The "extended" version. Twelve verses, twenty-six lines.
Fair Lady far from her homeland,
your life is forever western bound,
and you caught between two worlds.
Fickle Lady filled with uncertainties,
today’s truth is sure to be tomorrow’s lie.
Sweet Lady of compassionate heart,
your thoughts always empathizing.
Spiteful Lady of the warrior caste,
the enemy in name is not always so.
Gentle Lady from the river faith,
cleanse and heal the sinner’s soul.
Combative Lady of the demon-fighting blood,
you thrill to battle despite your denials.
Thoughtful Lady full of fancies,
taking your beautiful dreams to their end.
Selfish Lady full of herself,
destroying the future for a present whim.
Loving Lady born of the sun’s followers,
in your affection is the fruit of life.
Passionate Lady with the bewitching eyes,
an exciting tempest in the heat of your touch.
Laughing Lady with your vivacious soul,
your joy of living filling those around you.
Lady who means Wealth, Beheld by God,
be free of the dark and shine your light,
since heart speaks to heart, listen.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Lady
The "core" version. Six verses, thirteen lines.
Sweet Lady of compassionate heart,
your thoughts always empathizing.
Spiteful Lady of the warrior caste,
the enemy in name is not always so.
Combative Lady of the demon-fighting blood,
you thrill to battle despite your denials.
Thoughtful Lady full of fancies,
taking your beautiful dreams to their end.
Passionate Lady with the bewitching eyes,
an exciting tempest in the heat of your touch.
Lady who means Wealth, Beheld by God,
be free of the dark and shine your light,
since heart speaks to heart, listen.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Sweet Lady of compassionate heart,
your thoughts always empathizing.
Spiteful Lady of the warrior caste,
the enemy in name is not always so.
Combative Lady of the demon-fighting blood,
you thrill to battle despite your denials.
Thoughtful Lady full of fancies,
taking your beautiful dreams to their end.
Passionate Lady with the bewitching eyes,
an exciting tempest in the heat of your touch.
Lady who means Wealth, Beheld by God,
be free of the dark and shine your light,
since heart speaks to heart, listen.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Over the Hills
Found a very old poem of mine, thought to post it here.
Over the Hills
Over the hills and far away,
I march to meet my end.
The arena of battle is my destination,
to the field of death I am sent.
I have no one waiting for me at home,
I have no one who loves me worrying.
Since there is nothing for me in this world,
I have nothing to live on for.
In this battle to which I march,
I will care not for Old Grim's smile.
Over the hills and far away,
I embrace my bitter destiny.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Over the Hills
Over the hills and far away,
I march to meet my end.
The arena of battle is my destination,
to the field of death I am sent.
I have no one waiting for me at home,
I have no one who loves me worrying.
Since there is nothing for me in this world,
I have nothing to live on for.
In this battle to which I march,
I will care not for Old Grim's smile.
Over the hills and far away,
I embrace my bitter destiny.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
89
Tears come unbidden
The Grief never lets me go
The Knight of Mourning
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
The Grief never lets me go
The Knight of Mourning
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Monday, November 1, 2010
88
Even the devil knows when he meets divinity
Only a fool fails to recognize a goddess
So what am I not to see holiness
Or at least a sacred person right beside me?
Guess this is what they mean
When they say too dumb too live
So since hell is too good for me
I better dread the payment for my sin
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Only a fool fails to recognize a goddess
So what am I not to see holiness
Or at least a sacred person right beside me?
Guess this is what they mean
When they say too dumb too live
So since hell is too good for me
I better dread the payment for my sin
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Return, Part 5
It did not take long for an end to the battle once the horsemen were committed. Once again, fortune had smiled on Ardeo, allowed him to commit his troopers at just the moment when the enemy’s morale was at its lowest. With Marcus’s own horsemen plunging in from the opposite end, the enemy collapsed, attempted to flee. The piercing cohort took its cue from the fleeing enemy, chasing after it. In a conspicuous display of military skill and courage, they managed to enter Taren’s city gate, and seize possession of it. Ardeo and Marcus had moved as quickly as they could to follow the cohort in, and very soon, the rest of the army was pouring into the tightly contested gate. Before the Tarens could stop them, two legions had already broken into the city, with a third on its way.
Aware they had lost, every last surviving fighting man had fled from the field, shedding their armor and weapons on the spot. With great difficulty, Ardeo and Marcus managed to restrain their pillage-hungry soldiers, threatening immediate execution to anyone who disobeyed. By sunset, there was no more resistance, and Odacer himself entered the city, escorted by Karadord and his Guardsmen. Ardeo and Marcus met him at the entrance to Flaccus’s palace.
“What took you?” Ardeo called out lightheartedly.
Odacer leveled an amused look at his kinsman. “Mopping up is not an elegant operation, Ardeo. You, Marcus, and the commander of the cohort certainly distinguished yourselves today, but there is more to battle than the thrill of the charge.”
Ardeo smiled, still covered in sweat and dirt, his cloak and armor in not much better state. “That’s why we’re waiting here. We wanted you to enter first, do the whole formal acceptance of surrender thing.”
Tilting his head back, Karadord frowned. “Flaccus is surrendering?”
“Yes,” Marcus answered. “I sent my cavalry to secure the docks. No ships have sailed. And all the gates have been sealed. No one has left the city.”
“That is…not in character,” Odacer finally said. “Andrej Palev, I hope you won’t mind lending me your Guardsmen while we go inside.”
Karadord shook his head. “No, I do not mind at all.”
Warily entering Flaccus’s palace, the heavily armed troop moved carefully, watchful for the slightest sign of betrayal, the noblemen in their center no less wary. The obvious displays of wealth and splendor were lost on all present, as Ardeo and his kin were indifferent to such things, while the Imperials were inured to it, already accustomed to the far greater displays in the Emperor’s capital.
When they finally entered Flaccus’s audience chamber, the noblemen stopped, in shock. Flaccus, unmistakable with his fair features and fine clothes, was chained to his throne. Heavy iron links kept him bound, unable to move, while a gag had been stuffed into his mouth. Standing beside him was a woman wearing a dress of Imperial scarlet, a tall, elegant lady with hair the color of fire, skin as fine as alabaster, and eyes that contained more than a hint of the ocean’s sea blue. Her physical beauty combined with the fierce intelligence in her eyes made for an intoxicating combination.
“My name is Valena Orguja Theron, Princess of the Imperial House,” she said in the precise accent of the Imperial city, facing her…guests? It was impossible to imagine this woman as anyone’s prisoner.
She studied each man in turn, her sangfroid easily surpassing that of her brother’s. Her eyes dismissed Marcus and Ardeo, settling on Odacer with complete assurance. “I take it that this was my brother’s doing?”
The older man inclined his head gracefully. “It is indeed, Princess Valena. However, I do believe that Andrej Palev is in a better position to explain everything.”
With smoothly polished grace, Karadord explained everything to Valena from the very beginning, starting with Ardeo’s victory over the Fianna on Firesoul’s Plain. From the moment Karadord had indicated Ardeo’s person, Valena had focused her attention on him, and her gaze made Ardeo uncomfortable, to say the least. He had once heard his father mutter that when a woman looked at you like that, she was weighing every last thing about your person, and it was quite possible she was able to divine everything from his exact weight to the last time he had had his underclothing washed.
“Enough,” Valena said when Karadord began to elaborate on the discussions that had gone on in the Imperial court as to why Flaccus had rebelled.
She moved gracefully down the dais where Flaccus still sat in chains, impotent. “Would you like to know why this man rebelled?”
“I daresay it is of great interest, Princess Valena,” Karadord responded smoothly.
“Yes, you would certainly think so, Karadord,” Valena replied. “This…man, and I use the term loosely, was never the slightest bit interested in loyalty to the Empire. What he wanted was to bring back his precious Respublia in his own image. My divorce was just a pretext he needed to give his cause some legitimacy.”
Her bitter half-smile caused chills up Ardeo’s back. “After all, how can you genuinely rebel against your rightful overlord when your wife is still a virgin?”
Odacer, at least, was startled. “You remain a virgin? But why…?”
Valena’s half-smile faded away, and her tone of voice left no doubt as to how direly unhappy her life had been for the last few years. “That thing in his throne has no interest in women. His preference is for little boys.”
Ardeo saw Odacer, Marcus, and Karadord each reflect the horror and disgust that he himself felt. His hand itched to remove his sword and behead Flaccus on the spot. But he did not get the chance to beg Karadord and Odacer for the task, as Valena marched toward him, stopping right in front of him.
“And now I find I am to marry someone else,” she said, her voice detached, cold, disinterested. “Once again, I am being used by a male of my family as a tool for some sordid task. Why in the world should I look forward to exile in cold Iyaza? Why in the world should I marry you? I’m officially divorced from that…pervert. I’m free. Why should I give up my freedom?”
Valena looked away from Ardeo to glare at Odacer and Karadord before they could so much as open their mouths. “And don’t give me that duty rubbish. I’ve had a bellyful of duty. Duty sent me away from my beautiful home to this far-off place, and put me into the hands of a disgusting creature. Duty forced me to remain silent, since Father could do nothing to save me without risk of rebellion. Duty forced me to ignore things that even now make me want to vomit. Not one word of duty!”
As this fierce woman swung her eyes away from the older, ostensibly wiser statesmen to him, Ardeo felt himself at a loss of words. He had originally dreaded this encounter, had been as enthusiastic about his coming marriage as he would have been about a dragon eating his horse. But now that he had actually met her, he was confused, uncertain. She was unlike any woman, especially any noblewoman, he had ever met before.
She was certainly beautiful, easily one of the greatest beauties of the Empire. She was intelligent, tough, and resourceful; witness her survival in the court of a husband who had no use for her, and her capture of an enemy of Imperial Sandora. Her bloodline was the best in the world, and her dowry was more than most nobles made in a decade. She was eligible in every sense of the world. She was as tough as a Fianna, as beautiful as a goddess, and as brave as a dragon. Ardeo was smitten.
But there was more to it than that. Ardeo could sense it. She was not an empty-headed noblewoman; the prime occupations of her life were not clothes, jewels, and gossip. She was an intelligent woman who had been damned by her father into an unhappy marriage, and who had probably suffered as much from being stifled as she had from being neglected. She wanted to be free. That was impossible, of course. No one was ever free. Freedom was an unattainable lie that people kept reaching for. But he could at least offer her the lightest of shackles.
Ardeo got down on one knee before her. “I swear to you, Princess Valena, that if you marry me, I will not treat you as chattel. I will not neglect you, nor will I shove you into some corner to do nothing more than produce babies. I will treat you as your intelligence demands it. I will treat you as my equal, and share my power and authority over Iyaza with you. P’iedro’s Oath on it.”
Silence reigned throughout the audience chamber. P’iedro’s Oath was the most ironclad oath anyone could swear. Even the Emperor himself was bound by such an oath, and should he dare break it, the War of the Sin would seem like a mere inconvenience compared to the consequences, both in this world and the next. Not only had he sworn the oath, he had done so on his knee, something that he would only have to do before the Emperor himself. For long moments, Valena studied him, her expression inscrutable.
Finally, when even Ardeo was forced to conclude that she was going to reject him, she extended her hand toward him. Ardeo felt hope soar within him as he grasped her clean, dainty hand in his dirty steel gauntlet. She smiled at him, the first time her expression lacked hostility. “I think I like you, Ardeo Vellus. I think I may grow to love you. So I will marry you, if you are willing.”
Ardeo smiled triumphantly. Besides all the benefits this marriage would bring politically, he did like her, and he thought she was right. There were seeds here for friendship, and perhaps, even love. “I would be happy to.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Aware they had lost, every last surviving fighting man had fled from the field, shedding their armor and weapons on the spot. With great difficulty, Ardeo and Marcus managed to restrain their pillage-hungry soldiers, threatening immediate execution to anyone who disobeyed. By sunset, there was no more resistance, and Odacer himself entered the city, escorted by Karadord and his Guardsmen. Ardeo and Marcus met him at the entrance to Flaccus’s palace.
“What took you?” Ardeo called out lightheartedly.
Odacer leveled an amused look at his kinsman. “Mopping up is not an elegant operation, Ardeo. You, Marcus, and the commander of the cohort certainly distinguished yourselves today, but there is more to battle than the thrill of the charge.”
Ardeo smiled, still covered in sweat and dirt, his cloak and armor in not much better state. “That’s why we’re waiting here. We wanted you to enter first, do the whole formal acceptance of surrender thing.”
Tilting his head back, Karadord frowned. “Flaccus is surrendering?”
“Yes,” Marcus answered. “I sent my cavalry to secure the docks. No ships have sailed. And all the gates have been sealed. No one has left the city.”
“That is…not in character,” Odacer finally said. “Andrej Palev, I hope you won’t mind lending me your Guardsmen while we go inside.”
Karadord shook his head. “No, I do not mind at all.”
Warily entering Flaccus’s palace, the heavily armed troop moved carefully, watchful for the slightest sign of betrayal, the noblemen in their center no less wary. The obvious displays of wealth and splendor were lost on all present, as Ardeo and his kin were indifferent to such things, while the Imperials were inured to it, already accustomed to the far greater displays in the Emperor’s capital.
When they finally entered Flaccus’s audience chamber, the noblemen stopped, in shock. Flaccus, unmistakable with his fair features and fine clothes, was chained to his throne. Heavy iron links kept him bound, unable to move, while a gag had been stuffed into his mouth. Standing beside him was a woman wearing a dress of Imperial scarlet, a tall, elegant lady with hair the color of fire, skin as fine as alabaster, and eyes that contained more than a hint of the ocean’s sea blue. Her physical beauty combined with the fierce intelligence in her eyes made for an intoxicating combination.
“My name is Valena Orguja Theron, Princess of the Imperial House,” she said in the precise accent of the Imperial city, facing her…guests? It was impossible to imagine this woman as anyone’s prisoner.
She studied each man in turn, her sangfroid easily surpassing that of her brother’s. Her eyes dismissed Marcus and Ardeo, settling on Odacer with complete assurance. “I take it that this was my brother’s doing?”
The older man inclined his head gracefully. “It is indeed, Princess Valena. However, I do believe that Andrej Palev is in a better position to explain everything.”
With smoothly polished grace, Karadord explained everything to Valena from the very beginning, starting with Ardeo’s victory over the Fianna on Firesoul’s Plain. From the moment Karadord had indicated Ardeo’s person, Valena had focused her attention on him, and her gaze made Ardeo uncomfortable, to say the least. He had once heard his father mutter that when a woman looked at you like that, she was weighing every last thing about your person, and it was quite possible she was able to divine everything from his exact weight to the last time he had had his underclothing washed.
“Enough,” Valena said when Karadord began to elaborate on the discussions that had gone on in the Imperial court as to why Flaccus had rebelled.
She moved gracefully down the dais where Flaccus still sat in chains, impotent. “Would you like to know why this man rebelled?”
“I daresay it is of great interest, Princess Valena,” Karadord responded smoothly.
“Yes, you would certainly think so, Karadord,” Valena replied. “This…man, and I use the term loosely, was never the slightest bit interested in loyalty to the Empire. What he wanted was to bring back his precious Respublia in his own image. My divorce was just a pretext he needed to give his cause some legitimacy.”
Her bitter half-smile caused chills up Ardeo’s back. “After all, how can you genuinely rebel against your rightful overlord when your wife is still a virgin?”
Odacer, at least, was startled. “You remain a virgin? But why…?”
Valena’s half-smile faded away, and her tone of voice left no doubt as to how direly unhappy her life had been for the last few years. “That thing in his throne has no interest in women. His preference is for little boys.”
Ardeo saw Odacer, Marcus, and Karadord each reflect the horror and disgust that he himself felt. His hand itched to remove his sword and behead Flaccus on the spot. But he did not get the chance to beg Karadord and Odacer for the task, as Valena marched toward him, stopping right in front of him.
“And now I find I am to marry someone else,” she said, her voice detached, cold, disinterested. “Once again, I am being used by a male of my family as a tool for some sordid task. Why in the world should I look forward to exile in cold Iyaza? Why in the world should I marry you? I’m officially divorced from that…pervert. I’m free. Why should I give up my freedom?”
Valena looked away from Ardeo to glare at Odacer and Karadord before they could so much as open their mouths. “And don’t give me that duty rubbish. I’ve had a bellyful of duty. Duty sent me away from my beautiful home to this far-off place, and put me into the hands of a disgusting creature. Duty forced me to remain silent, since Father could do nothing to save me without risk of rebellion. Duty forced me to ignore things that even now make me want to vomit. Not one word of duty!”
As this fierce woman swung her eyes away from the older, ostensibly wiser statesmen to him, Ardeo felt himself at a loss of words. He had originally dreaded this encounter, had been as enthusiastic about his coming marriage as he would have been about a dragon eating his horse. But now that he had actually met her, he was confused, uncertain. She was unlike any woman, especially any noblewoman, he had ever met before.
She was certainly beautiful, easily one of the greatest beauties of the Empire. She was intelligent, tough, and resourceful; witness her survival in the court of a husband who had no use for her, and her capture of an enemy of Imperial Sandora. Her bloodline was the best in the world, and her dowry was more than most nobles made in a decade. She was eligible in every sense of the world. She was as tough as a Fianna, as beautiful as a goddess, and as brave as a dragon. Ardeo was smitten.
But there was more to it than that. Ardeo could sense it. She was not an empty-headed noblewoman; the prime occupations of her life were not clothes, jewels, and gossip. She was an intelligent woman who had been damned by her father into an unhappy marriage, and who had probably suffered as much from being stifled as she had from being neglected. She wanted to be free. That was impossible, of course. No one was ever free. Freedom was an unattainable lie that people kept reaching for. But he could at least offer her the lightest of shackles.
Ardeo got down on one knee before her. “I swear to you, Princess Valena, that if you marry me, I will not treat you as chattel. I will not neglect you, nor will I shove you into some corner to do nothing more than produce babies. I will treat you as your intelligence demands it. I will treat you as my equal, and share my power and authority over Iyaza with you. P’iedro’s Oath on it.”
Silence reigned throughout the audience chamber. P’iedro’s Oath was the most ironclad oath anyone could swear. Even the Emperor himself was bound by such an oath, and should he dare break it, the War of the Sin would seem like a mere inconvenience compared to the consequences, both in this world and the next. Not only had he sworn the oath, he had done so on his knee, something that he would only have to do before the Emperor himself. For long moments, Valena studied him, her expression inscrutable.
Finally, when even Ardeo was forced to conclude that she was going to reject him, she extended her hand toward him. Ardeo felt hope soar within him as he grasped her clean, dainty hand in his dirty steel gauntlet. She smiled at him, the first time her expression lacked hostility. “I think I like you, Ardeo Vellus. I think I may grow to love you. So I will marry you, if you are willing.”
