3.
When you thought about it, it was actually quite amazing how relatively minor things could have such a major impact. At least that's what Taelan considered as he chewed through his day-old bread, washing it down with sour wine of local stock.
Take for example his present situation. Just one small stone had been enough to make his horse go lame after it threw a shoe, thus leaving the captain of a thousand Avanese horse without one himself.
Somewhere, he was sure of it, someone was laughing at his misfortune.
They had brought spares, of course – every company had a few extra horses which helped carry the provisions at first, and doubled as reserve-mounts for just such occasions as these. That way they wouldn't have to leave a man behind in foreign territory. But it was still just a bit too ironic not to notice, that the only horse to go lame so far had been his own. Even Terl had managed the daily treks with nothing but a sore backside to show for it.
Taelan snorted. At least they had made decent progress. Not as fast as he'd hoped, granted, but they where moving forward. And as they did, tension had visible risen in the ranks.
It was always a funny thing, riding into the unknown. His men and he had trained it a couple of times, certainly – but there was quite the difference between training and live combat. And of course on this side of the Maesil waving a banner with the Avanese dragon around might as easily be construed as a threat as anything else. Just another reason to be wary.
Not for the first time, the captain of the horse-regiments hoped that the Princess' plan worked as she intended. They'd heard rumors about the situation in Calrie – tidbits at best, but the closer they came, and the more they heard, the better the pieces of the puzzle fell into place.
They said the city had fallen, that traitors where everywhere and that people who where once the closest of neighbors and friends, now looked for nothing more than the best way to plant a dagger in their next fellows back. Taelan scoffed at this – until these people had experienced true Avanese brotherly love, he doubted they had anything to complain about. At least with a dagger the end came swiftly, rather than linger on to fester and grow, until it consumed you whole.
They also said that several large hosts had converged on the province. So at least there the Princess projections seemed to be on the mark. Hopefully that boded well for the future.
He attacked the dry bread in his hand with his teeth once more, more out of necessity than any actual wish to eat it, and wolfed the last of it down. Then he stood back up, grimacing as his sore muscles protested at the treatment, and looked out over the small army of men under his disposal. They had gathered in small groups, some sitting and eating, like he had just done himself, and others trying to get what sleep they could. A few riders where still in the saddle, maintaining a loose perimeter around the resting troops, and up ahead he could see smalls group of ouriders moving ahead and off to the side to get the lay of the land in front of them in preparation for the small host to move out again. Five men where returning with two horses between them. Heavy sacks hung across over their backs – filled with bread and dried corn to top off their steadily dwindling supplies. Parties such as that one was constantly out buying what they could, and, Taelan had no doubt, even sometimes taking what they couldn't, though they had strict orders to cooperate with the local populace. That was just the way things where – give a man a sharpened stick and teach him how to use it, and suddenly he feels himself more entitled to a piece of bread than the baker who made it in the first place. In fact it sometimes seemed like the only real difference between mere thugs and royal soldiers where the men who led them.
Taelan snorted again. That was just another reason that Taelan needed to reclaim the Robhart-legacy from the weasals that currently held it. He could only all to vividly imagine the chaos that would ensue, if his older sniveling pen-pushing brothers stood in his stead. Gods above. Just thinking about them standing in the defense of Avanil made him sick to the core. Avanil didn't need sycophants and perfumed dandelions with nothing in their heads and even less between their legs. It needed men of action. Men who did their Princess honor. Men like him.
Looking about, Taelan spotted one of his adjutants – a gangly lieutenant of about the same age as himself, what was his name again? Boelswick? Boerswick? Mightily unlucky name for an Avanese chap, no wonder people disliked him. The captain caught his attention and gave a throw with his head in the direction of the resting troops.
“Raise the men – we ride out in ten minutes. We've dallied enough around here.”