Roleplay Forums > Canelux > Throat of the Moon > Highlands > Homecoming Into Flames (P,R)
Galin

Character Info
Name: Galin Ochiern
Age: --
Alignment: CG
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Class: Warrior
Silver: 643
The sea voyage had not done anything to improve Galin’s temper and even as the hall and palisade of Dunholm appeared on the horizon, he grumbled incessantly to anyone that would listen. Things, in his opinion, had gone from bad to worse since he had the ambassadors to the Adelunan court thrust into his lap. Bohari raiders had tried to cut them to shreds over trade routes and it was a bloody scrap that kept the ambassadors alive on the road to Adeluna. While they had held off the riders relatively easily, Galin could not shake the feeling that his men were not prepared for the sort of fighting they would face. Too many, after Cedric, lost the cohesion of their old companies within the wall, the messmates they had known for years, and even the fights they had endured since had not truly brought them together in the same way. On the road to Adeluna, it had been Cooper that prevented a slaughter with his heroics but Galin knew that if he was his most honest, the entire situation should never have come down to the intervention of one man. The line did not hold as it had always done before, where men knew their rank-mates like brothers and fought with one mind and one will. That was anathema to the skirmishers who were the bulk of the reformed company and, despite his nearly ceaseless training, he found it nearly impossible to form a shield wall that he would have trusted with his life.

And then that bastard Sanders. That dottering old bastard decided that he knew what the company needed and instead of finding a way to keep them out of the Court’s eye, he thrust them directly into it, all in the name of helping them. A small reward and sending them on their way would have been the perfect reward for keeping the ambassadors from being skewered by the Bohari but instead they were sent north to help defend the borders of the Queen’s family lands in Mamlak. Being mercenaries and thus not actual lords of the soil, they were eligible for extended service abroad, while a knight could return home after thirty days in the field outside the bounds of Adeluna proper. Thus sixty men, more than half the company, were loaded into one of the large cargo hulks that plied the coast from Adeluna to Dunholm and were shipped north. Galin had suggested a sea voyage in spite of himself, knowing that even saving a few days would make the overland trek from Dunholm to Mamlak more bearable.

“Cooper,” Galin growled to the big man behind him, “get the men in full kit now. Anyone that grumbles, throw him over the damned side. I am tired of their malingering shite and they need to get it through their damned heads that no matter who they were with Cedric, we are all the same now. No more of this shite…” Galin turned to glare at the man then sighed through his nose softly. “I know man, I know, you don’t need to say it. But we’re bloody Highlanders, not southrons. We can’t discard fighting the way the Maker taught us for the sake of expedience. And just because back home, back here the skirmishers have their own messes and serve nearly as a second force in the field, doesn’t mean that we can just ignore what the company is now. And I know you’ve heard me say it every bloody day, but we need to either get the men to understand it or let ‘em retire so I don’t end up with a Bohari twelve foot sticker in my guts because some bugger’s decided to drift to suit the calling of his own skirmishing soul.”

“Aye sir, and I bloody well understand,” Cooper replied with a wry smile. “But the fellas are skirmishers, through and through. Can’t change a dog’s spots, so you can’t. They may make half decent men on the line but I’d prefer ‘em on my flank out ahead pestering the shite out of the other lines, yeah?”

“And if I had my preference, I’d be eyeballs deep in gold and beer and the company would be another man’s bleeding problem. Sadly, I can’t see a pint or a crescent anywhere here, so preference is about as bloody useful as Deepdale’s pissing into the wind last night.” Galin grinned and shook his head. “Just get them ready, Owen. Full kit, because when we hit the wharf, we’re marching to Mamlak straight away. No dawdling about, looking for the comforts of home. We have a bleeding job to do and I want to not have it be another cockup like the last, yeah?” Cooper grinned back and sketched a salute before ducking below to where the men were starting to wake, shouting at them to roust them from their sleep and into some semblance of military shape. Galin, already in his mail, turned and nodded to the ship’s sailing master. “Just another hour, you think?” The man spat over the side and nodded. “Very well, thank you,” Galin replied and left the man to his steering while the small crew of the hulk secured sails home to catch the first stirrings of the morning’s west wind.

Seagulls screamed over the wharf as the ship drew closer and the port seemed like an anthill that was kicked, a buzzing mass of activity with a touch of frenzy to it. Galin chewed on a piece of twice baked ship’s biscuit as he tried to remember his last time in Dunholm. He had been on the run from his home after his livestock had been run off or killed and his croft burned to its foundations, labelled a murderer without trial by the uncle of the man he had killed in what, by all accounts, had been a fair fight. Now he was returning at the head of his own war band, possessed of well-made arms and armor, as well arrayed as the lord that had run him out of his home. Part of him wanted to divert the march to the bastard’s hall, hammer down the gates of his hall and demand satisfaction but he knew that was simply vanity. He had his orders and they would have to be obeyed. Galin looked out over the calm coastal water at the gulls and smiled. Even if it was a visit, it was good to be home.

Galin pushed aside the tarpaulin that served as the door of the space he and Luthene shared with Colum and found them hard at work, Colum copying out lines from a small volume Luthene had brought for him and Luthene muttering what she could remember from the story of the Maker he had taught her the night before in the Highland language. “Scholars, it’s time to be warriors. Gear on and shift in. We’ll be docking in a few moments.” He leaned down to kiss Luthene and ruffle Colum’s hair before he let the tarpaulin drop back into place and twisted his neck to jerk his spine back into alignment. The first of the company’s men were coming out of the hold, armed like the heavy infantry he doubted they could ever be. “Ready lads,” Galin said and smiled with expectation. Despite his reservations, Galin was ready to go to war. He felt more himself, more alive among the clash of arms, and he was going to see the Highlands again, something he had doubted he would ever do.

A small smack pulled up alongside and a man, a gold chain of office draped over his cloak, waved frantically at them. “Hail there. I am Eoin, reeve of this port. What is your business here?”

Galin leaned over the bow and waved back. “Ochiern’s company in service of Her Majesty in Adeluna, heading to Mamlak to face the orcs at Her Majesty’s orders. The shipmaster has coin to pay our port tax and we have provisions so we will need nothing from yourself. We will land and be on the march within the quarter hour.”

“Not if you want to live through the week you won’t,” the reeve replied and grasped a line one of the crewmen threw to him so he could come aboard the hulk. “The orcs are between you and Mamlak and in force. Unless you’ve got an entire army hidden in here, you’ll be cut to shreds before you make the mountains.” Galin extended a hand and Eoin grabbed it, pulling himself onto the deck. “They just bloody appeared and the vills closest to Mamlak are aflame. Refugees are heading in country and there’s a call up of any man that can stand in the wall. How many are you?”

“Sixty men, all told, veterans of the Valley most of them. All in full gear, most of ‘em mail now. And if we move fast, we can make Mamlak. We just need to stay in the hills, follow the sheep paths and avoid the roads.”

Eoin shook his head. “You don’t understand, mate. It isn’t a handful of raiders. It’s a whole bloody call up of the orc tribes. Every one of the green skinned dogfuckers. If you want to bloody well see the first bloom of spring, you’ll be fighting your whole way through and the only way to do that’s to join the Highland call up. We’re in Dunholm now and we march for the Pass of Crannog in the morning. You’re with us, mate, whether you want it or not.”

