Ebengrenzstadt
Alberic and Vassos speak about the recruits, new and old faces arrived
Cowritten between @Badarby, @InfamousGuy101, and @Dyelli Beybi
The recruits stood in an uneven line, shoulders slouched and blades wavering like fishing rods in the hands of men who’d never seen the sea.
"Watch!" Alberic barked the command again and slashed his own sword through the air, one hand only, a clean diagonal cut, then the quick follow-through in the Monchian corsair’s style. The hay dummy in front of him took the blows without flinching, straw spilling where the steel had bitten in practice after practice.
“Again,” Alberic snapped. The dozen or so recruits stumbled through the motion, sluggish and clumsy. A few nearly dropped their blades, one lost his footing entirely, Alberic’s jaw tightened. Too many men to train and too few worth training. And the veterans? Posted on guard, not wasting hours here in the yard.
For a moment, Alberic let his thoughts wander. Warrin was somewhere across the mainland raising hell while he stood here babysitting boys with sticks. Anger seethed under his ribs, he had chosen to stay. Chosen wrong, perhaps. With Coralie’s envoy gone and no bargain struck, what had he achieved? Nothing but dull blades and wasted time. He noticed Vassos lingering at the edge of the yard, watching the display with what seemed to be a disapproving eye. Alberic exhaled hard through his nose, strode over, and spoke before the man could get a word in.
“I’m doing the best I can with what I’ve got. Which isn’t much. We can’t spare the skilled men, we need them on the walls," he said.
"We don't need veterans on the walls, bring them back," Vassos looked over what was going on in the yard with his usual inscrutable expression. "Let the town watch do what the town watch does. The most important thing we can do is drill the musketeers to reload quickly and to recognize the signal to withdraw into the pike square. The pikemen need to be able to move in formation and brace their weapons. Fencing instruction is... fine... but we don't need fencing masters. We need a battalia who can hold formation over rough terrain and maintain discipline under fire."
Alberic gave a short nod, “You’re not wrong,” he admitted.
“Marcus has already been running a troop through pike drills, brace, line march, how to rally when the shot comes close. He’s better at that than I am, so I’ve left it to him. But even he’ll tell you the same problem I will: we don’t have enough muskets. We’ve got arquebuses in decent number, but true muskets? Those are few, and fewer still in working order. I can’t drill men to fire what we don’t have.”
He looked back at the awkward line of recruits, one still fumbling to keep his grip on the blade, "I’ll give this lot what I can, if that means musket practice one man at a time, then so be it. But don’t dismiss the steel, Vassos. No formation ever held forever, not against cavalry or sudden breaks. When it comes down to it, these men will meet an enemy face to face, so best they know how to put a blade to use than stand frozen when the pikes splinter.”
While Vassos and Alberic spoke to each other, horse noises could be heard as a guard guided two armored men on horses to the Lieutenant Colonel. Closer look at the two men would reveal one of them to be the familiar face of Sir Loan.
“Here is the Lieutenant-Colonel my Lord,” the guide said to Loan and the other man, one clean shaven and looking a few years younger.
“Thank you, soldier,” Loan said to the guide before smiling at the direction of Vassos and Alberic. The soldier bowed and walked away.
“Hello there, good gentlemen,” he called out, waving at Vassos and Alberic, having the horse walk closer to the Lieutenant Colonel. “It’s been a while but the royal detachment has arrived.
“And the man next to me is Prince Edwin, leading this detachment in the name of the King,” he added, introducing the other man. The prince bowed in respect to the colonel.
“It is an honor to meet the Lieutenant Colonel of the Regiment of Lady Andronika,” Edwin replied. “We have brought around 3,000 men as part of the King’s detachment in support of Lady Andronika’s regiment.”
For a moment the Alberic only studied the prince, then he gave a small bow, stiff but respectful, the movement of a man more at ease on a deck than in a court.
“Your Highness,” Alberic said, voice steady, “Three thousand men is no small gift. You have my thanks, and the thanks of every soldier in Lady Andronika’s service. I am Captain Alberic Thorel, at your service.”
"Your Highness," Vassos swept off his hat, offering a practice bow, "Our Lady will doubtless be grateful for the detachment, though I must preemptively offer her apologies for not being here. The Lady Andronika is travelling to meet with the Elga Prince in the West to secure Alliance that will allow her to be restored to her rightful throne."
