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Fit for Life

Wow, fast-forward on the Bishop track!

And what a novel idea - put a Bishop's crook in the hands of the only one who won't be a crooked Bishop!

Something that's been bothering me for a while...when the Quistadores were Snatched, were there Bishops among them? Because otherwise...how could they even ordain priests?

I decided I didn't want to keep sticking in elements of the "Bishop Plot" in chapter after chapter, so I just did it all at once. If I ever do this for publication, I'll probably spread it out more, developing the brother/Brother's character a little more, and some of the other players in it (Centurion Vargas, for one).

The "only one"? Not really. But the only one they could get their hands on, and have influence with, and those are rather the reasons they got the idea -- here was a good man, there was a dying bishop..... and that reminds me: I expected someone to jump on Esteban's ass! (Not because it's cute, which it is.)

We may run across some Quistador history in a future chapter, so I won't reveal anything, but consider who else is among them, and whether they would have arisen out of nothing, and the relations between the two branches.....

Thanks Kuli.
Is this a small start of a Revolution in the Church ?
Roads, bridges and tunnels abuilding, so industrious and everyone working together with a common aim.
How will the new Bishop fare??
Wonderful weaving by our Master Author.
Please continue
Harry

A small revolution, maybe, for now. First they need a printing press that will turn out things that look like they were hand-written, I'd think.

Think of it as a foothold.
 
Yeah, will Esteban just get away with murdering the old Bishop? I mean, he may have been corrupt, and old, and sick, and mentally pretty much not-there mentally, but he was a living human being, and Esteban poisoned him. I don't see where that's OK.
 
Kuli,
A most intriguing 20 plus pages that I've finally been able to sit down and read!

Yeah, the assisted blissful sleep of the Bishop does give me some trouble.
If Streaker and Pounces instinctively know the evil of the inquisition and go after them while ignoring who they know are soldiers, perhaps Esteban, coming up from the dregs of society, and having the Scout Spark, also "knew" the evilness of the bishop, not just his senility. Maybe he was truly doing God's work. He did help the man pass peacefully in his sleep.

I'm still digesting the whole enchilada of activity -

There's gold in them thar tunnels - under river beds.
Devon has certainly been busy with his burgeoning crew.

Let's buy up the city block - and re-do it to suit our purposes - including ownership of the secret tunnels - love the Stables idea - They are going to need them in the not too distant future, afterall.

And, don Antonio, we have a surprise for you - you know your estate, the one you had to flee from because of the Duke? Well, we bought it back from your creditors for you.

There's so much going on back and forth, and my tired old brain can't remember all the details.

But, my overriding reaction is all positive. How could it be anything else with your artistic mastery?
:=D: :wave:
 
WOW! SO much More than I was hoping for, let alone expecting!! (!w!)

But, First, Dear Kuli ...

I hope, and trust, that you realize "our" kidding/nudging (downright intrusive prodding), is merely our playful way of letting you know that we [STRIKE]NEED OUR FIX![/STRIKE] miss you, are thinking of you, and are wishing you well! :kiss: (*8*)

And though "we", undoubtedly, Under estimate all of the trials/tribulations, and hard Work, that you go through, in order to bring us this fantastic story, we can not Over appreciate all that you have created, and are still accomplishing! WOW! (ww) :=D:

Now ...

"Pounces" ... I like that! Such a suitable name for Esteban's new "Buddy"! It fits them both, actually, quite well! ..|

Never underestimate the Power of rumors! Talk about creating a "spin'! However, I'm still wondering how the Hell "Thed's" image appeared, re-appeared, and then vanished from that wall! Maybe, perchance, there might have been some "higher" intervention, too? Hmmm?? :confused:

And, yes, I, too, am a bit "uncomfortable" with Esteban's "assisting" the old Bishop's "relief from suffering". Though he didn't actually poison him directly (And, was it really a "poison"? Esteban tasted it.), he was still implicit in "hurrying" the old guy's peaceful demise. And, from what I gather, though he may have been "somewhat" corrupt, this Bishop was not, necessarily, a "Bad" one. Perhaps it can be looked at as a bit of "expedient Mercy", as Oz extended to Lady de Logrono ...

Which brings another "thought". Though it was "arranged", how, exactly, did the Monsignor "succumb"??? Seems "The Hand" can accomplish wondrous things! :lol:

And, who the Hell is the "watchful Stranger"??? So many questions! #-o

Tunneling for travel, then, "Oh, Shist!" ... no, wait! ... there's Gold!! :D

But ... what I was actually looking for ... What about those darned Brits?!! ](*,)

THANK YOU! Kuli!! And, yeah!, the more you give "Us", the MORE we're going to want!! Just one of the consequences of getting us ALL Hooked! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 

Exercises​


Fifty horses came to a halt five hundred meters from the edge of the wooded hills. On the twenty-seven of those which bore men, the senior leftenant lifted his telescope to his right eye and scanned the effective border. His fellow officer did the same.

“The actual entrance is blocked”, Aodh observed. “Archer platforms in the tree line.”

“Loyalists, or rebels?” wondered Heueil. “From the description, they could be either.”

“Doesn’t matter, really”, his superior responded. “The only way to find out is to try them. The one answer would be wonderful, the other would doom us. So we ignore the official entrance.”

The two leftenants were products of Cavern Castle’s school for older students. Both were nineteen, both had adjusted quickly to patterns of thought and speech Snatched from modern America. Both excelled in reading and arithmetic; both were excellent marksmen; both had shown leadership since an early age. They were the best Ryan had been able to put his hands on for implementing his decision to not just send the horses Rigel had asked for, but kill two birds with one stone by sending riflemen to make sure those horses got where they were meant to and to provide aid for the Regent, Lord Ortega. Without Scout, Druid, or full Healer – two students rode with them – they had only themselves to rely on. That they’d become very much a team served Ryan’s intent well.

“I say we ride off some and circle left while we do. Disappear behind a ridge, then cut back right and make our way through some unprotected spot. There’s not much brush under those trees”, Heueil finished.

“Sounds workable.” We stop every now and then to survey the tree line, too.” He signaled; the company turned to follow.


They snuck in under the cover of darkness. Every piece of gear was padded and strapped snug, but not tight – tight could squeak, and squeaks carry in the night, as well as the clink of metal on metal. The three who led were veterans of the woods, good hunters with an instinct for paths without serious obstacles, able to distinguish by feel between a branch that could be bent aside over and over and one that had to be clipped or tied back. Aodh followed close on the leaders; Heueil shepherded the rear.

There were no ranks, and not much in the way of files. Despite horses’ hooves being larger, and not even the same shape, they wanted to leave a path looking as natural as possible. Aodh pondered what it might be like to hunt something as large as a horse – venison was fine, but having only rabbit for an option seemed limited. Occasionally he glanced back, not that he could see more than the next two or three horses. But the stealth made him nervous; their training had been for battle in an open field, not sneaking through the woods – and an odd woods at that; there were trees here unlike any he’d seen. Maybe there was game he’d never seen....


“Leftenant – light.” The rifleman’s voice snapped him out of his reverie. Instead of thick forest, they were among sparsely scattered trees. Ahead were fields; fields meant people, and people meant they could try starting the next part of their plan.

“Hate taking people’s clothes”, Heueil said to him more than an hour later. Some of their number were better at infiltration than others; those had spent the better part of an hour finding and making off with clothes to outfit the company.

“We left them copper”, Aodh reminded him, “enough they should be able to get better. Now all we have to do is make our horses look like their heavy pullers while we look like peasants.”

“Some wagons would help.”

“We’re not making off with wagons – we can try to buy a couple, though.” The expedition’s commander yawned. “But not close to here. And not soon – soon, we need a place to hide and sleep.”



Manuel saw the line of horses take a game trail into Lord Tempus’ protected wood. That was odd, so he watched. About one man per two horses, he judged – important horses, then, not that it was his place to wonder about the doings of lords. He’d heard some lords were trying to breed horses for speed, yet again; that would explain why they were moving with such protection and using back paths. He watched the last horse disappear among the trees, wished the lord luck with his breeding, and turned back to his watch; if he let vermin among the vendain plants, he’d be in trouble with his own lord.



Stefan saw a line of horses against the sky. In the dim light, they looked like ordinary Refuge horses, solid and patient. Men led them, two or three horses per man; two wagons moved in the middle.

It seemed unusual, and he tried to make sense of it. Perhaps a lord had acquired a large new number of horses? Perhaps a horse trader, making deliveries? He liked the second one better. Either way, he decided, he’d better tell the mayor – in the morning; he wasn’t going to skip supper over some horses, and would rather appear freshly washed with no dust from work.