Ardeo smiled triumphantly. Besides all the benefits this marriage would bring politically, he did like her, and he thought she was right. There were seeds here for friendship, and perhaps, even love. “I would be happy to.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Return, Part 4
Halfway through the night, Ardeo was awakened by an excited commotion outside his tent. Grumbling, he tried to curl under his blankets. It was night, he was tired, and his hastily assembled bodyguard should be more than capable of keeping any unwanted visitors away from his tent. However, the noise became more insistent, and his sleeping momentum was lost. With a growl, Ardeo shucked off his blankets, and stalked out of his tent.
“What is the meaning of this?” he demanded.
The man who had been attempting to get in looked at Ardeo, and from his facial features and skin, it was obvious he was an Aimani. “Duke Nyzdar. Archduke Mircea summons you to a war council.”
“A war council? In the middle of the night?”
“The city gates have opened. Thousands of fighters are pouring out and taking up positions in the no man’s land.”
“Shit!”
With that bit of unexpected news, Ardeo roared for the soldiers to be roused and for his servants. Drums drummed, horns blared, lower-ranked soldiers rushed to officer tents to awaken their superiors, and soon, joined the cacophony of noise with curses that would awaken the dead.
His servants appeared as soon as he reentered his tent. Moving quickly, they helped him into his armor, making sure everything was securely fastened, from cuirass to greaves. Grabbing his red cloak, he rushed toward Odacer’s tent, securely in the middle of the siege camp. His bodyguard hustled after him even as the noise of six legions in frenzied activity clamored through the night.
When Ardeo finally arrived at Odacer’s tent, he found he was not the only man there. All the senior officers of the army were gathered around Odacer, as were the young noblemen like Marcus who would take on some sort of role in the upcoming fight.
“It’s still too dark to see how they’ve drawn themselves up or to see their numbers,” Odacer growled as soon as Ardeo arrived.
Karadord was speaking with Odacer and shrugged. “You’re the legendary Dragon, so I daresay it will go well, even if we can’t see them just yet.”
“We’ll have to wait for the first crack of dawn to actually make feasible plans,” Odacer continued. “In the meantime, hustle out the legions, standard formation. When I can see the enemy, I’ll make a better plan.”
“But how did they know that today would be the day of the attack?” Ardeo asked. “I know their chances are better in pitched battle, but how did they know today was the day?”
Odacer looked at Ardeo and said one word. “Kuso.”
Of course. Where else could the assassin have gone, if not to Taren? “They don’t make Fianna like they used to,” was all Ardeo replied.
When dawn finally arrived two hours later, Odacer’s army was out on the field, past the deadly row of stakes he had elected to remove. He had no intention of losing the battle, nor did he intend to retreat, but if his army was pushed back, he wanted to avoid impaled soldiers. It would be a fight to the death. The siege camp’s walls cut off retreat. When Odacer finally climbed down from his sentry tower, his face was expectant.
“From what’s been counted, they’ve got about forty to fifty thousand out there,” Odacer said to his gathered command chain. “The army’s already out on the field, so I can’t address them. Everything is now dependent on you men, and your obedience and adaptability. We’ve got about eighteen thousand soldiers out there, with fourteen hundred of them cavalry. We don’t have nearly enough cavalry to focus on the wings, so they’ll act as the mobile reserve. The Guardsmen will be on the left, my cohort of horse in the center, and Duke Nyzdar’s on the right. Andrej Palev will command the left, Duke Nyzdar the right, and I will command the center.”
Having settled the top jobs, Odacer moved on to his strategy. “The city gate is in the center of our field of operations. I want you all to use it as the orientation point. I want the army drawn up in a sickle shape. The legions on the tips will be forward of the center, acting as wings. I am placing a cohort in the center of the sickle as a piercing point. I want the wings even with the spike. The goal is simple. I want to split their army in two, and enclose each half within the half-sickles that will form. Once they’ve been split, we’ll punish them severely.”
The various officers murmured their understanding of the plan. Karadord spoke up. “Workable. I’ll go form up my men.”
Odacer nodded. “Remember, they only have fifteen thousand real fighters out there. The rest is little boys and old men. Spread the word to your legions. They’ll discount the civilians and realize that for all intents and purposes, the odds are slightly in our favor.”
No time was wasted. The moment the army had been put into formation, Odacer sounded the advance. Odacer himself would not be able to participate. As general, he had to keep a good vantage point so he could react appropriately to any changes in the line of battle. Marcus was in command of the six hundred cavalry who would be moved to any weakened points. Ardeo and Karadord would be with their own cavalry, keeping an eye on their parts of the army from their own vantage points, and reacting appropriately.
Later on, as the battle progressed, Ardeo stood on his horse, frowning at what he could see of the scene. He turned toward a nearby sentry tower. “Ho, the tower! Is the spike cut off from the rest of the army?”
The sentry peered into the roiling mass of battle, and then shouted down, “Aye, sir. The spike is cut off. But Lord Marcus’ reserve is moving in to reinforce them.”
Ardeo bit his lip. Six hundred horsemen would have trouble penetrating the milling masses of enemy that were focusing all their rage on the cut-off spike. There was a very real danger that Marcus’s cavalry thrust would be dragged down and massacred if it lost cohesion, a very real possibility in that quagmire. Surveying the scene once again, Ardeo watched the gap form between his two legions and the center legions and their penetrating point. There.
Slowly crouching down and then positioning himself to ride his horse, Ardeo fluttered his cloak out behind him. It would serve as a rallying point while they charged and fought, even though it made it obvious he was a high-ranking target. “Advance at a trot! Wedge formation!”
Moving at a light pace unlikely to tire the horses before they got close enough to unleash a devastating charge, Ardeo’s eyes had more than enough time to regard the scene. The battle had been going on for quite some time, and by all indications, the enemy knew it was doomed. Odacer’s basic strategy had worked, and the last rebel army would break before long. Because of that, it seemed they were concentrating their efforts on the penetrating point, to at least destroy that obstinate Imperial cohort before defeat consumed them.
Hefting his shield as his cavalry drew closer and closer to committing to the fray, Ardeo allowed a smile to cross his lips. Irregular infantry without any sort of cohesion simply had little hope against cavalry. One thousand pounds of horseflesh at the hands of a skilled rider was a vicious weapon on the battlefield, especially going at full speed. Any man unlucky enough to be caught in a horse’s path would end with his back broken, at the very least. Should the number of bodies in the way of the horse grow to the point where it could no longer gallop from sheer mass, war horses had plenty of additional tricks available, from biting into shoulders to kicking heads off necks.
His men were Aimani dragoons, skilled on horse and on foot, as were Marcus’s. Looking across the battlefield, he raised his lance, then lowered it, digging his heels into his horse as he galloped at full speed into the fray, six hundred deadly warriors behind him.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
“What is the meaning of this?” he demanded.
The man who had been attempting to get in looked at Ardeo, and from his facial features and skin, it was obvious he was an Aimani. “Duke Nyzdar. Archduke Mircea summons you to a war council.”
“A war council? In the middle of the night?”
“The city gates have opened. Thousands of fighters are pouring out and taking up positions in the no man’s land.”
“Shit!”
With that bit of unexpected news, Ardeo roared for the soldiers to be roused and for his servants. Drums drummed, horns blared, lower-ranked soldiers rushed to officer tents to awaken their superiors, and soon, joined the cacophony of noise with curses that would awaken the dead.
His servants appeared as soon as he reentered his tent. Moving quickly, they helped him into his armor, making sure everything was securely fastened, from cuirass to greaves. Grabbing his red cloak, he rushed toward Odacer’s tent, securely in the middle of the siege camp. His bodyguard hustled after him even as the noise of six legions in frenzied activity clamored through the night.
When Ardeo finally arrived at Odacer’s tent, he found he was not the only man there. All the senior officers of the army were gathered around Odacer, as were the young noblemen like Marcus who would take on some sort of role in the upcoming fight.
“It’s still too dark to see how they’ve drawn themselves up or to see their numbers,” Odacer growled as soon as Ardeo arrived.
Karadord was speaking with Odacer and shrugged. “You’re the legendary Dragon, so I daresay it will go well, even if we can’t see them just yet.”
“We’ll have to wait for the first crack of dawn to actually make feasible plans,” Odacer continued. “In the meantime, hustle out the legions, standard formation. When I can see the enemy, I’ll make a better plan.”
“But how did they know that today would be the day of the attack?” Ardeo asked. “I know their chances are better in pitched battle, but how did they know today was the day?”
Odacer looked at Ardeo and said one word. “Kuso.”
Of course. Where else could the assassin have gone, if not to Taren? “They don’t make Fianna like they used to,” was all Ardeo replied.
When dawn finally arrived two hours later, Odacer’s army was out on the field, past the deadly row of stakes he had elected to remove. He had no intention of losing the battle, nor did he intend to retreat, but if his army was pushed back, he wanted to avoid impaled soldiers. It would be a fight to the death. The siege camp’s walls cut off retreat. When Odacer finally climbed down from his sentry tower, his face was expectant.
“From what’s been counted, they’ve got about forty to fifty thousand out there,” Odacer said to his gathered command chain. “The army’s already out on the field, so I can’t address them. Everything is now dependent on you men, and your obedience and adaptability. We’ve got about eighteen thousand soldiers out there, with fourteen hundred of them cavalry. We don’t have nearly enough cavalry to focus on the wings, so they’ll act as the mobile reserve. The Guardsmen will be on the left, my cohort of horse in the center, and Duke Nyzdar’s on the right. Andrej Palev will command the left, Duke Nyzdar the right, and I will command the center.”
Having settled the top jobs, Odacer moved on to his strategy. “The city gate is in the center of our field of operations. I want you all to use it as the orientation point. I want the army drawn up in a sickle shape. The legions on the tips will be forward of the center, acting as wings. I am placing a cohort in the center of the sickle as a piercing point. I want the wings even with the spike. The goal is simple. I want to split their army in two, and enclose each half within the half-sickles that will form. Once they’ve been split, we’ll punish them severely.”
The various officers murmured their understanding of the plan. Karadord spoke up. “Workable. I’ll go form up my men.”
Odacer nodded. “Remember, they only have fifteen thousand real fighters out there. The rest is little boys and old men. Spread the word to your legions. They’ll discount the civilians and realize that for all intents and purposes, the odds are slightly in our favor.”
No time was wasted. The moment the army had been put into formation, Odacer sounded the advance. Odacer himself would not be able to participate. As general, he had to keep a good vantage point so he could react appropriately to any changes in the line of battle. Marcus was in command of the six hundred cavalry who would be moved to any weakened points. Ardeo and Karadord would be with their own cavalry, keeping an eye on their parts of the army from their own vantage points, and reacting appropriately.
Later on, as the battle progressed, Ardeo stood on his horse, frowning at what he could see of the scene. He turned toward a nearby sentry tower. “Ho, the tower! Is the spike cut off from the rest of the army?”
The sentry peered into the roiling mass of battle, and then shouted down, “Aye, sir. The spike is cut off. But Lord Marcus’ reserve is moving in to reinforce them.”
Ardeo bit his lip. Six hundred horsemen would have trouble penetrating the milling masses of enemy that were focusing all their rage on the cut-off spike. There was a very real danger that Marcus’s cavalry thrust would be dragged down and massacred if it lost cohesion, a very real possibility in that quagmire. Surveying the scene once again, Ardeo watched the gap form between his two legions and the center legions and their penetrating point. There.
Slowly crouching down and then positioning himself to ride his horse, Ardeo fluttered his cloak out behind him. It would serve as a rallying point while they charged and fought, even though it made it obvious he was a high-ranking target. “Advance at a trot! Wedge formation!”
Moving at a light pace unlikely to tire the horses before they got close enough to unleash a devastating charge, Ardeo’s eyes had more than enough time to regard the scene. The battle had been going on for quite some time, and by all indications, the enemy knew it was doomed. Odacer’s basic strategy had worked, and the last rebel army would break before long. Because of that, it seemed they were concentrating their efforts on the penetrating point, to at least destroy that obstinate Imperial cohort before defeat consumed them.
Hefting his shield as his cavalry drew closer and closer to committing to the fray, Ardeo allowed a smile to cross his lips. Irregular infantry without any sort of cohesion simply had little hope against cavalry. One thousand pounds of horseflesh at the hands of a skilled rider was a vicious weapon on the battlefield, especially going at full speed. Any man unlucky enough to be caught in a horse’s path would end with his back broken, at the very least. Should the number of bodies in the way of the horse grow to the point where it could no longer gallop from sheer mass, war horses had plenty of additional tricks available, from biting into shoulders to kicking heads off necks.
His men were Aimani dragoons, skilled on horse and on foot, as were Marcus’s. Looking across the battlefield, he raised his lance, then lowered it, digging his heels into his horse as he galloped at full speed into the fray, six hundred deadly warriors behind him.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Return, Part 3
“How did he get away?” Ardeo demanded a few days later, still fuming. “How did he do it?”
Odacer looked up from his paperwork, an exasperated expression on his face. The two men were sitting in Odacer’s far larger command pavilion, theoretically doing paperwork. Not many people realized just how much paperwork had to be gotten through to keep a military campaign operational. Paper reports made by literate officers, tallies on casualties, wounded, and fit for service, interviews from scouts on terrain and preparations, estimates from engineers and prefects on the status of this piece of artillery or that piece of equipment, and dozens of other things, and each one had to be vetted by the general in charge or a delegated officer.
Even worse was the accounting. Few people realized how much money went into keeping an army of professionals in the field, armed, fit, and deadly. Nor did many people realize just how intricate the accounts for an army was. Every expenditure had to be tabulated, every piece of booty acquired had to be recorded, estimates on rate of consumption for everything from salt, grain, and meat, to wear and tear on equipment and wages. And all of the gods help you if it was not done in quintuplicate!
“Ardeo, you’re my dearest kinsman, but if you don’t shut up about our escaped assassin and help me get through this paperwork, I swear by all the gods that I am going to make you the centerpiece of the experiment to find out how he escaped!”
Ardeo scowled, and said nothing. When Nerva had handed Kuso over to them for justice, Odacer had issued orders that the man be dangled from the camp ramparts. A slow, torturous death, it was also a visible reminder to the Fianna to behave themselves. Not two days later, he was gone, missing. A thorough search of the entire camp revealed that he had gotten clean away.
Grousing under his breath, Ardeo did as he was told, reviewing the accounts for his Iyazan legion. It was just as well that the Rigsraadet was financing the entire expedition! He certainly would not have shelled out the sort of money required just to marry the sister of the Emperor, even for Imperial Kinsman status. It had been an uncharacteristically canny move on the part of the Emperor to insist that the Rigsraadet pay the costs for the divorce, and to phrase it in such a way that even a war was covered as a cost of divorce! He expressed this sentiment to his cousin after he had calmed down.
“The Emperor does have a few intelligent advisors, in spite of how poor his retinue of hangers-on are. Thasa was one, which makes his death all the more pitiable. Karadord and Bakun are also canny men, for all their flaws.”
Before this discussion of the Imperial court could continue, Marcus entered, a perturbed expression on his face. He had been given duty as officer of the day, parked outside his father’s headquarters to screen those who came to see the general, as well as routing inquiries to the proper place. It was boring desk duty that ill-suited the young man, but even Ardeo appreciated the grim humor behind it. If Odacer had to suffer behind a desk with mountains of papers in front of him, so did his kin!
“What is it, Marcus?”
The youth hesitated, then blurted, “Imperial Guardsmen, Father! A full mounted troop of them!”
That brought Ardeo to his feet, even though Odacer remained at his desk. Imperial Guardsmen were Fianna rotated into duty at the Blackstar Castle, the Emperor’s residence. They wore distinctive scarlet-lacquered armor and clothing, and traveled with the Emperor or his chosen representatives directly from the capital.
“Only a troop means a high-ranking delegate of the Emperor,” Odacer said musingly. “If it were the Emperor himself, he’d have brought the entire legion, and then some. Send in the Emperor’s representative, Marcus.”
Even as Marcus turned on his heels, Ardeo quietly moved to stand beside Odacer. While he might be the Duke of Iyaza, he lacked the standing to remain seated before an Imperial representative. Only Archdukes had quite that much clout, and he would not become one until he was safely married to the Emperor’s sister.
The two men who walked in were different from each other in every way. Neither of them was known to Ardeo, but Odacer recognized them. “Andrej Palev Karadord,” Odacer said calmly, his gaze on the shorter of the two.
Ardeo studied the shorter man intensely. Karadord was dark of hair and eye, broad in the shoulder and chest, and walked with so much inherent confidence that he seemed much taller than he was. He was just beginning middle age, with a light sprinkling of gray at his temples that did not harm his good looks. He wore armor, and the amulet with the Imperial sigil around his neck made it obvious he was the Emperor’s representative. Much was said about Karadord, not all of it complimentary. He had once been a Sonoman lord, who had made the attempt to take control of that nation’s throne by force. The fractious Sonoman nobles had united to stop him from displacing their puppet-ruler, forcing him to abandon his attempt and flee. He had found sanctuary with Zeno, and risen high in his favor ever since.
Karadord smiled, revealing small, even teeth. “I thank you for the courtesy of my full name, Archduke Odacer Militiades Mircea. Not many Sandoran nobles do me such honor.”
“I am a fair man, Andrej Palev. Just because you lost your title in Sonoma does not make you less of a nobleman. Besides, you’re not a bad soldier, so you deserve that much. To what do I owe this honor?”
“Business, I fear, strictly business.” The stout man sat in Ardeo’s chair easily. “The Emperor has sent me as his representative to oversee the final settlement of the various domains of the rebels.”
“I see…” Odacer leaned back in his chair. “I take it the Emperor does not trust my judgment?”
It was a dangerous question, and Karadord proved himself to be as discrete as he was brave. “It is not quite a lack of trust in your judgment, Archduke Mircea, but a matter of arranging matters correctly. The Emperor is of the opinion that any settlement of the region should be seen to have his stamp on it in a more direct and personable manner than Fiannan legions marching and burning.”
“I see,” Odacer said noncommittally. “And does your companion happen to be a part of the Emperor’s settlement?”
“Indeed he is. May I introduce you to Varro Bius Flaccus, the younger brother of our rebellious mastermind?”
Cast in the shade by his colleague’s entrance, the younger man was taller, fair of hair and eye, but lacked charisma and self-confidence. A weaker persona in all aspects, nor an impressive one, he was dressed in fine velvets, indicating he had some money at his disposal. When Karadord introduced him, Varro bowed in Odacer’s direction before launching into a short speech.
“G-greetings, Archduke Odacer Militiades Mircea of Aiman,” he began nervously, “I do assure you. I was with the Grand Prince Sanc Tolos Caepio since winter, trying to wring out some favorable trade concessions on behalf of my brother, and I had no idea about his revolt, I do assure you.”
“Interesting,” Odacer replied. “And why, precisely, should you be allowed to succeed in your brother’s place?”
