlyn, the soldiers of the Light
|
|
Regiments of the B.E.F. turned from their vigilant watch to the south
|
|
to watch the black smoke from the dying city climb ever higher into
|
|
the sky. The men stared at the marker of Port Sevlyn's funeral pyre
|
|
until the Sergeants rather harshly reminded the men of their duty. The
|
|
men shrugged and turned to the south once more, keeping watch for the
|
|
Regiments of the enemy that weren't coming.
|
|
At least, not in their direction.
|
|
Not immediately.
|
|
|
|
Lord Thorne and party made their way east throughout the
|
|
remainder of the day, the smoke behind them sending a clear and
|
|
unmistakable message to all who could see it; the juggernaught was
|
|
unleashed like a wolf among lambs and the wolf was hungry. The
|
|
campaign for the Laraka was beginning to heat up.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 QQQQQ tt
|
|
QQ QQ tttttt
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aaaa nnnn tt aaaa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQQQQQ uuu aaaaa nn nn tt aaaaa
|
|
QQQ
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
|
|
Published monthly, each issue contains short fiction, articles and
|
|
editorials by authors around the world and across the net. Quanta
|
|
publishes in two formats: straight ascii and PostScript* for
|
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PostScript compatible printers. To subscribe to Quanta, or just to
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get more info, send mail to:
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da1n@andrew.cmu.edu
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da1n@andrew.bitnet
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Quanta is a relatively new magazine but is growing fast, with over
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two hundred subscribers to date from seven different countries.
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Electronic publishing is the way of the future. Become part of that
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future by subscribing to Quanta today.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 (C) Copyright August, 1990, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd
|
|
<White@DUVM.BitNet>. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
|
|
not be reproduced or redistributed (save in the case of reproducing the
|
|
whole 'zine for further distribution) without the express permission of
|
|
the author involved.
|
|
|