Galin nodded and stuck out his hand. “We’ll seek you when we’ve landed.” Eoin took his hand, shook it perfunctorily, and slipped back over the side to alert the harbor master to be prepared for the ship to dock and unload with all speed. Galin turned to Luthene and Cooper who had taken their places behind him and groaned. “Well, we’re fucked. Well and truly fucked like a tavern whore come payday. So what in the nine hells do we do? We can’t make it to Mamlak through ten thousand craiceann glas bastards but I don’t want to end up in some bloody mess with the call up.” Galin leaned against the bulwark of the hulk as it slipped alongside the quay. “Why couldn’t we just have let those damned ambassadors die, eh?”
Luthene

Character Info
Name: Luthene
Age: About 25
Alignment: TN
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Class: Mercenary
Silver: 3175
Languages did not come easily to Luthene. It took work, and whenever she could, she would quietly recite one of the epic poems of the Highland people, poems about great wars, the Maker, and sometimes both. Colum heard her one evening, and seemed to have a much easier time learning the strange new words. It was a shame, Luthene thought, that they would not be able to stay long in the Highlands; their orders were to march to Mamlak and assist in the defence of that city, and they would only be in Dunholm long enough to unload the ship before marching west. Maybe when they were finished in the city, they’d have a bit more free time to enjoy Galin’s homeland, land Colum had not yet seen but needed to.

Galin found them studying, her reciting a new poem and Colum copying out words from a book that, he said, wasn’t nearly as interesting as the poem she was trying to learn. She had the boy help her with her mail, not because she needed it, but because it was good for him to know. “Can you handle getting our things together?” she asked, and Colum nodded.

Luthene joined Galin in time to hear the reeve mention the large force of orcs between them and Mamlak, attacking some of the western Highland villages. Orders being what they were. Galin wanted to go around the orc forces straight to Mamlak, but the reeve stressed that this wouldn’t be possible, and their best chance was to join the other Highlanders.

When Galin turned to her and Cooper, she could tell he felt trapped. Cooper spoke up first. “I’ve got family here,” he said, “and so do most of the other men. Two brothers and a sister, and they’ve all go wee ones. We can’t leave them for the orcs! Sixty men against ten thousand, that ain’t much, but with the other Highland men? You’d be fighting in a shield wall again! Don’t tell me you’d rather try to go around.”

The Highland people were not Luthene’s people by birth, but soon enough, they would be by marriage. She started twisting her ring around as she thought. Like Cooper, Luthene wanted to join the rest of the Highland forces to fight off the orc threat in these lands. She didn’t want to see the Highlands burn any more than anyone else. They just needed a way to justify it when they got back to Adeluna, and had to explain why they did not march straight for Mamlak as ordered.

“Once we dock,” she said to Galin, “you and I should find the reeve. We must explain to him that, while we are a company of Highlanders, most of whom have family here and who would gladly join the fight against the orc threat, we have orders to make for Mamlak straight away, though it means passing through sovereign Highland territory to get there. We really have no choice in the matter. Unless, of course, the reeve here gave us no choice but to join the call up. Say, if we were conscripted. And we’ll get that in writing, so I’ll go with you as your clerk, but you should be the one to do the talking. It would sound strange coming from me, I’m too southern.

Once the ship was docked and tied, Cooper saw to the unloading, while Galin and Luthene went looking for the reeve. When they returned to the men, it was to tell them they’d been conscripted, and would march out in the morning, not for Mamlak, but the Pass of Crannog.


    OOC: Jenna
Galin

Character Info
Name: Galin Ochiern
Age: --
Alignment: CG
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Class: Warrior
Silver: 643
It was strange, Galin thought, what sorts of things he remembered as he stepped off the hulk and back onto Highland soil. The smells of bubbling pitch over sea coal fires and freshly hewn timber, the tang of salt in the air, all of it transported him immediately back to his first time in Dunholm when he was leaving for the war in the Valley. He could not believe it was nearly a decade since he had left the first time but it seemed like not a single moment had passed. Dunholm was nearly frozen in time, as apparetnky unchanging as the Highlanders tended to be themselves. Memories, though, would have to wait, and the reeve found Galin and Luthene quickly when they disembarked. Galin had known from the start that he would help the in the defense even as he grumbled about it with Luthene and Cooper; there was no other option in his mind.

After he shook the reeve’s hand, he followed the man to a counting house on the docks with Luthene alongside him. Inside the stone hall, Galin saw rows and rows of spears in racks against the wall, carefully wrapped swords in wooden crates, and barrels filled with sheaves of arrows. “Eoin, friend, my men have not been to the North since the war in the Valley and many have had to make do with southern arms more often than not. Would it be possible to resupply with some of these,” he asked, gesturing to the amassed weapons, “considering they are about to head to Crannog to bloody the green bastards?” Eoin screwed up his face a moment at the thought of having to give over the hoarded weapons but decided that they would do more good in the hands of the company’s troops rather than collecting dust waiting for the muster to need them.

“Take what you need,” he said finally as he drew up the papers that would explain that, due to the exigent circumstances of the invasion, the men of the company were being drafted into the Highland defense as was every other able bodied man of military age residing within the districts of the North, native-born or foreign. “I’ll hold these for your return,” the reeve said after Luthene and Galin signed them, attesting that the document was true and they were unwilling conscripts. “And thank you. Most of the clans in the North are already engaged and falling back here with the orcs right on their heels. We haven’t got a proper force here yet either. The attack was a surprise so the call up just went out. The local area’s levy will be ready within the day, and likely anyone along the way to the pass. But it’s not much, I’m afraid.” Galin chewed his lip as he listened to the grimness of the situation. He had less than a hundred men, all well trained warriors but not many. The local chiefs and warlords would be able to add their retinues, all mailed, armed professionals as well, and the villages between Dunholm and the pass could yield more men, the levy of spears and shields that would make up the bulk of the Highlanders’ forces in war. It would not be ideal, Galin knew, but it would have to be enough. “And in case you weren’t aware, you’re in charge.”

Galin blinked a moment and cocked his head to the side in confusion. “In charge of… all the bloody bastards marching up to the Pass? Are you out of your fucking mind, man? I’ve got my men to worry about and orders from Adeluna on my bloody shoulders and you want me organizing these sheep fucking shits into enough of an army to give the hairy-arsed northern clans get themselves out of the hills and down to the muster? Are you fucking mental?!”

The reeve shook his head. “The rest are little better than pirates, good for raiding the southrons and not bloody much else. The retainers haven’t been in anything but a skirmish in years and the lords are more worried about not having their damned toy soldiers hurt rather than proper fighting. And believe me, I would do it myself, but…” He leaned down and rapped his fingers against his left leg at the knee. There was no mistaking the sharp report of wood and the man straightened up and shrugged. “Orc war axe, five summers back. So I can’t do bloody anything. So unless you’ve got someone better in mind, you’re bloody it. You fought in the Valley and ain’t dead, so you can’t be the worst under the sun.” When Galin could think of no one better, the reeve spat in his hand and extended it to Galin. “So it’s settled then. And I’ll have some porters and smiths in your contingent from the city so you will be able to repair what’s broken in the wall. Now you’d best go.”

Cursing under his breath, Galin left the counting house and looked straight at Luthene. “Don’t you start. Don’t you even fucking start. I don’t want to be in charge of these bastards and I know you’ll tell me all these grand reasons that I ought to be and that it’s the best course, but fuck it. I fucking hate it and that’s the end of it.” Cooper noticed the pair of them as they turned down the track toward the dock and strode over to them quickly. “I took the liberty of telling the lads about the change of orders and I have to say, they ain’t even complained. Even Deepdale looks ready to do some proper soldiering for the first time since the Valley. So, what’s the order?”