Still squinting, Varro replied, “Because I lack any sort of ambition toward reviving Respublia. It was a failed system, and I’d much rather trust to a firm hand than the sort of infighting I grew up under. I’ve already promised to give up every part of Flaccus’ holdings besides the city of Taren and enough of the hinterland to feed the city. In a practical as well as ideological way, it’d be impossible for me to try what my brother is trying.”
Ardeo finally spoke up, startled. “Why in the world would you give up so much? You’d be able to keep a pittance, if that.”
Varro blinked, then squinted at Ardeo. “You are the Duke of Iyaza, are you not? You should know. I’d rather inherit at least a part of what belongs to my family, than nothing at all.”
Considering this, Ardeo finally nodded. “You make a valid point.”
Odacer stepped in. “My thanks, Varro Bius Flaccus. My son Marcus is outside. Ask him to take you to some sort of adequate accommodation. We lack anything permanent, but I’m sure we can arrange something relatively comfortable for you.”
Varro bowed once again, and walked out. Waiting until Varro’s figure was out of earshot, Odacer spoke to Karadord. “I take it he’s near-sighted, Andrej Palev.”
“Very perceptive. Yes, he is, so he’ll never be a soldier, more the pity.”
“Not all of us are meant to be soldiers,” Odacer noted calmly.
“Quite.” Karadord placidly spoke on. “He’s something of a nobleman scholar, exceptionally well educated. He and his brother don’t get on at all. Their father favored the bookish Varro over the militant Iudaces, indulged him with books and scrolls. He owns something like a quarter-million pieces of literature.”
Ardeo blinked. “That’s the largest collection I’ve ever even heard of.”
“The Emperor himself said the same thing at the audience Varro managed to get through no small amount of pleading and bribing,” the ex-Sonoman lord replied. “One of Varro’s biggest reasons for giving up so much was to preserve his library. He realized that if you sacked Taren, a lifetime of collecting knowledge would go up in flames, and he broke down in tears at the thought that so much that his father had given him would be no more than ashes.”
“Interesting. I’ve never met someone so dedicated to books,” Odacer said.
“What’s more interesting is what he intends to do with his collection,” Karadord continued. “Once Taren falls, he plans on opening his library and his city to all seekers of knowledge, turn it into something he calls a ‘university’. His goal is to foster learning and learned thought, so I rather doubt he’ll be doing any fighting while you finish this campaign.”
“What of you, Andrej Palev? What will you be doing while I finish this campaign?”
Karadord adopted a thoughtful expression. “Well, I don’t honestly know, Archduke Mircea. The Emperor’s commission was to arrange a settlement throughout the region, so I fear I won’t be able to do very much until you do finish.”
Odacer looked as thoughtful as Karadord did. “Would you be willing to lend me a hand? I’ve only got fourteen hundred cavalry, and your two hundred would be of great assistance. And I do believe you have Imperial authority right now, so the Fianna won’t be too averse to taking orders from you.”
Karadord smiled carefully at Odacer. “I’d be more than happy to put my two hundred Guardsmen to work for you, Odacer Militiades.”
“Oh, no, you mistake my meaning. I want you to command the left wing of this army, which happens to be Fianna.”
Shock flitted across Karadord’s face before his expression was enthused with genuine gratitude. “It would be my pleasure.”
Standing up, Karadord bowed gracefully before leaving the pavilion. Ardeo looked down at his near kin, puzzled. “Why did you go and do that?”
Odacer laughed soundlessly. “Karadord is a soldier, much like I am. He wanted to fight, but he’s too proud to ask. So I had to ask. He did quite well in Sonoma, you know, would have been its Prince if he had had just a bit more time to consolidate and been a bit less outnumbered. Besides, I can’t be at both the center and the left wing. The Fianna are not dependable. They’re too orthodox, probably since they have the capacity to think pounded out of them too harshly.”
Odacer paused, then added seriously, “Besides, I really do need his two hundred troopers. I really don’t have enough cavalry, and playing nice earned me his gratitude and his horsemen.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Odacer looked up from his paperwork, an exasperated expression on his face. The two men were sitting in Odacer’s far larger command pavilion, theoretically doing paperwork. Not many people realized just how much paperwork had to be gotten through to keep a military campaign operational. Paper reports made by literate officers, tallies on casualties, wounded, and fit for service, interviews from scouts on terrain and preparations, estimates from engineers and prefects on the status of this piece of artillery or that piece of equipment, and dozens of other things, and each one had to be vetted by the general in charge or a delegated officer.
Even worse was the accounting. Few people realized how much money went into keeping an army of professionals in the field, armed, fit, and deadly. Nor did many people realize just how intricate the accounts for an army was. Every expenditure had to be tabulated, every piece of booty acquired had to be recorded, estimates on rate of consumption for everything from salt, grain, and meat, to wear and tear on equipment and wages. And all of the gods help you if it was not done in quintuplicate!
“Ardeo, you’re my dearest kinsman, but if you don’t shut up about our escaped assassin and help me get through this paperwork, I swear by all the gods that I am going to make you the centerpiece of the experiment to find out how he escaped!”
Ardeo scowled, and said nothing. When Nerva had handed Kuso over to them for justice, Odacer had issued orders that the man be dangled from the camp ramparts. A slow, torturous death, it was also a visible reminder to the Fianna to behave themselves. Not two days later, he was gone, missing. A thorough search of the entire camp revealed that he had gotten clean away.
Grousing under his breath, Ardeo did as he was told, reviewing the accounts for his Iyazan legion. It was just as well that the Rigsraadet was financing the entire expedition! He certainly would not have shelled out the sort of money required just to marry the sister of the Emperor, even for Imperial Kinsman status. It had been an uncharacteristically canny move on the part of the Emperor to insist that the Rigsraadet pay the costs for the divorce, and to phrase it in such a way that even a war was covered as a cost of divorce! He expressed this sentiment to his cousin after he had calmed down.
“The Emperor does have a few intelligent advisors, in spite of how poor his retinue of hangers-on are. Thasa was one, which makes his death all the more pitiable. Karadord and Bakun are also canny men, for all their flaws.”
Before this discussion of the Imperial court could continue, Marcus entered, a perturbed expression on his face. He had been given duty as officer of the day, parked outside his father’s headquarters to screen those who came to see the general, as well as routing inquiries to the proper place. It was boring desk duty that ill-suited the young man, but even Ardeo appreciated the grim humor behind it. If Odacer had to suffer behind a desk with mountains of papers in front of him, so did his kin!
“What is it, Marcus?”
The youth hesitated, then blurted, “Imperial Guardsmen, Father! A full mounted troop of them!”
That brought Ardeo to his feet, even though Odacer remained at his desk. Imperial Guardsmen were Fianna rotated into duty at the Blackstar Castle, the Emperor’s residence. They wore distinctive scarlet-lacquered armor and clothing, and traveled with the Emperor or his chosen representatives directly from the capital.
“Only a troop means a high-ranking delegate of the Emperor,” Odacer said musingly. “If it were the Emperor himself, he’d have brought the entire legion, and then some. Send in the Emperor’s representative, Marcus.”
Even as Marcus turned on his heels, Ardeo quietly moved to stand beside Odacer. While he might be the Duke of Iyaza, he lacked the standing to remain seated before an Imperial representative. Only Archdukes had quite that much clout, and he would not become one until he was safely married to the Emperor’s sister.
The two men who walked in were different from each other in every way. Neither of them was known to Ardeo, but Odacer recognized them. “Andrej Palev Karadord,” Odacer said calmly, his gaze on the shorter of the two.
Ardeo studied the shorter man intensely. Karadord was dark of hair and eye, broad in the shoulder and chest, and walked with so much inherent confidence that he seemed much taller than he was. He was just beginning middle age, with a light sprinkling of gray at his temples that did not harm his good looks. He wore armor, and the amulet with the Imperial sigil around his neck made it obvious he was the Emperor’s representative. Much was said about Karadord, not all of it complimentary. He had once been a Sonoman lord, who had made the attempt to take control of that nation’s throne by force. The fractious Sonoman nobles had united to stop him from displacing their puppet-ruler, forcing him to abandon his attempt and flee. He had found sanctuary with Zeno, and risen high in his favor ever since.
Karadord smiled, revealing small, even teeth. “I thank you for the courtesy of my full name, Archduke Odacer Militiades Mircea. Not many Sandoran nobles do me such honor.”
“I am a fair man, Andrej Palev. Just because you lost your title in Sonoma does not make you less of a nobleman. Besides, you’re not a bad soldier, so you deserve that much. To what do I owe this honor?”
“Business, I fear, strictly business.” The stout man sat in Ardeo’s chair easily. “The Emperor has sent me as his representative to oversee the final settlement of the various domains of the rebels.”
“I see…” Odacer leaned back in his chair. “I take it the Emperor does not trust my judgment?”
It was a dangerous question, and Karadord proved himself to be as discrete as he was brave. “It is not quite a lack of trust in your judgment, Archduke Mircea, but a matter of arranging matters correctly. The Emperor is of the opinion that any settlement of the region should be seen to have his stamp on it in a more direct and personable manner than Fiannan legions marching and burning.”
“I see,” Odacer said noncommittally. “And does your companion happen to be a part of the Emperor’s settlement?”
“Indeed he is. May I introduce you to Varro Bius Flaccus, the younger brother of our rebellious mastermind?”
Cast in the shade by his colleague’s entrance, the younger man was taller, fair of hair and eye, but lacked charisma and self-confidence. A weaker persona in all aspects, nor an impressive one, he was dressed in fine velvets, indicating he had some money at his disposal. When Karadord introduced him, Varro bowed in Odacer’s direction before launching into a short speech.
“G-greetings, Archduke Odacer Militiades Mircea of Aiman,” he began nervously, “I do assure you. I was with the Grand Prince Sanc Tolos Caepio since winter, trying to wring out some favorable trade concessions on behalf of my brother, and I had no idea about his revolt, I do assure you.”
“Interesting,” Odacer replied. “And why, precisely, should you be allowed to succeed in your brother’s place?”
Still squinting, Varro replied, “Because I lack any sort of ambition toward reviving Respublia. It was a failed system, and I’d much rather trust to a firm hand than the sort of infighting I grew up under. I’ve already promised to give up every part of Flaccus’ holdings besides the city of Taren and enough of the hinterland to feed the city. In a practical as well as ideological way, it’d be impossible for me to try what my brother is trying.”
Ardeo finally spoke up, startled. “Why in the world would you give up so much? You’d be able to keep a pittance, if that.”
Varro blinked, then squinted at Ardeo. “You are the Duke of Iyaza, are you not? You should know. I’d rather inherit at least a part of what belongs to my family, than nothing at all.”
Considering this, Ardeo finally nodded. “You make a valid point.”
Odacer stepped in. “My thanks, Varro Bius Flaccus. My son Marcus is outside. Ask him to take you to some sort of adequate accommodation. We lack anything permanent, but I’m sure we can arrange something relatively comfortable for you.”
Varro bowed once again, and walked out. Waiting until Varro’s figure was out of earshot, Odacer spoke to Karadord. “I take it he’s near-sighted, Andrej Palev.”
“Very perceptive. Yes, he is, so he’ll never be a soldier, more the pity.”
“Not all of us are meant to be soldiers,” Odacer noted calmly.
“Quite.” Karadord placidly spoke on. “He’s something of a nobleman scholar, exceptionally well educated. He and his brother don’t get on at all. Their father favored the bookish Varro over the militant Iudaces, indulged him with books and scrolls. He owns something like a quarter-million pieces of literature.”
Ardeo blinked. “That’s the largest collection I’ve ever even heard of.”
“The Emperor himself said the same thing at the audience Varro managed to get through no small amount of pleading and bribing,” the ex-Sonoman lord replied. “One of Varro’s biggest reasons for giving up so much was to preserve his library. He realized that if you sacked Taren, a lifetime of collecting knowledge would go up in flames, and he broke down in tears at the thought that so much that his father had given him would be no more than ashes.”
“Interesting. I’ve never met someone so dedicated to books,” Odacer said.
“What’s more interesting is what he intends to do with his collection,” Karadord continued. “Once Taren falls, he plans on opening his library and his city to all seekers of knowledge, turn it into something he calls a ‘university’. His goal is to foster learning and learned thought, so I rather doubt he’ll be doing any fighting while you finish this campaign.”
“What of you, Andrej Palev? What will you be doing while I finish this campaign?”
Karadord adopted a thoughtful expression. “Well, I don’t honestly know, Archduke Mircea. The Emperor’s commission was to arrange a settlement throughout the region, so I fear I won’t be able to do very much until you do finish.”
Odacer looked as thoughtful as Karadord did. “Would you be willing to lend me a hand? I’ve only got fourteen hundred cavalry, and your two hundred would be of great assistance. And I do believe you have Imperial authority right now, so the Fianna won’t be too averse to taking orders from you.”
Karadord smiled carefully at Odacer. “I’d be more than happy to put my two hundred Guardsmen to work for you, Odacer Militiades.”
“Oh, no, you mistake my meaning. I want you to command the left wing of this army, which happens to be Fianna.”
Shock flitted across Karadord’s face before his expression was enthused with genuine gratitude. “It would be my pleasure.”
Standing up, Karadord bowed gracefully before leaving the pavilion. Ardeo looked down at his near kin, puzzled. “Why did you go and do that?”
Odacer laughed soundlessly. “Karadord is a soldier, much like I am. He wanted to fight, but he’s too proud to ask. So I had to ask. He did quite well in Sonoma, you know, would have been its Prince if he had had just a bit more time to consolidate and been a bit less outnumbered. Besides, I can’t be at both the center and the left wing. The Fianna are not dependable. They’re too orthodox, probably since they have the capacity to think pounded out of them too harshly.”
Odacer paused, then added seriously, “Besides, I really do need his two hundred troopers. I really don’t have enough cavalry, and playing nice earned me his gratitude and his horsemen.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Return, Part 2
It was a sound that awoke Ardeo. Not a particularly loud sound, just one out of place in a camp that had hunkered down for a good night’s sleep, excluding the sentries. Ardeo ran it through his mind quickly, his body moving silently from being on its side to being on its stomach, his arms braced under his body while the rest of him remained unmoving under the blankets, free to dodge without encumbrance. The typical sounds of a night camp. Snores, soft wheezes, coughs, light laughter and soft chatter from soldiers who should have known better and been asleep. The light jingle of chain mail, of sentries calling out the watch, the sound of noncombatants going about their chores, all of these were normal sounds, things that should not and did not impede on his consciousness. So why had he awaken?
The soft rasp of steel sliding out of a leather sheath told him he was not alone. Eyes roaming along the walls of his tent, Ardeo finally located the shadowy shape he was looking for, flush against the back tent wall, nearest his own bed. A shadow that had not attempted to go in through the tent flap that served as a door, but that had lurked along and snuck in through the back. Assassin.
He had no light inside his tent, so he could not see when the assassin silently used his knife to pierce the tent. However, he had to strain his ears to catch the soft tearing sound of steel against cloth. Under other circumstances, Ardeo might have applauded the assassin’s ability, were he not the target.
He considered his options. Fight or flight. Both held their own risks and benefits, but Mircean blood flowed through his veins. Flight held no appeal. So he would fight.
As quickly as that, he made his choice, pride dictating his response more than a cautious evaluation of the situation. His assassin entered his tent silently, knife in hand. Which hand? He wasn’t sure. He would have to move as soon as the assassin came too close. He could not confront him on equal terms until he knew which hand.
“Now you die,” his assassin hissed softly.
Sensing the assassin begin to move downward to strike, Ardeo launched himself to the side, slamming himself into his desk but avoiding the assassin’s strike. Scrambling to his feet, Ardeo realized from the assassin’s hurried standing that the knife was in the left hand. Then he had no more room for thought as his assassin came for him again.
He just managed to catch the assassin’s knife hand before his assassin tried to punch him. He just managed to catch that attack too, but he was now in an unenviable position, legs pinned by his desk and his assassin, his dominant hand stalemated with his assassin’s dominant hand. He had to get out of this trap before a false move resulted in his premature death.
“Help!” Ardeo roared. “There is an assassin in my tent! Help!”
His shout for help startled his assassin. A slight slackening of his grip, a miniscule hesitation in his attack, an opening so slight most people would not have realized it. But Ardeo was as much soldier as general. He exploited the opening to knee his assailant in the groin.
His opponent groaned. The knife slipped from his grip as he instinctively tried to clutch his injured genitals. Falling backward onto his desk, Ardeo used his momentum and his legs to chuck his assailant over his head and out the tent flap. Breathing heavily, he stooped down, picked up the knife by its hilt, and walked outside.
His eyes alighted on a scene of chaos. A half-dozen of his men were struggling with his would-be assassin. Another dozen or so lingered around the edges of brawl, uncertain what to do. More men seemed to be arriving by the minute. Ardeo quickly snapped off orders. “Don’t just stand there! Cut off the area. I don’t want him getting out of here.”
Ardeo pointed out a half-dozen burlier soldiers. “You lot, go help your fellows put my assassin down.” Ardeo paused as he considered. “Keep him alive, and leave his face unmarked. Break whatever bones you have to, though.”
Looking around as his men complied with his orders, Ardeo recognized an Aimani officer. Walking over to him, he put his hand on the man’s shoulder. “Go bring the Archduke of Aiman here. Fill him in on the way, and make it clear he’s needed with the highest priority.”
Nodding once, the officer turned and ran off, heading in the direction of Odacer’s tent. Moving closer to the large fire that was in the middle of this section of camp, Ardeo studied the knife. There was no distinct discoloration on the blade that hinted it had been poisoned, but a few precautions would not be amiss in this situation. He removed a kerchief from around the neck of one of his uninvolved soldiers, and wrapped the blade with it.
Sighing, Ardeo pulled back from the fire, and watched the brawl continue. The assassin was giving a good account of himself, biting, clawing, punching, and kicking, but the addition of the half-dozen strongmen finally put a stop to his antics. The fact it had taken a dozen men to put him down gave a good indication of what he was.
Time seemed to drag interminably while he waited for his cousin to show up. He kept his eyes on his men, quick to rebuke the moment he noticed any slackening in their grip. When they started to react a trifle slowly to his censure, he promised dire punishment if the assassin escaped.
When Odacer finally arrived, Ardeo breathed a small sigh of relief. It had probably not been too long a time, but his nerves were frazzled, and he did not feel all that charitable at the moment. “What took you?”
“Yes, it’s a pleasure seeing you too, Ardeo,” the older man replied dryly. He gestured behind him. “I didn’t like the idea of being waylaid on my way, you see, so I asked my men if any wanted to accompany me. They rather wholeheartedly agreed to being my protection.”
Ardeo blinked in surprise when he followed his cousin’s movement. From what he could see from his vantage point, Odacer had brought a full troop of two hundred men as a bodyguard. To round off the fully armed and armored men, Odacer had also brought his Viantha along with him. Ardeo turned his back on his cousin and hid a rueful smile. It was as obvious an unspoken rebuke as it was ostentatious.
