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    1. DeltaV 10 yrs ago

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Sometimes I partake in the computers.

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The twisting black iron walls of Aquilonia, so monstrous and threatening from afar, did not seem quite so looming now, Ioannes noted as he rode the length of his drawn-up battle lines. The walls were large, that was to be admitted, but they were not made of thick stone but sheets of hammered metal, and while it would be impossible to grapple over them it would not be so difficult to tear through.

He had chosen to set the rams to work where he gauged that the city's original gate should have been. That gate had fallen long ago, and a new one had been erected in turn from black iron on the other side of the city, but Ioannes judged that if they could break through the walls there the main street into the city should provide room to maintain his soldiers' ranks.

The siege had been a strange one, to be sure. For some weeks not a single sortie had emerged from the walls to challenge the invaders, and the gaunt-eyed scouts atop the towers did not seem particularly concerned. Eventually the rotting egg of the city had hatched, however, and hundreds of ill-armored and unskilled slave soldiers had emerged. Ioannes had commanded his sergeants to strike at the enemy commanders and let the rest break without pursuit.

And the enemy armies had broken, that was to be sure. After the frontlines collapsed the rest had scattered every which way, as men in black armor atop black horses tried to maintain order. Crossbowmen and archers dealt with them, and Ioannes and his cavalry had swept in between the army and its city, leaving the fleeing soldiers to run in any other direction. They were not followed; Ioannes hoped, though he knew it foolish, that they might recover from whatever foulness engulfed the city in the wilds and come to rejoin civilization.

Such a battle had repeated over and over, with ever-increasing frequency, as Ioannes' rams and trebuchets came closer to punching a suitable hole into the city's walls. With each sortie the slaves seemed more desperate, though many refused to break -- in fear of what might happen if they were recaptured? -- and instead died on the spears or lances of the phalanxes of Acharnae. There had not been time even to bury the dead before the next wave emerged, and so they had been cleansed in great bonfires against the city's walls.

A messenger had arrived at Ioannes' camp in the dead of night, however, and informed him that the walls had been broken. The city had not yet noticed. As the moon shone bright above, Ioannes drew his remaining armies -- perhaps a fourth of them had been lost to battle or attrition -- into tight columns, with his cavalry at the head. They would ride ahead to surprise the enemy, and behind the main force would storm into the city and recapture it.

As was to be expected, the scouts in their towers noticed as Ioannes led a wedge of mounted lancers through a newly-made gap in the walls. The air filled with shouts and commands in some guttural ancient language, but it was not soon enough. The wedge tore through the bleary and half-assembled slave ranks like a knife through supple cloth as they raced ahead towards the city's inner sanctum.

Ioannes supposed that the center of the city must once have contained a great marble forum. Now, however, it was a fortress in and of itself, the only building inside of the city's walls that had been rebuilt. Where the roads leading up to it had been all sun-bleached, half-destroyed facades and pillars, this one shone darkly in the moonlight. Drawn up in front of it was a more worrying force -- a line of horsemen to meet their own, armored all in black iron plate that seemed the same material as the fortress itself. They lowered oiled lances and charged to meet Ioannes' wedge along the road.

The first few seconds were chaos, as lines met and horses wheeled. Ioannes' lance wedged itself deep into the gorget of some poor fool, and as he dropped it he unsheathed the orichalcum-lined blade of his forefathers. Around Ioannes the line had broken up into two dozen individual duels, and further back the main infantry had fallen upon the broken lines of the Aquilonians.

Ioannes chose his target, raising his sword towards a man taller than most on a spotted destrier. The knight turned and met his gaze, and both charged. Horses wheeled around one another as both fighters landed blows on one another's shields and armor. The rest of the world fell away, and for a few moments all that existed was the sword in hand and the sword in his foe's hand and the song of steel. Ioannes parried the black knight's longsword aside with his superior blade, and buried his sword to the hilt in a chink in the man's pauldron. He was rewarded with a pained grunt and the sound of a sword clattering to the ground. Ioannes drew his blade back out and lodged it with a thrust deep into his enemy's visor. As he pulled it out once more for another swing, the knight toppled lifeless from his horse.

By then the main battle lines had caught up with the cavalry, and the remaining black knights -- perhaps half of those who had originally rode from their stronghold -- fled for safety. Several were met with well-placed crossbow quarrels, and one was spilled from his horse as it collapsed dead to the ground. Ioannes' own had fared slightly better, though not by any great measure; many of his companions lay dead on the paved stones, and their horses milled aimlessly or sprawled over their corpses.

The battle was not won, of course. As the gate of the stronghold was encircled, Ioannes and his remaining cavalry rode to the city's new gate and raised it for the rest of his army to enter. Another block of slave fodder marched from the inner sanctum, and were quickly slaughtered or shattered.

The dawn had arrived when Ioannes' battering rams broke down the gate of the main fortress. With the first rays of morning light spilling over the ruins of a once-great city, he rode into the gaping maw of the city center.
Been busy, should have a post up tomorrow or Saturday. @Dead Cruiser, just out of curiosity, how did you envision the spooky dark forces of Aquilonia? Or do I have free reign with them as my imagination dictates?
Gods above. What Ioannes had always heard to have been a grand, shining city had been turned into a behemoth of a citadel, its walls black as night. From the top of the rocky bluff on which his cavalry forces sat, Ioannes could see sentries standing atop towers of twisted, hideous iron. None of the fractured polis of Atlantis could have created such a thing, nor the fierce northmen or mounted hordes of the northeast. This was something else.

