-- Chapter 1: The Outpost --
Peter paused and crouched down in the darkness. I bloody heard it that time, he thought - he wasn't alone in these woods. Ahead of him, maybe a hundred yards, something was there. The soft crunching of leaves underneath feet was coming closer. He remained still, not daring to even breathe, a shadow in the night. Whether it was a man or an animal, he couldn't tell - hopefully the latter, but that would be lucky, and his luck hadn't been any good at all lately. None of the other British sentries were in this area. If that's a man, he's bloody well French.
The footsteps came closer as Peter waited. Finally he saw it in the dim moonlight - a man's shape creeping through the forest. Peter knew he hadn't been seen yet, he'd been a poacher since he was a child and knew how to keep quiet in the woods - both to hide from the animals he was hunting and the guardsmen who had been hunting him. Of course, if I'm really as good as I bloody like to think I am, I wouldn't be here in the first place, he thought to himself. Duke Andrew's men had caught him crossing a field with one of the Duke's deers slung across his back. When the first arrow whistled past his head, he had decided against trying to run. The Duke gave him a stark choice - lose a hand or join Her Majesty's army. As he crouched alone in the darkness, he wondered whether he had chosen wrong.
Peter considered his options - the sentry post was a thousand yards behind him, barely a glimmer of flame through the trees. He knew better than to look back at it, that would ruin his night vision and leave him blind. He had been sent deeper into the woods to spy out anyone who tried to get close and his orders were to kill anyone who did. If he were to raise a shout, his comrades would come out and maybe the man in the woods would run off. Then again, maybe the man would try and kill him before the English soldiers could arrive. Peter had been trained in combat during his tenure in the army, but he knew his fighting skills were average at best and he had no desire to find out if this man was better.
Also, he could let the man go past. He was getting closer now and Peter could not see anyone else with him. A single man sneaking up through the woods meant a scout, not a raid. He could stay here silent in the darkness, the man would take a look at the English defenses and then leave. No one would even have to know that he'd been there. Of course, Peter had spotted him a hundred yards away, the French hadn't picked their best man for creeping through the woods. If another of the English sentries saw him, Captain Blake would ask how he had gotten so close without Peter seeing him.
Blake was the eldest son of an important Earl and made sure that none of his men ever forgot that fact. He despised what he called "the Trash of the Empire", men like Peter who had been sent to the army instead of a prison. It was his duty to make use of them, but he made it no secret that he did not like them. If this man got close to the sentry post without a cry being raised, Blake would see Peter hanged for cowardice. He hated his commanding officer, Yes, m'Lord, of course, m'Lord, may I wipe your bloody arse for you, m'Lord, he thought. There was nothing worse than having to cowtow to that noble git.
It's not like he could run off anywhere either, the town of Manchester was the only English settlement on this entire continent. There was nothing around them but the French, and although their two empires weren't officially at war, he didn't speak their language and there had been enough skirmishes between their respective troops that he didn't want to trust his lives to them. If he ran, he'd either be killed by the first Frenchmen he came across or by English troops who'd string him up as a deserter.
So, he was left to deal with this man on his own. There were no other Englishmen close enough to help him and he couldn't let the man get past. Peter didn't like the idea, but he really didn't feel that he had a choice. Silently, he slunk closer to the man. He stopped beside a tree, directly between the man and the English sentry post and crouched down behind it, just one more shadow in the woods at night. Leaving his sword sheathed at his side, he drew his hunting knife and waited. The trees grew close together here and it would be difficult to fight with a sword, the knife was a much better option ... At least that's what I bloody hope. As the man came closer, Peter could see him clearly, he hadn't even bothered to take off his French army uniform. Granted, the dark blue colour was suited to the forest at night, but still it wasn't very wise - if he was captured, he couldn't pretend to be a farmer that's lost his way, or something.
The Frenchman had his eyes on the English sentry fire in the distance as he crept forward. Looking at that light had blinded him to everything else in the night and Peter was just another shadow to him. He walked three feet from where Peter was crouching and didn't see a thing. The man had his knife out as well, it appeared that he had been taught the same thing about trying to fight with a sword in dense woods. As the Frenchman passed by, Peter stood up quietly behind him; the man never knew anyone was around until Peter's dagger slit his throat. Clamping his other hand over the man's mouth, Peter silently lowered him to the ground as the lifeblood spilled out and then the body was still.