“Two and a half kilometers”, the scout judged. Aodh agreed; he’d estimated three, but scouts were better at distances; it was one reason they were scouts.

“We have to go in parties”, Heueil stated. “All at once, we’d attract too much attention.” That was a problem they wanted to avoid: in the three and a half days it had taken them to wend their way toward San Tesifón, they’d learned enough about the local situation to know that the town was divided, and enemies of Earl Rigel’s ally the Regent abounded in the countryside.

“Even in parties we may attract attention”, Aodh pointed out. “So we’ll have to stay close enough together for support, in case. Two scout parties first, then the wagons – if the wagons get in trouble, there’ll be help ahead and behind. We stay close enough together for support.” His statements were turned into orders by their sergeants, so within ten minutes the first group had led off. Others circled as far as concealment allowed, so they wouldn’t all be coming from the same origin.

“Half a klick to go”, Aodh muttered. His party was the last; he was estimating the distance between the first party and the city. “Let’s close in.” That would signal the others to close the gaps more and more. He urged his horse to a fast walk, and started to jog – none were riding in most of the groups, since peasants didn’t do so often. Thirty seconds into his first walking break, he saw their first party pause at the gate – and stop.

To his right, Heueil’s party went to a trot. Aodh let them, but signaled to be ready to mount. He had no way to know why the first group was being detained, but if he assumed the worst and acted on it, they’d be discovered for certain. The only choice he saw was to keep on.

The first wagon reached the gate, then another party led by a scout. From the waving of arms, he guessed the gate guards had decided they needed to search the wagons. When they did, the masquerade would be over. Aodh preferred to end it on his own terms. Closer and closer they walked, his eyes on the guard pressing his rifleman. Finally his man yielded.

“Mount up!” he called. The men had been waiting for it; they took one jogging stride, bounced, and landed in their saddles. Half-hitch knots came free, the ties dropping in the road, loosening rifles in their scabbards; quick jerks free the scabbards to rest in their accustomed places.

The other parties followed his example. Attention, unimportant now, came. Yells in the fields turned the heads of the gate guards; with this new occurrence, the inspection of the wagon was forgotten. Surprise proved their great ally: they all arrived at the gate without incident. There, Aodh tugged off his peasant shirt to reveal his uniform underneath. He faced the sergeant in charge.

“Embassy from Lord Ryan of Horse Valley, to see the Lord Regent of the Refuge”, he declared. The others in his command were already abandoning their disguises, a few at a time while others kept watch.

The sergeant stared at him. Aodh let him; the longer he didn’t react, the more time for his men. Finally he found words: “Yes, sir – I’ll send word at once!”

“And a guide, if you please?” Aodh asked. The sergeant was regaining his composure; the presence and doings of foreign lords had been all the talk of the city, but to meet them! But that was better than not having heard anything about such strangers.

“Yes, sir....?”

“Leftenant Aodh, sergeant. We would like to see the Regent as soon as humanly possible.” Aodh liked that phrase, which he’d heard from Wizard Ryan one day on the practice range.

A teniente in House Guard uniform emerged from inside. “Leftenant Aodh, I’m Teniente Medina.” He bowed slightly. “I’ll guide you. Sergeant, tell Teniente Cruz I’ve left early to escort important visitors to Regent Ortega.”

“Sir!”

Aodh liked the snappy discipline. It was something that Captain Tanner insisted they all learn, but not be ‘chained to’. To Aodh, it showed understanding of a man’s place, and efficiency at his duties – but in the wrong place at the wrong time, it was not at all effective, their trek through the byways of Refuge a case in point. “Form it up”, he called softly over his shoulder, knowing that his people would ‘do it smartly’ just to show the teniente that they, too, were ‘sharp and on top of it’. He shook his head slightly at all the phrases from Captain Tanner and Wizard Ryan, Lady Breeze and Lady Crystal, and Mother Ocean – a title he recalled her giggling about once, but that was the honorary appellation given to respected herb women.


Lord Regent Ortega rose from his seat wearily to greet the newcomer. He noted the clean, tidy uniform, and the revolver on the man’s hip. That intrigued him; all he knew from Earl Rigel was that it was a small version of a rifle. They shook hands, and both sat.

“So you brought horses”, Ortega said. “I had hoped, but not counted on them.”

“Lord Ryan acted immediately on reading Earl Rigel’s letter. You were to have the aid of horses, so we were gathered within the hour, organized within four, and set off at dusk.” He smiled at Ortega’s raised eyebrows. “The first part of the way from Cavern Castle south is in a tunnel, the next across the Valley of Servants. Both are safe enough they can be ridden in minimal light. We camped in the Valley, and began in earnest the day following.”

Ortega nodded. “Are you permitted time to remain to teach something of horsemanship?”

Aodh grinned widely; beside him, Heueil chuckled. “Lord Ryan ventured to say he thought the snows might come early, and he would not want us lost in them, returning. He recommended we remain here until we can be certain of the weather. He also gave orders we were to practice our skills by engaging in ‘live fire exercises’ resulting in damage to the Lord Regent’s foes, if possible.”

Ortega laughed, losing tension he hadn’t realized was there. “I like your Lord Ryan! So you are a loan to me until spring!”

Heueil frowned and shook his head. “Not exactly a loan, my lord. We can and will cooperate with you on our live-fire training, but we aren’t under your orders. The men, by the way, are hoping for something soon – it’s been a quiet ride since the herd of gr’venstut that charged us.”

Aodh chuckled – the beasts that looked like huge ugly pigs had brains even smaller: they’d just kept charging while rifles killed them lengths before they reached a horse. “We covered the hides, in case your tanners might like them. Leftenant Heueil is right about some action. I’d like to move fast, and use the element of surprise. Tonight would be nice....”

Ortega shook his head slowly, regarding the pair in amazement. They’d just completed a long journey, had barely arrived, hadn’t settled in at all, and they wanted to go fight! “Tonight... if I send messages immediately, we might be able to do something.” The Regent reached over and pulled a rope; a bell rang not far away. “There’s a certain problem here I’ve been wanting to deal with....”

When the messenger the bell had summoned arrived a minute later, the three were bent over a map of the city. Ortega called over his shoulder. “Find that boy Teniente Bolivar left with us. Then alert all the Guard save the Fourth Section. After that, inform the Captain of the Watch that I’d like the watch near the walls doubled after the third hour.”

“Yes, lord.”

“Now, here’s what I’d like....”


Heueil checked everything one more time. They’d had only one chance to practice, which hadn’t been encouraging; there hadn’t been any opportunity to test their device.

The concept was simple: a fortress’ gates open outward, so they are hard to push inward. Getting them to go inward was a matter of great enough force properly applied. Greater speed gave greater force, Wizard Ryan said, as did repetition. They didn’t have time for repetition, so they were going for speed – and an extra punch. The wagon had extra wheels, the axles a half arm’s length out from the sides, so it wouldn’t tip. It was an “alley wagon”, long and narrow, so tipping was a real concern. The front had been opened, the wagon tongue reversed and underneath, now controlled from the back, where the wood from the front covered a seat for a steersman. In the wagon was a monstrous log, one that would have been put in a sling for a battering ram in other circumstances. The log was roped, strapped, and bolted to the wagon frame, and stuck out in front about an arm’s length. The end of the log had been hollowed, with thick walls, and in the hollow they’d packed powder from their supplies, covered it with a pottery lid, and put three different trigger devices on the front.

The idea was simple: eight horses would get the wagon started. Once the speed got high, the first two, pulling from ahead of the wagon, would loose their ropes and drop to the sides. The six remaining would pull until they couldn’t go faster, then they would loose their ropes and fall to the sides. Loosing the ropes was important; a tangle in an axle would ruin the ability of the remaining man, in the seat at the rear, to steer. Rolling on its own, the log was under the control of the steersman, who would ride it, aiming all the way, until just before it hit, then tie the reins and dive off. Since he would be steering, Heueil hoped he’d dive so he’d be clear when the log tip hit the gates, the charge in the end went off, and broken pieces of wagon and – hopefully! – gate went flying about. Then it would be his job to wait for the charge, shooting anyone who showed himself.

It all looked good. Somewhere, Ortega’s men, most of what he had in the city, were gathering. Heueil didn’t know where; he didn’t need to know – all he needed to know was their uniforms, so he wouldn’t shoot anyone friendly. Somewhere else, the thieves of the city were getting ready to fulfill their promise....


“We aren’t fighters, to be capturing gates”, the masked man had told Lord Ortega, when Ortega had revealed their objective.

“You just have to get men away from the gates”, Ortega had replied. “I trust you know the inside of the fortress. Just pick something you can do that will draw men from the walls and the gates.”