“Drag him here, into the light,” Ardeo ordered. “I want the Archduke of Aiman to see our uninvited guest clearly.”
The would-be assassin was dragged unwillingly into the light that the fire pit still gave off. The man was dressed in black, from tunic to boot. The ritual sash of Imperial scarlet was missing from his belt, but the haughty, aristocratic features could only belong on the face of a member of the Emperor’s Fianna.
“This man is an assassin,” Ardeo declared clearly. He handed Odacer the knife that had been used in the attempt on his life. “This is the weapon he attempted to use to kill me. I can also testify it took a dozen men to put him down and prevent his escape. It is my considered opinion that he is a Fiannan. I do not know if he attempted the deed on his own, or was sent under orders.”
Odacer turned the knife in his hands around, studying it in the light, taking care to prevent the blade from touching his flesh. It was a normal steel dagger, by all appearances, except for one telltale giveaway: the Imperial signet on the blade, near the hilt. “I suppose we shall find out soon enough,” Odacer replied quietly. “I sent for the cesar of the Fianna with us. He should be here momentarily. Get your men to move our friend here out of sight. I want to see the cesar’s reactions without having them tainted with the presence of this assassin.”
The wait was interminable. Ardeo paced back and forth while Odacer gazed grimly at the Fiannan assassin. Odacer’s Viantha seemed as unruffled by the whole scene as Ardeo’s Iyazans were disturbed. And Odacer’s “friends” had taken charge, roused up a full cohort of Iyazans to put the camp on lockdown. When the Fiannan cesar finally arrived, Ardeo was ready to burst from impatience.
Not that he got the chance to fly at the man. Odacer addressed him efficiently from the start.
“Do you know who I am, cesar?” he asked, politely.
The cesar, a tall middle-aged man with frosty hair, nodded, calm unimpaired. His stance the rigid languidness of a warrior-born. From his facial expression, being summoned in the middle of the night to face a casual inquiry was nothing out of the ordinary. “Yes, sir. You are the Prince of Swords.”
“And what does that mean, precisely, cesar?”
The man’s stance retained that same ease of violence. “In the absence of the Emperor or the Heir, any orders you issue that do not threaten the continued safety and well-being of the Emperor are to be treated as though issued by the Emperor himself.”
“Did I not issue orders to the Fianna that the Duke of Iyaza was not to be harmed in any way?” Odacer asked, the politeness gone from his tone.
The cesar tilted his head, clearly puzzled. “You did, sir. I issued that order to every man in the legions.”
“Then please explain why there was an assassination attempt on the Duke of Iyaza.”
The Fianna blinked, completely startled. For a rigidly self-controlled old soldier like the cesar to reveal so much spoke volumes. Fianna were not known to be skillful dissemblers, so the assassin was not carrying out orders from a highly ranked superior. Or at the very least, not from this superior.
“What assassination attempt?” the man asked dumbly.
Ardeo gestured brusquely to his men, who quickly brought out their captive Fianna assassin. “The assassination attempt made by this man,” he growled.
The Fianna cesar clearly recognized the assassin. His face scowled, then recovered its rigid mask. His voice, however, was anything but calm.
“That,” he said, his voice dripping contempt, “is a miserable vermin known as Kuso. He has always been dissatisfactory as a Fianna. When you issued your order that the Duke of Iyaza was not to be harmed, he had the audacity to attempt to convince me to disregard your order and try against the life of the Duke. I issued him a personal order to leave the matter alone, and not harm the Duke. Clearly, he did not deem my order worth obeying.”
Marching over to Kuso, the older Fianna struck him, hard. “I hereby expulse you from the ranks of the Fianna, and turn you over to the justice of the Duke of Iyaza and the Prince of Swords.”
Bowing to Ardeo and Odacer, he added, “I will make no protest in whatever you decide to do with him. His fate is in your hands. Kill him, punish him, do whatever you so wish.”
With that, the Fiannan officer stalked off into the night.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
The soft rasp of steel sliding out of a leather sheath told him he was not alone. Eyes roaming along the walls of his tent, Ardeo finally located the shadowy shape he was looking for, flush against the back tent wall, nearest his own bed. A shadow that had not attempted to go in through the tent flap that served as a door, but that had lurked along and snuck in through the back. Assassin.
He had no light inside his tent, so he could not see when the assassin silently used his knife to pierce the tent. However, he had to strain his ears to catch the soft tearing sound of steel against cloth. Under other circumstances, Ardeo might have applauded the assassin’s ability, were he not the target.
He considered his options. Fight or flight. Both held their own risks and benefits, but Mircean blood flowed through his veins. Flight held no appeal. So he would fight.
As quickly as that, he made his choice, pride dictating his response more than a cautious evaluation of the situation. His assassin entered his tent silently, knife in hand. Which hand? He wasn’t sure. He would have to move as soon as the assassin came too close. He could not confront him on equal terms until he knew which hand.
“Now you die,” his assassin hissed softly.
Sensing the assassin begin to move downward to strike, Ardeo launched himself to the side, slamming himself into his desk but avoiding the assassin’s strike. Scrambling to his feet, Ardeo realized from the assassin’s hurried standing that the knife was in the left hand. Then he had no more room for thought as his assassin came for him again.
He just managed to catch the assassin’s knife hand before his assassin tried to punch him. He just managed to catch that attack too, but he was now in an unenviable position, legs pinned by his desk and his assassin, his dominant hand stalemated with his assassin’s dominant hand. He had to get out of this trap before a false move resulted in his premature death.
“Help!” Ardeo roared. “There is an assassin in my tent! Help!”
His shout for help startled his assassin. A slight slackening of his grip, a miniscule hesitation in his attack, an opening so slight most people would not have realized it. But Ardeo was as much soldier as general. He exploited the opening to knee his assailant in the groin.
His opponent groaned. The knife slipped from his grip as he instinctively tried to clutch his injured genitals. Falling backward onto his desk, Ardeo used his momentum and his legs to chuck his assailant over his head and out the tent flap. Breathing heavily, he stooped down, picked up the knife by its hilt, and walked outside.
His eyes alighted on a scene of chaos. A half-dozen of his men were struggling with his would-be assassin. Another dozen or so lingered around the edges of brawl, uncertain what to do. More men seemed to be arriving by the minute. Ardeo quickly snapped off orders. “Don’t just stand there! Cut off the area. I don’t want him getting out of here.”
Ardeo pointed out a half-dozen burlier soldiers. “You lot, go help your fellows put my assassin down.” Ardeo paused as he considered. “Keep him alive, and leave his face unmarked. Break whatever bones you have to, though.”
Looking around as his men complied with his orders, Ardeo recognized an Aimani officer. Walking over to him, he put his hand on the man’s shoulder. “Go bring the Archduke of Aiman here. Fill him in on the way, and make it clear he’s needed with the highest priority.”
Nodding once, the officer turned and ran off, heading in the direction of Odacer’s tent. Moving closer to the large fire that was in the middle of this section of camp, Ardeo studied the knife. There was no distinct discoloration on the blade that hinted it had been poisoned, but a few precautions would not be amiss in this situation. He removed a kerchief from around the neck of one of his uninvolved soldiers, and wrapped the blade with it.
Sighing, Ardeo pulled back from the fire, and watched the brawl continue. The assassin was giving a good account of himself, biting, clawing, punching, and kicking, but the addition of the half-dozen strongmen finally put a stop to his antics. The fact it had taken a dozen men to put him down gave a good indication of what he was.
Time seemed to drag interminably while he waited for his cousin to show up. He kept his eyes on his men, quick to rebuke the moment he noticed any slackening in their grip. When they started to react a trifle slowly to his censure, he promised dire punishment if the assassin escaped.
When Odacer finally arrived, Ardeo breathed a small sigh of relief. It had probably not been too long a time, but his nerves were frazzled, and he did not feel all that charitable at the moment. “What took you?”
“Yes, it’s a pleasure seeing you too, Ardeo,” the older man replied dryly. He gestured behind him. “I didn’t like the idea of being waylaid on my way, you see, so I asked my men if any wanted to accompany me. They rather wholeheartedly agreed to being my protection.”
Ardeo blinked in surprise when he followed his cousin’s movement. From what he could see from his vantage point, Odacer had brought a full troop of two hundred men as a bodyguard. To round off the fully armed and armored men, Odacer had also brought his Viantha along with him. Ardeo turned his back on his cousin and hid a rueful smile. It was as obvious an unspoken rebuke as it was ostentatious.
“Drag him here, into the light,” Ardeo ordered. “I want the Archduke of Aiman to see our uninvited guest clearly.”
The would-be assassin was dragged unwillingly into the light that the fire pit still gave off. The man was dressed in black, from tunic to boot. The ritual sash of Imperial scarlet was missing from his belt, but the haughty, aristocratic features could only belong on the face of a member of the Emperor’s Fianna.
“This man is an assassin,” Ardeo declared clearly. He handed Odacer the knife that had been used in the attempt on his life. “This is the weapon he attempted to use to kill me. I can also testify it took a dozen men to put him down and prevent his escape. It is my considered opinion that he is a Fiannan. I do not know if he attempted the deed on his own, or was sent under orders.”
Odacer turned the knife in his hands around, studying it in the light, taking care to prevent the blade from touching his flesh. It was a normal steel dagger, by all appearances, except for one telltale giveaway: the Imperial signet on the blade, near the hilt. “I suppose we shall find out soon enough,” Odacer replied quietly. “I sent for the cesar of the Fianna with us. He should be here momentarily. Get your men to move our friend here out of sight. I want to see the cesar’s reactions without having them tainted with the presence of this assassin.”
The wait was interminable. Ardeo paced back and forth while Odacer gazed grimly at the Fiannan assassin. Odacer’s Viantha seemed as unruffled by the whole scene as Ardeo’s Iyazans were disturbed. And Odacer’s “friends” had taken charge, roused up a full cohort of Iyazans to put the camp on lockdown. When the Fiannan cesar finally arrived, Ardeo was ready to burst from impatience.
Not that he got the chance to fly at the man. Odacer addressed him efficiently from the start.
“Do you know who I am, cesar?” he asked, politely.
The cesar, a tall middle-aged man with frosty hair, nodded, calm unimpaired. His stance the rigid languidness of a warrior-born. From his facial expression, being summoned in the middle of the night to face a casual inquiry was nothing out of the ordinary. “Yes, sir. You are the Prince of Swords.”
“And what does that mean, precisely, cesar?”
The man’s stance retained that same ease of violence. “In the absence of the Emperor or the Heir, any orders you issue that do not threaten the continued safety and well-being of the Emperor are to be treated as though issued by the Emperor himself.”
“Did I not issue orders to the Fianna that the Duke of Iyaza was not to be harmed in any way?” Odacer asked, the politeness gone from his tone.
The cesar tilted his head, clearly puzzled. “You did, sir. I issued that order to every man in the legions.”
“Then please explain why there was an assassination attempt on the Duke of Iyaza.”
The Fianna blinked, completely startled. For a rigidly self-controlled old soldier like the cesar to reveal so much spoke volumes. Fianna were not known to be skillful dissemblers, so the assassin was not carrying out orders from a highly ranked superior. Or at the very least, not from this superior.
“What assassination attempt?” the man asked dumbly.
Ardeo gestured brusquely to his men, who quickly brought out their captive Fianna assassin. “The assassination attempt made by this man,” he growled.
The Fianna cesar clearly recognized the assassin. His face scowled, then recovered its rigid mask. His voice, however, was anything but calm.
“That,” he said, his voice dripping contempt, “is a miserable vermin known as Kuso. He has always been dissatisfactory as a Fianna. When you issued your order that the Duke of Iyaza was not to be harmed, he had the audacity to attempt to convince me to disregard your order and try against the life of the Duke. I issued him a personal order to leave the matter alone, and not harm the Duke. Clearly, he did not deem my order worth obeying.”
Marching over to Kuso, the older Fianna struck him, hard. “I hereby expulse you from the ranks of the Fianna, and turn you over to the justice of the Duke of Iyaza and the Prince of Swords.”
Bowing to Ardeo and Odacer, he added, “I will make no protest in whatever you decide to do with him. His fate is in your hands. Kill him, punish him, do whatever you so wish.”
With that, the Fiannan officer stalked off into the night.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Return, Part 1
Mile after mile of fortification marred the landscape. Once verdant grasslands and farms had been reduced to mud and dust as thousands of armed and dangerous men excavated mountains of dirt and turned grazing land into ditches. Crops had been dug up so that sharpened stakes could discourage enemy forays against the earth and log walls that protected the besiegers. Foragers had brought in what cattle and food the besieged had failed to take into the walls with them. Ballistae and catapults turned attacking the besiegers’ camp from merely foolhardy to suicidal, while a large fleet with its crew of sailors and marines blockaded the port, letting nothing in or out.
The centerpiece of all this martial effort was the city of Taren, in a state of rebellion against the Empire of Sandora. Immense, thick stone gave the walls superior resistance to ram and mining. Not that that was an impediment. Siege towers were under construction, massive tools of war designed to flood the enemy defenses with hundreds of troops, preventing the sort of bitter fighting that a wall fight would provoke as the attackers literally shoved the defenders off through sheer weight of numbers.
Ardeo Nyzdar sat quietly near one of the siege towers, craning his neck to study it. It was the first completed tower, the one designated to roll across the blighted no man's land and open nearest the gates. The other five towers were almost finished, construction proceeding at a good pace. They would be finished within the week, and the day after they were complete, all six would be rolled the five hundred dangerous feet from besieger to besieged.
A pleasant breeze blew, bringing a welcome coolness to the hot day. Ten legions had been assigned to put down the uprising that had occurred at summer's start in this northeastern domain. The entire uprising could hardly have been more of a joke. The thirty or so lords who had rebelled against Imperial authority had not been generals, had been defeated in the field ignominiously time and time again. It had gotten to the point where the army had been split into five parts, each section permitted to campaign independently. Ardeo had been in command of two legions, and had done quite well for himself, burning a swath of destruction through the south.
But then Archduke Odacer Mircea of Aiman, the overall commander of this campaign, had summoned him to Taren. He had hustled his two legions, puzzled as to why he had been sent for. One look at the city defenses, and it was quite obvious that two legions could not take the city, especially since many of the defeated rebels had fled here for a last stand. So he had gotten to work, setting his men to digging and building under the watchful eye of the Dragon.
Ardeo smiled. The Dragon. It was an ancient nickname, one given only to the greatest members of House Mircea, and for good reason. The Mirceans were unique throughout the world. They did not claim descent from this minor lord or that one, but from Aneas Mircea, the only man in recorded history to have ever slain a dragon in single combat.
Not that their family history, or even the history of their domain, was quite that simple. Aneas Mircea had been an Aiman'xan, a member of the ferocious and independent people that ruled the daunting peaks of the Dragon Range. Dragons were dangerous nuisances throughout Mion. They were known to attack human settlements in search of prey. Not that they ate humans, but who could convince ignorant peasants of that? No, they hungered for cattle, sheep, goats, all the creatures men ate for their meat. But what made he Aiman'xan unique was that they had tamed the power of the dragons and made it their own.
For that reason, Aneas Mircea's act had been an unspeakable sin. He and his entire clan had been banished from the Dragon Range. Nothing daunted, they had driven out the previous inhabitants of what was now Aiman, and entered into an alliance with the Founder of Imperial Sandora. What followed was the longest-lasting alliance in history, two noble houses that had fought back to back for over two thousand years.
Not that Ardeo was a run-of-the-mill nobleman. His grandmother had been the youngest sister of Odacer's grandfather. He knew that he had inherited his military talent from House Mircea, not from House Nyzdar, but his family name had its own magic. Through his paternal name, he was descended from Andri Firesoul, the King of Swords.
The King of Swords. The legendary man who could touch the Divine Power of the Gods, something that only the female mages known as the Viantha could do. His birth inspired fear and terror, his life changed the world, his death only a brief interlude before his next rebirth. The Tarot could give some warning, but never enough. The Founder had been another incarnation of the King of Swords, though Ardeo knew full well he could not claim any bloodlinks to the Imperial family.
But that, Ardeo mused as he turned his back on the siege tower and walked toward one of the many sentry towers, was only a part of the story. He was twenty-nine years old, and had only reached his paternal home and achieved his birthright last summer. For over five hundred years, House Nyzdar had been a house of refugees, a situation that had its roots in the mists of history.
"Ardeo Vellus Nyzdar!"
Ardeo stopped in his ruminations and turned around, smiling in the direction of the impertinent youth who had called out to him. "Marcus Comodo Mircea!"
Marcus walked up to him and slung a companionable arm around his neck. A youth of sixteen years, his curling black hair and hawkish face made him seem an untamed rogue rather than the son of one of the most powerful men in Imperial Sandora. A handsome rake, Odacer's son had taken to war like a drunkard to wine, an embryonic master-soldier. The youth had been everywhere, leading cavalry on foraging or skirmishes, scouting, fighting in the thick of every battle. Even now, he was dressed in steel, his cuirass, gauntlets, and greaves glinting in the sunlight.
Not that Ardeo conceded anything to Marcus in either looks or military talent. He genially slung his own arm around his young kin as Marcus began to talk.
"What are you doing here by the siege tower? I'd have thought you'd be with Father, debating which legion to assign where."
Ardeo ruffled Marcus's hair. "Look who's talking about being in the wrong place! I'd have thought you would be carousing with some dazzled peasant girl."
Marcus hesitated, his grin fading away, his blue eyes serious. "The Fianna...make that a rather difficult proposition."
Ardeo felt his own smile die. "And there is the crux of our problem, isn't it?"
"Yes, that's our problem in a nutshell, cousin.” Marcus sighed, looked around, and walked a little quicker into the camp of Ardeo's legion. “Although I am not one of those who blames you."
"You'd better not blame me, Marcus! I'd throw you into the nearest cauldron of pitch if you did."
Marcus managed a weak smile, looked at his olive flesh. "I don't think I look good in a red color, cousin!"
They had been walking through the camp of Ardeo’s Iyazan legion, the first he had managed to raise and fully train. It was more veteran in composition than it was on paper, but it was a good legion, with good troops. They had built their camp in a structured manner, under the close supervision of Aimani officers who knew how everything was supposed to go. The orderly lines of tents, the communal fire pits, the latrines and wells, everything was organized for maximum efficiency. Eventually, he would have to see if he could “borrow” enough officers from his cousin to stiffen the back of his own legions.
As they walked, Ardeo headed toward the distinct red and white banner of House Nyzdar flying in the light breeze, marking out his tent. Ardeo entered his command tent before Marcus, and took everything in at a glance. Two chairs sat near his desk, a few blankets and a pillow behind that, his armor on its stand near the tent flap, a small trunk in the left corner for his clothes, and a locked chest on his desk with his paperwork. It was the total sum of what he had taken with him on campaign, along with a pair of servants who were probably doing some chores.