It always amazed him how easy it was to kill a man. He done in a few of the French since being posted on this bloody continent and once a warden had come across him outside of Edinborough while he was staking a deer. Peter had an arrow drawn to put into the buck, but when the man called out for him to stop, he'd turned and fired it through his eye. Luckily the Duke's guardsmen who'd caught him poaching that time didn't know about that, or they'd have given him a rope, not a uniform.
Peter waited motionless, listening to the darkness. He didn't hear any other sounds, it seemed that he was right about this man being alone. He really was a bloody fool. He wiped his hands on the ground and tied a bandage around the dead man's still bleeding throat - he only had two changes of clothes and wanted as little blood to clean off as possible. Slinging the body over his shoulder, he headed back towards the English sentry post.
- - - - - -
"Captain, permission to enter."
Captain Richard Blake looked up from the maps he had been studying, annoyed at the interruption. He had asked not to be disturbed for the remainder of the night. There was important work to be done and he did not want to be bothered by the petty inconveniences his men continually thrust upon him. Whatever it was had better be important or he would make sure heads rolled on the morrow. "Come, " he responded.
His aide entered the tent and saluted sharply. "What is it you want, Corporal?" Blake asked tersely. Jackson was the younger son of a minor lordling and on his first assignment in Her Majesty's forces. Back in London society, they may have been acquaintences, but in the field, the boy was merely a Corporal and Blake himself a Captain; there was no need for familiarity between them.
"One of the outer sentries found a French infiltrator approaching the camp, sir" the Corporal replied. "He dispatched him and brought the body back."
"Very well, I'd best take a look." Blake said as he strode out of the tent, Jackson quickly leaping back to hold open the flap for him. Blake despised the men he put on duty as outer sentries. They were poachers and thieves, the rubbish of society that had found their way into Her Majesty's service, usually to escape the gallows for one crime or another. They were good at skulking around in the darkness, though - likely learned in alleyways while they were thieving from better men - so he posted them in the forest beyond the sentry fires, to give advance warning of anyone who tried to approach. His secret hope was that they would try to run off, as sometimes happened. There was a great deal of satisfaction in tracking down deserters and seeing them hanged.
A group of soldiers had gathered around the body of the French soldier, some of whom had already begun rifling through the pockets to see what they could steal off of the corpse. Vultures, all of them, Blake thought as he came forward. Fortunately, there were sturdier men in his command, as well, and a perimeter of archers and pikemen had been set up, in case any of the dead man's associates were in the area.
The soldiers moved back as Blake arrived to inspect the body. The fool had worn his French army uniform as he tried to spy on the English encampment. These people truly were without sense, it would only be a small matter for Her Majesty's armies to defeat them if it came to war. Being incorporated into the British Empire with all the benefits that entailed would likely be the best thing for the savage race. It was fortuitous for them that the English had come to this continent when they did.
"Who spotted this man?" Blake asked.
One of the soldiers stepped forward. Blake did not remember his name, not that that mattered, this trash he was forced to serve with were all alike.
"I did, m'Lord. Peter, of Edinborough," the man said, bowing his head.
Of Edinborough, Blake thought, the man names himself as if he thinks he's the Duke. He looked down at the dead body, seeing the slit throat. His second cousin Heather's fiancee had had his throat cut by highwaymen outside of Edinborough. Blake wondered whether this Peter had been one of them. Still, he had done good work in disposing of the French spy, so Blake consented to give him a congratulatory nod, which was likely more than someone like him deserved.
He turned to Corporal Jackson, "Dispatch some men to take this body west the the Gascon Hills. There have been reports of French outriders there and I want them to find this one's corpse, to teach them what happens when they do not give Her Majesty's forces a wide berth. At dawn, I want double the regular patrols to scour the area to ensure that none of this one's compatriots have remanined in the area." Jackson saluted and went about carrying out his orders.
War is coming, Blake thought as he returned to his tent. There was no doubt in his mind about it. The French and the English could not occupy the same land without it coming to bloodshed. That is why he had given his men the order to kill any Frenchman they saw, it was no less than these savages would do to any good Englishman. He was glad to have this assignment on the front lines, the better to prove his worth. He was in command of thieves and murderers, true, but a few victories should be easy against the sort of men the French could put in the field. After showing his valour on the battlefield, he would be given a more choice command, as befit his birth and station. The Queen would see that the proud Blake name still defended her Empire with honour.
He returned to the study of his maps, waiting for the day he would be given the command to attack. He knew he would not have to wait long.
