Lithium Flower
Arcane
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2016
- Messages
- 1,832
"It would only be sensible to fear an enemy that so outnumbers us, Your Excellency."
"Numbers?" Lord Cassius replies incredulously. "You would hide from a force which, I have been assured by your Lord Havenport, is inferior in both drill and equipment to yours, simply because of numbers?" He shakes his head and mutters something under his breath, something which you do not quite catch.
"I beg pardon, Your Excellency?" you ask.
"The Richshyr does not put stock in numbers. A Takaran officer always expects themself to be outnumbered and is taught that any foe, no matter how great they are in size, can be mastered," Lord Cassius replies. "Then again…" He waves his perfectly manicured fingers dismissively. "You are not a Takaran officer, are you?"
The comparison rankles in your mind, but the elegant diplomat is already moving on and heading for the door. "Regardless, there is no point in arguing over the matter now. The decision has been made, and there is no point in wasting time further, yes?"
With that, the ambassador walks out into the courtyard and calls for his horse and valet, leaving you alone in the map room.
-
You depart Fort Kharan that morning.
Over the next few days, you make good progress. Though the trees hem your column in on both sides, your outriders report no sign of partisan activity. It seems that the Antari are too busy planting their spring crops to give you any trouble.
Instead, it is a growing feeling of dread that haunts you as the days pass. The further you proceed along the road, the heavier the feeling grows. You can see that some of your other dragoons feel it as well, your veterans, those who have been with the army for years: an oppressive pall which dampens the moods of your best men.
Finally, on a morning a week out of Fort Kharan, Hernandes falls back towards you and your fellow officers from his position at the head of the column.
"It's up ahead," he says, his eyes haunted.
You nod, your own dark mood matching your Staff-sergeant's as the memories of that bloody day in the past well up in your mind once more.
"I don't understand, sir," Blaylock says from your left, looking at the two of you with puzzlement. "What's up ahead?"
Your answer comes out hoarse and brittle, barely louder than a whisper. "Blogia."
-
Blogia.
Fear and powder-smoke, banefire and steel, bloodshed and death.
The memories strike you like blows to the head, too bright, too loud, and too swift to stop. The crack of massed musketry, the hollow thunder of cannon, the trembling of the earth under the iron-shod hooves of Khorobirit's Church Hussars as they swept Wulfram's cavalry from the field in a tide of bane-hardened steel, the wings mounted on their back wailing as they charged home with their monstrous lances.
"Blogia?" Lord Cassius's too-cheerful voice pulls you bodily into the here-and-now. "Did I hear correctly? We are near Blogia? That is where your Duke of Wulfram was defeated by Prince Khorobirit, yes? Also, it is where you won your knighthood, is it not? I would very much like to see the field for myself." The Takaran's blue eyes sparkle with excitement. "Might you offer me a tour?"
You do not much relish the idea of heading back to that field again, especially if it is merely to indulge a foreign diplomat's curiosity.
Yet, surely, if you were able to impress upon him just how hard and how well your men had fought, perhaps you could win some respect from the point-eared bastard.
"Perhaps," you reply, though you cannot imagine such a task will be very easy for you.
It wouldn't be an easy thing for your men either, to see the field where so many fellow Tierrans had fallen. Of course, you suppose you might be able to use their discomfort to your advantage. If you could find the right words, you could turn your dead countrymen from fellows to be mourned into martyrs to be avenged.
That would put fire in your men's hearts and fight in their stomachs.
"Ah, Staff?" Lord Renard pipes up. "The field's safe to cross, ain't it? Been three years, wot."
Hernandes shakes his head. "No sir. If the Antari burned the dead after the battle, they didn't do a thorough job of it. There's bones everywhere."
The young lordling swallows hard, and it takes him a moment to regain his composure. "Ain't proper that. Ought to gather 'em together, those bones, burn 'em up," he says quietly, reverently. "Ain't going to find the Saints if they's left half rot on the ground."
1) I give the battlefield a wide berth in order to avoid unsettling the men.
2) I'll show my men where our countrymen died in order to stoke the fires of vengeance.
3) I'll use the opportunity to show off where my men and I fought.
4) I stage a short ceremony of remembrance for our Tierran dead.
"Numbers?" Lord Cassius replies incredulously. "You would hide from a force which, I have been assured by your Lord Havenport, is inferior in both drill and equipment to yours, simply because of numbers?" He shakes his head and mutters something under his breath, something which you do not quite catch.
"I beg pardon, Your Excellency?" you ask.
"The Richshyr does not put stock in numbers. A Takaran officer always expects themself to be outnumbered and is taught that any foe, no matter how great they are in size, can be mastered," Lord Cassius replies. "Then again…" He waves his perfectly manicured fingers dismissively. "You are not a Takaran officer, are you?"