Everything seemed as it was when he had left. He moved the chair behind the desk and sat in it with a sigh. He looked at Marcus shrewdly. "I take it that some of the more sycophantic members of the Rigsraadet are blaming me for Flaccus' revolt and his attempt to revive Respublia?"
"How did you guess?" Marcus replied with a smile.
Ardeo simply looked grim. "Zeno's doing?"
Marcus nodded. "Yes. You are not a popular man with the Emperor, cousin. The Ceremony of Oaths was practically a disaster, with Zeno Theron and his little boy scowling at everyone who did their obeisance. And let's leave alone your little coup at year's start!"
No surprise that he was not popular with the Emperor Zeno, newly ascended to the throne and much his own age, the inferior son of a far superior father. Rich, powerful, tremendously well-born, House Theron had one asset above all others that maintained their ascendancy over Imperial Sandora: the Imperial Fianna. The Emperor's private army, they were the toughest soldiers in the Empire and commanded by the conscripted sons of the noble Houses, given to the Emperor in accordance with Imperial law. Those boys were indoctrinated at an early age to blindly obey the Emperor above all, even their one-time families. The Fianna were the Emperor's trump card, his answer to everything be it revolt or succession crises.
“I didn't have a choice, Marcus. It was either submit, or die.”
“That’s exactly right,” a new voice interjected strongly.
Ardeo and Marcus were on their feet instantly. “Cousin!”
Odacer Mircea looked what he was, a hard-bitten, fierce warlord who had few, if any, equals anywhere in the world. The strength of life in his dark-brown eyes contrasted with the gray in his beard and hair, the fine wrinkles around his eyes. Thirty-five of his fifty-five years had been spent on campaign all over the empire, always in service to the great Emperor Aurelian Neoptalmus Theron. A life of warfare had left him a trim, well-built man in prime physical condition, if perhaps a trifle weary. A new wife did not help his case.
His young son stepped aside and allowed his father to take his chair. Ardeo sat in his own chair, a trifle surprised. He had not expected his cousin to come visit him, especially not now, with the thousand and one details that the commander of a campaign would have to handle. He was clad much as his son was, his cuirass having seen almost as much action as he, and without the distinctive scarlet cape that denoted the general in charge. Even seated, Odacer was a formidable presence.
“What brings you to my tent, cousin?” Ardeo asked.
“Business, of course. We should make the dispositions for what to do about Taren now, rather than later.”
“What to do…?” Ardeo asked, confused.
Odacer snorted. “I’d have thought your little northern adventure would have illuminated you to certain facts. Taren will fall, especially with me here. However, decisions will have to be taken as to what to do with it afterward. Should we sack it, or should we leave it be? Shall we allow Flaccus to retain his holding, or reward it to someone else?”
“The Emperor has already given orders that Flaccus be brought through the Traitor’s Gate, Father,” Marcus reminded him.
A pensive frown crossed Odacer’s face before he shrugged. “True enough. And Zeno will execute him and put his head on display by the Raven’s Square, make no mistake.”
Ardeo tilted himself back in his chair, thoughtfully mulling over something he had never considered. There was more to warfare than just maneuver, combat, and clean-up. “Well, Taren should not be sacked. It’s a useful jumping off point and supply port for the legions on Ridamek.”
“And it’s a rich city. It can afford to pay an indemnity,” Marcus added.
Odacer nodded his agreement. “Yes, it would be a shame to sack it. Now, how do you propose to control the Fianna? You were the one who disgraced them.”
Ardeo winced. “It wasn’t exactly my idea!”
The older man’s laughter was rich and deep. “No, you hadn’t thought it on your own. But I know, and you know, that your blood demanded it. Honestly, Ardeo, you didn’t have a choice.”
“Especially after you kicked me out of Adiutrix.”
The look he received was mild. “I prefer to think of it as a promotion.”
“That promptly got me into deep trouble.”
“To quote someone,” Odacer replied, still mild, “it wasn’t exactly my idea.”
The three of them fell silent as they contemplated the events of winter past. The north of Imperial Sandora had not fallen under control of the Emperor until recent years. Or, more precisely, it had not been back under the Emperor’s control until recent years.
Five hundred years ago, the Empire of Sandora had ruled the all of the continent south of the Northern Wastes, excluding the Golden Bowl, the Viantha island-stronghold of Para Disio, and Sanctuary, the lush valley in the Dragon Range that was preserved as an asylum for the vanquished and the hunted. Sanctuary was guaranteed by the might of the Aiman’xan and the sworn oath of the Founder. Five hundred years ago, the Empire had violated Sanctuary. What followed was the disastrous War of the Sin. The Dragon Riders had gone to war against the Empire of Sandora, and virtually the entire continent had rebelled. Even the King of Swords alive at that time could do no better than end the war in a draw- a testament to the power of the mob when backed by great power.
Far to the north, Iyaza was the redoubt that kept the barbarian tribes of the Northern Wastes within their dreary lands. House Nyzdar had ruled this important land for nearly forty centuries when the War of the Sin broke out. Much like House Mircea, they had remained loyal to the Emperor. In the brutal twenty years of warfare that followed, Iyaza was lost to them, as they were driven from their lands, and barbarian tribes swooped in from the north to trample the newly “free” rebels.
His ancestors had fled south into Imperial territory. Odacer’s ancestors had given his sanctuary, even restored a measure of dignity by granting them a fief to be held in their name. The end of the War of the Sin saw Imperial Sandora reduced to a shadow of its former self, the continent in chaos. For five hundred years, struggle was the order of the day, as new nations were carved through blood and steel, and Imperial Sandora struggled to recover lost land.
“I’ve never really thanked you in person, have I, Odacer?”
His older kinsman looked at him curiously. “For what?”
A thankful smile appeared on Ardeo’s face. “For restoring me to my birthright, and making me of Duke of Iyaza.”
Raising his right hand, Odacer gestured, casually dismissed Ardeo’s implied apology. “Think nothing of it, cousin. I was busy putting down revolt in Ostia when you arrived at Iyaza, and you were certainly busy by the time you could consider thanking me in person.”
“‘Busy’ is such an inadequate word,” Marcus interjected cheekily. “I’d have picked ‘fighting for survival’.”
The smile changed from thankful to mischievous. “I can’t say I’d disagree.”
Odacer’s glance was wry. “Most people would chose far choicier words than ‘fighting for survival’ when facing four legions of Imperial Fianna.”
Feeling his smile become a bit weaker, Ardeo tried to recover the previous light-heartedness. “And four legions of auxiliaries. Why does everyone always forget that part?”
“Because most people don’t hear beyond the word ‘Fianna’,” Marcus replied.
When the campaigns to conquer the northern domains had been finished, Odacer had reinstated Ardeo as Duke of Iyaza, without seeking formal Imperial approval. This was something within his authority as Prince of the Sword, but he had not acted entirely on his own. He and the Emperor had discussed what to do with the dispositions in the north after Respublia was conquered, and agreed that House Nyzdar be restored to Iyaza. It had been arrived at informally, but still enjoyed Imperial approval. At the time it had not been commented on, but it set in motion utterly unexpected events.
When Aurelian Neoptalmus had died past autumn, Zeno had been in Ostia, not in the Imperial Capital. While governing the twice-subdued city, he had made the acquaintance of Mihal Borischev Bakun, the previous master of Iyaza whom Odacer had kicked out. For whatever reason, Zeno had taken to Bakun, raised him to the level of confidant and friend.
After his father’s death, Zeno had moved against House Nyzdar. He had set Bakun to bring a case into a Rigsraadet session packed with his minions and sycophants, and obtained a dispensation to eject Ardeo from Iyaza in favor of Bakun. Eight legions had been sent out to remove Ardeo by force. By the time the rest of the noble houses had found out, it had been too late to stop the army.
“How did you win against eight legions, anyway, Ardeo?” Marcus asked. “Last I knew of, you only had access to a legion of Dragon Guard Father lent you, and two legions of militia.”
Ardeo smiled grimly at his younger kin. “Yes, that was all I had. A whole nine thousand men against twenty-four thousand of the Emperor’s finest. I didn’t have much time to raise levies amongst the Iyazans, and I wouldn’t have used them, anyway. It takes one hundred days to turn a raw recruit into a soldier, and there’s nothing worse on a battlefield than having untested, untrained men pretend to be professional soldiers.”
“So you raised a legion of mercenaries?” Odacer asked.
“Yes, I managed that. Promised them an outrageous sum of money, and lied through my teeth reassuring them they weren’t facing Imperial Fianna.” Ardeo scowled. “Mercenaries are ridiculous! I don’t know whether it’s the greed or the selfishness, but I refuse to use such troops ever again! When they’re not demanding a fortune in wages, they’re boasting, drinking, carousing and more. I used the Dragon Guard as often against them as I did for anything else during that campaign.”
“Did you manage to impose proper discipline?” Marcus asked.
“Oh, yes. They were mostly former Respublian troopers, so it didn’t take too long to put them back on the straight and narrow, even if it took a few public and very messy executions. So I had twelve thousand disparate and desperate troops against twenty-four thousand veteran Imperial soldiers.”
“Where did you lure them into battle?”
“On Firesoul’s Plain.”
Odacer blinked in surprise. “How did you manage to beat them on Firesoul’s Plain? I’d have thought that terrain perfect for horse troopers like the Fianna.”
“I had the goddess of fortune on my side. Firesoul’s Plain is poor terrain, pockmarked with holes, dips, and gaps. It grows long grass, and little else. The height of the grass and the heavy snows of winter concealed my advantages. I mounted two cohorts of Dragon Guard, and the three others I put on each tip and in the center. I armed everyone with a heavy shield and spear. For whatever reason, the Fianna traveled ahead of their auxiliaries. They charged me on a front that was four legions wide, which I had anticipated by thinning my own lines to a similar length. I won that first battle as much by killing their mounts as I did killing them. I locked them all up in one of your abandoned redoubts, left a full legion of militia to keep an eye on them. After the Fianna, the auxiliaries were easy.”
“Which brings us to our present pass,” Odacer noted clinically.
“As I keep saying to ears stopped up by Imperial indignation, it was not my idea.”
“No, it was not your idea, but you were certainly the pretext for it. Your victory on your ancestor’s plain swayed the Assembled Houses to your side, especially since they did not wish to set a precedent that future Emperors might use to increase the Imperial House’s already formidable power.”
“I was actually there for it, Cousin,” Marcus said. “It was…impressive, to say the least. The first thing they did was revoke Bakun’s original dispensation, which leaves him rather high and dry. They confirmed you in your holdings, and issued a formal demand against the Emperor to make peace with you, under threat of withholding tribute and open war.”
“That’s just it,” Ardeo protested. “I never knew any of this! I was too busy recruiting fresh troops in case the Emperor decided to try again, so how could any of this have been my idea?”
Odacer looked amused. “Your lack of access to a Viantha certainly supports that, doesn’t it?”
“If anyone can be blamed for this, it’s the witches,” Ardeo muttered.
The Sisterhood of Viantha was a powerful force in the scheme of things. Besides their ability to tap into the Divine Power, they had money, clout, and agents scattered throughout Mion. They were fair arbiters, ambassadors, and negotiators, with the added caveat of being an almost instantaneous communication source. One of their abilities was the ability to communicate telepathically with a fellow Viantha so long as there was sunlight.
Through that ability, they had managed to hammer out an agreement between Zeno and the Assembled Houses. Zeno had agreed to give his sister to Ardeo in marriage and elevate Ardeo the rank of Archduke. In exchange, the Rigsraadet agreed to continue paying tribute and to defray the costs of divorcing Valena Orguja Theron from her current husband and marrying her to Ardeo.
Unsurprisingly, this led into another problem. Valena’s husband happened to be Iudaces Starbo Flaccus, a powerful nobleman of old Respublia whom Aurelian Neoptalmus had thought it prudent to tame with a marriage alliance. Zeno had sent one of his favorites to Flaccus’s capital of Taren, and he had informed him that he was to divorce his wife and turn her over to the Duke of Iyaza, soon to be Archduke. The mortally offended Flaccus had had the hapless messenger beheaded, and sent the head to Zeno.
Flaccus had raised the standards of dead Respublia, and begun to rally men to his banner. He managed to do this surprisingly quickly and quietly. The first Zeno had known of the revolt was when the head had arrived.
“Just how angry was the Emperor when his ambassador’s head arrived?” Ardeo asked Marcus.
The youth hesitated. “I don’t think my vocabulary is quite that descriptive. He was already pretty furious when he found out that you beat his Fianna on Firesoul’s Plain, but I can’t think of any word strong enough to match how he was when he got Thasa’s head.”
“I think the Ceremony of Oaths gives the best example of just how angry he was,” Odacer commented. “He managed to get it done in two and a half hours instead of the usual four. The moment I took my oath, he closed the ceremony, marched off his throne, told me to take two legions from Tabon, summon two of my own, take the legions you disgraced at Iyaza, and to grind Flaccus into dust.”
“How convenient of you to remember that I still had one of your legions up north with me,” Ardeo noted dryly.
Ignoring the jibe, Odacer resumed talking. “As you well know, I hustled myself up north to take personal command. The Fianna obey me as Prince of the Sword, but you? They’d tear you apart. Marcus I sent to Aiman to pick up one of mine, and the two from Tabon I sent along the along the road to meet us at a halfway point.”
“Where I found myself engaged to the Emperor’s sister, and soon to be promoted to Archduke, with several restive legions of Fianna and several raw legions of my own.”
“Quite so. I must say, your first Iyazan legion did quite well. And I’m sure you were just as happy to blood them on these easy pickings before you had to blood them on barbarian tribes.”
“Just as well this campaign is almost done,” Ardeo replied grimly. “I’ve had a letter from Iyaza. The barbarians have already begun raiding, never mind the troops we left manning the border forts.”
Marcus sighed. “The problem is, you couldn’t leave enough troops on the border. The four legions of Fianna were more needed up there than down here.”
“Perhaps,” Odacer replied. “However, they were not likely to take orders from Ardeo, especially in the absence of their dead general. However, I’ve already sent orders. These four legions will be sent to Ridamek as soon as the region is pacified, and four of the seven on Ridamek will be brought here. You’ll be taking those home with you, Ardeo.”
“Ah, Odacer, don’t you think that’s a bit…foolhardy? I can hardly be popular with the Fianna right now.”
The look his elder kinsman gave him made Ardeo feel like a little boy again. Fighting to keep his inclination to bow his head and apologize at bay, he returned the look with steady detachment. At least, that was the effect he was aiming for.
“No, it is not foolhardy,” Odacer finally replied, a bit tartly. “As soon as we enter the city, I’ll show Valena her brother’s edict annulling the marriage, and his letter ordering her to marry you. When you leave Taren with those legions, you’ll be brother-in-law of the Emperor himself. That makes you an Imperial Kinsman, and sacrosanct.”
“All he has to do is live that long,” Marcus observed, not altogether lightly.
“Thank you, Marcus,” Ardeo articulated each syllable through grit teeth. “As if I didn’t have enough troubles on my mind.”
“I make a valid point, cousin. You’re a prime target for assassination until you’re safely married off. You should keep your person and your tent under heavy guard at all times.”
Ardeo glared at Marcus, who had grinned impudently the moment he had said ‘married off’. He shifted his look to Odacer. “Do you remember Ossia?”
Odacer blinked. “The ugly daughter of that rich but vulgar merchant of merchants?”
“The same. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to gain control of that massive fortune?”
Odacer smiled slightly. “And she is near Marcus’ age…”
Marcus’s eyes were wide with horror. “I would sooner fall on my sword than marry that ugly bovine! Do you hear me, Father?”
The two older men shared a good laugh at the younger’s expense, but when the laughter ended, Odacer looked as serious as a judge on his tribunal. “I do suggest you raise a bodyguard, Ardeo, for your own safety, and only until the siege is over. Better safe than sorry.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
The centerpiece of all this martial effort was the city of Taren, in a state of rebellion against the Empire of Sandora. Immense, thick stone gave the walls superior resistance to ram and mining. Not that that was an impediment. Siege towers were under construction, massive tools of war designed to flood the enemy defenses with hundreds of troops, preventing the sort of bitter fighting that a wall fight would provoke as the attackers literally shoved the defenders off through sheer weight of numbers.
Ardeo Nyzdar sat quietly near one of the siege towers, craning his neck to study it. It was the first completed tower, the one designated to roll across the blighted no man's land and open nearest the gates. The other five towers were almost finished, construction proceeding at a good pace. They would be finished within the week, and the day after they were complete, all six would be rolled the five hundred dangerous feet from besieger to besieged.
A pleasant breeze blew, bringing a welcome coolness to the hot day. Ten legions had been assigned to put down the uprising that had occurred at summer's start in this northeastern domain. The entire uprising could hardly have been more of a joke. The thirty or so lords who had rebelled against Imperial authority had not been generals, had been defeated in the field ignominiously time and time again. It had gotten to the point where the army had been split into five parts, each section permitted to campaign independently. Ardeo had been in command of two legions, and had done quite well for himself, burning a swath of destruction through the south.
But then Archduke Odacer Mircea of Aiman, the overall commander of this campaign, had summoned him to Taren. He had hustled his two legions, puzzled as to why he had been sent for. One look at the city defenses, and it was quite obvious that two legions could not take the city, especially since many of the defeated rebels had fled here for a last stand. So he had gotten to work, setting his men to digging and building under the watchful eye of the Dragon.
Ardeo smiled. The Dragon. It was an ancient nickname, one given only to the greatest members of House Mircea, and for good reason. The Mirceans were unique throughout the world. They did not claim descent from this minor lord or that one, but from Aneas Mircea, the only man in recorded history to have ever slain a dragon in single combat.
Not that their family history, or even the history of their domain, was quite that simple. Aneas Mircea had been an Aiman'xan, a member of the ferocious and independent people that ruled the daunting peaks of the Dragon Range. Dragons were dangerous nuisances throughout Mion. They were known to attack human settlements in search of prey. Not that they ate humans, but who could convince ignorant peasants of that? No, they hungered for cattle, sheep, goats, all the creatures men ate for their meat. But what made he Aiman'xan unique was that they had tamed the power of the dragons and made it their own.
For that reason, Aneas Mircea's act had been an unspeakable sin. He and his entire clan had been banished from the Dragon Range. Nothing daunted, they had driven out the previous inhabitants of what was now Aiman, and entered into an alliance with the Founder of Imperial Sandora. What followed was the longest-lasting alliance in history, two noble houses that had fought back to back for over two thousand years.
Not that Ardeo was a run-of-the-mill nobleman. His grandmother had been the youngest sister of Odacer's grandfather. He knew that he had inherited his military talent from House Mircea, not from House Nyzdar, but his family name had its own magic. Through his paternal name, he was descended from Andri Firesoul, the King of Swords.
The King of Swords. The legendary man who could touch the Divine Power of the Gods, something that only the female mages known as the Viantha could do. His birth inspired fear and terror, his life changed the world, his death only a brief interlude before his next rebirth. The Tarot could give some warning, but never enough. The Founder had been another incarnation of the King of Swords, though Ardeo knew full well he could not claim any bloodlinks to the Imperial family.