The masked man had studied the map, then grinned and tapped a point. “Here, I think. We can get in – but what of plunder?”

“As the Prince Heir’s man said.”

A satisfied nod. “Then watch this place....”


The top of a tall, slim tower burst into flame. The east wall leaned outward, then slowly toppled into air, heading for a roof below. Badly supported, the peaked roof sagged and collapsed into the flames. Fire raged. In eight seconds – good time, Aodh judged – a bell began ringing, followed by another three second later. Footsteps on stone sounded in the quiet night as men ran to fight the blaze. He saw two on the section of wall he faced disappear running.

Fire blossomed three floors from the top; glass shattered from the heat, sending splinters into the dark. Two more bells started ringing, urgently. More men disappeared from the walls. Aodh signaled Heueil, who whistled, and the eight horses began their charge. Screams came from within the walls; what the thieves were doing was their business, so long as it drew men as Lord Ortega wanted.

The lead horses loosed ropes and peeled off, slowing, to await the charge. That was Aodh’s signal to start moving. Silently, leather on their hooves, his dozen and a half mounted riflemen moved at a walk from their shadowed refuge behind a long hall and turned down the street. Once in two files, they began to trot, then a slow canter.

Heueil watched the street ahead. If there were obstacles, he’d never know it; they’d practiced on a leveled field of packed earth; this was entirely different. Even with the immense mass of the log, the wagon bounced and jolted; it was all he could do to keep it pointed at the three lights by the fortress gates. He heard “Yippee-kai-ay!”, the signal for the six horses to let go – he was on his own. Two blocks, he told himself, just two blocks....

Lord Ortega stood unmoving, in his full armor, hands clasped behind his back, waiting. When he heard, faintly, that “Yippee-kai-ay!”, he smiled. “Time!” he called. Behind him, orders flew, sending one hundred eighty-four men of the House Guard into action. He waited till the last, then, despite his age, fell in with a squad bearing crossbows and jogged down the hill.

Aodh held on; he’d never been in a gallop on a stone surface before. Tell Captain Tanner to get that in the training! he told himself. He yelped involuntarily as his mount swerved to avoid something he couldn’t see, slamming his tailbone against the saddle. Then he heard the Boom! that meant his fellow leftenant was either a hero or dead. “Charge!” he yelled. They broke into full, leg-breaking risky gallop.

Heueil couldn’t get the rope tied right; it was caught on something, and too short. He kicked hard at the frame of his wooden shelter; a piece an arm long and a palm wide splintered off. He wrapped the reins around it, aimed one last time, jammed the scrap against the back of the wagon, and dove.

Aodh didn’t see Heueil leave the wagon when he was supposed to. Idiot! he cursed, unsure if he meant Heueil or himself. He thought he saw something leave the wagon just before it hit the gates....

Heueil kept one eye on the wagon while he dove. It swerved just at the end; his wood scrap must have come loose. But there wasn’t room or time for it to miss: the log slammed into the left gate with a boom and flash, and


Aodh barely made out a limp form to his left as he and his ‘wing rider’ hit the gap in the gate. He couldn’t give it attention; he was pulling out his rifle, slinging it to his arm, ready for targets. Then he was inside, shooting by reflex at anything that moved without friendly colors. He emptied his magazine. Switching it out, he noticed that someone had thrown up on his arm – the taste in his mouth suggested it was himself. To his right, battle erupted on the wall as twenty of Lord Ortega’s men arrived by means of ladders from a nearby building. In the distance, vaguely, he heard laughter – the thieves, no doubt, doing their plundering.

Four men down, no horses, his mind tallied. No more resistance in the courtyard, and now Ortega’s men held the eastern wall and part of the northern. To his right there was a stone stair leading to the top of the wall... “Sixth, to me!” he yelled, slinging his rifle. He drew his saber – Lord Ryan’s innovation for horsemen, made for slashing at fighters on foot. He started at a trot, picked up speed, and hit the bottom of the stairs at a canter. In twenty seconds he and the Sixth had ridden down a score of defenders from the rear. Leaving Ortega’s men to take surrenders, he swung and led his dozen the other way.

Heueil moaned. His right leg was on fire, his hip felt like he figured it would if someone stuck a sword through it. Both arms worked, though his legs weren’t cooperating. A noise got his attention; he rolled. Four paces away and advancing was an enemy. “If only you knew what you were up against”, he muttered, drew his Kinner-Ruger, and put two rounds in the man’s chest. Cheap breastplate anyway, he noted, and moved to reload.

The top of the wall was clear. The tower ahead was another matter. Aodh considered it: fire would be nice, but Ortega didn’t want any getting loose. A battering ram would be nicer, but there wasn’t exactly spare time for making one. A trebuchet would be quite fine... But he’d only seen one in action once, and couldn’t have even explained one to an engineer. All he had was rifles.

“Sir, the back wall’s uncovered.” The voice was one of his youngest men, just eighteen – Lord Ryan’s minimum for new riflemen. “I can climb that – it’s sloppy, gaps all over.”

“Take two ropes”, Aodh responded. “Get up, and haul more up.” He didn’t have a plan, but figured he would by the time he had a half dozen men on the roof.


‘They’ll live”, Gavin decided. “You’re five men short for twelve days, but they’ll live.” Aodh sighed in relief. He knew Ortega had lost eleven for certain, with some touch-and go left

“Thanks to you, lad”, he told Gavin. He yawned.

“Get your sleep, Leftenant”, Gavin recommended.

“Can’t – gotta be at the official surrender.”

He didn’t have long to wait. Not even a minute later, a runner requested his presence in the great hall. Lord Ortega sat in the seat.

In front of him, the Captain-Commander of the Guardians looked like a cornered deer.


“I will not surrender!” the Captain-Commander declared, though there was fear in his voice. To Aodh, Ortega looked like he was going to try sweet reason – again. He had a different idea; from the argument so far, he’d deduced that the man three to the Captain-Commander’s left was the second-in-command – actually first in terms of the fortress itself; the Captain-Commander seemed to be in charge of all the Guardians.

“Fine”, the leftenant said. “If you won’t surrender, we’ll try your second-in-command. So we won’t be needing you any longer.” He’d drawn his Kinner-Ruger while he spoke, and brought it up to the man’s nose. He made sure there wasn’t anyone standing behind before he smiled and said, “Good-bye.” He pulled the trigger.

Ortega was on his feet, furious. “You must not do so!” he raged.

Aodh stared at him, then shrugged. He turned to the one he’d decided must be next in line. “Are you in charge now?” he asked, pleasantly, wearily.

The officer swallowed hard, his eyes dashing frequently to the shining metal weapon in Aodh’s hand. “Yes – of this castle. Second of the Guardians is in Tarentino.”

“Answer Lord Oretga’s question.”

The fortress commander’s eyes went involuntarily to the nearly-headless corpse still held upright next to him. He jerked them away and looked at Ortega. “Lord Oretga, I surrender the fortress.” He undid his sword belt and offered the whole to Aodh. The latter shook his head and stepped back.

Ortega stepped up and took it. “I accept your surrender”, he said gracefully.

Aodh spoke before Oretga could say more. “Lord Ortega, I apologize for upsetting you. I don’t apologize for shooting that imbecile. He wasn’t going to surrender no matter what he did, and even if he had, it would have been meaningless except here, anyway. I got rid of a problem. The main fortress of the Guardians is yours, now. If you don’t know what to do with the prisoners, I have an idea I’m authorized to discuss.” He bowed and backed up two steps before turning away.

Eyes followed him. “That is a frightening man”, the officer who’d just handed over his sword commented.

“So he is”, Ortega agreed. “Yet I think he is not honorless”, he added, as though the man he addressed weren’t a prisoner.

“He has his own sort of honor. I believe it says fools are to be removed.”

Ortega’s mouth curled into an unhappy half-smile. “So it seems. Now – as to collecting your men’s weapons....”


Heueil stared up at his superior. “I can’t move.” Aodh could hear the restrained panic.

“Gavin said he... untied the reins from your brain to your body. Your injuries... you won’t be riding, or fighting, for many days.”

“Fine. So we got the fortress?”

Aodh nodded. “One hundred seventy-eight prisoners. There were nine accused rapists – they go to trial.”

“What’s Ortega going to do with them?”

“For now, half are servants in the fortress, the others are locked up. In the spring, we’ll take them all north for Lord Ryan. They weren’t going to agree until I said they could still be Guardians, just guarding in a different place.”

Heueil frowned. “Guarding what?”