The weight of the responsibility was already grating on Galin but he pushed it aside until he was alone. “We are the van of the Highland response,” he explained, loudly enough for the men to hear even though they made a studied effort to pretend they were not eavesdropping. “We’re leading the muster from Dunholm and everyone we meet along the road to the Pass and we’re holding them up there until the northern clans can assemble. We all know those savages are always looking for a fight so they’ll be down here quick as you like. We’re the shield, not the sword. We’re to slow them down and retreat in good order if we’re pressed. No heroics.” Cooper nodded gravely, knowing as well as Galin and the rest of the men did, that it was not going to be as simple as that. “But there is some good news. The reeve’s giving us the city’s armory to loot like tinkers, so every man’s to have three spears and a spare shield and blade. We’ll let the locals hump the gear on carts but we’ll need ‘em up at Crannog’s. Now gather it up and let’s shift it, right? We’ve got to show these pampered guard boys how to march before we lose ‘em on the road.”

As the men dispersed to raid the armory, Galin smiled sadly at Cooper. “Sorry you’re stuck in this, mate, what with Maria and all. We’ve got to recruit more men while we’re here, once we see off the green fuckers, so we don’t have the same men out every day.” Cooper clapped his hand on Galin’s shoulder with a forced smile.

“Aye, once we see them off, we’ll be getting to that, we will, sir. I’ll go up to the armory now, if you don’t mind, and make sure the lads aren’t losing focus. Grab you something nice as well, Galin? Luthene?”

Waving up at the men with his infectious cheer, Cooper left them at the quay where the rations were being unloaded from the hulk and Galin sat on one of the barrels of wine and looked up at Luthene. “Not much choice, have I? The whole north’s gone right to shit and we’re the only thing between the orcs and the sea. Not sure I want the job but it’s mine now, yeah? We should probably go see the other contingents and let ‘em know what’s happening. Might need my diplomat,” he said with a wink, and hauled himself back to his feet to kiss her. “And once we’ve got them in line, we’ve got to march straight away, so make sure Colum’s not gotten himself lost. Boy’s got to learn what a proper battle array looks like, after all.” He adjusted his sword belt to let the blade fall more comfortably, then extended his arm for Luthene. “On we go, then, my lovely lass. Time to kiss asses, sweet talk pirates, and turn these useless dog fuckers into something that will stop a green skinned savage with a war axe and a taste for blood. What a grand holiday this is, eh?”
Luthene

Character Info
Name: Luthene
Age: About 25
Alignment: TN
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Class: Mercenary
Silver: 3175
“I know you hate it.” Luthene was almost offended that Galin seemed to think she would try to make it seem grander than it was. “And anyway, in spite of the fact that you’re a veteran of the Valley, have killed two champions, and have been serving as a professional soldier these past few years while men here have been in raids and skirmishes and little else… the last time you were in the North, you were the enemy of a lord and accused of murder, and I expect we’ll run into people here who want to see you hang, not follow you into battle. I think the reeve dislikes the idea of you being in charge almost as much as you do, but he doesn’t have anyone else.”

It was good that the men were on board with the new orders, as they didn’t have any choice in the matter. While it had been Galin and herself to sign the order, it was on behalf of the whole Company. After the men had heard their orders, Cooper offered to pick up something for herself and Galin at the armoury. Luthene thought for a minute. “A long sabre, perhaps, if you can find one.” A cavalry sword, usually, and while Luthene was not cavalry, the battle might require her to be.

“No choice at all, at least according to the order we signed,” Luthene said with a slight smile. Taking his arm, she added, “I don’t know how much of a diplomat I’ll be, considering the reputation I have here. So, let’s get it over with.”

The reeve had already called various leaders of the contingents together. Luthene counted nine in total, three or four wearing the sort of arms that marked them as members of a household guard. The rest would have been from Dunholm itself, or one of the nearby villages. It was hard to say how many men they might have, what their kit might be, or their skills.

There were some mutterings in the crowd when Galin was introduced. Some of them seemed positive, to Luthene’s relief; Galin’s reputation was working in his favour. Not all were happy with the choice, however, and one of the guardsmen spat. “That sheep-fucker killed Ennis, down in Carrik, then ran off with his tail between his legs when his lord tried to have him arrested for it. He should hang, not lead! Alfric’s men won’t follow a coward like Galin Ochiern!”

Some of the other leaders, those who had seemed less enthusiastic about Galin’s leadership but not about to leave, seemed a bit emboldened by one man’s opposition. “Did Alfric buy you that mail,” Luthene called out, a challenge. “Galin won his, along with his helm and war belt. By himself, he defeated Tancred of Adeluna, a champion in service to Lord Arnholt. An experienced fighter, ten years older than Galin, and without a single scar on him. Tancred fought with a large war axe— like that one,” Luthene added, pointing to one of the other household guards, “but longer. He challenged Galin, who was without his shield, having given it to his shield-mate when his had broken. Tancred’s blows were fast and furious, and Galin nearly lost his sword trying to parry. Then, rolling to the ground, he managed to slice into Tancred’s calf, only to find his boots were lined with plate. Still, it made Tancred weaker, and worse, hurt his pride, and he tried to drive Galin back again with his axe. Galin parried the heavy axe head to the ground, then drew his knife. Before Tancred could recover his axe, Galin drove the point of his knife into the champion’s throat, and sawed into him until there was more blood on Galin than there was left inside Tancred’s lifeless corpse. That is why Galin wears fine Adelunan mail: because he killed a champion and took it off him.

“Now, Galin leads the Company, many of them veterans of the Valley, experienced soldiers all. Any one of them would follow Galin through that Valley again. There is no one better to lead you, now.”


    OOC: Jenna
Galin

Character Info
Name: Galin Ochiern
Age: --
Alignment: CG
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Class: Warrior
Silver: 643
"I don’t see what you’ll be needing a sabre for, love,” Galin said in a whisper as Cooper left. “We’ll be in the wall and the only horses we need are for carting spare spears and kit up the road to the Pass. No riding about heroics this time. Maybe you misunderstand the geography of the place, see, but it ain’t fit for horse and if we end up in country that is, something’s gone to complete shite.” Galin looked at Luthene calmly and squeezed her hand. He knew what the reeve was asking in a way that she did not and it broke his heart to have to explain it to her. He let his hand drop and squatted down in the dust of the road and started scratching shapes in it with the tip of his long knife. “Have a look, love,” he said as he drew, marking Dunholm with an X and scratching the land from there to the border with the detail of a man who had once lived rough in those same hills as he avoided the hangman’s noose.

“The X there, that’s us. The northern clans marshal here, at Carrick, where I was born by the way, and then they march about a week to Dumholm. Crannog’s Pass is a two days march to the west of here, in a valley between the Twins, the tallest mountains on the border. There are other ways around but none that I’d want an army through, so that’s the spot. And beyond, between it and Dunholmn?” He gestured with his hand to the rolling hills filled with the first sprouts of spring. “Fine land, good farms, and a terrible place for a handful of men to fight a horde. So we fight them at the pass and make sure to hold them so they ain’t in the interior without the northern clans ready to meet them. So we will be making that pass a fortress and fighting them there. There’s no withdrawing until the clans muster.” Galin shrugged. “Ain’t much else we can do.” He stood up and scuffed out the map with the toe of his boot and hugged Luthene. The men had understood what he meant when he mentioned the pass and were ready but Luthene was not of the North so it was not as readily clear. He just hoped they would both live to regret signing the reeve’s orders.