But that, Ardeo mused as he turned his back on the siege tower and walked toward one of the many sentry towers, was only a part of the story. He was twenty-nine years old, and had only reached his paternal home and achieved his birthright last summer. For over five hundred years, House Nyzdar had been a house of refugees, a situation that had its roots in the mists of history.
"Ardeo Vellus Nyzdar!"
Ardeo stopped in his ruminations and turned around, smiling in the direction of the impertinent youth who had called out to him. "Marcus Comodo Mircea!"
Marcus walked up to him and slung a companionable arm around his neck. A youth of sixteen years, his curling black hair and hawkish face made him seem an untamed rogue rather than the son of one of the most powerful men in Imperial Sandora. A handsome rake, Odacer's son had taken to war like a drunkard to wine, an embryonic master-soldier. The youth had been everywhere, leading cavalry on foraging or skirmishes, scouting, fighting in the thick of every battle. Even now, he was dressed in steel, his cuirass, gauntlets, and greaves glinting in the sunlight.
Not that Ardeo conceded anything to Marcus in either looks or military talent. He genially slung his own arm around his young kin as Marcus began to talk.
"What are you doing here by the siege tower? I'd have thought you'd be with Father, debating which legion to assign where."
Ardeo ruffled Marcus's hair. "Look who's talking about being in the wrong place! I'd have thought you would be carousing with some dazzled peasant girl."
Marcus hesitated, his grin fading away, his blue eyes serious. "The Fianna...make that a rather difficult proposition."
Ardeo felt his own smile die. "And there is the crux of our problem, isn't it?"
"Yes, that's our problem in a nutshell, cousin.” Marcus sighed, looked around, and walked a little quicker into the camp of Ardeo's legion. “Although I am not one of those who blames you."
"You'd better not blame me, Marcus! I'd throw you into the nearest cauldron of pitch if you did."
Marcus managed a weak smile, looked at his olive flesh. "I don't think I look good in a red color, cousin!"
They had been walking through the camp of Ardeo’s Iyazan legion, the first he had managed to raise and fully train. It was more veteran in composition than it was on paper, but it was a good legion, with good troops. They had built their camp in a structured manner, under the close supervision of Aimani officers who knew how everything was supposed to go. The orderly lines of tents, the communal fire pits, the latrines and wells, everything was organized for maximum efficiency. Eventually, he would have to see if he could “borrow” enough officers from his cousin to stiffen the back of his own legions.
As they walked, Ardeo headed toward the distinct red and white banner of House Nyzdar flying in the light breeze, marking out his tent. Ardeo entered his command tent before Marcus, and took everything in at a glance. Two chairs sat near his desk, a few blankets and a pillow behind that, his armor on its stand near the tent flap, a small trunk in the left corner for his clothes, and a locked chest on his desk with his paperwork. It was the total sum of what he had taken with him on campaign, along with a pair of servants who were probably doing some chores.
Everything seemed as it was when he had left. He moved the chair behind the desk and sat in it with a sigh. He looked at Marcus shrewdly. "I take it that some of the more sycophantic members of the Rigsraadet are blaming me for Flaccus' revolt and his attempt to revive Respublia?"
"How did you guess?" Marcus replied with a smile.
Ardeo simply looked grim. "Zeno's doing?"
Marcus nodded. "Yes. You are not a popular man with the Emperor, cousin. The Ceremony of Oaths was practically a disaster, with Zeno Theron and his little boy scowling at everyone who did their obeisance. And let's leave alone your little coup at year's start!"
No surprise that he was not popular with the Emperor Zeno, newly ascended to the throne and much his own age, the inferior son of a far superior father. Rich, powerful, tremendously well-born, House Theron had one asset above all others that maintained their ascendancy over Imperial Sandora: the Imperial Fianna. The Emperor's private army, they were the toughest soldiers in the Empire and commanded by the conscripted sons of the noble Houses, given to the Emperor in accordance with Imperial law. Those boys were indoctrinated at an early age to blindly obey the Emperor above all, even their one-time families. The Fianna were the Emperor's trump card, his answer to everything be it revolt or succession crises.
“I didn't have a choice, Marcus. It was either submit, or die.”
“That’s exactly right,” a new voice interjected strongly.
Ardeo and Marcus were on their feet instantly. “Cousin!”
Odacer Mircea looked what he was, a hard-bitten, fierce warlord who had few, if any, equals anywhere in the world. The strength of life in his dark-brown eyes contrasted with the gray in his beard and hair, the fine wrinkles around his eyes. Thirty-five of his fifty-five years had been spent on campaign all over the empire, always in service to the great Emperor Aurelian Neoptalmus Theron. A life of warfare had left him a trim, well-built man in prime physical condition, if perhaps a trifle weary. A new wife did not help his case.
His young son stepped aside and allowed his father to take his chair. Ardeo sat in his own chair, a trifle surprised. He had not expected his cousin to come visit him, especially not now, with the thousand and one details that the commander of a campaign would have to handle. He was clad much as his son was, his cuirass having seen almost as much action as he, and without the distinctive scarlet cape that denoted the general in charge. Even seated, Odacer was a formidable presence.
“What brings you to my tent, cousin?” Ardeo asked.
“Business, of course. We should make the dispositions for what to do about Taren now, rather than later.”
“What to do…?” Ardeo asked, confused.
Odacer snorted. “I’d have thought your little northern adventure would have illuminated you to certain facts. Taren will fall, especially with me here. However, decisions will have to be taken as to what to do with it afterward. Should we sack it, or should we leave it be? Shall we allow Flaccus to retain his holding, or reward it to someone else?”
“The Emperor has already given orders that Flaccus be brought through the Traitor’s Gate, Father,” Marcus reminded him.
A pensive frown crossed Odacer’s face before he shrugged. “True enough. And Zeno will execute him and put his head on display by the Raven’s Square, make no mistake.”
Ardeo tilted himself back in his chair, thoughtfully mulling over something he had never considered. There was more to warfare than just maneuver, combat, and clean-up. “Well, Taren should not be sacked. It’s a useful jumping off point and supply port for the legions on Ridamek.”
“And it’s a rich city. It can afford to pay an indemnity,” Marcus added.
Odacer nodded his agreement. “Yes, it would be a shame to sack it. Now, how do you propose to control the Fianna? You were the one who disgraced them.”
Ardeo winced. “It wasn’t exactly my idea!”
The older man’s laughter was rich and deep. “No, you hadn’t thought it on your own. But I know, and you know, that your blood demanded it. Honestly, Ardeo, you didn’t have a choice.”
“Especially after you kicked me out of Adiutrix.”
The look he received was mild. “I prefer to think of it as a promotion.”
“That promptly got me into deep trouble.”
“To quote someone,” Odacer replied, still mild, “it wasn’t exactly my idea.”
The three of them fell silent as they contemplated the events of winter past. The north of Imperial Sandora had not fallen under control of the Emperor until recent years. Or, more precisely, it had not been back under the Emperor’s control until recent years.
Five hundred years ago, the Empire of Sandora had ruled the all of the continent south of the Northern Wastes, excluding the Golden Bowl, the Viantha island-stronghold of Para Disio, and Sanctuary, the lush valley in the Dragon Range that was preserved as an asylum for the vanquished and the hunted. Sanctuary was guaranteed by the might of the Aiman’xan and the sworn oath of the Founder. Five hundred years ago, the Empire had violated Sanctuary. What followed was the disastrous War of the Sin. The Dragon Riders had gone to war against the Empire of Sandora, and virtually the entire continent had rebelled. Even the King of Swords alive at that time could do no better than end the war in a draw- a testament to the power of the mob when backed by great power.
Far to the north, Iyaza was the redoubt that kept the barbarian tribes of the Northern Wastes within their dreary lands. House Nyzdar had ruled this important land for nearly forty centuries when the War of the Sin broke out. Much like House Mircea, they had remained loyal to the Emperor. In the brutal twenty years of warfare that followed, Iyaza was lost to them, as they were driven from their lands, and barbarian tribes swooped in from the north to trample the newly “free” rebels.
His ancestors had fled south into Imperial territory. Odacer’s ancestors had given his sanctuary, even restored a measure of dignity by granting them a fief to be held in their name. The end of the War of the Sin saw Imperial Sandora reduced to a shadow of its former self, the continent in chaos. For five hundred years, struggle was the order of the day, as new nations were carved through blood and steel, and Imperial Sandora struggled to recover lost land.
“I’ve never really thanked you in person, have I, Odacer?”
His older kinsman looked at him curiously. “For what?”
A thankful smile appeared on Ardeo’s face. “For restoring me to my birthright, and making me of Duke of Iyaza.”
Raising his right hand, Odacer gestured, casually dismissed Ardeo’s implied apology. “Think nothing of it, cousin. I was busy putting down revolt in Ostia when you arrived at Iyaza, and you were certainly busy by the time you could consider thanking me in person.”
“‘Busy’ is such an inadequate word,” Marcus interjected cheekily. “I’d have picked ‘fighting for survival’.”
The smile changed from thankful to mischievous. “I can’t say I’d disagree.”
Odacer’s glance was wry. “Most people would chose far choicier words than ‘fighting for survival’ when facing four legions of Imperial Fianna.”
Feeling his smile become a bit weaker, Ardeo tried to recover the previous light-heartedness. “And four legions of auxiliaries. Why does everyone always forget that part?”
“Because most people don’t hear beyond the word ‘Fianna’,” Marcus replied.
When the campaigns to conquer the northern domains had been finished, Odacer had reinstated Ardeo as Duke of Iyaza, without seeking formal Imperial approval. This was something within his authority as Prince of the Sword, but he had not acted entirely on his own. He and the Emperor had discussed what to do with the dispositions in the north after Respublia was conquered, and agreed that House Nyzdar be restored to Iyaza. It had been arrived at informally, but still enjoyed Imperial approval. At the time it had not been commented on, but it set in motion utterly unexpected events.
When Aurelian Neoptalmus had died past autumn, Zeno had been in Ostia, not in the Imperial Capital. While governing the twice-subdued city, he had made the acquaintance of Mihal Borischev Bakun, the previous master of Iyaza whom Odacer had kicked out. For whatever reason, Zeno had taken to Bakun, raised him to the level of confidant and friend.
After his father’s death, Zeno had moved against House Nyzdar. He had set Bakun to bring a case into a Rigsraadet session packed with his minions and sycophants, and obtained a dispensation to eject Ardeo from Iyaza in favor of Bakun. Eight legions had been sent out to remove Ardeo by force. By the time the rest of the noble houses had found out, it had been too late to stop the army.
“How did you win against eight legions, anyway, Ardeo?” Marcus asked. “Last I knew of, you only had access to a legion of Dragon Guard Father lent you, and two legions of militia.”
Ardeo smiled grimly at his younger kin. “Yes, that was all I had. A whole nine thousand men against twenty-four thousand of the Emperor’s finest. I didn’t have much time to raise levies amongst the Iyazans, and I wouldn’t have used them, anyway. It takes one hundred days to turn a raw recruit into a soldier, and there’s nothing worse on a battlefield than having untested, untrained men pretend to be professional soldiers.”
“So you raised a legion of mercenaries?” Odacer asked.
“Yes, I managed that. Promised them an outrageous sum of money, and lied through my teeth reassuring them they weren’t facing Imperial Fianna.” Ardeo scowled. “Mercenaries are ridiculous! I don’t know whether it’s the greed or the selfishness, but I refuse to use such troops ever again! When they’re not demanding a fortune in wages, they’re boasting, drinking, carousing and more. I used the Dragon Guard as often against them as I did for anything else during that campaign.”
“Did you manage to impose proper discipline?” Marcus asked.
“Oh, yes. They were mostly former Respublian troopers, so it didn’t take too long to put them back on the straight and narrow, even if it took a few public and very messy executions. So I had twelve thousand disparate and desperate troops against twenty-four thousand veteran Imperial soldiers.”
“Where did you lure them into battle?”
“On Firesoul’s Plain.”
Odacer blinked in surprise. “How did you manage to beat them on Firesoul’s Plain? I’d have thought that terrain perfect for horse troopers like the Fianna.”
“I had the goddess of fortune on my side. Firesoul’s Plain is poor terrain, pockmarked with holes, dips, and gaps. It grows long grass, and little else. The height of the grass and the heavy snows of winter concealed my advantages. I mounted two cohorts of Dragon Guard, and the three others I put on each tip and in the center. I armed everyone with a heavy shield and spear. For whatever reason, the Fianna traveled ahead of their auxiliaries. They charged me on a front that was four legions wide, which I had anticipated by thinning my own lines to a similar length. I won that first battle as much by killing their mounts as I did killing them. I locked them all up in one of your abandoned redoubts, left a full legion of militia to keep an eye on them. After the Fianna, the auxiliaries were easy.”
“Which brings us to our present pass,” Odacer noted clinically.
“As I keep saying to ears stopped up by Imperial indignation, it was not my idea.”
“No, it was not your idea, but you were certainly the pretext for it. Your victory on your ancestor’s plain swayed the Assembled Houses to your side, especially since they did not wish to set a precedent that future Emperors might use to increase the Imperial House’s already formidable power.”
“I was actually there for it, Cousin,” Marcus said. “It was…impressive, to say the least. The first thing they did was revoke Bakun’s original dispensation, which leaves him rather high and dry. They confirmed you in your holdings, and issued a formal demand against the Emperor to make peace with you, under threat of withholding tribute and open war.”
“That’s just it,” Ardeo protested. “I never knew any of this! I was too busy recruiting fresh troops in case the Emperor decided to try again, so how could any of this have been my idea?”
Odacer looked amused. “Your lack of access to a Viantha certainly supports that, doesn’t it?”
“If anyone can be blamed for this, it’s the witches,” Ardeo muttered.
The Sisterhood of Viantha was a powerful force in the scheme of things. Besides their ability to tap into the Divine Power, they had money, clout, and agents scattered throughout Mion. They were fair arbiters, ambassadors, and negotiators, with the added caveat of being an almost instantaneous communication source. One of their abilities was the ability to communicate telepathically with a fellow Viantha so long as there was sunlight.
Through that ability, they had managed to hammer out an agreement between Zeno and the Assembled Houses. Zeno had agreed to give his sister to Ardeo in marriage and elevate Ardeo the rank of Archduke. In exchange, the Rigsraadet agreed to continue paying tribute and to defray the costs of divorcing Valena Orguja Theron from her current husband and marrying her to Ardeo.
Unsurprisingly, this led into another problem. Valena’s husband happened to be Iudaces Starbo Flaccus, a powerful nobleman of old Respublia whom Aurelian Neoptalmus had thought it prudent to tame with a marriage alliance. Zeno had sent one of his favorites to Flaccus’s capital of Taren, and he had informed him that he was to divorce his wife and turn her over to the Duke of Iyaza, soon to be Archduke. The mortally offended Flaccus had had the hapless messenger beheaded, and sent the head to Zeno.
Flaccus had raised the standards of dead Respublia, and begun to rally men to his banner. He managed to do this surprisingly quickly and quietly. The first Zeno had known of the revolt was when the head had arrived.
“Just how angry was the Emperor when his ambassador’s head arrived?” Ardeo asked Marcus.
The youth hesitated. “I don’t think my vocabulary is quite that descriptive. He was already pretty furious when he found out that you beat his Fianna on Firesoul’s Plain, but I can’t think of any word strong enough to match how he was when he got Thasa’s head.”
“I think the Ceremony of Oaths gives the best example of just how angry he was,” Odacer commented. “He managed to get it done in two and a half hours instead of the usual four. The moment I took my oath, he closed the ceremony, marched off his throne, told me to take two legions from Tabon, summon two of my own, take the legions you disgraced at Iyaza, and to grind Flaccus into dust.”
“How convenient of you to remember that I still had one of your legions up north with me,” Ardeo noted dryly.
Ignoring the jibe, Odacer resumed talking. “As you well know, I hustled myself up north to take personal command. The Fianna obey me as Prince of the Sword, but you? They’d tear you apart. Marcus I sent to Aiman to pick up one of mine, and the two from Tabon I sent along the along the road to meet us at a halfway point.”
“Where I found myself engaged to the Emperor’s sister, and soon to be promoted to Archduke, with several restive legions of Fianna and several raw legions of my own.”
“Quite so. I must say, your first Iyazan legion did quite well. And I’m sure you were just as happy to blood them on these easy pickings before you had to blood them on barbarian tribes.”
“Just as well this campaign is almost done,” Ardeo replied grimly. “I’ve had a letter from Iyaza. The barbarians have already begun raiding, never mind the troops we left manning the border forts.”
Marcus sighed. “The problem is, you couldn’t leave enough troops on the border. The four legions of Fianna were more needed up there than down here.”
“Perhaps,” Odacer replied. “However, they were not likely to take orders from Ardeo, especially in the absence of their dead general. However, I’ve already sent orders. These four legions will be sent to Ridamek as soon as the region is pacified, and four of the seven on Ridamek will be brought here. You’ll be taking those home with you, Ardeo.”
“Ah, Odacer, don’t you think that’s a bit…foolhardy? I can hardly be popular with the Fianna right now.”
The look his elder kinsman gave him made Ardeo feel like a little boy again. Fighting to keep his inclination to bow his head and apologize at bay, he returned the look with steady detachment. At least, that was the effect he was aiming for.
“No, it is not foolhardy,” Odacer finally replied, a bit tartly. “As soon as we enter the city, I’ll show Valena her brother’s edict annulling the marriage, and his letter ordering her to marry you. When you leave Taren with those legions, you’ll be brother-in-law of the Emperor himself. That makes you an Imperial Kinsman, and sacrosanct.”
“All he has to do is live that long,” Marcus observed, not altogether lightly.
“Thank you, Marcus,” Ardeo articulated each syllable through grit teeth. “As if I didn’t have enough troubles on my mind.”
“I make a valid point, cousin. You’re a prime target for assassination until you’re safely married off. You should keep your person and your tent under heavy guard at all times.”
Ardeo glared at Marcus, who had grinned impudently the moment he had said ‘married off’. He shifted his look to Odacer. “Do you remember Ossia?”
Odacer blinked. “The ugly daughter of that rich but vulgar merchant of merchants?”
“The same. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to gain control of that massive fortune?”
Odacer smiled slightly. “And she is near Marcus’ age…”
Marcus’s eyes were wide with horror. “I would sooner fall on my sword than marry that ugly bovine! Do you hear me, Father?”
The two older men shared a good laugh at the younger’s expense, but when the laughter ended, Odacer looked as serious as a judge on his tribunal. “I do suggest you raise a bodyguard, Ardeo, for your own safety, and only until the siege is over. Better safe than sorry.”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Nothing is Free
The damp and gloomy hallway seemed endless. With the weak light of the torch trying vainly to burn away the shadows, Cid resigned himself to even more time spent below ground, in these accursed catacombs beneath the city of Torvado, which had belonged to the once mighty, now extinct, Sarykan civilization. Keeping the dead company was not at the top of his list of fun things to do, and wandering around looking for stable paths did not make it onto the list, either. An expert mercenary and adventurer could think of plenty of other things to occupy his time.
