“Hop it Bee, the Captain wants you!” a voice snapped from the street. Bianca Paniterra stumbled from the stone linteled brothel in a state of absolute disarray. She had at least managed to get her pants on, as well as one boot and was hopping awkwardly trying to pull the other up over her foot. Her shirt hung open, exposing her breasts to the warm summer air. She was a trim woman with dark hair, bright green eyes and skin that had been burned a pleasant brown by years spent outdoors in all weathers. Bianca managed to get her second boot on and spun back towards the brothel, walking backwards as she tried to button her shirt.
“Talia, you truly are the greatest lover in all of Palona!” she called grandly, running a hand through her disheveled hair and trying to tie it back in an appropriate military bun.
“You said that about Zenda!” Talia called laughing from the shelter of the brothel, “and Lilsa, and Antonius!” Bianca sketched a bow as she finally managed to button up her tunic.
“And when I said it to each of them it was true!” she laughed.
“What about me?” a playful voice called from the building.
“Sorry Eva, you were only ok,” Bianca replied. A bundle flew from the doorway and hit Bianca in the stomach dropping her to the floor with a clatter of iron. She peered owlishly at the bundle before recognizing they were her weapons.
“If I’m not honest with you, you will never improve!” she shouted into the darkness to another round of giggling.
“If you are quite finished?” the initial voice said with a hint of exasperation. Bianca pulled herself to her feet and swung her weapons belt around her hips, the long cavalry sword and paired dueling pistols weighing it down to the left, not quite counterbalancing the weight of the buckler on the right. The speaker was a Rajindan woman named Nambi. She had dark, almost ebon skin, with a golden tear drop tattooed beneath her left eye. She was the healer of the Silver Swords and a certified wizard, marked and guilded.
“Well, I wasn’t quite but then you had to show up and be all… ‘the captain wants you!’” Bianca retorted in a fair imitation of the company doctor’s accent. Nambi folded her arms beneath her breasts with an air of irritation. Bianca had the alcohol induced swaying under control now and began to move down the street in the general direction of the old temple that was serving as the company command post. The streets of Palona were paved in warm stone as was the fashion in Iscala, the heat of midday still shimmered from the pavement, even though that was two hours passed.
“You were supposed to be there ten minutes ago,” Nambi muttered as they climbed a broad stone stairway up towards the top of the wall that surrounded the city, a much faster route to the temple than taking the maze of twisting streets. Bianca refused to be baited, too distracted by the dull ache of wine in the back of her head now that she was out in the hot sun.
“I’ll never understand why you insist on wasting so much time with wine and whores,” Nambi continued, unwilling to give up her carping. Bianca wasn’t surprised, the First of the scouts having had to endure her lectures every time she had yanked her from a brothel.
“It distracts me from the fact I’m going to die,” Bianca replied tiredly as they reached the top of the wall and surveyed the vista beyond.
“I have to say, most days that feels less immediate.”
Palona was built on a small hill in the middle of the broad plain of the river Ebo. Ordinarily the view from the city wall would have been a grand sight. One of neatly cultivated fields and prosperous groves of apples and cim fruit. Now however… The city was surrounded by a network of palisades and trenches, its apple groves cut down to provide timber for the besieging army that laired just beyond the walls of sharpened wooden stakes. The cim fruit, too sturdy to be easily cut down still stood, looking oddly festive among the wreck of the plain. Canvas tents in their hundreds surrounded the city, and the smoke from thousands of cook fires was already drifting skyward. The great army of Priest-Queen Hecantha had been besieging Palona for nearly a month. A great jagged sap zig zagged its way towards the city wall, wooden mantlets and wicker facines of earth defending those sections where they would have been exposed to fire from the walls. It looked like a puckered scar across the land with piles of spoil lining each side of the trench. The sap had advanced another fifty feet since Bianca had surveyed it at dawn.
“They must be paying those long-bearded bastards by the yard,” Bianca muttered. Fifty feet was prodigious progress in the rocky soil of the plain, a feat only dwarven engineers might manage. The reality was the Grimgi Grak weren’t being paid at all. The dwarven company had been on the side of High Prelate Sandus four months ago when the Priest Queen’s forces had routed them at Silver River. By the laws and traditions that governed mercenary companies in the subcontinent, Grimgi had been given the Three. The Three were the proscribed options a defeated mercenary company could select. The First was a day's head start, during which time no pursuit was supposed to occur. A company that chose the First was free to rejoin its employers, providing they could outrun the pursuit that began after the grace period expired. Taking the First almost always meant abandoning pack train and equipment. For some companies that was a price worth paying, for dedicated siege engineers like Grimgi’s Gak, with cannon and powder to protect, it was ruin and so he had chosen the Second. The Second was a six moon indenture during which the company would serve their captors without pay, twelve moons if they were taken in a siege. While they wouldn’t be paid they were allowed the traditional share of booty and a wise captain who put aside some gold could often weather such a setback. The Third was death. For obvious reasons, mercenaries rarely availed themselves of the Third.