The reaction among the assembled leaders of the war bands was about what Galin would have expected. He had not left the North covered in glory but a fugitive from dubious justice at the hands of an enraged lord after Galin stabbed his nephew in a drunken brawl in Carrick and some of the men remembered, especially the guardsmen of Alfric. It seems that time had not tempered the lord’s dislike and Galin’s memory was still blackened by that evening’s events. “Drunk son of a bitch came at me, acting the big man,” Galin muttered out of anyone’s hearing but Luthene’s, “and I’m the bloody criminal. Fuck ‘em.” But Luthene proved her worth again as a diplomat and Galin leaned back, arms folded across his chest, while she spoke. Her telling of the fight in Arnholt’s fortress was close enough to the mark and it seemed to be doing the trick, with even Alfric’s men looking at him with more respect than contempt. When she finished, he let his arms drop and walked among the leaders, clapping them on their shoulders as he passed each one.

“Look men, we’re buggered. The orcs are, from what I’ve been told, less than a week’s march out. I ain’t expecting you all to like me but I’m the best worst option we’ve got. And ask the men I brought, they know me. I am no tyrant. You command your men, same as before, and we have war councils every night at my fire. It won’t be pure democracy but I will listen to what you have to say and am willing to be wrong. Other than that, I think Luthene’s about covered it. We’re clearing out the reeve’s stores now, getting every scrap of steel we can out toward the pass. If any of you have carts and beasts to draw them along the route of march, send runners and have them ready. We will be settling in there and need every bit of help we can muster. The northern clans have heard the summons and should be at Carrick within a day. Orcs aren’t at the pass yet, so we have time to get there and make it a bloody tough nut to crack. Now if you need arms, we will share out of the reeve’s stores once we’re at Crannog’s. No sense in marching through peaceful country in mail, eh?” Some of the men, the older smallholding farmers who led their bands of neighbors, laughed and even Alfric’s men smiled. “Now get your lads formed out of the west gate in an hour. And, oh, before you head off, if any of your men’s been head to head with the greenskins in living memory, send ‘em over my way. Got to know up enough to stick a spear in ‘em.”

Cooper had done an excellent job organizing the ransacking of the armory and by the time Galin caught up with him, there was a veritable sea of wagons and carts loaded with arms, supplies, rations, and about anything else that a traveling army might think to need. It was not how the company would usually travel, preferring to move quickly and live off the land, but with what amounted to a siege ahead of them, the men had prepared well. “Coops, well done as always. The rest are about a half mile down the road, so let’s get a move on and catch ‘em. We’re marching straight on til we’re at the Black Ford, no matter when that is, and we march at dawn the next day, so let’s shift it!” The waggoneers cracked their whips and horses and oxen lurched forward and like an animal shaking itself awake, the column company started forward to rendezvous with the levies and household guards along the Pass Road and toward the Black Ford. The mood of the company changed, even with the danger they faced. The men marched without complaining and after the first mile, songs began to pop up among the men as they marched, lifting their spirits in the face of what was to come.

The column made it to the ford an hour after sunset and the levy men collapsed nearly where they stood from the pace of the march. Even some of the household troops were complaining of blistered feet, much to the amusement of the company men. Cooking fires sprang up and the men came together to cook their rations. Galin, bereft of Cooper’s woman’s cooking and unwilling to suffer through his own, circulated between the fires, sharing out drinks from his wineskin with the men, learning their names and where they had lived. When he returned to his own fire, he saw that Cooper had outdone himself, procuring a good cut of beef in Dunholm that he had cooked on the same discarded breastplate they had used during the retreat from the company’s massacre. “Ain’t got enough oil like Maria’d use, but plenty of fresh butter, so you’ll be happy enough,” he said and slid a chop onto Galin’s outstretched wooden plate. “And this man here, he said his officer’d sent him. Used to be a prisoner of the greenskins, so he was, and figures he might have something to add to your understanding.”

Galin turned to the other man seated next to Luthene and inclined his head. “Thank you for coming over. I hope Cooper’s been passable company. Now, please, tell me about these buggers. When I was growing up they’d gone quiet so it was more legend than fact, you know?”

The man, clearly on the wrong side of forty with streaks of grey in his beard and hair and a mouth only dotted with teeth, nodded to Galin and set aside his plate. “Name’s Cathal and I come from two days walk past the pass, wee vill there. Them orcs grabbed me when I was a wain, before your time, laddie, when they was still a’raidin weekly over the border. They et some of us right off, the bastards, like we was heads o’ beef. Me, I’d apprenticed with a smith, see, so they kept me alive to help ‘em make proper Highland steel, not that shite they use ‘emselves. So I lived among ‘em til one day I caved in the head of one of the smiths with me and got the hell out. Run into a shepherd after a day and got meself back here. So, you’ll be wantin’ to know about their fighting, aye?” Galin nodded and passed the man a cup of wine which he drank appreciatively.

“So, they’ve got tribes same as we’ve got clans, only you can tell jus’ by lookin’ at ‘em what tribe they is, see, ‘cause it’s more or less about size. The bigger buggers, they’re the top class, taller’n big men and strong as an ox and they rule the place from the upper reaches. Further down into the caverns you is, the more stunted the green buggers are, down to the size of a wee woman, some of ‘em. The ones down below don’t like the ones on the top, o’course but they ain’t strong enough to do a thing about it. When they fight, it’s the wee’uns they use first, tire us out with them and then the bigger, armored buggers come out of nowhere like a hammer and break whatever they’re looking at. The smaller ones, they ain’t given good blades or armor, no better than the worst of our levy, and the big ones, especially the full warrior tribes, thems the ones that are armed like a knight out of Adeluna, with mail and plate and what have you.

“Now the army, they stack up by tribe and fight in groups based on that. So you’ll have one of them elders leadin’ them and they’s a family, cousins and such, all together. Even the wee ones, it makes ‘em tough to break because they won’t leave their kin behind. Even for savages, they’ve got that much honor to ‘em. So they’ll come on in waves, the warriors of a few tribes at a time, trying to tire our arms, then melt back. Wave and wave they come but they don’t get stuck in proper unless it’s the chief clans. Them lads’ll stay fighting for the sheer love of it, battle mad bastards. But they love to surround their enemies, see?” He took a smoldering branch from the fire and drew up four blocks in a shallow T. “It’s like a bull, see? Them outside ones, that’s the horns, then the head, and the back’s the loins. So the head’ll come on with the horns and pin a body down and then the loins, the heavy ones, they come storming in once they’re good and fucked. Love their swords though, no use for a proper spear. Keep ‘em at arm’s length and put a foot of good Highland spearhead in their guts as easy as pissin’. And them archers they got, their bows ain’t much stronger’n what you’d use as a wee lad, no more’n fourteen summers. Good for hunting and ambushing folk but against a proper shield and good mail… we’ll look like hedgehogs when they’re through but we’ll be standin’ and that’s what matters. And if’n we capture a few, I know enough of the tongue to get some proper answers out of ‘em, so I’ll make myself handy, aye?”

Galin nodded while he spoke, fixing in his memory everything Cathal was saying, not knowing what would be useful when they made it to the Pass. “Thank you Cathal, thank you,” he said, chewing his lip distractedly. He tossed the man a fresh skin of strong wine and was surprised by the speed at which the old man snatched it out of the air.

“Old, boyo, not dead,” he said with a laugh and took his leave, returning to his own fire with his prize.

Galin turned to Cooper and Luthene again, his food half-forgotten in his lap. “Well, that’s good news, I think. Buggers like to swarm and we’re fighting in a pass as narrow as a gnat’s arsehole. Gives us proper chance to fight ‘em like proper soldiers, even make some preparations and all that…” He trailed off, chewing his lip again. “Before I ramble though, the both of you, what’s the morale like? You were moving among the troops all day, so aside from being hungry, tired, and footsore, what in the nine hells have we got to work with to defend the pass? Do they seem like the sort that’ll stand or am I more worried about them buggering off the first time the greenskins hammer on their drums and come running? And be blunt, aye? I’d rather know now than when the wall’s a bloody shambles,” he said, laughing with dark, wry amusement.
Luthene

Character Info
Name: Luthene
Age: About 25
Alignment: TN
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Class: Mercenary
Silver: 3175
Once the fires were lit, Cooper insisted on on cooking. “I thought all Southern women knew how to cook,” he said, “but to hear Galin tell it, he’d rather starve than eat a meal you prepared.”