The world he lived in was always an interesting puzzle to think about. Long ago, the world was ruled by mages, men armed with the power of gods. That was back when the Sarykan civilization had thrived in ancient Sukeban, and before the mages got a bit too big for their voluminous robes.
The mages back then ruled the same way women did these days. They sought ever greater power, and used their soldiers to pursue their goals. The big difference was that mages had that handy little tool called magic. As would be expected, the deaths were in the millions upon millions, and they nearly ended up destroying the world. They definitely succeeded in burying plenty of their cities, he silently grumped. Their destructive tendencies complicated his job considerably!
Not that he had cause for complaint, or so he told himself. The Duke of Torvado paid high prices for genuine Sarykan artifacts, and money talked. Of course, the only trouble with hunting for those genuine Sarykan artifacts was that they were almost inevitably well hidden in extremely unpleasant locations, with the easy treasures long picked clean by other adventurers, and the more valuable treasures always protected by deadly traps that had visibly claimed more than their fair share of unwary adventurers. He wondered at the perversity of the ancient mage rulers of the world. Did they just like having opportunities to show off their godly powers?
Not that the traps were very original. In his childhood, Cid had been an avid reader and had discovered, much to his amusement, that almost all of the traps within the catacombs had not only been described within many of the books he had read…. they were downright cliché.
With a sigh, he looked around once again. The gloom was typical; the long abandoned Sarykan ruins had been thoroughly buried by millennia and in this case, further buried by the construction of a city. Duke Arutairu had assured him that this particular section should be empty, but Cid was not so sure. More than once, he had been forced to fight off greedy scavengers who did not have the sense to leave him be while he hunted. The sword he had forged had saved his hide more than once, and had been instrumental in getting him out of some of the more… original Sarykan traps.
Squinting into the gloom, Cid thought he saw some light at the end of the tunnel. Strangely, he thought of the Duke’s daughter, Danae. A pretty teenage girl, easily fifteen years his junior, owner of a healthy sense of adventure mingled with naiveté. To her, everything was new and shining. He himself had long ago made peace with the world, and viewed everything with cynicism. That was not totally his fault –not many people could view the world the same after a partner betrayed them into a trap, and left them to die. Among other awful memories. Ever since then, he’d worked alone, not trusting a soul.
He smiled humorlessly as he realized how like a mage that made him. When the world had ended, not all the mages had died. There had been a very few survivors, but nowhere near enough to rule the world. So they withdrew to the northern continent of Basileus, where they quietly built up their strength, trusting no one, working quietly in rumor until they went for round two and declared war on the world.
Cid blinked after he entered a doorway he had seen, startled. Not only was this portion of the catacombs well illuminated by gaps in the ceiling that let in fair amounts of daylight, it was also relatively intact. Looking around, he could see cavernous palaces, aesthetically designed temples, and small homes, all made of stone.
Shrugging, he headed toward the nearest temple, hoping to find something of use inside. Taking the steps two at a time, he kept an eye out for anything suspicious. Surprises could be quite unpleasant for an adventurer, and always worse in a Sarykan temple.
Looking inside, Cid could not resist a slow, incredulous whistle. Not only was the temple altar amply bedecked with golden necklaces and figurines carved of precious stones, the bodies of dozens of his fellow adventurers liberally decorated the temple floor. Appraising the place with an expert eye, he noted several likely-looking traps. Cid stooped to pick up a rock, and then threw it violently against one of the floor tiles. He was not surprised when a pair of sharp metal needles rose from the floor, resulting in what more than likely would have been an unpleasant separation of the left and right sides of the body. Humming a dancing tune, he got to work setting off each trap from a distance, memorizing its location, and then resuming. When he had finally found each trap, he nodded, and then made his way up to the altar, keeping a close eye on his steps.
Once there, he smiled at the treasure. Cid removed a small bag from his belt and began filling it with golden necklaces and rings. The bag was small by necessity, to give him maximum freedom of movement, while allowing him to easily carry out a fortune. “Greed kills more men than bad planning and lack of skill put together,” he murmured softly.
Not that the old mages had been greedy. The War of the Orders had pitted the united nations of women against the mages. Soldiers and fleets sworn to the female rulers of the Order of Despoina fought against the mage knights and their warriors of the Order of Basileus. It was patriarchy versus matriarchy in the most brutal fashion. The Order of Basileus brought northern Seleucia under its direct rule as a standstill developed. Eventually, the Order of Despoina could no longer send men to die fighting against those who had once been their masters. They compromised –Basileus kept all it had won, and Despoina kept all it had preserved.
His small bag firmly tucked away, he turned his eye to the jade figurine. A green as dark as his own eyes, it was ornately detailed, easily capturing the essence of its subject, which, he decided, could not have been more appropriate. The subject was an idealized, perfect depiction of a beautiful Sarykan princess. Well, maybe not perfect –for all he knew, the sculptor had taken artistic liberties with the looks of his subject in order to protect his own hide. The figurine stood two hands tall, her delightfully curved body and long legs wrapped in the beautiful clinging silk dress the Sarykan women seemed to prefer. Her long hair was wrapped in an intricate braid, and her face was, Cid decided, far more patrician than many of the so-called nobles he dealt with. She also bore a striking resemblance to Danae. Some long ago ancestress, perhaps?
Either way, the figurine would make a fat bonus in his wallet. Not that he was stupid enough just to walk up and take it. Something that well carved had to be well protected. Tossing rocks all around it, Cid was puzzled, then alarmed, to note that nothing happened. Nothing whatsoever.
“Wonderful… If I pick it up, it’ll probably let some boulder loose that will chase me out of the city, or drop a rock pillar on me, or some other ridiculous cliché…” he muttered sourly.
Still, he thought it best to be cautious. Picking up a rock that seemed to be about the same weight as the small statue, he carefully took the figurine, then placed the rock in its stead. Looking around warily, he sighed when nothing happened. Making his cautious way out, he paused outside the temple gate. And groaned in annoyance.
His exit was now blocked by giant blades that swung back and forth, a pendulous and fast moving death trap waiting for the slow of foot and wit to attempt to cross. And just his luck that there was no other way out! He would have to run through that mess. Now was a bad time for the Sarykans to have been original. Especially like this. Gritting his teeth, he walked over to his exit, thinking dark thoughts about what he would like to do to the thrice-damned Sarykan architect who had come up with this particularly devious menace.
One…two…three…four…five… Cid quietly counted how long it took for the first blade to reach its outermost point of its arc before it would swing by again. He had a two count window to slip by. He positioned himself to the far left, did his count twice, then on the third repetition of two, leapt through, the blade swinging by where he had been. One down. However many left to go. The worst part so far as he was concerned was that all this effort was for a pittance! Well, a pittance and to avoid becoming dead adventurer on the floor.
I am definitely demanding a bonus for this!
Cid stood in the private reception room of the Duke’s castle, impatient to be gone from the gaudy place. Duke Arutairu, a fat and pasty man with more money then taste, stood behind his desk, greedily pawing at the riches that had come from far beneath his domain. Every time Cid encountered the Duke, he tried to puzzle out how the devil the man had ever inherited the position of battle leader for this frontier province. While women might rule most of the world, places like the frontier and the unclaimed lands were entrusted to men. Just like the days of the War of the Orders, men still did the dying on the battlefield.
Danae stood off to one side, her eyes on him. Or at least, he felt her eyes on him. Every time he turned to look at her, the gaze he was sure was focused on him was elsewhere. Two guards stood at the door of the room, supposedly to protect the Duke, but Cid was not worried. The two were not professional soldiers, just peasants who looked like they knew what they were doing. The Duke really shouldn’t announce that he was all about appearances like that.
“Excellent work, Cid!” the Duke exclaimed, pleased at the treasures Cid had risked his neck to get him. “Now, what was it we agreed on? Fifty copper coins for each treasure you brought back?”
Cid snorted in annoyance, sourly remembering that it always came down to this. Forcing his client to pay up the agreed upon wages. He knew of adventurers who agreed to less, and he could not believe how stupid they were. One client had attempted to double-cross Cid, and had paid for that effrontery with his life. He hated dishonest people, and hated being cheated even more. Glaring at the Duke, in his pompous laces and silks, he coldly declared, “Ten silver for each ring, twenty silver for each necklace, and seven hundred gold for any works of art. At those pre-agreed rates, you now owe me two hundred ninety silver coronets and seven hundred gold crowns. Plus a bonus of my choosing at a time of my choosing.”
The Duke looked up at Cid, angered. It was pretty obvious that no one had ever spoken to the fat pampered bastard like that, especially not a lowborn Alesian frontier peasant. No doubt Arutairu had been scheming on how to wriggle out of what he had promised to pay. “And if I don’t feel like paying?” the fat man asked nastily.
Cid did not bother to draw his sword. Even with their pikes, the two guards were hopelessly overmatched, and they knew it. He swaggered over to the Duke’s desk, leaned in close, and spoke softly in a casual tone that belied his words.
“You know what’s interesting about impalement? How long it can take to die. It all depends on how the impaler does the task. If it’s done right, the impaled takes days to die. You aim through the guts, under the rib cage, into the left lung, and out the back. It’s unfortunate, but the impaled usually end up defecating at this point. But really, that’s no concern of the impaler, so long as he stays in front. Usually, the impaled tries to pull himself free, even if it is a hopeless exercise. I suppose they just want to get away from the smell. But they usually don’t have the strength to get away. So there they stay, stuck in their own shit, unable to breathe, each beat of their heart utter agony.”
The Duke’s brown eyes rose to see the promise of death present in the jade depths of Cid’s eyes. “But I’m certain that you’ll never have to know about that first hand, will you, Duke Arutairu?”
The Duke’s pasty countenance had paled to the color of paraffin wax. By now, he would be busy recalling just whom he was dealing with. Not simply “Cid.” He was dealing with the man who rumor and reputation called “The Mercenary,” a man whom merchant princes and noblewomen feared, who was owed favors by the rich and powerful, a man who enjoyed the high regard of the Grand Duke himself. As Cid’s dishonest client had learned in slow agony and mired in his own excrement, it was a reputation well deserved.
“Ah, yes. Thank you for reminding me,” the Duke said weakly. He gestured to his daughter, his hand festooned with rings as gaudy as the reception room. “Danae? Please lead our friend to the treasurer.”
Smiling shyly, the girl curtsied, her mane of brown hair firmly tucked into an intricate braid. Preceding him out the door, she led the way toward the treasury, glancing back at him every few steps with eyes filled with admiration. Following her, he began to relax, to ponder the nature of whatever bonus he would demand. It was probably her figure that provoked the errant thought, but maybe his bonus would not be monetary, this time. Just maybe, it was time he settled down with a pretty wife. After all, he could not keep adventuring forever. Eventually, he would grow old, and his wits would wither. And he rather liked the thought of twisting the knife into this Duke’s pride. But for the moment, the bonus could wait. He needed to get paid.
Nothing is free. Especially not me.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
The world he lived in was always an interesting puzzle to think about. Long ago, the world was ruled by mages, men armed with the power of gods. That was back when the Sarykan civilization had thrived in ancient Sukeban, and before the mages got a bit too big for their voluminous robes.
The mages back then ruled the same way women did these days. They sought ever greater power, and used their soldiers to pursue their goals. The big difference was that mages had that handy little tool called magic. As would be expected, the deaths were in the millions upon millions, and they nearly ended up destroying the world. They definitely succeeded in burying plenty of their cities, he silently grumped. Their destructive tendencies complicated his job considerably!
Not that he had cause for complaint, or so he told himself. The Duke of Torvado paid high prices for genuine Sarykan artifacts, and money talked. Of course, the only trouble with hunting for those genuine Sarykan artifacts was that they were almost inevitably well hidden in extremely unpleasant locations, with the easy treasures long picked clean by other adventurers, and the more valuable treasures always protected by deadly traps that had visibly claimed more than their fair share of unwary adventurers. He wondered at the perversity of the ancient mage rulers of the world. Did they just like having opportunities to show off their godly powers?
Not that the traps were very original. In his childhood, Cid had been an avid reader and had discovered, much to his amusement, that almost all of the traps within the catacombs had not only been described within many of the books he had read…. they were downright cliché.
With a sigh, he looked around once again. The gloom was typical; the long abandoned Sarykan ruins had been thoroughly buried by millennia and in this case, further buried by the construction of a city. Duke Arutairu had assured him that this particular section should be empty, but Cid was not so sure. More than once, he had been forced to fight off greedy scavengers who did not have the sense to leave him be while he hunted. The sword he had forged had saved his hide more than once, and had been instrumental in getting him out of some of the more… original Sarykan traps.
Squinting into the gloom, Cid thought he saw some light at the end of the tunnel. Strangely, he thought of the Duke’s daughter, Danae. A pretty teenage girl, easily fifteen years his junior, owner of a healthy sense of adventure mingled with naiveté. To her, everything was new and shining. He himself had long ago made peace with the world, and viewed everything with cynicism. That was not totally his fault –not many people could view the world the same after a partner betrayed them into a trap, and left them to die. Among other awful memories. Ever since then, he’d worked alone, not trusting a soul.
He smiled humorlessly as he realized how like a mage that made him. When the world had ended, not all the mages had died. There had been a very few survivors, but nowhere near enough to rule the world. So they withdrew to the northern continent of Basileus, where they quietly built up their strength, trusting no one, working quietly in rumor until they went for round two and declared war on the world.
Cid blinked after he entered a doorway he had seen, startled. Not only was this portion of the catacombs well illuminated by gaps in the ceiling that let in fair amounts of daylight, it was also relatively intact. Looking around, he could see cavernous palaces, aesthetically designed temples, and small homes, all made of stone.
Shrugging, he headed toward the nearest temple, hoping to find something of use inside. Taking the steps two at a time, he kept an eye out for anything suspicious. Surprises could be quite unpleasant for an adventurer, and always worse in a Sarykan temple.
Looking inside, Cid could not resist a slow, incredulous whistle. Not only was the temple altar amply bedecked with golden necklaces and figurines carved of precious stones, the bodies of dozens of his fellow adventurers liberally decorated the temple floor. Appraising the place with an expert eye, he noted several likely-looking traps. Cid stooped to pick up a rock, and then threw it violently against one of the floor tiles. He was not surprised when a pair of sharp metal needles rose from the floor, resulting in what more than likely would have been an unpleasant separation of the left and right sides of the body. Humming a dancing tune, he got to work setting off each trap from a distance, memorizing its location, and then resuming. When he had finally found each trap, he nodded, and then made his way up to the altar, keeping a close eye on his steps.
Once there, he smiled at the treasure. Cid removed a small bag from his belt and began filling it with golden necklaces and rings. The bag was small by necessity, to give him maximum freedom of movement, while allowing him to easily carry out a fortune. “Greed kills more men than bad planning and lack of skill put together,” he murmured softly.
Not that the old mages had been greedy. The War of the Orders had pitted the united nations of women against the mages. Soldiers and fleets sworn to the female rulers of the Order of Despoina fought against the mage knights and their warriors of the Order of Basileus. It was patriarchy versus matriarchy in the most brutal fashion. The Order of Basileus brought northern Seleucia under its direct rule as a standstill developed. Eventually, the Order of Despoina could no longer send men to die fighting against those who had once been their masters. They compromised –Basileus kept all it had won, and Despoina kept all it had preserved.
His small bag firmly tucked away, he turned his eye to the jade figurine. A green as dark as his own eyes, it was ornately detailed, easily capturing the essence of its subject, which, he decided, could not have been more appropriate. The subject was an idealized, perfect depiction of a beautiful Sarykan princess. Well, maybe not perfect –for all he knew, the sculptor had taken artistic liberties with the looks of his subject in order to protect his own hide. The figurine stood two hands tall, her delightfully curved body and long legs wrapped in the beautiful clinging silk dress the Sarykan women seemed to prefer. Her long hair was wrapped in an intricate braid, and her face was, Cid decided, far more patrician than many of the so-called nobles he dealt with. She also bore a striking resemblance to Danae. Some long ago ancestress, perhaps?
Either way, the figurine would make a fat bonus in his wallet. Not that he was stupid enough just to walk up and take it. Something that well carved had to be well protected. Tossing rocks all around it, Cid was puzzled, then alarmed, to note that nothing happened. Nothing whatsoever.
“Wonderful… If I pick it up, it’ll probably let some boulder loose that will chase me out of the city, or drop a rock pillar on me, or some other ridiculous cliché…” he muttered sourly.
Still, he thought it best to be cautious. Picking up a rock that seemed to be about the same weight as the small statue, he carefully took the figurine, then placed the rock in its stead. Looking around warily, he sighed when nothing happened. Making his cautious way out, he paused outside the temple gate. And groaned in annoyance.
His exit was now blocked by giant blades that swung back and forth, a pendulous and fast moving death trap waiting for the slow of foot and wit to attempt to cross. And just his luck that there was no other way out! He would have to run through that mess. Now was a bad time for the Sarykans to have been original. Especially like this. Gritting his teeth, he walked over to his exit, thinking dark thoughts about what he would like to do to the thrice-damned Sarykan architect who had come up with this particularly devious menace.
One…two…three…four…five… Cid quietly counted how long it took for the first blade to reach its outermost point of its arc before it would swing by again. He had a two count window to slip by. He positioned himself to the far left, did his count twice, then on the third repetition of two, leapt through, the blade swinging by where he had been. One down. However many left to go. The worst part so far as he was concerned was that all this effort was for a pittance! Well, a pittance and to avoid becoming dead adventurer on the floor.
I am definitely demanding a bonus for this!
***
Cid stood in the private reception room of the Duke’s castle, impatient to be gone from the gaudy place. Duke Arutairu, a fat and pasty man with more money then taste, stood behind his desk, greedily pawing at the riches that had come from far beneath his domain. Every time Cid encountered the Duke, he tried to puzzle out how the devil the man had ever inherited the position of battle leader for this frontier province. While women might rule most of the world, places like the frontier and the unclaimed lands were entrusted to men. Just like the days of the War of the Orders, men still did the dying on the battlefield.
Danae stood off to one side, her eyes on him. Or at least, he felt her eyes on him. Every time he turned to look at her, the gaze he was sure was focused on him was elsewhere. Two guards stood at the door of the room, supposedly to protect the Duke, but Cid was not worried. The two were not professional soldiers, just peasants who looked like they knew what they were doing. The Duke really shouldn’t announce that he was all about appearances like that.
“Excellent work, Cid!” the Duke exclaimed, pleased at the treasures Cid had risked his neck to get him. “Now, what was it we agreed on? Fifty copper coins for each treasure you brought back?”
