This is the first chapter of a story I've just started, dealing with some events that took place during one of my games with an invented civilisation called Kraedor, based on the Egyptians. It's partly serious, and you should be able to get an idea for what the theme of the story is going to be from this chapter. If it recieves any vaguely positive response, I might continue it. If not, then I won't. Anyway.
The Darkness Behind The Throne
The rain lashed down, drenching the already blood-soaked earth. Beneath the hooves of the cavalry, the field before Washington had been churned up into a muddy morass, and progress was becoming difficult. Such is the fate of the soldier, thought Jehan. To summon the courage to ride to the place of his death, only to be stopped by the weather. He laughed, a harsh and bitter sound. Beneath him, his horse whickered nervously as the guns of the Americans once again rang out from the city walls, too far away to have any effect.
He raised his sabre once more, bright steel against the dark sky. “Rally to me, my countrymen! Once more to the walls!” he yelled, causing his horse to rear as he did so. As it landed back into the mud, he dug in his spurs, and the horse again galloped forward, carrying a Jehan still yelling the cries of battle. Mud sprayed out with each stride it took.
He was not being followed. Glancing back, he pulled his horse to a halt, and looked at the dozen or so remaining cavalrymen from his division. “Come on, you fools! For the glory of Kraedor!” he shouted at them through the rain.
Nothing happened. Cursing them beneath his breath, he wheeled his horse around and rode back to them. They sat on horses drooping with fatigue, their eyes full of the resignation that this war had made common. One of them, a young recruit from Caira, turned to look at Jehan, or rather through him. “No,” he said.
“What are you saying?” Jehan gasped, “No? You dare disobey a direct order from your superior officer on the field of battle?”
“This is not a field of battle. This is…” the young soldier started shivering, from the cold or from terror, Jehan was unable to tell, “… the dying ground.”
Blast. A religious one then, and a cowardly one at that. Still, an order was an order, no matter how insane it may have seemed to Jehan, and it must be followed if any respect at all was to be retained for the chain of command. As a high-ranking part of the chain of command, he felt this very strongly. He drew his musket, and aimed it at a point between the recruit’s eyes.
Around him, he saw the resigned looks of the surviving cavalrymen change to ones of anger, and a dozen barrels were levelled at his chest. “No,” the young recruit said, more emphatically this time. “We will not die today. You may go, if you wish. We will not follow. Do not attempt to persuade us. If you remain any longer, you will die. This is our decision.”
Looking at the hardening faces around him, Jehan turned his horse back to the city. “Enjoy your hangings, cowards, for that is surely what the courts will do to you once they learn of this cowardice.” With that, he rode off once again towards the walls of Washington.
As he crossed the muddy remnants of what once was bountiful grassland, his thoughts turned to what the preacher had taught him in the great cathedral of Xahu, on a bright summer day so many years ago.
Tiny motes of dust were hanging in the air, visible in the rays of the sun streaming through the great window. A much younger Jehan watched them settle on the preacher’s robes, bored by all this talk of religion.
Then the preacher mentioned battle, and Jehan’s ears pricked up. “The Americans came down from the mountains of Babylon like a raging torrent, in armies thousands strong. It was said that the gleam of their knights’ armour was enough to rival the sun, such were their numbers. They stormed Baek, and quickly overthrew the city’s pitiful defence. Plundering and looting, they burned the city to the ground, destroying the beautiful gardens that had once flowered there. Our armies were at the opposite end of the empire, still tired from skirmishes with the Russians. There was no way they could reach in time, and the American advance towards the capital seemed relentless.
Then the gods intervened, and caused it to seem as though time had flowed backward. We watched as the American hordes retreated back to the mountains, and the ruins of Baek rose up to become once more the great city it had been. We had been forewarned, but they had not, and when they came down once again they were met by our massed musketmen, which were then the most powerful military force in the world, and on the plains beneath the mountains we triumphed. Kraedor forced a peace on America, which has lasted until this day. We dwell safe in the knowledge that, if danger ever threatens Kraedor again, the gods will intervene. We truly are the chosen people.”
This childhood memory had sustained Jehan throughout his whole military career, safe in the knowledge that the gods would not let one of their chosen people die on the field of battle. The rest of his unit had been from the occupied province of Germania, and thus were not under the gods’ protection. But he was. And so, he galloped towards Washington, and while the musket balls of the Americans began to hit the mud around him he laughed, feeling the invincibility handed to him by the gods themselves.
The musket fire grew more intense, and got slowly closer to Jehan. Still he rode on, until a ball caught his horse in the head. It screamed briefly, and collapsed, trapping one of Jehan’s legs beneath it. He stared up at the walls, imagining he could see the musketmen taking aim at the now immobile target, and laughed, awaiting time to roll back.