“Well, don’t use any ginger, Galin doesn’t like it,” Luthene advised.

Cooper laughed. “I’m right sick of it, myself!”

Galin visited the various campfires while the meal was being prepared, talking to the men. He’d asked Luthene and Cooper to move amongst the troops as they marched, to get a feel for their morale, and she assumed Galin was doing a bit of that, himself. She noticed some complaining, mostly from men not used to a long day of marching. Most of the men, while tired, didn’t mind it, and there were some who started singing. Luthene might have even impressed a few when she, a southerner, was able to join in on a few of the songs, thanks to Galin’s lessons.

A man named Cathal joined them just as the meat was finishing, and told Cooper that he’d heard Galin wanted to speak to someone who had fought orcs before. When Galin rejoined them, Cathal began his tale, speaking about how he’d been taken as a boy and made to work as a smith for them until he managed to escape. As he spoke about their castes and fighting style, Luthene thought about strategy. Use spears, as Cathal suggested. Rotate out the lines, to prevent those in the first line tiring out against the weaker enemies. But spears may break, and the orcs may have overwhelming numbers, while they were less than a thousand.

Once Cathal left them, Galin asked about the morale of the men. “They’ll follow you,” Luthene said. “Some may not like you, but on the whole, they agree you’re the best to lead them. But they’re green. The household troops are better trained and equipped, but they’ve been in small skirmishes and little else. The same is true of most of the levy men, only they don’t have much training and their equipment is mostly from whatever the reeve gave us. There are a few exceptions, however. Fergus, he’s leading the largest of the levy contingents, and he fought in the south years ago, when William was still king, and retired back north just before the war started. He’s older than Cathal, but he fits in his old armour still, and he’s sharp.” He had two sons in the levy, Luthene remembered, who had been taught to fight by their father, but had never seen actual combat before. “Then there’s Alfric’s man, Wulfric. He was the one who spoke against you, remember? He was a professional soldier as well, though he wouldn’t talk about it much, not to me anyway. His lieutenant told me he worked out of Srendnyimor, and he’s the sort of man who truly enjoys killing, and the last year has been torturous boredom for him. Something about him rubs me the wrong way, though he has the respect of his men; I think they even fear him a bit.

“I do worry about how some of the men will do when the fighting starts, especially if we lose men, ground, or both. They’re as brave as any Highland man, but if even one breaks, I fear more would follow. We’ll have to consider that when forming the wall and deciding who will stand where.” Luthene looked from Galin to Cooper, then back to Galin. “The two of you should probably be in different sections of the wall, too. If…” Her voice cracked a bit. “If Galin falls, we’ll need someone else to lead the men. Owen, you’d be the best choice. Different sections, I figure that increases the chances of us having one of you alive should the other fall.”

Sleep did not come easily to Luthene that night, feeling far less optimistic about the coming battle compared to when she had signed the conscription order. She had believed Galin when she said they would meet the orcs at the pass and fall back if they had to, that other clans would join them and only then would they attack in full force. But they would be no retreat, and if they failed to hold the orc forces back at the pass, they’d die. The inexperience of the men also troubled her. Would Galin be able to hold them, or would they flee? She didn’t know for certain; she didn’t like that uncertainty.

Breakfast the following morning consisted of more of the same food they’d had the night before, only cold. The camp had been packed away and the men on the march within an hour of waking. There was a heavy fog that morning, and the gentle hills of the interior had an eerie look to them as a result. Then one of the Company men, a sharp-eyed scout, pointed out a light in the distance, atop a hill.

“Back in line!” Cooper barked at a group of levy men who had fallen back a bit.

“It’s the orcs!” one man— barely a man— exclaimed, and his words only deepened the panic amongst the men.

Both Luthene and Cooper looked to Galin at the same time. “Should we get the weapons off the wagon?” she asked. Maybe, with the fog, they might be able to sneak up on the orc camp, if that’s who it was. “The men are spooking, what’s the order?”


    OOC: Jenna
Galin

Character Info
Name: Galin Ochiern
Age: --
Alignment: CG
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Class: Warrior
Silver: 643
“It’ll be simple enough,” Galin replied when Luthene spoke about her fear of the men breaking. “We fight in groups of ten, and at least one of the men in every group’s a company man. Means we have a steady hand in every group in arm’s reach to grab any poor sod that pisses his breeches and tries to make a run for it. I’ll be in the center with picked men, of course. The men wouldn’t stand long if I were skulking in the back and telling them to do something I wouldn’t myself. Cooper. I’ll have you on the far right in the mid ranks. Men will start to drift that way in the fighting, looking for the cover of their shield-mate’s shield. We can’t do that here or the line won’t stay anchored then the green fuckers will have us surrounded the way they like.”

Galin chewed on some of the chop in silence, mentally dividing the army up into sections. He could not leave the levies alone either, tasked with holding the line alone. “And we’ll have a small reserve, with you in the lead, Luthene. Whenever the line looks weak and the levies are a bit shaken, you take them in and shore them up from the back. Make it so they can’t turn tail and they’ll have to fight. Even a babe in the woods would figure out that fighting the orcs is a better chance than trying to run through our lads. And once they’ve got proper armor and a day learning the horn to rotate lines, they’ll be alright. They can’t afford to run and they know it. May not be professionals but I figure they’ll do just fine. They know what is at stake if they lose. And I wouldn’t be too worried,” Galin said with a ghost of a smile. “There might be some surprises for these orc bastards before long. They won’t like a proper fight, for sure, and I’ve got an idea to make that pass a fortress. They’ll break like waves on the beach.” Galin spoke with a confidence he was not entirely sure he felt but it was not wrong, at least as he saw it. Well positioned troops with a strong position could hold that pass until the Maker came from the heavens to remake the world, and Highland men would fight better than most with their homes and families under threat. It could, Galin thought, be far worse.

He slept alongside Luthene that night and could tell that her night had been fitful at best when they woke. Cooper, when he watched Galin shaving with a scrap of dwarven steel, thought the man looked far too calm to be leading men into the field against a horde ten times their number or more. But as he sat there, scraping the blade along the angle of his jaw, Cooper could see the sort of laughter in his eyes that was there before he told a particularly offensive joke. The man, he thought, had something up his sleeve but for the life of him, Cooper could not figure out what. Galin waved to the big man and offered the blade and still-warm water in case Cooper wanted to shave himself as well. “Nah, never figured to do it when we’re out in the field, you see. Only hands I trust near me neck with a blade’re Maria’s, and now that she’s with child, bugger if I can trust that either.” Galin just chuckled and stowed the razor in his pouch. “When are we marching, sir? Lads have got their skins full from the river and rations washed down. If we start soon, maybe the levy won’t have time to belly ache about the pace or the fighting?”

Galin laughed and patted Cooper on the shoulder. “Aye Owen, get the lads in line, same as yesterday. Before the sun’s over the ridge there, I want to see us gone a few miles. We have to make the Pass tonight or we may as well lay down in the road and wait for the bastards to slit our throats.” Cooper saluted and moved among the campfires, bellowing orders and chivying the men into line to a chorus of grousing and the same tired jokes that were part and parcel of a soldier’s trade. Men laughed nervously, feeling the distance between themselves and the Pass shrinking and with that, the reality of their situation sinking in. Galin gave them no time to consider the situation, driving them like cattle to market, with trusted men from the company at the flanks of the column to keep the other men in step and in their stations. Galin marched at the head of the column in full gear, his green cloak hanging damp over his shoulders in the fog and dew of the spring morning’s chill. Luthene was alongside him and he chatted with her about the country as though they were in fact on a holiday, telling the old folk stories that every mother would tell their children in the evenings.