Aodh chuckled. “Lord Ortega said their Heir is sending a lot of people north to be vassals of Rigel and Antonio – and probably some for Ryan. They’re going to be busy fixing up ruins into places to live. I figured they could be border guards, once Captain Tanner retrains them.”

Heueil blinked. “Lord Ryan didn’t say anything about that!”

Aodh shrugged. “He said to use our imaginations – it’s called ‘initiative’, remember? He’ll like it, once he hears about it. Mix in some of our people, and it’s a great idea.”

Heueil disagreed. “Not many of ours. The appeal to them is they’ll still be guarding their own people, the Escobar people. Thin that out and have trouble.”

Aodh followed the reasoning, and decided he agreed. “Lord Ryan will know better.” He grinned weakly. “We just have to win, not run things.”

“And ride wagons with logs and black powder”, Heueil noted. “Next time it’s your turn.”



The teniente of the Watch accepted the silver, and passed the man through the postern gate in the city wall. The coin never reached his pocket; it landed in the hand of the man whose garotte was cutting into his neck, cutting off life. That man’s partner rejoined him in a moment, wearing the cloak of the man who’d just tried to leave the city.

“Good coin, he had”, the partner noted. “And a bit of a scroll.”

The first man took the offered item. “The rifle leftenant will pay well for that.” He looked down at the corpse. “Strip that and throw it in the cess pond. Then disappear for the night.” Almost as an afterthought, he tossed the man the copper the watch officer had accepted. As quickly as it flew to the second man, the first was gone.



Lord Heir Pena handed over the small bag of coin and the bottles of “hellfire”. “Half way between bells”, he instructed once again. “Then out the Potter’s Gate – the guard will be waiting.” He watched his hirelings go, enjoying the prospect of an inn, a smithy, and a storehouse belonging to one of Lopez’ friends going up in flames within the hour. The fist that met his face when he turned wasn’t as pleasant, nor the scrapes that cut through his coat and into his back as he was thrown onto a trash wagon and dragged across broken glass and pottery. The sleep that followed, granted by the oily substance on some of that glass, was quite pleasant; it wasn’t even disturbed when he was stripped of all valuables and rolled into the pit with the other refuse he’d been buried with.

The would-be arsonists awoke with lumps on their heads and throbbing aches in head and shoulders. The ropes that held them to a wall wiggled when they tested their bonds, the wiggling in turn jiggling, and thus jingling, small bells. “Ah, awake”, a voice said. “Time for lessons: first, no man does business with fire without paying the proper fee....” The whip that flicked away a piece of the first man’s ear returned quickly to the second, and the third....


Three men snuck through the shadows, then dashed to the gate. The guard was glad; he hadn’t heard any alarms yet, but he wanted these three out into the night as he’d been paid. But the three who came close were in uniform – House Guard, not city watch, and definitely not the three men he’d been told to expect. “Watchman Peres? You’re under arrest. Please try to resist!”



“That one”, the young man said. The man next to him was strange, out of his experience, as methodical and deliberate as a smith, and about as talkative as an empty ale mug. In the young man’s experience, killing was something to be enjoyed, or hated – depending on the situation – but this one treated it as business no different than buying bread or slicing meat.

He expected the man to ask if he was certain; adults almost always did. Instead he heard, “I see him”, then, “Cover your ears”. Two heartbeats later he learned what a “rifle” was, as flame shot forth, concussion slapped his face, and a man eighty meters away jerked and fell.



Lord Ortega regarded Aodh with mixed emotions. He turned to his side table and poured some strong wine, a beverage produced by leaving straight-sided pots of wine with a honey-oil covering to sit and freeze in the winter – the ice left alcohol behind, so what was left was stronger. A part of the enjoyment to him was that there was no way of making any two pots come out the same. Though the vintners had gotten better at it. When they realized that combining the results yielded a batch with the same content, it had been a loss – but then there were different years, with different strengths. It was one of those aspects of “progress” that reduced the joy in life, he considered – something like the rifle.

“Thirty-one men were reported dead this morning, half of them lords or lords’ sons, with holes in them that could only come from your ‘bullets’.” He tried to sound stern, but couldn’t help letting a little gratitude creep in.

Aodh heard that bit. “My lord Regent, two things: first, your reports are short; there were thirty-five; second, every one of those has been behind violence against an ally of my own lord, Earl Rigel. They were thus, by my orders, legitimate objects for live-fire exercises by my men. You can’t tell me you’re not glad they’re dead.”

Ortega gave the leftenant credit. He hoisted his glass in salute. “I won’t make that claim. But I object to the use of assassins’ methods!” That, he managed sternly indeed.

Aodh chuckled. “Good – object loudly, and the people will favor you for it. Blame it on the foreigners with their horrid weapons. But take advantage of the results, and when my lord Earl Rigel returns with your Heir, he can make a show of turning me over to the Heir, who can demonstrate his justice by punishing me, and then I’ll get to go somewhere else and be effective at my job again.” He pointed to the side table. “May I?”

Ortega grasped that he was facing a man far more dedicated to achieving a goal than he’d perhaps ever met. Honor, fair play... these things meant nothing to the leftenant; the only thing he valued was getting the job done. He sighed. “If you wish”, he allowed. His guest could have taken that as a victory, but he didn’t in the least – which made it almost harder for Ortega to bear.

“Is there anything else in your orders I should know about?” he asked, a bit bitingly.

Aodh paused in pouring; most men Ortega knew would have finished that before answering. “My lord, I’m instructed to cause maximum damage to your enemies by whatever means I deem effective, until your position here is secure, making maximum use of surprise whenever possible. I interpret that to mean that all opposition to you and the legitimate Heir are to be removed from the city. On our first night here, we made it possible for you to take the fortress of the Guardians. On our second, we and some friends eliminated all the remaining Guardians at large in the city. On our third, we have killed three dozen enemies by stealth, another two dozen in direct confrontation, and acted to achieve the arrest of nearly two dozen corrupt members of the city Watch. I haven’t slept in that time except for two hours this morning. I awoke to information that every lesser lord in the city is now standing with you, one greater lord tried to flee and is now being kept... confined, and another has barred himself in his fortified house, declaring himself neutral. That is no small doing.
“There are but three lords of any stature left who oppose you. I aim tonight to deal with two of those, and leave the third to some friends. When that is done, and those houses are left with heirs who understand things, you will be in control of the city – complete control. At that point I will move elsewhere, to aid you differently. Once I’ve left here, my orders specify only that I am to help your friends prosper and your enemies suffer.”

He finished pouring, and sipped, then let out a sigh. “You freeze it, to make it stronger? I live where we get trapped by snow two months of the year, and no one thought of this!”

“I believe it was an accidental discovery”, Ortega informed him drily. He looked at this own glass in a new light – did accidents govern the affairs of men at all levels? He wondered.
“Leftenant Aodh, I can’t decide whether to admire your dedication or despise your approach. Let that be; I accept your aid and will not impede your efforts. I will be glad to have control of this city in the name of the Prince Heir, and will also be glad when you are gone. And I will shudder at the thought of your assassin’s ways daily.”

Aodh grinned, his first non-serious look of the afternoon. “The assassins shudder, too”, he related. “Though not at the silver we paid them for their permission to operate.”

Ortega looked suddenly a bit ill. “You paid assassins to allow you to... do your work?”

Aodh restrained himself. “You didn’t know there was an assassins’ association? I didn’t either, until... someone mentioned it to me. Here’s something that should cheer you: the ones in San Tesifón are on your side.”

That jolted Ortega; he was still trying to adjust to knowing that assassins had their own... guild, he supposed he should call it. “Pray... why should they favor me?”

“Your enemies would turn the Refuge into... a place of war. Their leader sees that when war rages, things aren’t as profitable for assassins: killings are done more directly, and guard is tighter.” Aodh shook his head in his own bit of wonder: “And he foresees that contact with the wider world should provide more chances of employment.”

“He thinks to make Refuge a refuge for assassins, to kill elsewhere?” Ortega was deeply offended.

Aodh swirled his glass and sniffed; the liquid was almost as pleasant to smell as to sip. “Would you like to hear a suggestion?”

Ortega wasn’t sure he did, but knew he’d never stop wondering if he didn’t ask. “I believe I could tolerate one.

“Recruit them”, recommended the leftenant bluntly. “Hire them as official... agents. They don’t really care who pays them, but believe it or not, most are deeply loyal to the House. They find the idea of anyone but the proper heir being Heir offensive. They found the image of anyone taking the Seat who hadn’t earned it... despicable. Though their rules forbid killing without pay, they just might have broken that if your Raoul had won that day.
“Hire them. Give them a serious title. Make them a part of the service to your House – then put them to work.”

“Hire assassins? Never!”