Peter paused and crouched down in the darkness. I bloody heard it that time, he thought - he wasn't alone in these woods. Ahead of him, maybe a hundred yards, something was there. The soft crunching of leaves underneath feet was coming closer. He remained still, not daring to even breathe, a shadow in the night. Whether it was a man or an animal, he couldn't tell - hopefully the latter, but that would be lucky, and his luck hadn't been any good at all lately. None of the other British sentries were in this area. If that's a man, he's bloody well French.
The footsteps came closer as Peter waited. Finally he saw it in the dim moonlight - a man's shape creeping through the forest. Peter knew he hadn't been seen yet, he'd been a poacher since he was a child and knew how to keep quiet in the woods - both to hide from the animals he was hunting and the guardsmen who had been hunting him. Of course, if I'm really as good as I bloody like to think I am, I wouldn't be here in the first place, he thought to himself. Duke Andrew's men had caught him crossing a field with one of the Duke's deers slung across his back. When the first arrow whistled past his head, he had decided against trying to run. The Duke gave him a stark choice - lose a hand or join Her Majesty's army. As he crouched alone in the darkness, he wondered whether he had chosen wrong.
Peter considered his options - the sentry post was a thousand yards behind him, barely a glimmer of flame through the trees. He knew better than to look back at it, that would ruin his night vision and leave him blind. He had been sent deeper into the woods to spy out anyone who tried to get close and his orders were to kill anyone who did. If he were to raise a shout, his comrades would come out and maybe the man in the woods would run off. Then again, maybe the man would try and kill him before the English soldiers could arrive. Peter had been trained in combat during his tenure in the army, but he knew his fighting skills were average at best and he had no desire to find out if this man was better.
Also, he could let the man go past. He was getting closer now and Peter could not see anyone else with him. A single man sneaking up through the woods meant a scout, not a raid. He could stay here silent in the darkness, the man would take a look at the English defenses and then leave. No one would even have to know that he'd been there. Of course, Peter had spotted him a hundred yards away, the French hadn't picked their best man for creeping through the woods. If another of the English sentries saw him, Captain Blake would ask how he had gotten so close without Peter seeing him.
Blake was the eldest son of an important Earl and made sure that none of his men ever forgot that fact. He despised what he called "the Trash of the Empire", men like Peter who had been sent to the army instead of a prison. It was his duty to make use of them, but he made it no secret that he did not like them. If this man got close to the sentry post without a cry being raised, Blake would see Peter hanged for cowardice. He hated his commanding officer, Yes, m'Lord, of course, m'Lord, may I wipe your bloody arse for you, m'Lord, he thought. There was nothing worse than having to cowtow to that noble git.
It's not like he could run off anywhere either, the town of Manchester was the only English settlement on this entire continent. There was nothing around them but the French, and although their two empires weren't officially at war, he didn't speak their language and there had been enough skirmishes between their respective troops that he didn't want to trust his lives to them. If he ran, he'd either be killed by the first Frenchmen he came across or by English troops who'd string him up as a deserter.
So, he was left to deal with this man on his own. There were no other Englishmen close enough to help him and he couldn't let the man get past. Peter didn't like the idea, but he really didn't feel that he had a choice. Silently, he slunk closer to the man. He stopped beside a tree, directly between the man and the English sentry post and crouched down behind it, just one more shadow in the woods at night. Leaving his sword sheathed at his side, he drew his hunting knife and waited. The trees grew close together here and it would be difficult to fight with a sword, the knife was a much better option ... At least that's what I bloody hope. As the man came closer, Peter could see him clearly, he hadn't even bothered to take off his French army uniform. Granted, the dark blue colour was suited to the forest at night, but still it wasn't very wise - if he was captured, he couldn't pretend to be a farmer that's lost his way, or something.
The Frenchman had his eyes on the English sentry fire in the distance as he crept forward. Looking at that light had blinded him to everything else in the night and Peter was just another shadow to him. He walked three feet from where Peter was crouching and didn't see a thing. The man had his knife out as well, it appeared that he had been taught the same thing about trying to fight with a sword in dense woods. As the Frenchman passed by, Peter stood up quietly behind him; the man never knew anyone was around until Peter's dagger slit his throat. Clamping his other hand over the man's mouth, Peter silently lowered him to the ground as the lifeblood spilled out and then the body was still.