They marched, he told her, in the same valley as the Maker had with his band to the same purpose. It was the same story he had told to Colum before he had to carry out the sentence of death pronounced for Murtagh. A small band of Highland heroes defending a pass that the orcs tried to force. Every man in the column knew the story and Galin, in his heart, thought that it would help. Marching in the footsteps of their god, into the pass where he saved the people he made his own was a powerful tonic to the men whose spirits were flagging and courage wavering at the thought of the task to come. To his right, Colum kept pace with them at a trot, listening with rapt attention to the stories that Galin told and interjecting with questions. “Wasn’t the Maker afraid? They were outnumbered and the orc were pressing them like an avalanche. Where could he find courage then?” Galin smiled and shifted his spear to his left hand and hauled the boy onto his shoulders with his right.

“Where, Colum, did we say fear comes from?”

“I… I don’t know? From…. From our enemies?”

Galin smiled indulgently even if Colum could not see, exchanging a glance with Luthene in the morning mist. “No, little man, it is from here,” he said, reaching up to tap Colum’s unkempt head. “And here,” he continued as he tapped the boy’s chest. “Our flesh is the source of our fear, not our enemies, not some magics, not anything but our own selves. If we believe we are so high and so mighty that we must be protected above all else, that is when we know fear. If I thought my body was my own, I do not think I could advance against a handful of old men with clubs, let alone an army.” He paused at let the words sink it and when he continued, he raised his voice slightly so it could carry through the first few ranks without seeming like he was addressing them directly.

“A warrior of our people, son, he belongs to his people, body and soul. We belong to the Maker and to our brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, to our ancestors before us, and to the men and women of the North who will follow us a hundred generations from now. It belongs to this land that gave us our lives and all that we have and are. So when the time comes, Col, a warrior gives back all that he was given from this land, even his life, because his life is tied to those people for a thousand years. That, my boy, is where we find strength when the walls clash. That is how we conquer our fear.”

Before Colum could reply with what Galin knew would be a barrage of questions, one of the scouts returned to the line of march, pointing to a fire burning on the crest of the ridge ahead of them that Galin had intended to reach before midday. The men were instantly on edge and the men of the levy fear the worst, with shouts that the orcs were already through the pass breaking out in the column. Cooper roared at them to keep their discipline but panic was starting to take hold. When Cooper and Luthene looked at him, his eyes were filled with that private laughter again. “I would wait on getting the spears, love. I think I can handle this myself.” He ducked down for Colum to swing off his back. “Down you go lad. Now watch this wee trick,” he said and winked at the boy. He took the signal horn from its loop on his belt and handed it to the boy. “Three quick notes lad, like we do in drills.” Colum took the horn and put it to his lips and sounded three notes, sharp in the morning stillness. Grouse flapped angrily from the heather around them, furious to have been startled from their nests, and all the thousand men seemed to slow their steps and hold their breath, waiting to see what Galin was doing.

Seconds stretched in the morning’s half light and men fingered their charms and touched the wood of their shields to ward off ill luck and then they heard it. Three answering blasts and shouting voices of Northmen. As though a single entity, the men let out their breath and began to laugh, shouting curses at Galin as they quickened their pace toward the ridge. As they approached closer, they could make out wagons loaded with armed Highlanders lounging around them as their smaller campfires burned down to embers. Galin crested the ridge with Luthene and Colum and headed for the tallest man there, dressed in mail chased with silver and a war axe strapped across his back. The man raised his arm in greeting but before he could speak, a grey blur streaked out from behind him and barreled into Luthene, barking madly and standing on his hind legs, nearly as tall as a man, to lick her face. “It seems my dog likes your woman, Ochiern. Down, Cadarn, down!” The big man smiled and clasped Galin’s hand. “I came when I got your word and with supplies to boot. My crew and ten others like it are here and ready.”

Galin laughed and pulled the man into a tight hug. “Thank you, brother. You did not have to come.” When he released him, most of the column had started to mill around the ridge, looking in unfeigned surprise at the men and wagons there. “Luthene, you remember Aelle, right? He lent us his ship while we were getting Sanders out of trouble. When I arrived in Dunholm,” he continued, quietly, just for her and Cooper’s ears, “I saw we did not have enough men to hold the pass more than a day or two, so I sent Mathuin to ferret out Aelle here and enlist the crews. He’s outdone himself for sure, and it will cost me later, but we have at least another three hundred fighting men, all tough as iron. And the wagons? Spars, masts, enough timber to wall the pass like the Maker’s own hall, “donated” from the warehouses of merchants who conveniently took to sea at the first sign of the greenskins on the border.” He grinned at the two of them and winked. “Never let it be said that I am as stupid as I look, yeah?”

The men of the column were laughing and shouting to the crews in their excitement until Cooper shouts reminded them of their discipline and they formed back into ranks. Standing alongside Aelle, Galin shouted to address both the men of Dunholm and the crews. “Brothers, it seems I neglected to mention I sent for some friends to join as in the threshing. Aelle here has brought his crew and every other man he could pluck from among the ships out of Dunholm. They are all fighters and are welcome to stand with us in the shield wall. We are all men of the North and whatever differences we have had are no longer important. There are no distinctions and there is no past. Today we are all brothers and we fight to protect our families and homes. So fall in, the lot of you, and double time it. We will turn that pass into a living hell for the orc that will rival the Maker himself. Now move!” The men grinned and let the ship's crews mix into the line, levy and crew sharing the ranks, and whistling and laughing, they sped toward the Pass as the sun burned through the mist in the east. Galin laughed with them, hugging Luthene and Colum as they went. So far his plan was working and it rekindled his hope that they would live through the ordeal to come.
Luthene

Character Info
Name: Luthene
Age: About 25
Alignment: TN
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Class: Mercenary
Silver: 3175
Galin’s expression and behaviour was strange. The men feared the orc, the idea that they’d been beaten to the pass and the hoard was already into the open countryside. Luthene was afraid, too, Galin’s lesson about the geography of the region still fresh in her mind. If the orcs were already through the pass, there would be no stopping them. Galin didn’t seem worried, however; indeed, he looked almost playful. Not the orc, then, which was a relief. He gave Colum his horn, and instructed the boy to give it three quick blasts. It seemed like a long time before an answer came, everyone save Galin tense, and then came another horn and the familiar brogue of Highlanders.

The dog startled Luthene, but she stayed on her feet as he licked her face. “Aye, I expect I smell better than the rest of you,” Luthene replied once the dog had backed down. Introductions were unnecessary; she recognized Aelle. Galin explained what he had done, how he’d sent word to Aelle to get his crew together, and supplies for a wall. “You could have told us!” Luthene said to Galin, her tone also hushed. She couldn’t help but return his smile, and his mood was infectious. Another three hundred men, and a wall. It might be enough to hold the pass.

The levies and the Company were told about Aelle and his men, and then Galin set a gruelling pace to the pass. While there was still complaining from those not used to such a march, there was singing and storytelling along the way. Aelle told them about his exploits since they’d parted ways in Vilpamolan, and recalled how, when they’d met, she had been Alyson. Luthene had to explain who she was, yes she was that Luthene, no she did not have three tits like the rumours said, and no, she would not let him check for himself.