“Regent, if you hire them, they won’t be ‘assassins’ any more, they’ll be soldiers with a useful set of skills”, Aodh suggested. “Besides, it’s better than letting, oh, Lord de Cadiz hire them.” The look on Ortega’s face told the leftenant his message had gone home. Likely before he’d left, certainly before Heueil had recovered, there would be an Escobar Secret Operations Force, or whatever the Regent decided to call it. Appealing to the usefulness to the House would never have persuaded him; that merely gave him an excuse. The danger to himself hadn’t been persuasive, either, Aodh was certain, not with a man like Ortega – but that he might be killed and thus unable to fulfill his duty to the man for whom he was Regent wouldn’t allow him to reject this.

There were advantages in being the second son of a man who tried to engineer a clan war, he thought – and more in having an occupation which let him get far, far away from a clan that despised him, however much they might pretend they didn’t.



The column of men in Guardians’ uniforms stumbled its way down the hill. Those in the camp blocking the road to the north gave them two looks – the new men looked sloppy, the horses looked scruffy – but no more. But they looked up again when the cracks of rifles filled the air – those who weren’t on the receiving end of what the rifles spat out. Twenty men rose then only to fall back to earth, leaking bright red life into soil or cloth.

“That’s forty-one”, Aodh’s aide counted. The man had an uncanny ability to tell how many of something had changed from their peers, without counting. The rifles cracked again. “Fifty-four.” Aodh didn’t even nod; he was waiting....

The image of a Guardian with captain’s bars on his helm and shoulders came into view, then into sights – then gone again, Aodh’s bullet sent through eye and brain. Next he found a teniente, who followed his first in command. He kept scanning, but saw no other officers – maybe they’d been shot already, maybe they were at the barrier? It didn’t matter, really.

“The company will charge!” he yelled, putting his rifle in its scabbard. “Sabers! Charge!!!”


“I hate killing”, Aodh confessed to the only surviving Guardian officer, a sub-teniente younger than he was. “I threw up after the third of your people I slashed dead with my sword. Now, please – give me what I need, so I won’t have to do this the bloody way again.”

Bloody it had been. Their charge had destroyed the enemy in the camp as any kind of a military force, but cost him two men. The teniente in command of the barrier had been good; he set fire to anything on the south side that would burn, and put his men on the north side. Even sending a circling group hadn’t prevented the butcher’s bill: he’d lost two more men. The four were the ones Gavin hadn’t been able to do anything for, a fact that had the young Healer student curled up in a ball, rocking himself, in a tent. But the cost for the Guardians had been worse; covering fire through the smoke had kept them pinned until his circling force had turned it into a slaughter: one hundred and six of the enemy lay dead, stretched out in rows, the corpses being picked clean of anything valuable by local farm lads he’d hired to dig graves.

“Lord leftant, here’s all the coin”, one of those lads told him minutes later. He hadn’t been aware of staring at the birds being shooed from the bodies by the youngest children who’d come. This one, ribs showing but tough with solid muscles, held out three bags bulging with coin.

“What’s your name?” he asked.

“Amistad, lord.”

Aodh shook his head. “I’m not a lord, just a leftenant – a teniente.” He took one of the bags; it was about the size of a baby’s head, and heavy. “How far can you count?” he asked.

“To a hundred, if I’m careful”, Amistad replied. “Pa taught me before he died.”

“You live with your ma?”

“She’s dead, too. I’ve just me.”

Aodh thought he heard a question in there. The eyes didn’t convince him it was real, but he tried anyway. “Want to ride with us?” he asked softly.

Amistad’s face broke open like clouds after a hail storm. “Oh, yes, teniente, sir!” he declared.

“All right. You can start by helping me count all this coin.” He sat on the blanket he’d spread out for... for something he’d forgotten – maybe to count the coin? – and poured his bag out. “It’s easiest if you just count to ten – ten in one pile, then make another, ten piles in a row....”


Heueil woke to Lord Ortega’s gentle shake. “Hmmmm?” he inquired sleepily.

“A letter from your captain”, Ortega told him. Aodh was officially a leftenant, but in Escobar terms, if you were the head officer of a unit, you were a captain by courtesy.

“Oh. And news?” Heueil knew Aodh wouldn’t waste paper on anything not personal.

“The road from here north is clear. He eliminated two camps along the way and destroyed the one at the border. Then local lords helped him capture the watch towers that didn’t surrender.
“Six of your people have been killed. The captain replaced them with volunteers. He’s got a little army out there, your men plus sixty young men with ideas of being heroes. They captured a small castle... by deceit, I’m afraid... and got a lot of weapons. Young men are going to him to help, one or more every day.” Ortega wasn’t happy about it; it wasn’t the way battle was supposed to be – and it showed in his voice.

Heueil tried to remember what Lord Wizard Ryan had told them. “Things change, Regent. Men have to all join together. We have to attack the Foe and get rid of them. That means new ways. If we have to fight other men, we do. We kill as few as possible, so we have more to fight the Foe. If we fight in ways that kill more men, we lose even if we win.”

Ortega sighed. “Your words sound like those of your Earl Rigel. I think he’s right, but older folks, and I’m one, won’t feel glad about it.”

“We don’t, either”, Heueil explained. “But we really wouldn’t be glad if the Foe won. Mother Ocean says we endure sadness so when the Foe are all gone, we’ll have great gladness.”




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Wow, I really don't like Aodh.

And AMISTAD?!?!? I guess I know what HE'S going to wind up doing.
 
Kuli,
While I understand the Regent (and Criostoir's) dislike of Aodh and his tactics, I have to applaud them.

I'm all in favor of make love not war. BUT, when it's time to make war, you don't line up like the fucking Brits used to do and take turns killing each other. You fight guerilla warfare tactics - in this case, you return fire in kind with the deceit and treachery that the lords have shown the House Escobar in their contempt.

Aodh and his men aren't being deceitful. Lord Rigel made pronouncements before he left, as did the Heir to House Escobar. The Lords were free to accept or reject - with full understanding that they rejected the legitimate heir and his House at their own peril. Aodh and his men acted quickly and surgically. The took out the guard that opposed the House Escobar FIRST. That left the lords the next day to recant their disloyalty. They didn't, so they were fair game. The same is true of the dishonest watchmen.

Our young orphan appears to be headed for a career as accountant for the spoils of war - coinage section, at a minimum.

It was fun reading about the approach to the Refuge de la Casa Escobar.
It was exciting reading about their tactics.

I take it that our faithful Leftenant Heueil will be OK, including the use of his lower extremities. It sounds as though our junior healer disconnected the synapses and neural processing from there for now so he doesn't feel the pain as his body heals.

Earl Rigel and Lord Ryan are definitely going to develop a reputation in the larger world, as is Lord de la Vega.

Well and soundly done, sir, well and soundly done.
:wave:
 
WHOOF! SO much More so Soon! Bless You, Kuli!! (ww) :=D:

And, Yes!, Lord Ortega, there are, indeed, "New Ways" of "doing Business" in your immediate future! And, it is precisely because they do not adhere to the "Old Sympathies", that they are going to prove to be to your advantage. Progress only often comes with the breaking of "comfortable" paradigms! #-o ..|

Yet, I, too, am just a bit "uncomfortable" with the Coldness that Aodh interprets/fulfills his orders. However, there is NO doubt that his approach is quite efficient and effective! Be thankful that He, and the Assassins, are on the "Right" side! :cool:

And, now that the story is moving "back", closer to L'ard ReHeel, what's going on with those Brits??? :confused: :help:

Kuli! ... (group) !!!

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Now, Chaz, you know we can't look at EVERY aspect of the saga EVERY chapter.
 
Now, Chaz, you know we can't look at EVERY aspect of the saga EVERY chapter.

Um ... Really? Why the Hell NOT??? :lol:

I mean ... given the way Kuli has been "Super Posting", recently ... (!w!)

Actually, I think He's "Teasing" Me/"Us" ... "Dropping" the Brits on Us, then "going off" in Other important/interesting/fantastic/awesome directions ... #-o (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Um ... Really? Why the Hell NOT??? :lol:

I mean ... given the way Kuli has been "Super Posting", recently ... (!w!)

Actually, I think He's "Teasing" Me/"Us" ... "Dropping" the Brits on Us, then "going off" in Other important/interesting/fantastic/awesome directions ... #-o (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:

It just works out that way -- but I do enjoy it working out that way.

Part of this is the timeline. I have a nice little spreadsheet showing who's where in terms of time gone by, and this series of chapters is working to get everyone back in roughly the same time frame. I think I'll have them all, in their different locations, within three days of each other.