The final thing his ears recorded was the sound of a musket shot. This time the gods would not intervene.
The Darkness Behind The Throne
The rain lashed down, drenching the already blood-soaked earth. Beneath the hooves of the cavalry, the field before Washington had been churned up into a muddy morass, and progress was becoming difficult. Such is the fate of the soldier, thought Jehan. To summon the courage to ride to the place of his death, only to be stopped by the weather. He laughed, a harsh and bitter sound. Beneath him, his horse whickered nervously as the guns of the Americans once again rang out from the city walls, too far away to have any effect.
He raised his sabre once more, bright steel against the dark sky. “Rally to me, my countrymen! Once more to the walls!” he yelled, causing his horse to rear as he did so. As it landed back into the mud, he dug in his spurs, and the horse again galloped forward, carrying a Jehan still yelling the cries of battle. Mud sprayed out with each stride it took.
He was not being followed. Glancing back, he pulled his horse to a halt, and looked at the dozen or so remaining cavalrymen from his division. “Come on, you fools! For the glory of Kraedor!” he shouted at them through the rain.
Nothing happened. Cursing them beneath his breath, he wheeled his horse around and rode back to them. They sat on horses drooping with fatigue, their eyes full of the resignation that this war had made common. One of them, a young recruit from Caira, turned to look at Jehan, or rather through him. “No,” he said.
“What are you saying?” Jehan gasped, “No? You dare disobey a direct order from your superior officer on the field of battle?”
“This is not a field of battle. This is…” the young soldier started shivering, from the cold or from terror, Jehan was unable to tell, “… the dying ground.”
Blast. A religious one then, and a cowardly one at that. Still, an order was an order, no matter how insane it may have seemed to Jehan, and it must be followed if any respect at all was to be retained for the chain of command. As a high-ranking part of the chain of command, he felt this very strongly. He drew his musket, and aimed it at a point between the recruit’s eyes.
Around him, he saw the resigned looks of the surviving cavalrymen change to ones of anger, and a dozen barrels were levelled at his chest. “No,” the young recruit said, more emphatically this time. “We will not die today. You may go, if you wish. We will not follow. Do not attempt to persuade us. If you remain any longer, you will die. This is our decision.”
Looking at the hardening faces around him, Jehan turned his horse back to the city. “Enjoy your hangings, cowards, for that is surely what the courts will do to you once they learn of this cowardice.” With that, he rode off once again towards the walls of Washington.
As he crossed the muddy remnants of what once was bountiful grassland, his thoughts turned to what the preacher had taught him in the great cathedral of Xahu, on a bright summer day so many years ago.
Tiny motes of dust were hanging in the air, visible in the rays of the sun streaming through the great window. A much younger Jehan watched them settle on the preacher’s robes, bored by all this talk of religion.
Then the preacher mentioned battle, and Jehan’s ears pricked up. “The Americans came down from the mountains of Babylon like a raging torrent, in armies thousands strong. It was said that the gleam of their knights’ armour was enough to rival the sun, such were their numbers. They stormed Baek, and quickly overthrew the city’s pitiful defence. Plundering and looting, they burned the city to the ground, destroying the beautiful gardens that had once flowered there. Our armies were at the opposite end of the empire, still tired from skirmishes with the Russians. There was no way they could reach in time, and the American advance towards the capital seemed relentless.
Then the gods intervened, and caused it to seem as though time had flowed backward. We watched as the American hordes retreated back to the mountains, and the ruins of Baek rose up to become once more the great city it had been. We had been forewarned, but they had not, and when they came down once again they were met by our massed musketmen, which were then the most powerful military force in the world, and on the plains beneath the mountains we triumphed. Kraedor forced a peace on America, which has lasted until this day. We dwell safe in the knowledge that, if danger ever threatens Kraedor again, the gods will intervene. We truly are the chosen people.”
This childhood memory had sustained Jehan throughout his whole military career, safe in the knowledge that the gods would not let one of their chosen people die on the field of battle. The rest of his unit had been from the occupied province of Germania, and thus were not under the gods’ protection. But he was. And so, he galloped towards Washington, and while the musket balls of the Americans began to hit the mud around him he laughed, feeling the invincibility handed to him by the gods themselves.
The musket fire grew more intense, and got slowly closer to Jehan. Still he rode on, until a ball caught his horse in the head. It screamed briefly, and collapsed, trapping one of Jehan’s legs beneath it. He stared up at the walls, imagining he could see the musketmen taking aim at the now immobile target, and laughed, awaiting time to roll back.
The final thing his ears recorded was the sound of a musket shot. This time the gods would not intervene.
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