It was evening when they reached the pass, which came as a relief to the men. Even the professional men were grumbling a bit at this point, and all were looking forward to a good meal and rest. It had to wait; first, they needed to erect a basic palisade. Aelle organized the unloading of building supplies, and everyone got to work. Galin even found tasks for Colum.

Were it not for the fact that they’d marched all day and she’d had nothing to eat since breakfast that morning, Luthene might have gone straight to sleep. It was dark when they’d finished building, or at least done as much as they’d manage that evening, and cookfires were built. Cooper prepared a meal for them once again, but Luthene was too hungry to taste her food. Cadarn, Aelle’s dog, nuzzled her arm more than once, hoping for a scrap. She tried to shoo him away, and when that failed, she tossed him a bone.

Colum fell asleep before he’d finished his food (which the dog appreciated), and Luthene covered him with a blanket. Cooper finished his plate and was soon snoring, leaving Galin and Luthene alone, and giving her the opportunity to talk to him privately about something that had been bothering her.

“This will be the second time you’ve ordered me to stay back in a fight,” she began. “You are my captain and I’ll obey your order, but I have to ask, is this because it’s the best place for me tactically, or… are your reasons more personal? I understand if it’s personal, trying to keep me from harm’s way, but I don’t want you keeping me out of the fight, or promoting me over your officers.” She sighed, and took his hand. “You’ve already said to Cooper that I’ll lead the reserves, and I will, but you’d better let me fight in the wall with you next time, alright? This might be my last summer fighting with you, you know; I wouldn’t mind having a few stories to tell. And,” Luthene added, smiling, “if you are going to keep making me do the work of an officer, I may insist you start paying me like one.”


    OOC: Jenna
Galin

Character Info
Name: Galin Ochiern
Age: --
Alignment: CG
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Class: Warrior
Silver: 643
"And ruin the surprise?” Galin laughed and shoved Luthene playfully as they moved into marching order. There was something about the impending fight that brought out the boyishness in Galin that was so often lacking, hidden away by his unwelcome burden of command. Back during the War, he had been the worst practical joker in his troop and every once in a while, he allowed himself to indulge in that sort of behavior despite the grave seriousness expected of him as a captain of the company. “And look at the lads now,” he said, waving a hand toward the column. “They’ve gone from pissing their breeches in terror to laughing like we’re on a stroll to the harvest fair. Sometimes even a stubborn old Northman like me can pull off just the right sort of magic to keep things afloat.”

The march went slower than Galin would have liked and while he kept joking and smiling with the men, in his head, he was already furiously planning the evening’s construction. The men did not know it yet but they would not be able to rest at the end of the march. The Pass has to be fortified and Aelle had done a great deal to help make that possible. There were spars, oars, and all manner of timber in the carts, barrels of pitch, and yard upon yard of hemp cordage and enough axes and tools to build a fleet, let alone a wall across the pass. As the day drew to a close and the men entered the valley of Crannog, Galin took Cooper and Aelle ahead with a handful of scouts, men accustomed to ranging ahead of the army, in order to scout the terrain. Galin was looking for the right location to build his barricade and stem the tide of the orcs and he had to choose wisely. If the hordes could turn his flank and steal a march on him, not only would the entire force be slaughtered, the interior would fall before the northern clans had arrived in force.

A half mile into the valley, one of the rocky cliff faces been struck, from the blackening Galin noticed, by lightning during what had to be a powerful winter storm. Boulders were strewn around the valley floor and the rubble was so steep that not even a mountain goat could cross it. This rock fall narrowed the pass to a little over a short bowshot, a hundred yards or so and as Galin paced along that front, he smiled. The ground ahead was nearly flat and devoid of trees that could shelter the enemy advance. The ground was soft enough to dig and, with a good rain, would make the pass into a muddy trap to bog down the orcs. He took his own spear and jammed it into the rich, dark earth forty yards from the rocks and then took Cooper’s and thrust it down ten yards away. “This is our line,” he said to the two other men. “Ahead of us is flat and even for three hundred yards ahead; you can’t fit more than a hundred shields across at this width. So we build the palisade here, anchored on the rocks and the valley wall, a ditch in front as deep as we can and the earth from it six foot high and steep. Between the spears, we leave a space because we will do our fighting in front of the wall, in the open ground.”

Cooper had been nodding along but the thought of fighting with the wall at his back made him pause. “Are you sure that’s a good idea? Fighting out in the open like that, we can’t fall back well and if we’ve got a wall, why not just defend it. Let the green skinned dick strokers waste themselves on the slopes and us cut ‘em down like harvest time?” Aelle stood next to Cooper, nodding in agreement but not bothering to speak. He had a sense that Galin had a few more surprises in store and waited in wry amusement for the man’s answer. Galin motioned for the men to follow him into what he was already envisioning as the killing ground where he would have to fight the orcs to a standstill. Once they walked out to the funnel mouth of the pass, where it widened again and then Galin turned around.

“Owen, you would have us fight behind the wall and hold them there? I think you do not fully realize the threat, my friend. From this point until the Valley reaches the Border itself, there will be orcs. If we meet them at the wall and we fail, they will be in the interior in two day’s time. The clans will not have mustered in force and the Highlands will be put to the sword. You are a skirmisher, friend, but this is not the sort of war. We have over a thousand shields with us, now that Aelle has joined, and it will be a battle of shoving and hacking, pressed so close you can smell the greenskins’ breath. We will fight ahead of the wall and fall back to it when we need to rest. We cannot risk this pass, so we will confront them here, in this killing ground, and fight for every inch of it.” The scouts had begun to return, waving to the knot of men as they climbed down the valley toward them. “We will build the wall and clear this ground so not even a field mouse can take cover here. Then, lads, it’ll be time for a bit more of my magic. I conjured three hundred shields out of thin air, after all. Bloody magus, I am.”

The scouts reported that the Valley was clear as far they could see, at least a day’s march and maybe longer with the size of the orc force. Galin nodded as he digested the report, forming a clearer plan as they made their reports. If he had an extra day, he would make this place a living hell for the invading forces, he thought and grinned with a feral glee. “Aelle, when the wagons arrive, get the timber off first, spars and sweeps first. Get them cut to about the height of a man and sharpen both ends. Get them in threes and,” he stooped and took up three twigs, making two of them into a X and then laying the third through the top angle, “lash them together like this. They go up on top of the palisade, sink ‘em into the fighting step and they can’t get through us without a bloody axe. Then take a mast to set across the space between the two ends of the palisade. That’ll get some of the spiked bits run through it and then we can drag it into place and out when we’ve got to move men through the palisade.

“Keep your lads working, Aelle. I’ll send any men I find that’re good with woodworking as well, carpenters and the like. The rest will be making the ditch and ramparts. I know the men won’t like it, but it’ll keep our arses alive til the clans arrive.” The rest of the column was snaking wearily into view and Galin sighed. “Time to be the most unpopular man this side of the Border,” he muttered to Cooper as they strode back to the column, shouting orders to keep the men from collapsing where they stood and taking their ease. There was far too much work left to do, he thought, as the men struggled out of their war gear and gathered picks and shovels instead. They grumbled and snarled in frustration but they worked and Galin, stripped to the waist and streaked with dirt, worked alongside them. Many of the levy men, farmers and laborers, were accustomed to this sort of work and it was, unlike the march, the professional soldiers who did the bulk of the complaining. Galin made a point of approaching the most vocal among them and working silently at the same task, usually silencing them with his example and shaming them into silence. A leader must never ask anything of his men that he would not readily do himself, a line that Domnall repeated time and again while he led the company, came to mind and once again, Galin thanked the Maker for his example.