But because of the structure of the story, too, further material about the Brits has to wait a bit (I'm working on it now, but then I'm working on several chapters at once... again). I think it will mark the end of Part 4 -- not that any of you have been paying attention to what Part it is!

In the meantime, you could have a discussion of the relative merits of the different pictures to the chapters they end......

read.gif
 
In the meantime, you could have a discussion of the relative merits of the different pictures to the chapters they end......

read.gif

Pictures? There are pictures?? What pictures??? :confused: :slap:

Actually, Kuli ... I do enjoy the pictures! They have all proven to be quite a poignant emphasis on what has been revealed. Indeed, they have been an excellent "cap stone" to each, and every, chapter. They add just the right touch of an additional "oomph!" (As have the occasional "extra-JUB" Smilies!) ..| :=D:

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Great chapter, Kuli, Thanks.
It is true that you have many threads going in different directions and sometimes I find this a mite confusing.
It will be good when you do draw everything together... but then... I suppose that will mean the end is nigh!!
I am so enjoying your wonderful tale that I will be very sad when it concludes.
Hugs
Harry
 
Great chapter, Kuli, Thanks.
It is true that you have many threads going in different directions and sometimes I find this a mite confusing.
It will be good when you do draw everything together... but then... I suppose that will mean the end is nigh!!
I am so enjoying your wonderful tale that I will be very sad when it concludes.
Hugs
Harry

I was thinking about that just yesterday, driving off to work at my volunteer community-benefit project. My subjective feeling/image about the tale is that the trajectories are going to be slowing, sort of, then building mass and converging. From convergence to end... I have no idea how long it will take, just the basic trajectory.

And that it will be epic. It's going to be really fun finding out just how all my characters are going to charge down their "hill of destiny", so to speak, and smash in the final act, final scene, and curtain.

If it is a curtain -- I'm starting to get hints that it may just be a bit open-ended.
think.gif
 
British​


British?!

Rigel knew he shouldn’t have been surprised; in a world where they’d met Celts, which Rita and Ryan both thought had come in more than one wave, what with Irish, Scottish, and Continental Celt names, and Spanish who called themselves Quistadors, a corruption of “Consquistadors”, why not British? For that matter, why not French? or Arabs? or Indians from the subcontinent? or Japanese? For all they knew, the world was filled with a grab bag of ancient cultures lifted and replanted – a transplanted Roman Empire could be just over the mountains, with a this-world Great Wall of China keeping Aztecs at bay across the sea, and Samurais reigning over a realm with Chippewas and Sioux as subjects!

He signaled for a turn without even thinking about it. For a few seconds the two groups rode a parallel course before a mutual slowing, until they faced each other across a gap of maybe five meters, horses and pones both at a walk. Rigel noted the professionalism in the British party, and hoped they saw something to respect in his group, as well.

Someone had to break the silence. “This is your border, then?” he asked.

“Please do not be offended, but I may not answer that.” Rigel almost laughed; it sounded too much like government bureaucrats back in the States. From this man it seemed sincere, though, and that was enough to keep him serious.

Rita cut in. “This is Lord Rigel, Earl FitzWin”, she declared. “Whom has he the pleasure of addressing?” Rigel didn’t know if he should be annoyed or grateful, but he knew he was afraid his counterpart would find a woman daring to speak to be offensive.

He was wrong: the man managed to bow from the saddle. “My lady”, he said, “I would say it is a pleasure to make your acquaintance, but duty prevents. I am privileged to be Kevin, Knight of the Hull, Lord MacNeil, Earl Dennishire, commanding this contingent of Her Majesty’s Dragoons.” He doffed his hat and bowed deeply. “My Lord Earl FitzWin, I regret I may not welcome you, but must urge you speedily on your way – away.”

Rigel was at a loss; he felt like he’d stepped into a play by Shakespeare – well, maybe not that far back, but something from the colonial period, anyway. It seemed clear that this man was willing to be friendly, but wasn’t allowed to be. That puzzled and frustrated him; he didn’t like dealing with two-pronged motives. At least he didn’t have that problem, from his side.

“We come exploring, seeking other peoples.” He could almost hear Ryan in his head: We come in peace, seeking new life and new civilizations. “We look for peace, not conflict.”

“Her majesty has decreed peace with all who stay away”, replied Lord MacNeil, Earl Dennishire. “Now I truly must insist you withdraw.”

“I think I understand”, Rigel responded. “But exactly which directions count as withdrawing?”

Kevin Aidan Cathal MacNeil nearly smiled at this foreign lord’s tenacity, and even audacity, stubborn in the face of polite rejection, boldly daring him to say just which way he couldn’t go. But he couldn’t be too welcoming in his non-welcome! “Anywhere to the right of our present course”, he answered firmly, touching his sword in emphasis.

Rigel understood he wasn’t going to get more. Regretfully, he signaled a turn to the right. “Tell Her Majesty we’d like to visit sometime”, he called as they drew apart. “We have interests in common!”


The British Earl brought his party to a halt and watched the others move away at a stately walk. He envied them their horses; Her Majesty’s best ponies were as nothing to those. The Signals team had already reported an intrusion; now he had to decide what to add to that. Turning his back on the obviously friendly Earl FitzWin was hard; he’d never met a foreigner, hadn’t even been certain there were any, any longer. Lost Britain had been apart for so long, isolated, but he was certain he’d seen mythical Celts and even a Spaniard in the Earl’s party. And what a name – “FitzWin”! It sounded as if someone had chopped off the end of Fitzgerald and that of Winham and patched the remnants together – a total botch-up of a name.

“Leftenant, signal, ‘Nomads’, ‘Non-hostile’.”

“Nomads, sir?” the leftenant questioned.

“I saw men, women, and young, what appeared to be housing borne by beasts, and they were going from one place to another – do tell, what could they be, but nomads?”

“Aye, sir – nomads it is, sir.” The leftenant bent to his codes. Soon thereafter the signals equipment was disassembled, back on its string of ponies. Troubled by the requirements of his position, Lord MacNeil turned south, away from the visitors he’d had to send away. The encounter would, he knew, trouble him until he could, in fact, speak of it to Her Majesty.


“Rigel – I think it’s Others!” Oran looked almost terrified, none of his cocky sureness in evidence.

“Where?” Obviously it was south, since that was where Oran had come from.

“If they keep on, they’ll hit the British group.”

“Frak!” Rigel swore. “To hell with borders! Tanner, let’s ride – this is for real!”

As they crossed the second low ridge on their way, Oran pointed. Telescopes came out. Tanner and Rita shuddered at what they saw: like some bloated, malignant form of mutant albino ants, their heads replaced with demon-spiders the color of pale rotting meat, the Others moved in a mob. Rigel went cold with recognition, his hand automatically going to his sword. What filled him then was an eager sense of satisfaction, and satisfaction to come.

He almost yelled, “Escobar!” He felt Osvaldo looking at him, nodded to the Prince Heir, and quietly ordered a charge.


I did so hope to return this time, Kevin MacNeil commented to himself. A scout had reported the presence of Aliens, as the grotesque, huge insect-like enemy was officially called – Bugs, unofficially – and he’d done his best to avoid them. Given another hour, he could have been able to reach safety, at least of a sort to allow a certain victory, though not without cost. He wasn’t to have that hour, it seemed. “Signals – send word. Leave the tripod; we won’t be needing it again. Let’s see how many of the vermin we can take with us. On the ridge should do – make them climb to us.” It wasn’t much of a ridge, but he had to try. Elizabeth.... he called silently, longingly.

The Aliens spread into an attack formation, if their jumble of bodies and limbs could be called that. The manual said they always spread out to match the length of their line to that of their intended victims; that was enough for the General Staff to designate it a formation. The name hardly mattered....

“Rifles!” He was hardly aware of the leftenants giving their commands. “At ready!” And there was another spot in the distance, dust rising – was he to be ground into dust himself, facing two groups? “Fire!” It was maximum effective range, and against these monstrosities it wasn’t very effective. Mechanically, he added his fire to the rest. From fifty rifle rounds, three Aliens fell. He wondered how many they could kill before the other group arrived, and glanced over–

Color! That other group wasn’t Aliens, it was that Earl FitzWin and his party, coming at a gallop! Patterns shifted in his mind, vectors and closing speeds.... He waited for the next volley to be called, then, “One more volley, gentlemen, then we move”, he said calmly. “First squad, let’s put our fire on their left.” When the volley rang out, four Aliens fell, two of them on the left. The oncoming enemy shuffled their ranks to keep their line a wide as his. He didn’t watch the end of that maneuver; he was leading the men at an angle down the back of the pitiful ridge to one sorrier yet.