“Today do you think?” Nambi asked, looking out over the approaching siege works. It was close enough that Bianca could pick out the shovels and picks flashing in the afternoon sun.
“Tonight maybe,” Bianca said. She made a gesture with her arm to a point twenty yards in front of the sap where hard men and mud-stained dwarves were filling facines around a platform of logs laid on crushed stone, replacing the wooden mantlets that had protected them from fire during its construction.
“We fought with Grimgi at Draza two years ago, he has a twenty pounder that can make the range,” Bianca explained, “it’s going to take them the rest of the day to bring it up.” A siege was not considered joined until the first cannonball struck the wall and Bianca suspected that Hecantha’s forces would wait until the following morning to commence.
“Will we sally, do you think?” Nambi asked. Bianca snorted with laughter.
“I doubt anyone is that eager to get killed,” she replied, pointing to a pair of small hillocks on which crossbowmen lazed behind a forest of pavise shields, quartered with the arms of the Golden Coin Company of Altria. The Golden Bough were legendary marksmen, to earn a place you had to be able to put a bolt through a golden ducat at a hundred paces. Riding out to attack the siege lines would be both suicidal and pointless, even a successful attack would only delay things by a day or two. Behind the crossbowmen were lines of horses tied to stakes, cavalry to drive off any survivors of the hail of crossbow bolts.
The two Silver Swords walked along the wall as they talked, passing Palonan defenders who sat with their backs to the wall, some smoking clay pipes while others played dice with their companions. The defenders were a mix of Palonan levies, unskilled peasants who had the family crossbow or an old billhook and perhaps a suit of boiled leather armor to their names, and mercenaries from across the continent. The League of the North, a coalition of cities that had banded together to resist the Priest Queen, had hired a number of companies to try to check her advance from the Emerald Hills, but their general, a northern named Costigan, had been overwhelmed in the spring when the Priest Queen’s army had surged out of the south, much earlier and in much greater numbers than anyone expected. The Priest Queen used mercenaries also, though the core of her army were fanatical followers from the teeming cities of the south. They were poorly equipped and had little training, but had swamped Costigan with numbers and enthusiasm for which he had been ill prepared. Now Bianca and the rest of the Silver Swords were stuck here within this island of of a town amidst a sea of death.
The Silver Swords were typical of the type of outfit the league had hired. Three hundred strong mounted infantry with a long history on the subcontinent. There were some two thousand mercenaries in Palona though, besides the Silver Swords, only the Iron Shields - a company of Northmen, and the Horse Lords - heavy cavalry from Bettony, numbered more than a hundred Blades. They were far better equipped and trained than the local levies were, but Palona wasn’t their home, and they weren’t motivated to fight to the death against fifty thousand frothing fanatics and their mercenary auxiliaries. To a mercenary there were no causes, only contracts, and if this one wasn’t panning out, it was time to find another.
“Talia, you truly are the greatest lover in all of Palona!” she called grandly, running a hand through her disheveled hair and trying to tie it back in an appropriate military bun.
“You said that about Zenda!” Talia called laughing from the shelter of the brothel, “and Lilsa, and Antonius!” Bianca sketched a bow as she finally managed to button up her tunic.
“And when I said it to each of them it was true!” she laughed.
“What about me?” a playful voice called from the building.
“Sorry Eva, you were only ok,” Bianca replied. A bundle flew from the doorway and hit Bianca in the stomach dropping her to the floor with a clatter of iron. She peered owlishly at the bundle before recognizing they were her weapons.
“If I’m not honest with you, you will never improve!” she shouted into the darkness to another round of giggling.
“If you are quite finished?” the initial voice said with a hint of exasperation. Bianca pulled herself to her feet and swung her weapons belt around her hips, the long cavalry sword and paired dueling pistols weighing it down to the left, not quite counterbalancing the weight of the buckler on the right. The speaker was a Rajindan woman named Nambi. She had dark, almost ebon skin, with a golden tear drop tattooed beneath her left eye. She was the healer of the Silver Swords and a certified wizard, marked and guilded.
“Well, I wasn’t quite but then you had to show up and be all… ‘the captain wants you!’” Bianca retorted in a fair imitation of the company doctor’s accent. Nambi folded her arms beneath her breasts with an air of irritation. Bianca had the alcohol induced swaying under control now and began to move down the street in the general direction of the old temple that was serving as the company command post. The streets of Palona were paved in warm stone as was the fashion in Iscala, the heat of midday still shimmered from the pavement, even though that was two hours passed.
“You were supposed to be there ten minutes ago,” Nambi muttered as they climbed a broad stone stairway up towards the top of the wall that surrounded the city, a much faster route to the temple than taking the maze of twisting streets. Bianca refused to be baited, too distracted by the dull ache of wine in the back of her head now that she was out in the hot sun.
“I’ll never understand why you insist on wasting so much time with wine and whores,” Nambi continued, unwilling to give up her carping. Bianca wasn’t surprised, the First of the scouts having had to endure her lectures every time she had yanked her from a brothel.
“It distracts me from the fact I’m going to die,” Bianca replied tiredly as they reached the top of the wall and surveyed the vista beyond.