Edwin nodded at both Vassos and Alberic's introductions. “It makes sense for her to meet with a potential ally in the West, the split between the two Princes of the Haltians is a surprising yet welcoming development.”
“Praise the Divine Family that the split occured,” he added. “Even with the fires emerging across the territories of the Empire, a unified Haltian would be a much tougher force to face than a divided one.”
"I would have said an impossible one," Vassos opined, before adding, "It has taken some time to negotiate but Orrian has acknowledge the Lady as 'Queen of the Humans'. It would seem he is not interested in direct rule of the Mittelvolk or the Inburians."
Alberic stood quiet as Vassos and the prince exchanged words, listening more than speaking. Politics wasn’t his craft; he’d been raised on the deck of a ship, not in the halls of lords. Still, even he could see the weight of what Vassos was saying. If Orrian truly recognized Andronika as “Queen of the Humans,” then perhaps they had the first solid stone laid for something greater than a rebellion. At least one thing was finally leaning in their favor after the mess with Coralie.
He let his eyes drift past the prince to the mass of mismatched recruits still fumbling with blades in the yard. His stomach tightened. Three thousand new soldiers, trained, armed, disciplined... on parchment it looked like salvation, but in truth it meant nothing unless they could be molded into something that held the line when the Haltian banners appeared.
Turning back, Alberic finally spoke, his tone steady.
“Titles and alliances are well and good, but what we need is an army that can stand. Our priority has to be drilling every man. With your detachment, Your Highness, we can at least bolster our defenses and our men's training. But we need to consult with Lady Andronika at once as to where our broader strategy lays now."
"Our broader strategy is to secure this Alliance," Vassos replied with a glance at Edwin, "This will secure us the backing of the finest soldiers on the continent and the ability to recruit and train in Mitteland... if, of course, Orrian can follow up on his earlier victory and drive his brother East. Which, incidentally, is why I would guess, once she returns, we will be marching to join up with Orrian."
“Plus one less enemy army to fight is always a sound strategy,” Loan chipped in. “And we already have many armies as is that could be an enemy outside of the Eastern forces.”
Alberic and Vassos speak about the recruits, new and old faces arrived
Cowritten between @Badarby, @InfamousGuy101, and @Dyelli Beybi
The recruits stood in an uneven line, shoulders slouched and blades wavering like fishing rods in the hands of men who’d never seen the sea.
"Watch!" Alberic barked the command again and slashed his own sword through the air, one hand only, a clean diagonal cut, then the quick follow-through in the Monchian corsair’s style. The hay dummy in front of him took the blows without flinching, straw spilling where the steel had bitten in practice after practice.
“Again,” Alberic snapped. The dozen or so recruits stumbled through the motion, sluggish and clumsy. A few nearly dropped their blades, one lost his footing entirely, Alberic’s jaw tightened. Too many men to train and too few worth training. And the veterans? Posted on guard, not wasting hours here in the yard.
For a moment, Alberic let his thoughts wander. Warrin was somewhere across the mainland raising hell while he stood here babysitting boys with sticks. Anger seethed under his ribs, he had chosen to stay. Chosen wrong, perhaps. With Coralie’s envoy gone and no bargain struck, what had he achieved? Nothing but dull blades and wasted time. He noticed Vassos lingering at the edge of the yard, watching the display with what seemed to be a disapproving eye. Alberic exhaled hard through his nose, strode over, and spoke before the man could get a word in.
“I’m doing the best I can with what I’ve got. Which isn’t much. We can’t spare the skilled men, we need them on the walls," he said.
"We don't need veterans on the walls, bring them back," Vassos looked over what was going on in the yard with his usual inscrutable expression. "Let the town watch do what the town watch does. The most important thing we can do is drill the musketeers to reload quickly and to recognize the signal to withdraw into the pike square. The pikemen need to be able to move in formation and brace their weapons. Fencing instruction is... fine... but we don't need fencing masters. We need a battalia who can hold formation over rough terrain and maintain discipline under fire."
Alberic gave a short nod, “You’re not wrong,” he admitted.