The sun set in the valley and still the men toiled, heaving earth by the spade-full out of the widening ditch and strengthening the ramparts. The ship’s crews sawed and lashed the sharpened spars together and, by the light of torches, the wall was finished for the evening. Galin would have more work for the men in the morning but it was a creditable effort and would serve well in case the scouts were wrong and the orcs arrived early. Colum, already asleep and covered in a blanket, snored softly by Luthene’s side while Galin finished the remains of his meal. It was nearly cold by the time he had finished on the wall but after the day’s labors, it was a veritable feast. Before Cooper took his leave, Galin pulled him aside and told him to set watches for the night and to make sure he was awake an hour before dawn so he could survey the work in the light and be dressed and ready for battle when his men were still waking and grumbling about their sore feet and backs. He was as tired and sore as they were but he would not let them see him that way. Instead, he would have to serve as an example of the sort of virtues he expected from the men, even when he would have killed for the extra moments of rest. When Cooper tramped off to see to the sentries and they were finally alone, Luthene spoke about his orders for her in the coming engagement while he chewed on his lip.

“Love, if I wanted to order you out of battle, I would have left you at the fort. I wanted someone I can trust in charge of the reserves but, looking at the field, I think I was wrong. We’ll only need a hundred shields across in the wall to hold the pass firmly, so the reserves won’t be needed the way I thought. Three divisions, each four hundred men or so, see? Rotate the ranks and then the divisions, and if ever things are in a dire pinch, we won’t need another leavening of wall-bound men but a charge like furies to push back an incursion.

“So that way, now, I’d want Aelle with a hundred of his roughest bastards waiting in the gateway of the wall we’ve got, two divisions in the killing ground, and a third taking their rest in the camp, tending to their arms and wounded. If the line weakens, Aelle’s to rush in and hack the bastards to pieces, clear the breach in the line, then fall back and let the wall go back to its business. I figure that does the best work, lets the piratical bunch do what they do best, scream out of the shadows, hit like a hammer, then fall back to do it again. That means you’re in the line, love, like a proper soldier again. No officer pay, though. Not til I promote you proper. Which I will, for the record. Probably after all this is done and dusted, mind. Can’t have it look like playing favorites before the fight. But I’ll have you in with the levy, one of the leavening elements. You’re in charge of your ten, no matter what the local says. Smack him upside his skull if you have you, and keep those lads in line.

“Now, my dear,” he said, pulling his cloak around them both, “we need some rest. You’ll be helping to lead the drill for the levy while I send the scouts out and work with the wall and some other surprises for the greenskins.” He kissed her softly, holding her body close to his as he pushed fear from his head and surrendered to sleep. There would be enough to worry about in the morning, he knew, so he made sure to savor the moment, the scent of Luthene’s skin and the warmth of his body as they finally were able to rest. It was the sort of thing that would sustain a man in battle, the love he felt for this woman and his hope for their future. It was as essential as mail and a shield and he would bear it with him in the fight as his protection and hope for a life after the fighting had ended. It was all they had, in the end – hope.
Luthene

Character Info
Name: Luthene
Age: About 25
Alignment: TN
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Class: Mercenary
Silver: 3175
Luthene woke when she felt Galin stirring, and she was suddenly cold without his warmth. The morning was damp, a light drizzle falling, and thick clouds as far as the eye could see in any direction. Fires were made with damp wood, and she wondered if that was wise, as the thick smoke would alert the orc to their location. It probably didn’t matter, though; the Highlanders would rely on the strength of their position to hold off the orc, not the element of surprise.

Breakfast for Luthene that morning was cold, though the damp actually improved the hard bread somewhat. While Galin wanted to be up, dressed, and ready before the other men were awake, she opted to take her time a little more. He needed to set an example more than she did. Still, Luthene was more awake than the rest and already in her mail as the rest of the camp, including Colum, started to rise.

Most of the wood had gone into building the wall and other defences, but Luthene found a few thick polls that would work as posts. With her shield in one hand and long fighting knife in the other, she demonstrated how the levy men would fight in the wall. “Whenever possible, use the point and stab. Usually you’ll be going underneath their shields. Get them in the groin if you can. That’s how they die. If you must use the edge, cut at their legs and try to bring them down. Then either you or the man behind you can finish him, or the orc will be trampled by his own kind. A thrust is more likely to kill, however.” She then showed them how to attack with a spear and an axe. The men were divided into groups depending on what weapon they had, everyone was given a shield— “Get used to the weight now!”— and made to pass by the post and attack it in a tight formation to mimic the conditions of the wall.

The drizzle had let up at morning gave way to afternoon, and Luthene was satisfied that the men knew how to use their weapons. Next, she had the levies stand in a wall, ten across, and practice with the horn, until their movements were fluid as they rotated through the ranks, advanced, retreated, and turned. Men not used to the horn— which was most of them— sometimes made the wrong move, but as soon as the men on either side of them learned the motions, everyone else fell in line.

For the most part, the men were cooperative; it helped that Galin himself had put her in charge of their training, and his leadership the past few days had won their respect. Still, they grew tired, and with that came more hostility to the one driving them hard. Luthene yelled at a group of men on the left flank to keep their shields up, and one man threw his shield down in response. Others followed.

Luthene, still holding her own shield, marched over to the first mutineer, and without warning, drove the pommel of her sword into him, winding the man. “If you’d kept your shield up, you wouldn’t be gasping for breath right now. And if that has been the point of my blade rather than the pommel, you would be a dead man. The man to your left would be dead, too, because he relies on your shield to protect him. Do you have a family?”

The man was glaring at her, but he nodded.

“They’re dead, too, if they’re lucky, and the orcs feasting on them.” Luthene’s voice was louder now. “But they’ll rape your wife and daughters, first. Some they’ll keep as chattel, and within a year will be birthing their children. Your sons, too, might be taken as slaves, unless they’re too young, in which case they’ll be cooked and served to orcs of the highest castes. You may have died in battle, with a weapon in your hand, and would be welcomed to the Maker’s hall, but you’d find no peace or happiness there, knowing what will happen to your family and you unable to take vengeance. That is what will happen if we fall. You men are the only ones between a horde of orcs and your villages, farms, and families. So you will pick up your shields and you will hold them until you are given leave to put them down, because if the orc are on us tomorrow, that shield will protect not only yourself, but your shield brothers and your loved ones back home.” Luthene stepped back, and waiting for men to pick up their shields. “Get into two groups, face each other, and try to use your shields to get the opposing line to retreat.”

Colum found her as two shield walls met and pressed hard against each other. “Should I attack the post? I know how, Galin taught me. I bet I’m better at it than these men.”

“Some of them are pretty good,” Luthene said, with a slight smile. It was true; some of the men might be farmers and labourers, but they were natural warriors, too. “But no. You and some of the other lads, your jobs will be to take weapons and shields to men in the wall, if they break theirs.

Colum looked disappointed.

“You’re still small,” Luthene explained, trying to reassure him, “so this is the perfect job for you. I bet you could run in between men right now, and you see how close together they are? I’d have a hard time squeezing in, and Galin? He’s too big, and men would have to spread out more for him to pass. You don’t want that to happen, though, because then the enemy might break through the wall.” She mussed Colum’s hair the way Galin sometimes did. “Galin wants everyone where they’re needed most, and this is where we need you. But keep your knife on you. You’ve still got it?”

Colum drew the long fighting knife Galin had given him. “Good. Keep that with you at all times, just in case, alright?”

Luthene’s parents and sisters had lived in the south, and had died, thanks to Timedeath. Unlike the levy men, her family was here, fighting in the wall, or running between the columns. She fought for them. She could not let the orcs get them. And if the worst happened… she dared not think of it.


    OOC: Jenna

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