Cid snorted in annoyance, sourly remembering that it always came down to this. Forcing his client to pay up the agreed upon wages. He knew of adventurers who agreed to less, and he could not believe how stupid they were. One client had attempted to double-cross Cid, and had paid for that effrontery with his life. He hated dishonest people, and hated being cheated even more. Glaring at the Duke, in his pompous laces and silks, he coldly declared, “Ten silver for each ring, twenty silver for each necklace, and seven hundred gold for any works of art. At those pre-agreed rates, you now owe me two hundred ninety silver coronets and seven hundred gold crowns. Plus a bonus of my choosing at a time of my choosing.”
The Duke looked up at Cid, angered. It was pretty obvious that no one had ever spoken to the fat pampered bastard like that, especially not a lowborn Alesian frontier peasant. No doubt Arutairu had been scheming on how to wriggle out of what he had promised to pay. “And if I don’t feel like paying?” the fat man asked nastily.
Cid did not bother to draw his sword. Even with their pikes, the two guards were hopelessly overmatched, and they knew it. He swaggered over to the Duke’s desk, leaned in close, and spoke softly in a casual tone that belied his words.
“You know what’s interesting about impalement? How long it can take to die. It all depends on how the impaler does the task. If it’s done right, the impaled takes days to die. You aim through the guts, under the rib cage, into the left lung, and out the back. It’s unfortunate, but the impaled usually end up defecating at this point. But really, that’s no concern of the impaler, so long as he stays in front. Usually, the impaled tries to pull himself free, even if it is a hopeless exercise. I suppose they just want to get away from the smell. But they usually don’t have the strength to get away. So there they stay, stuck in their own shit, unable to breathe, each beat of their heart utter agony.”
The Duke’s brown eyes rose to see the promise of death present in the jade depths of Cid’s eyes. “But I’m certain that you’ll never have to know about that first hand, will you, Duke Arutairu?”
The Duke’s pasty countenance had paled to the color of paraffin wax. By now, he would be busy recalling just whom he was dealing with. Not simply “Cid.” He was dealing with the man who rumor and reputation called “The Mercenary,” a man whom merchant princes and noblewomen feared, who was owed favors by the rich and powerful, a man who enjoyed the high regard of the Grand Duke himself. As Cid’s dishonest client had learned in slow agony and mired in his own excrement, it was a reputation well deserved.
“Ah, yes. Thank you for reminding me,” the Duke said weakly. He gestured to his daughter, his hand festooned with rings as gaudy as the reception room. “Danae? Please lead our friend to the treasurer.”
Smiling shyly, the girl curtsied, her mane of brown hair firmly tucked into an intricate braid. Preceding him out the door, she led the way toward the treasury, glancing back at him every few steps with eyes filled with admiration. Following her, he began to relax, to ponder the nature of whatever bonus he would demand. It was probably her figure that provoked the errant thought, but maybe his bonus would not be monetary, this time. Just maybe, it was time he settled down with a pretty wife. After all, he could not keep adventuring forever. Eventually, he would grow old, and his wits would wither. And he rather liked the thought of twisting the knife into this Duke’s pride. But for the moment, the bonus could wait. He needed to get paid.
Nothing is free. Especially not me.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Friday, August 27, 2010
Hegemon's Seven Swords
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
White kan-dao, Imperator.
Pride incarnated.
Justice of the King.
The sole ruler of the people creates a world for them.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Black kan-dao, Kshtriyani
Gentle other half.
Loss of idol.
The ideals and dreams of the innocent gives the people hope.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Reversed blade, sakabato Fukei
Painful mercy.
Punishment without death.
The stern teachings of a guardian educate the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Flawless steel, katana Gekkabijin.
Lonely moonlight.
Solitude of transience.
The beauty of sad evanescence grants the people appreciation.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Serbian blade, schiavona Caudillo.
Fearless warlord.
Inspiration by example.
The model of the hero inspires the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Ancient memory, gladius Dignitas.
Valued possession.
Legacy of honor.
The name of the sovereign defines the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
The black sword, Desrona
Truest mind.
Origin of birth.
The mind at the beginning binds the people to the vision.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
White kan-dao, Imperator.
Pride incarnated.
Justice of the King.
The sole ruler of the people creates a world for them.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Black kan-dao, Kshtriyani
Gentle other half.
Loss of idol.
The ideals and dreams of the innocent gives the people hope.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Reversed blade, sakabato Fukei
Painful mercy.
Punishment without death.
The stern teachings of a guardian educate the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Flawless steel, katana Gekkabijin.
Lonely moonlight.
Solitude of transience.
The beauty of sad evanescence grants the people appreciation.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Serbian blade, schiavona Caudillo.
Fearless warlord.
Inspiration by example.
The model of the hero inspires the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
Ancient memory, gladius Dignitas.
Valued possession.
Legacy of honor.
The name of the sovereign defines the people.
A lifetime since Pride gave birth to the Hegemon.
The black sword, Desrona
Truest mind.
Origin of birth.
The mind at the beginning binds the people to the vision.
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Apeiron Streets, Part 2
The young lieutenant cursed the firefight. When Captain Aram had taken a slug to the chest, it had taken all of his efforts to drag the captain behind the dubious protection of a trash dumpster. Staunching the blood flow, he monitored his com link, listening to the reports of entrenched combat. Assuring himself that the captain would make it, the lieutenant’s hand strayed to his pistol. Shaking his head, he reached for the plasma sword he always carried, a modern-day anachronism in a world of projectile combat. Glancing at the titanium blade, he pressed the switch to activate the plasma edge.
Plasma swords were a special kind of weapon that merged the old with the new. They could be used like regular blades for covert operations. When the plasma emitter was turned on, it produced a blade-shaped energy field that followed the original sword edge. Only near-indestructible layered molecular alloy swords could deal with the plasma edge. All other metals melted. Iullus Oda leapt from cover and adopted an en guard position as his amaranthine blade lit up the night.
The shooting stopped briefly as the thugs were confused by a blade-wielding Guard, and his comrades shouted for him to get out of the way. It did not take long for the thugs to decide not to ignore such a deceptively easy target; they opened fire.
As expected.
The slug on the standard sonic shot knock-off moved at a speed of 300 meters per second. The sonic blast that preceded the slug moved at 340 meters per second. Sonic rounds were a gimmick designed to incapacitate the target and void any miraculous escapes. However, like all projectiles, they depended on the user’s skill and the target’s luck. Relying solely on instinct, Iullus had launched himself into a lightning-quick evasive pattern, repeating no movement as he leveraged his incredible physical agility to become a human blur. He had trained under the fierce tutelage of one of the last surviving masters of the sword art in the harshest conditions on Kore for most of his life. Iullus found his current action to be little more than a nuisance. In a quick bark over the comnet, he ordered some of his troopers to circle around the thugs to cut off escape.
Three thugs had discarded their sonic guns, their weapons probably slagged by repeated fire. They all drew some sort of blade weapon, obviously intending to take Iullus on as a group and eliminate him as a threat. With a mournful little shake of his head, Iullus faked a retreat, then used his speed to jump toward the alley wall before he catapulted from the wall and into the thugs’ midst. Wasting no time, he neutralized them, using his plasma sword to chop off the thugs’ weapon arms. Two of them were crippled before their minds could grasp what had happened. The last remaining thug tried to stab Iullus’s throat with a knife; Iullus easily dodged and sliced off his arm as well. The plasma sword cauterized the wounds before they could bleed, and the three screamed in pain before falling into shock.
Iullus heard the shout to run away before he heard the peculiar implosion of a fired stunshot. A series of grunts followed a several stunshots brought down the criminals. Almost stereotypically, the reinforcement vans arrived as soon as the criminals had been secured in confinement rings. Police under the command of the Office of Planetary Security rushed out and secured the scene, attempting to isolate the area to find out what had happened. Two medics picked up Captain Aram and carted him into an ambulance.
Iullus observed the inept attempts of the sergeant-commander of this particular squad at trying to get information. Not feeling particularly forgiving, he shoved away the surprised man, picked up the thug he had observed as the leader, and slammed him into the wall. In direct contrast with his action, he calmly asked, “What went down here?”
“You ain’t gettin’ notin’ outta me, Rep,” the street enforced snarled. The man had a smashed nose, while his face and arms were decorated with the various scars that betrayed his status as an enforcer and biker. Iullus knew from previous encounters that these thugs had only one thing of value in their torrid existences, and that was their lives. Gang members held an exaggerated fear of the Republican Guard, whose reputation had unfairly been twisted into the role of brutal fanatics. He may as well have some fun with it.
“Is that so?” he asked, slowly adjusting his grip on the man so that he gripped the biker’s throat. “This is not officially a crime scene yet, you know. I can kill you, here and now. Do you think the police will betray us when we’re making their jobs easier? No one will know. Anyone who finds you and your dead friends will think that it was just another gang battle. No big deal. Want to risk it?”
Fear rippled across the man’s face. He shook his head, eyes glazed with terror. Nodding his acknowledgement of the thug’s acquiescence, Iullus let him slide to the ground. “I see we’re communicating. Start talking. Who are you? What gang do you belong to? What happened before we found you?”
Under the guise of getting up, the thug went for a concealed knife. Iullus had seen the knife well before the thug went for it. Viciously kicking him in the face, Iullus sent him sprawling. “Don’t try it, or you’ll find yourself in endless agony. Answer my questions, and all you’ll get is a comfortable prison cell.”
Sullenly, the thug sat up and glared at Iullus. “Name’s Shred. Wit da Red Stingers. We was jus doin’ some business ‘fore you damned Reps showed.”
“What sort of ‘business’?” Iullus asked, observing the orange specks in the ganger’s eyes that betrayed addiction to the drug A-17.
“Jus’ da usual. Notin’ to bother us wit.”
That flat-out lie was punished with a second kick, this one directed at Shred’s chest. Aware that the thug might need convincing, Iullus drew his plasma sword. Before he even activated it, Shred blurted, “Iight! I get da idea! We was on da watch for some KoreCorp delivery!”
“KoreCorp? Why did you want to steal KoreCorp’s property?” Iullus asked. KoreCorp was Kore’s chief electronic producer and innovator, with contacts with many high-ranking politicians.
“Big Boss tol us dat KoreCorp came out wit some new tech. Wanted it delivered, real discreet like, to some folks. We was to swipe it and make ‘em pay us to give it back. So we took the truck, and dat’s all I know! Gonna haveta ask Big Boss if’n you want ta know more!”
Iullus perked up at mention of Big Boss. The leader of the Red Stingers, he was a fat hedonist who had muscled his way up to the top slot of one of Apeiron’s two gangs. He had his hand in extortion, drug-dealing, assassination…anything punishable by law was his domain. His only rivals were the Camon Family, run by a woman known as the Lady. Loathing each other with a passion no street rumors could explain, they fought for control of Apeiron’s ghettoes.
“Where’s Big Boss?” Iullus demanded. When the answer was not immediately forthcoming, he turned on his sword. “Where?!”
“I dunno!” Shred screamed, terrified. “We was jus at our hangout in the Gamino when he came and tol’ us wha he wanted!”
Disgusted, Iullus indicated the impressed sergeant-commander should take him away. The rest of his squad gathered around him, awaiting his orders. Before, there had been an air of resentment to these enlisted men when near either Iullus or Aram. Now, they seemed to respect him for his willingness to fight alongside them. Of course, acting like one of the heroes from the stories they’ve heard since childhood didn’t hurt none either.
Iullus yanked off his combat helmet, turning to regard each Guardsman in turn. He was a handsome young man, but his hard eyes betrayed he was more mature than his years. He was black-haired and black-eyed, a rarity among Korens. After regarding all of his squad, he smiled wearily. “Gentlemen, it seems we had some more action than we had expected. Since our shift is almost over anyway, we’ll return to HQ and file a formal report. Thank you for your efforts, all of you. We’ll see if we can have some more fun tomorrow.”
Several of the other Guards had followed Iullus’s example in removing their uncomfortable helmets. One of them, young and still feeling the aftermath of adrenaline, exclaimed, “Lieutenant, begging your pardon, but that’s your idea of fun?!”
Iullus joined the other Guards in laughter. After he caught his breath, he replied, “My idea of fun is waiting at home for me, Private! And I intend to get there before she gets worried!”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Plasma swords were a special kind of weapon that merged the old with the new. They could be used like regular blades for covert operations. When the plasma emitter was turned on, it produced a blade-shaped energy field that followed the original sword edge. Only near-indestructible layered molecular alloy swords could deal with the plasma edge. All other metals melted. Iullus Oda leapt from cover and adopted an en guard position as his amaranthine blade lit up the night.
The shooting stopped briefly as the thugs were confused by a blade-wielding Guard, and his comrades shouted for him to get out of the way. It did not take long for the thugs to decide not to ignore such a deceptively easy target; they opened fire.
As expected.
The slug on the standard sonic shot knock-off moved at a speed of 300 meters per second. The sonic blast that preceded the slug moved at 340 meters per second. Sonic rounds were a gimmick designed to incapacitate the target and void any miraculous escapes. However, like all projectiles, they depended on the user’s skill and the target’s luck. Relying solely on instinct, Iullus had launched himself into a lightning-quick evasive pattern, repeating no movement as he leveraged his incredible physical agility to become a human blur. He had trained under the fierce tutelage of one of the last surviving masters of the sword art in the harshest conditions on Kore for most of his life. Iullus found his current action to be little more than a nuisance. In a quick bark over the comnet, he ordered some of his troopers to circle around the thugs to cut off escape.
Three thugs had discarded their sonic guns, their weapons probably slagged by repeated fire. They all drew some sort of blade weapon, obviously intending to take Iullus on as a group and eliminate him as a threat. With a mournful little shake of his head, Iullus faked a retreat, then used his speed to jump toward the alley wall before he catapulted from the wall and into the thugs’ midst. Wasting no time, he neutralized them, using his plasma sword to chop off the thugs’ weapon arms. Two of them were crippled before their minds could grasp what had happened. The last remaining thug tried to stab Iullus’s throat with a knife; Iullus easily dodged and sliced off his arm as well. The plasma sword cauterized the wounds before they could bleed, and the three screamed in pain before falling into shock.
Iullus heard the shout to run away before he heard the peculiar implosion of a fired stunshot. A series of grunts followed a several stunshots brought down the criminals. Almost stereotypically, the reinforcement vans arrived as soon as the criminals had been secured in confinement rings. Police under the command of the Office of Planetary Security rushed out and secured the scene, attempting to isolate the area to find out what had happened. Two medics picked up Captain Aram and carted him into an ambulance.
Iullus observed the inept attempts of the sergeant-commander of this particular squad at trying to get information. Not feeling particularly forgiving, he shoved away the surprised man, picked up the thug he had observed as the leader, and slammed him into the wall. In direct contrast with his action, he calmly asked, “What went down here?”
“You ain’t gettin’ notin’ outta me, Rep,” the street enforced snarled. The man had a smashed nose, while his face and arms were decorated with the various scars that betrayed his status as an enforcer and biker. Iullus knew from previous encounters that these thugs had only one thing of value in their torrid existences, and that was their lives. Gang members held an exaggerated fear of the Republican Guard, whose reputation had unfairly been twisted into the role of brutal fanatics. He may as well have some fun with it.
“Is that so?” he asked, slowly adjusting his grip on the man so that he gripped the biker’s throat. “This is not officially a crime scene yet, you know. I can kill you, here and now. Do you think the police will betray us when we’re making their jobs easier? No one will know. Anyone who finds you and your dead friends will think that it was just another gang battle. No big deal. Want to risk it?”
Fear rippled across the man’s face. He shook his head, eyes glazed with terror. Nodding his acknowledgement of the thug’s acquiescence, Iullus let him slide to the ground. “I see we’re communicating. Start talking. Who are you? What gang do you belong to? What happened before we found you?”
Under the guise of getting up, the thug went for a concealed knife. Iullus had seen the knife well before the thug went for it. Viciously kicking him in the face, Iullus sent him sprawling. “Don’t try it, or you’ll find yourself in endless agony. Answer my questions, and all you’ll get is a comfortable prison cell.”
Sullenly, the thug sat up and glared at Iullus. “Name’s Shred. Wit da Red Stingers. We was jus doin’ some business ‘fore you damned Reps showed.”
“What sort of ‘business’?” Iullus asked, observing the orange specks in the ganger’s eyes that betrayed addiction to the drug A-17.
“Jus’ da usual. Notin’ to bother us wit.”
That flat-out lie was punished with a second kick, this one directed at Shred’s chest. Aware that the thug might need convincing, Iullus drew his plasma sword. Before he even activated it, Shred blurted, “Iight! I get da idea! We was on da watch for some KoreCorp delivery!”
“KoreCorp? Why did you want to steal KoreCorp’s property?” Iullus asked. KoreCorp was Kore’s chief electronic producer and innovator, with contacts with many high-ranking politicians.
“Big Boss tol us dat KoreCorp came out wit some new tech. Wanted it delivered, real discreet like, to some folks. We was to swipe it and make ‘em pay us to give it back. So we took the truck, and dat’s all I know! Gonna haveta ask Big Boss if’n you want ta know more!”
Iullus perked up at mention of Big Boss. The leader of the Red Stingers, he was a fat hedonist who had muscled his way up to the top slot of one of Apeiron’s two gangs. He had his hand in extortion, drug-dealing, assassination…anything punishable by law was his domain. His only rivals were the Camon Family, run by a woman known as the Lady. Loathing each other with a passion no street rumors could explain, they fought for control of Apeiron’s ghettoes.
“Where’s Big Boss?” Iullus demanded. When the answer was not immediately forthcoming, he turned on his sword. “Where?!”
“I dunno!” Shred screamed, terrified. “We was jus at our hangout in the Gamino when he came and tol’ us wha he wanted!”
Disgusted, Iullus indicated the impressed sergeant-commander should take him away. The rest of his squad gathered around him, awaiting his orders. Before, there had been an air of resentment to these enlisted men when near either Iullus or Aram. Now, they seemed to respect him for his willingness to fight alongside them. Of course, acting like one of the heroes from the stories they’ve heard since childhood didn’t hurt none either.
Iullus yanked off his combat helmet, turning to regard each Guardsman in turn. He was a handsome young man, but his hard eyes betrayed he was more mature than his years. He was black-haired and black-eyed, a rarity among Korens. After regarding all of his squad, he smiled wearily. “Gentlemen, it seems we had some more action than we had expected. Since our shift is almost over anyway, we’ll return to HQ and file a formal report. Thank you for your efforts, all of you. We’ll see if we can have some more fun tomorrow.”
Several of the other Guards had followed Iullus’s example in removing their uncomfortable helmets. One of them, young and still feeling the aftermath of adrenaline, exclaimed, “Lieutenant, begging your pardon, but that’s your idea of fun?!”
Iullus joined the other Guards in laughter. After he caught his breath, he replied, “My idea of fun is waiting at home for me, Private! And I intend to get there before she gets worried!”
This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
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