“Marcus has already been running a troop through pike drills, brace, line march, how to rally when the shot comes close. He’s better at that than I am, so I’ve left it to him. But even he’ll tell you the same problem I will: we don’t have enough muskets. We’ve got arquebuses in decent number, but true muskets? Those are few, and fewer still in working order. I can’t drill men to fire what we don’t have.”
He looked back at the awkward line of recruits, one still fumbling to keep his grip on the blade, "I’ll give this lot what I can, if that means musket practice one man at a time, then so be it. But don’t dismiss the steel, Vassos. No formation ever held forever, not against cavalry or sudden breaks. When it comes down to it, these men will meet an enemy face to face, so best they know how to put a blade to use than stand frozen when the pikes splinter.”
While Vassos and Alberic spoke to each other, horse noises could be heard as a guard guided two armored men on horses to the Lieutenant Colonel. Closer look at the two men would reveal one of them to be the familiar face of Sir Loan.
“Here is the Lieutenant-Colonel my Lord,” the guide said to Loan and the other man, one clean shaven and looking a few years younger.
“Thank you, soldier,” Loan said to the guide before smiling at the direction of Vassos and Alberic. The soldier bowed and walked away.
“Hello there, good gentlemen,” he called out, waving at Vassos and Alberic, having the horse walk closer to the Lieutenant Colonel. “It’s been a while but the royal detachment has arrived.
“And the man next to me is Prince Edwin, leading this detachment in the name of the King,” he added, introducing the other man. The prince bowed in respect to the colonel.
“It is an honor to meet the Lieutenant Colonel of the Regiment of Lady Andronika,” Edwin replied. “We have brought around 3,000 men as part of the King’s detachment in support of Lady Andronika’s regiment.”
For a moment the Alberic only studied the prince, then he gave a small bow, stiff but respectful, the movement of a man more at ease on a deck than in a court.
“Your Highness,” Alberic said, voice steady, “Three thousand men is no small gift. You have my thanks, and the thanks of every soldier in Lady Andronika’s service. I am Captain Alberic Thorel, at your service.”
"Your Highness," Vassos swept off his hat, offering a practice bow, "Our Lady will doubtless be grateful for the detachment, though I must preemptively offer her apologies for not being here. The Lady Andronika is travelling to meet with the Elga Prince in the West to secure Alliance that will allow her to be restored to her rightful throne."
Edwin nodded at both Vassos and Alberic's introductions. “It makes sense for her to meet with a potential ally in the West, the split between the two Princes of the Haltians is a surprising yet welcoming development.”
“Praise the Divine Family that the split occured,” he added. “Even with the fires emerging across the territories of the Empire, a unified Haltian would be a much tougher force to face than a divided one.”
"I would have said an impossible one," Vassos opined, before adding, "It has taken some time to negotiate but Orrian has acknowledge the Lady as 'Queen of the Humans'. It would seem he is not interested in direct rule of the Mittelvolk or the Inburians."
Alberic stood quiet as Vassos and the prince exchanged words, listening more than speaking. Politics wasn’t his craft; he’d been raised on the deck of a ship, not in the halls of lords. Still, even he could see the weight of what Vassos was saying. If Orrian truly recognized Andronika as “Queen of the Humans,” then perhaps they had the first solid stone laid for something greater than a rebellion. At least one thing was finally leaning in their favor after the mess with Coralie.
He let his eyes drift past the prince to the mass of mismatched recruits still fumbling with blades in the yard. His stomach tightened. Three thousand new soldiers, trained, armed, disciplined... on parchment it looked like salvation, but in truth it meant nothing unless they could be molded into something that held the line when the Haltian banners appeared.
Turning back, Alberic finally spoke, his tone steady.
“Titles and alliances are well and good, but what we need is an army that can stand. Our priority has to be drilling every man. With your detachment, Your Highness, we can at least bolster our defenses and our men's training. But we need to consult with Lady Andronika at once as to where our broader strategy lays now."
"Our broader strategy is to secure this Alliance," Vassos replied with a glance at Edwin, "This will secure us the backing of the finest soldiers on the continent and the ability to recruit and train in Mitteland... if, of course, Orrian can follow up on his earlier victory and drive his brother East. Which, incidentally, is why I would guess, once she returns, we will be marching to join up with Orrian."
“Plus one less enemy army to fight is always a sound strategy,” Loan chipped in. “And we already have many armies as is that could be an enemy outside of the Eastern forces.”