It always amazed him how easy it was to kill a man. He done in a few of the French since being posted on this bloody continent and once a warden had come across him outside of Edinborough while he was staking a deer. Peter had an arrow drawn to put into the buck, but when the man called out for him to stop, he'd turned and fired it through his eye. Luckily the Duke's guardsmen who'd caught him poaching that time didn't know about that, or they'd have given him a rope, not a uniform.
Peter waited motionless, listening to the darkness. He didn't hear any other sounds, it seemed that he was right about this man being alone. He really was a bloody fool. He wiped his hands on the ground and tied a bandage around the dead man's still bleeding throat - he only had two changes of clothes and wanted as little blood to clean off as possible. Slinging the body over his shoulder, he headed back towards the English sentry post.
- - - - - -
"Captain, permission to enter."
Captain Richard Blake looked up from the maps he had been studying, annoyed at the interruption. He had asked not to be disturbed for the remainder of the night. There was important work to be done and he did not want to be bothered by the petty inconveniences his men continually thrust upon him. Whatever it was had better be important or he would make sure heads rolled on the morrow. "Come, " he responded.
His aide entered the tent and saluted sharply. "What is it you want, Corporal?" Blake asked tersely. Jackson was the younger son of a minor lordling and on his first assignment in Her Majesty's forces. Back in London society, they may have been acquaintences, but in the field, the boy was merely a Corporal and Blake himself a Captain; there was no need for familiarity between them.
"One of the outer sentries found a French infiltrator approaching the camp, sir" the Corporal replied. "He dispatched him and brought the body back."
"Very well, I'd best take a look." Blake said as he strode out of the tent, Jackson quickly leaping back to hold open the flap for him. Blake despised the men he put on duty as outer sentries. They were poachers and thieves, the rubbish of society that had found their way into Her Majesty's service, usually to escape the gallows for one crime or another. They were good at skulking around in the darkness, though - likely learned in alleyways while they were thieving from better men - so he posted them in the forest beyond the sentry fires, to give advance warning of anyone who tried to approach. His secret hope was that they would try to run off, as sometimes happened. There was a great deal of satisfaction in tracking down deserters and seeing them hanged.
A group of soldiers had gathered around the body of the French soldier, some of whom had already begun rifling through the pockets to see what they could steal off of the corpse. Vultures, all of them, Blake thought as he came forward. Fortunately, there were sturdier men in his command, as well, and a perimeter of archers and pikemen had been set up, in case any of the dead man's associates were in the area.
The soldiers moved back as Blake arrived to inspect the body. The fool had worn his French army uniform as he tried to spy on the English encampment. These people truly were without sense, it would only be a small matter for Her Majesty's armies to defeat them if it came to war. Being incorporated into the British Empire with all the benefits that entailed would likely be the best thing for the savage race. It was fortuitous for them that the English had come to this continent when they did.
"Who spotted this man?" Blake asked.
One of the soldiers stepped forward. Blake did not remember his name, not that that mattered, this trash he was forced to serve with were all alike.
"I did, m'Lord. Peter, of Edinborough," the man said, bowing his head.
Of Edinborough, Blake thought, the man names himself as if he thinks he's the Duke. He looked down at the dead body, seeing the slit throat. His second cousin Heather's fiancee had had his throat cut by highwaymen outside of Edinborough. Blake wondered whether this Peter had been one of them. Still, he had done good work in disposing of the French spy, so Blake consented to give him a congratulatory nod, which was likely more than someone like him deserved.
He turned to Corporal Jackson, "Dispatch some men to take this body west the the Gascon Hills. There have been reports of French outriders there and I want them to find this one's corpse, to teach them what happens when they do not give Her Majesty's forces a wide berth. At dawn, I want double the regular patrols to scour the area to ensure that none of this one's compatriots have remanined in the area." Jackson saluted and went about carrying out his orders.
War is coming, Blake thought as he returned to his tent. There was no doubt in his mind about it. The French and the English could not occupy the same land without it coming to bloodshed. That is why he had given his men the order to kill any Frenchman they saw, it was no less than these savages would do to any good Englishman. He was glad to have this assignment on the front lines, the better to prove his worth. He was in command of thieves and murderers, true, but a few victories should be easy against the sort of men the French could put in the field. After showing his valour on the battlefield, he would be given a more choice command, as befit his birth and station. The Queen would see that the proud Blake name still defended her Empire with honour.
He returned to the study of his maps, waiting for the day he would be given the command to attack. He knew he would not have to wait long.
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