The comparison rankles in your mind, but the elegant diplomat is already moving on and heading for the door. "Regardless, there is no point in arguing over the matter now. The decision has been made, and there is no point in wasting time further, yes?"
With that, the ambassador walks out into the courtyard and calls for his horse and valet, leaving you alone in the map room.
-
You depart Fort Kharan that morning.
Over the next few days, you make good progress. Though the trees hem your column in on both sides, your outriders report no sign of partisan activity. It seems that the Antari are too busy planting their spring crops to give you any trouble.
Instead, it is a growing feeling of dread that haunts you as the days pass. The further you proceed along the road, the heavier the feeling grows. You can see that some of your other dragoons feel it as well, your veterans, those who have been with the army for years: an oppressive pall which dampens the moods of your best men.
Finally, on a morning a week out of Fort Kharan, Hernandes falls back towards you and your fellow officers from his position at the head of the column.
"It's up ahead," he says, his eyes haunted.
You nod, your own dark mood matching your Staff-sergeant's as the memories of that bloody day in the past well up in your mind once more.
"I don't understand, sir," Blaylock says from your left, looking at the two of you with puzzlement. "What's up ahead?"
Your answer comes out hoarse and brittle, barely louder than a whisper. "Blogia."
-
Blogia.
Fear and powder-smoke, banefire and steel, bloodshed and death.
The memories strike you like blows to the head, too bright, too loud, and too swift to stop. The crack of massed musketry, the hollow thunder of cannon, the trembling of the earth under the iron-shod hooves of Khorobirit's Church Hussars as they swept Wulfram's cavalry from the field in a tide of bane-hardened steel, the wings mounted on their back wailing as they charged home with their monstrous lances.
"Blogia?" Lord Cassius's too-cheerful voice pulls you bodily into the here-and-now. "Did I hear correctly? We are near Blogia? That is where your Duke of Wulfram was defeated by Prince Khorobirit, yes? Also, it is where you won your knighthood, is it not? I would very much like to see the field for myself." The Takaran's blue eyes sparkle with excitement. "Might you offer me a tour?"
You do not much relish the idea of heading back to that field again, especially if it is merely to indulge a foreign diplomat's curiosity.
Yet, surely, if you were able to impress upon him just how hard and how well your men had fought, perhaps you could win some respect from the point-eared bastard.
"Perhaps," you reply, though you cannot imagine such a task will be very easy for you.
It wouldn't be an easy thing for your men either, to see the field where so many fellow Tierrans had fallen. Of course, you suppose you might be able to use their discomfort to your advantage. If you could find the right words, you could turn your dead countrymen from fellows to be mourned into martyrs to be avenged.
That would put fire in your men's hearts and fight in their stomachs.
"Ah, Staff?" Lord Renard pipes up. "The field's safe to cross, ain't it? Been three years, wot."
Hernandes shakes his head. "No sir. If the Antari burned the dead after the battle, they didn't do a thorough job of it. There's bones everywhere."
The young lordling swallows hard, and it takes him a moment to regain his composure. "Ain't proper that. Ought to gather 'em together, those bones, burn 'em up," he says quietly, reverently. "Ain't going to find the Saints if they's left half rot on the ground."
1) I give the battlefield a wide berth in order to avoid unsettling the men.
2) I'll show my men where our countrymen died in order to stoke the fires of vengeance.
3) I'll use the opportunity to show off where my men and I fought.
4) I stage a short ceremony of remembrance for our Tierran dead.
As of the Spring of the 610th year of the Old Imperial Era
Sir Alaric d'al Ortiga
Age: 22
Rank: Captain
Wealth: 488
Income: 15
Soldiering: 75%
Charisma: 43%
Intellect: 5%
Reputation: 20%
Health: 65%
Idealism: 69% Cynicism: 31%
Ruthlessness: 36% Mercy: 64%
You are a Knight of the Red, having the right to wear bane-hardened armour and wield a bane-runed sword.
You have no decorations as of yet.
Sir Alaric d'al Ortiga
Age: 22
Rank: Captain
Wealth: 488
Income: 15
Soldiering: 75%
Charisma: 43%
Intellect: 5%
Reputation: 20%
Health: 65%
Idealism: 69% Cynicism: 31%
Ruthlessness: 36% Mercy: 64%
You are a Knight of the Red, having the right to wear bane-hardened armour and wield a bane-runed sword.
You have no decorations as of yet.
Sixth Squadron, Royal Dragoons
Senior NCO: Staff-sergeant Hernandes
Discipline: 39%
Morale: 39%
Loyalty: 37%
Strength: 85%
Senior NCO: Staff-sergeant Hernandes
Discipline: 39%
Morale: 39%
Loyalty: 37%
Strength: 85%