There, they turned. “Odds and evens – Fire!” he called as soon as every rifle was up. He let the leftenants handle it from there, and just counted, watching, judging angles.... Each half, odds and evens, got off three rounds before he called another move.


“Rather good”, Chen commented as he fell in beside Rigel. “That fellow is trying to keep ahead of them while killing some. He’s hoping we get there in time.”

“Can we?” asked Rigel grimly.

“Not if we keep aiming at where he is – we have to figure out where he’s going to be.” Chen considered; he wasn’t as good at this as he wished, not with one unit moving in fits and starts. He abandoned vectors and shifted to tactics. “See that round rise behind and to their right? That’s my guess where we can meet up.”

“Ditto that”, Oran called, composure returned now that shock was worn off and purpose given. “Cut a little left and stay sort of hidden”, he suggested, pointing to a long depression running about the right direction.

“Yeah”, was all that Rigel said, but his real answer was given through his knees to Tornado. The turf below was softer, damped; no dust rose now from their passage.


Where did they go? demanded Lord MacNeil silently. He’d lost track, his concentration on the matter of keeping his people ahead of the Aliens. Sixteen of those horrors were down, eight more slowed and trailing ichor, but the group coming down on them was getting near post-blank range, and still outnumbered men and horses together. None of Signals section had arrived; he hoped that meant they’d been ignored, for half of them were young enough to be considered food by the Aliens.

“The round rise”, he ordered wearily. The ponies wouldn’t take any more after that; it was stand and kill... and die, he was afraid.


“Rifles... left!” came Tanner’s command. The main body kept on, the separation allowing the rifles to fire without hitting their own. “Rifles... fire! Fire! Fire!” The rounds slammed into the left flank of the Others, the Foe, and it collapsed into a heap of dead and writhing bodies. The rush against the British faltered only a little.

“Rigel, they’re yours!” Tanner called, and wheeled off to join those without firearms. His plan was simple: pour fire into them until his heavies could make use of the lances they’d cut the day before on a whim, then pull back and pour more fire into them until it was hand-to-claw, or mandible, or whatever the Others had.

“Full gallop!” Rigel called, leading by example. Firing from that speed wasn’t easy, but Tanner had drilled them daily, and it was possible. It would be easier if they were headed straight at the enemy, of course. “Fire!” Bullets away, he started a wide turn, though about as tight as they capable of. “Fire!” Their angle now let them shoot into the front of the Foe’s formation; the enemy faltered more, living ones stumbling over dead and injured. It wasn’t going to be enough, though; there were just too many of them.


“Almighty Creator, their rifles are superb!” cried his first leftenant. MacNeil had to agree; they’d opened fire at half again the range his weapons could manage, with devastating effectiveness. For his to be so effective at their longest effective range, he would have needed fifty rifles, but Earl Fitzwin had only half that many. His other men must not have rifles, or they wouldn’t be actually closing on the Aliens – and that was a pity, for with that many rifles, the Aliens would have been in sore straits indeed.

A bullet whizzed by him, a stray shot from their uninvited ally’s men. That they even dared to fire from a gallop amazed him; that no bullets had as yet hit any of his own men made him thankful. But they wouldn’t get off another safe volley; the opposing forces here were about to meet. He was going to lose a lot of men no matter what he did, almost certainly those with bore-fixed bayonets were doomed. But they had what they had....

His ally knew the range as well as he, but they weren’t turning away – they were fixing bayonets, very long and nasty bayonets, at a gallop! And they came on even faster! Then he had no time for the luxury of thought: the enemy had arrived.


Rigel winced as the two lines clashed. Good men were going to die, and he wasn’t quite close enough to help, yet, because he’d had to stay slow enough for shooting. But his part wasn’t done, and because they could shoot with bayonets mounted, he had one last trick to play. Tanner was right on time, aiming at the enemy’s left rear... edge; the word “corner” didn’t apply to that milling mass. “Rifles, walk!” he called. “Aim... Rapid fire, fire!” Every man proceeded to empty his five rounds into the Foe, across that back edge. There wasn’t time to reload, if they were to get into the battle; if they’d had those detachable magazines Ryan had described, maybe.


Kevin MacNeil laughed out loud in amazement and delight. The group of his unasked allies that had bored in steadily on the enemy had a front line that was, of all things, lowering lances and speeding up! It was an attack ponies could never have mounted – and he realized he was envious. He also realized that when that attack was carried through, it was going to literally shove Aliens onto his line. The solution came to him even as he pictured what was about to happen.

“Form wedge!” he yelled as loudly as he could. “Form wedge! Point on Donaldson!” There was no justice in the universe, certainly none for poor Donaldson, who happened to be on the spot where the point had to be if it was going to work – and it was the only thing that could work. His men, the two-thirds still alive, responded magnificently, those on the left hammering into the Aliens, those on the right pulling back, those on the flanks falling behind, to give his unit an arrow-sharp point. He guided his pony to stand behind Donaldson. The man noticed him.

“Am I to be grateful to yer lordship for this great favor?” he cried.

“No”, he yelled back, “my lordship is to be grateful to you!” At that moment MacNeil cursed himself for a fool; he had a brace of pistols tucked in his belt, four rounds each, and hadn’t even thought of them! But for Donaldson’s sake, he was grateful: he drew and killed an Alien, then another, then another, that would have taken the man’s life.

The fighting was so intense he didn’t even notice when the lances buried themselves in Alien bodies.


Tanner’s men drove their lances home. In practiced unity, they turned and drove right, out of the way. Crossbows unleashed their bolts, aimed at Foe not downed by the lances, then that wave, too, turned and rode. For mere heartbeats the Foe were stunned, almost motionless, and in that time, the swordsmen wheeled and slashed, striking at anything not fallen. They withdrew in turn, circling to re-form for another attack.

Rigel had never thought he’d be acting like a medieval knight on a horse, with a lance. A rifle with a bayonet on the end wasn’t even much of a lance, so he didn’t even fit the picture well. He tried to get the timing right; the idea was to let a dozen and a few more Others turn to face the new threat, if they were going to, and then drive home the bayonets and leave them in the bodies of the enemy. It didn’t quite go that way, though; the only Foe coming toward him weren’t actually coming at him, just filling the gap left facing Earl Dennishire’s position. Still, they were alive, and they were the enemy, so he carried through the charge as planned, planting bayonets, wheeling, withdrawing – and going to single-round fire.

The Dragoons wedge worked superbly. The Foe split in two; the Escobar in Rigel’s memories admired the move. Tanner shifted his attack immediately, slamming into the ones Rigel was facing, from the other side. Boxed, the Others had nowhere to go, no room to run, and they didn’t seem to understand running away. The FitzWin forces ground them to meat; Tanner left the last few to Rigel, wheeled, and pounded into the flank of the remaining ones..

MacNeil grasped what his rescuers were doing. He waited until Tanner’s units had turned, when Rigel’s riflemen outnumbered the Aliens they faced by two to one. “Form line left!” he called, the command echoing down the chain of command, and paused... “Form!” His wedge shifted, the left holding fast the right splitting and moving to reinforce it.

“Brilliant! Chen exclaimed, watching the British dragoons flow into a new formation. Rigel laughed. “Now they’re ours!” he yelled. “Re-form!” He swung out and back a little to get his men where he wanted them. In what was now the Foe’s rear, he saw Tanner making a mad dash to reach the Others’ right flank, peppering them with crossbow bolts, slashing with sabers, on the way.

MacNeil shouted in exultation. These troops were worthy of Her Majesty’s best: both forces kept whittling away at the enemy while they repositioned, then, in place, they charged and slammed into both Alien flanks at the same time. It ceased to be a battle, and became a meat grinder.


The two earls faced each other, a small draw between them and the rest. “Why did you come?” Dennishire asked. “I bid you depart.”

“They’re every man’s enemy”, Rigel replied. “We all have to fight them. Together.” He hesitated to mention his goal of wiping them out.

“Perhaps I understand. Still, Her Majesty–“

“Says we can’t be friends”, Rigel finished for him, drawing a slight, tight-lipped smile. “But you’re the enemy of my enemy, and I’m the enemy of your enemy – so what does that make us? Ask her that.”

Persistent! MacNeil thought. And noble, he added. “I believe I shall endeavor so to do”, he responded. “Thanks to your generous participation in the fray, I shall have the opportunity.”

“Only my duty”, Rigel answered. He switched words at the last; “job” seemed a paltry choice in the circumstances. Wanting to see to the wounded, he gave a nod, a relaxed palm-forward salute of the variety Chen used, and turned Tornado toward where Lumina was busy. Lord MacNeil watched him go, pondering a concept of duty that would lead man to risk his own for the sake of strangers who had turned him away. Does his duty cover the world? he wondered, amused at the thought.