“I have to say, most days that feels less immediate.”
Palona was built on a small hill in the middle of the broad plain of the river Ebo. Ordinarily the view from the city wall would have been a grand sight. One of neatly cultivated fields and prosperous groves of apples and cim fruit. Now however… The city was surrounded by a network of palisades and trenches, its apple groves cut down to provide timber for the besieging army that laired just beyond the walls of sharpened wooden stakes. The cim fruit, too sturdy to be easily cut down still stood, looking oddly festive among the wreck of the plain. Canvas tents in their hundreds surrounded the city, and the smoke from thousands of cook fires was already drifting skyward. The great army of Priest-Queen Hecantha had been besieging Palona for nearly a month. A great jagged sap zig zagged its way towards the city wall, wooden mantlets and wicker facines of earth defending those sections where they would have been exposed to fire from the walls. It looked like a puckered scar across the land with piles of spoil lining each side of the trench. The sap had advanced another fifty feet since Bianca had surveyed it at dawn.
“They must be paying those long-bearded bastards by the yard,” Bianca muttered. Fifty feet was prodigious progress in the rocky soil of the plain, a feat only dwarven engineers might manage. The reality was the Grimgi Grak weren’t being paid at all. The dwarven company had been on the side of High Prelate Sandus four months ago when the Priest Queen’s forces had routed them at Silver River. By the laws and traditions that governed mercenary companies in the subcontinent, Grimgi had been given the Three. The Three were the proscribed options a defeated mercenary company could select. The First was a day's head start, during which time no pursuit was supposed to occur. A company that chose the First was free to rejoin its employers, providing they could outrun the pursuit that began after the grace period expired. Taking the First almost always meant abandoning pack train and equipment. For some companies that was a price worth paying, for dedicated siege engineers like Grimgi’s Gak, with cannon and powder to protect, it was ruin and so he had chosen the Second. The Second was a six moon indenture during which the company would serve their captors without pay, twelve moons if they were taken in a siege. While they wouldn’t be paid they were allowed the traditional share of booty and a wise captain who put aside some gold could often weather such a setback. The Third was death. For obvious reasons, mercenaries rarely availed themselves of the Third.
“Today do you think?” Nambi asked, looking out over the approaching siege works. It was close enough that Bianca could pick out the shovels and picks flashing in the afternoon sun.
“Tonight maybe,” Bianca said. She made a gesture with her arm to a point twenty yards in front of the sap where hard men and mud-stained dwarves were filling facines around a platform of logs laid on crushed stone, replacing the wooden mantlets that had protected them from fire during its construction.
“We fought with Grimgi at Draza two years ago, he has a twenty pounder that can make the range,” Bianca explained, “it’s going to take them the rest of the day to bring it up.” A siege was not considered joined until the first cannonball struck the wall and Bianca suspected that Hecantha’s forces would wait until the following morning to commence.
“Will we sally, do you think?” Nambi asked. Bianca snorted with laughter.
“I doubt anyone is that eager to get killed,” she replied, pointing to a pair of small hillocks on which crossbowmen lazed behind a forest of pavise shields, quartered with the arms of the Golden Coin Company of Altria. The Golden Bough were legendary marksmen, to earn a place you had to be able to put a bolt through a golden ducat at a hundred paces. Riding out to attack the siege lines would be both suicidal and pointless, even a successful attack would only delay things by a day or two. Behind the crossbowmen were lines of horses tied to stakes, cavalry to drive off any survivors of the hail of crossbow bolts.
The two Silver Swords walked along the wall as they talked, passing Palonan defenders who sat with their backs to the wall, some smoking clay pipes while others played dice with their companions. The defenders were a mix of Palonan levies, unskilled peasants who had the family crossbow or an old billhook and perhaps a suit of boiled leather armor to their names, and mercenaries from across the continent. The League of the North, a coalition of cities that had banded together to resist the Priest Queen, had hired a number of companies to try to check her advance from the Emerald Hills, but their general, a northern named Costigan, had been overwhelmed in the spring when the Priest Queen’s army had surged out of the south, much earlier and in much greater numbers than anyone expected. The Priest Queen used mercenaries also, though the core of her army were fanatical followers from the teeming cities of the south. They were poorly equipped and had little training, but had swamped Costigan with numbers and enthusiasm for which he had been ill prepared. Now Bianca and the rest of the Silver Swords were stuck here within this island of of a town amidst a sea of death.
The Silver Swords were typical of the type of outfit the league had hired. Three hundred strong mounted infantry with a long history on the subcontinent. There were some two thousand mercenaries in Palona though, besides the Silver Swords, only the Iron Shields - a company of Northmen, and the Horse Lords - heavy cavalry from Bettony, numbered more than a hundred Blades. They were far better equipped and trained than the local levies were, but Palona wasn’t their home, and they weren’t motivated to fight to the death against fifty thousand frothing fanatics and their mercenary auxiliaries. To a mercenary there were no causes, only contracts, and if this one wasn’t panning out, it was time to find another.