Along with the rest of his men who lived and moved, Earl Dennishire stared. The young woman, bare back to the sun, sighed yet again, and the glow from her hands faded, the glow from her neck more slowly. It is Elzbeth Kennessee come again, he breathed silently, the more fools our fathers to have driven her out! It made no difference to her who the man was; she had gone among them all and brought the dying into the realm of survival, then eased the others toward wholeness. She Healed three more as he watched, then rose, faltering, to take yet another mug of hot liquid. What restorative can replace... whatever energy she uses?

She came right to him. “A lot of your wounded have to stay till morning. I’ll be able to help them enough then you can take them along. But there’s a price.” She wiped her brow, her movement weak. He knew she didn’t mean gold, so he just waited. “The boy in your Signals team, Logan – he has the spark. He comes with me.”

“Logan Cameron”, MacNeil recalled. “He – you can make him a Healer?”

She rubbed the back of her neck, grimacing. “He can make himself a Healer – I just aim him in the right direction and teach what I can. We have a school – Rigel and... well, others built it for us. In a few years he’ll be able to do what I just did. Maybe more.” She staggered. “Look – I pushed myself hard for everyone. I need to go fall over.” She might have then, he thought, but two of Earl FitzWin’s men brought by a handsome young Celt with both sword and rifle caught her and helped her away. It was the one who looked for all the world like a knight who carried her into a tent, though.

Kevin, Earl Dennishire watched Rigel Fitzwin move among his wounded – no, the wounded; he made as much difference between them as the Healer had. Out loud, he wondered, “Just who is he?”

“He’s L’ard Ree–“ The young man who’d spoken let out an “Oof!” as the Lady Rita jabbed an elbow in his ribs.

“He’s a man with a mission”, she said, ignoring the young man. “If your queen decides to be friendly, he might do you the honor of inviting you to join him.” A young man whose very bearing shouted “Scout!” to the world came and took the outspoken young man away.

“Should I say that to her?” he asked, bemused by her boldness, or perhaps audacity – it was arrogance itself, to say this lord might invite Her Majesty... or was it? He glanced over to the young man who’d spoken, escorted by the Scout.

Lady Rita shrugged, as though it made no difference to her. “That’s your choice.” Then she pinned him with eyes that seemed ancient. “But as you value Life” – he distinctly heard the emphasis – “know that all men have to stand together. There’s no time for separate paths any longer.” She bowed. “He’ll need me soon – and I see someone who thinks you need to talk with him.”

Impulse struck. “Wait!” he urged softly, intensely. MacNeil whistled twice; his pony came trotting over. He dug into his saddlebag and pulled out a slim volume, deep dark blue with an embossed cover. Command was in his eyes, entreaty in his voice. “Give this to him – he must know us! Only, not too soon.” He slipped it into a protective cover and handed it to her.

Rita couldn’t resist a tease. “He shouldn’t know you too soon?” She laughed softly at the confusion that generated. “Apologies, my lord Earl; I make sport with your speech. I will give it to him when the moment is right.” This time she made a tolerable curtsy. “Now, your someone is impatient.”

He bowed in return, then turned to see Alfred waiting. “Well, old fellow, what advice do you have now?” he asked when he’d halved the distance between them.



Rigel watched the British ride away. They’d lost almost half their men; he’d lost twelve. Lumina had tried to console him with the assurance that if he hadn’t been there, the British wouldn’t even be alive, and that without her, they’d have lost two-thirds. But he hated seeing any men lost to those... demon-creatures, big cousins to the demon-spiders; that he knew for sure now that he’d seen and smelled and fought and touched them, not just in memories from another man. Tanner had explained how they were all lucky that they’d been near enough to give aid when the Others came; alone, either group would have been destroyed, but together they’d had a good chance to kill rather than be killed.

“One day they won’t kill any more men”, he swore softly. “We just have to stand together.”

“I know”, Rita answered. “I told him that.”

“You didn’t say it was my destiny or anything?”

Rita laughed. “No – I’m wise, remember? Now, we should go, too. That frost last night was a warning.”



Kevin Aidan Cathal MacNeil, Lord Macneil, Earl Dennishire, pondered what he’d heard. The Signals section had survived, though the equipment was a shambles after they’d used pieces as weapons to stop the one Alien who’d come at them. He admired their determination to get his last signal off, though, boys standing on men’s shoulders to replace the ruined tripod. “Nomads friendly. Greetings exchanged.” he’d dared send. But the biggest message he wouldn’t entrust to anyone else; that, he would carry to his Queen himself.

“I’m coming, Elizabeth”, he whispered. “With a surprise or two.”



The-Oriental-Circlet1.jpg
 
WOW! That was more than I was expecting ... and, yet ... it "Fit" perfectly! :=D:

I'm still curious about the Brits' "offstandishness"! (HA! According to "spell check" I just created a new word!) I can understand their "protective" demeanor, and yet I'm a bit confused over their "ordered" lack of wanting to get to Know "Strangers"! :confused:

"Kev" is handling it well, given his constraints. But, it is precisely those "constraints" that I'm quite curious about. #-o

Definitely looking forward to the inevitable meeting with Elizabeth! ..|

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Kuli,
A very interesting meeting.

And, happenstance brings opportunity where protective tradition sought to preclude. Even in the "other world" the Brits have elevated a Queen.

I suspect the British contingent, in its protective isolationist SNOBBERY (since it sounds like that which they didn't understand was cast out - Elzbedt!) has been fighting a slowly losing battle against the Others on their own. And that has left them supply poor. The strong front precludes outsiders from seeing how weak they really are, and how ripe for picking, as it were.

But now, they have an English (albeit with a funny accent) speaking Earl with a superbly trained contingent of cavalry made up of an amalgam of Anglo-saxon heritaged, Celts? and Conqustadoran?! peoples. Has this truncated named Earl really started to unite all of these "mythical" people together into a unified stand against the Others, the Bugs? Is his Duty, taking care of the whole world? Indeed!

And I find it interesting that the tales of Elzbedt still abide within his people - and his eyes have been opened at the magnificent gift - and I didn't hear him complain or argue about his young soldier being taken by the Earl's contingent back to wherever Rita was talking about to help him explore and develop his healing spark.

And, the other interesting tidbit - A Scottish Earl, and his love, Elisabeth - could she be kin to our own Mistress of Healing from the past?

The battle itself was great - each side saw and comprehended the abilities, resolve, and tactical training of the other. And, seeing Rigel's troops line of attack, Lord Earl Kevin quickly comprehended the best way to position his troops to maximum collective benefit.

Yes, this selfless display of chivalry - for that is exactly what coming to the aid of another with no thought for your own wellbeing is, and the paramount professionalism - not to mention the superiority of Rigel's horses and Rifles - I think, when conveyed directly to her majesty will have far reaching effects at reuniting (or perhaps uniting for the first time) these disparate members of humanity.

Thanks, Kuli. I know we're headed off to other places, soon. Rita has a significant volume from Lord Earl Kevin - to be given to Rigel at the appropriate time. Rigel and Rita have the benefit of knowledge of the ancestry of the British contingent prior to being snatched. Perhaps this book is a diary - a history of the people since they found themselves in this strange place. If it includes a discussion about Elzbedt, that would also add important insight.

For now, will we be treated to the next day and Rita providing additional healing to the men? Will Rigel be privy to the book before they head off?
The frost is a warning to them - they are South, they need to head back North.

They have found House Escobar, and heard more of the ancestry of the House of Aragon - but have not found the full House - just a "Refuge" populated by ancestors of the house union. In their journey, they have found a colonial British contingent who are schooled in the military arts, but lacking in their tools and horses. Now, they have need of pressing on, and getting back to the North to help in the continued building of both civilization and war machine.

:=D: :wave:
 
Superb! The English are good warriors, I'll give them that. And Kevin seems like a decent sort. Let's hope Her Maj isn't stupid; turning away allies when you're about to be wiped out can be called nothing else. This is the problem with standing orders with no flexibility given to the man on the ground, of course...a notable dysfunction of monarchy in general.

Finally we see the Others! OK, they are clearly to be wiped out without mercy. Call the Orkin man!

Hmm...Project Orkin. They could use that freely in front of the English and never reveal a thing!

I think maybe Elisabeth is the Queen, and Kevin's love for her is courtly...or maybe he's her Robert Dudley!
 
Great chapter Kuli, Thank you.
The first battle with some of the 'others'
Although Kevin carried out orders in turning Rigel's party away he accepted their help and understood their tactics,
so making the two forces into an effective fighting machine.
Fantastic!!
Next chapter please
Harry
 
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