Ioannes turned to his gaping horsemen, and attempted to make his voice stern and confident. "It seems that things shall not be as easy as we hoped," he intoned, and gestured towards the back of the crowd. "You, there, ride for the main army and tell them what we have seen. We must encircle the city before they have word of our arrival." He could only hope that they had not yet been spotted; the outriders and sentries of Ioannes' host reported nothing but blackened hills and twisted, scraggly trees.

"The rest of you, form into groups of ten and ride around the perimeter of the city. Keep well out of sight, and strike down any scouting parties that you come across. Do not let them know that we are here. If that means that you need to spend hours creeping through the shadows of outcroppings, so be it. We must know what we face."

In the end, when all the orders had been given, one hundred horse set off back towards the main army, while the rest began to pick their way down the bluff and into the valley that contained the horrific city before them. The sun had begun to set by then; with any luck, none would be seen as they made the descent.

Ioannes had also dispatched a rider to send word back to Acharnae, and command that his paltry fleet be brought up the bay. A blockade could hardly go unnoticed, but by then the main army would have surrounded the city -- and ships meant a reliable source of supplies to feed Ioannes' men and construct siege weapons for what might be a lengthy struggle. He did not, however, send word to the polis -- better that they think he was putting another empty crown on his head than that his army was weakened against some unknown foe. If it was revealed that that citadel was swarming with foul demons and sorcerers, well, then it might do to have a few allies -- but until such a thing was discovered, Ioannes was content not to reveal all of the cards in his hand.

The dawn had nearly come when Ioannes' own ten spotted a scout emerge from a postern gate, perhaps half of a mile away. He seemed to be heading towards their group, though with any luck that was sheer coincidence. Ioannes commanded his compatriots into the safety of a nearby forest of blackened trees, where they waited for the scout to pass.

Once the man had gone by, and Ioannes' party sat between him and the citadel, they emerged from the treeline, blades and lances in hand. The scout stood little chance against ten of the famed cavalry of Atlantis -- a lance plunged entirely through the neck of the scout's horse, and he was thrown from the saddle. One man dismounted and pulled him from beneath the dying horse, blade at his throat.

"Leave him alive," Ioannes said. "We shall see what he knows."
So, a few questions so I can make a good post:

1) Are whatever has taken over the capital clearly not humans?
2) Are their numbers visibly superior to Ioannes' army? I'm imagining his consists of, I don't know, five thousand or so, as a random guess.
3) Do they have any sort of naval strength that would be visible if Ioannes made a trek around to take a look?
Here's an utterly hideous, definitely not to scale rendition of how i imagine the places currently relevant to my character to be situated:
@DeltaV Mentioned the wrong person, sorry! I meant Kingfisher ha-ha.


No problem. Also, depending on how things go in the next few posts, there might be a certain Atlantean army that would welcome some extra soldiers to its ranks.
@DeltaV Do the Boreans know you're about to attack them?


I'm not entirely sure what you mean. The remaining Atlantean cities will be getting messengers demanding their fealty soon, but my character hasn't planned on attacking the Boreans.
The dawn came at last, sending bright rays of yellow and red and orange across the rocky fields and rolling hills of the Atlantean homelands. The sigil of the Arsenikos dynasty displayed a bright golden sun, with a black stag contained within. Let us hope that both suns are truly rising once more.

Ioannes Arsenikos rose from his bed, leaving his wife snoring softly within the canopy as he crossed the chamber to dress. It had been three days since the city of Helorus surrendered itself under siege to the growing Empire of Acharnae, one of the dozen remaining heirs to have been birthed from the corpses of the Philosopher-Kings. Until Helorus had capitulated, the number of claimant polis had stood at thirteen -- luckily, the self-professed king of the city had had the sense to capitulate and swear his sword (and, more importantly, his levies) into fealty towards the growing Acharnaen realm. With any luck, he would not be the last.

Ioannes had left the spearmen and archers that made up most of his army under the control of his wife, the ambitious and cunning Anthousa, whom he had married but a few months ago, as he rode with his cavalry to encircle the city and take its forces by surprise. They had swept over the farms and mills and wells that surrounded Helorus, cutting down what few scouts they came upon, and as a result the Helorians had no time to burn their fields or poison their waters in preparation for a siege. When the main armies arrived a few days later to properly encircle the city, Ioannes had called for a parley with the so-called King of Helorus and offered him a pardon if he should give up his crown. After a brief argument rife with insults, the now-lord had come to his senses and surrendered meekly enough.

For the next three days, then, Ioannes had made himself, his household, and his army a tolerated if not entirely welcome guest in Helorus, allowing time for his weary levies to recover and assimilate the forces of Helorus that were now Ioannes' to command. Ioannes had also feasted the lord of Helorus and his family for each of the nights he had imposed himself on them, and perhaps managed to convince them of the righteousness of his cause.

Ioannes was no fool, of course. He had arranged for the lord's two eldest children to be escorted back to Acharnae -- as wards to be educated by Ioannes' own family, he insisted, but the unspoken agreement was that they were hostages to their father's loyalty. And so most of the levies of Helorus had been called up to join to Ioannes' own, though the lord of Helorus himself was content to remain behind his walls when the army marched off.

Today would be the day of marching, Ioannes knew. He had commanded that the army be drawn up into ranks outside of the city by dawn -- looking out his window from the chamber, he could see them assembled just outside of the gates. Ioannes dressed quietly before rousing Anthousa, who in turn dressed and joined him as they slipped out of the city. No doubt Helorus would wake more easily to be rid of the thousands of intruders with whom they had been forced to share their homes for a few days.

As he rode to meet the head of his army, Ioannes thought on his chosen destination. There were no lack of possible opportunities. The cities of Acharnae, Ephyra and Helorus stood in a roughly straight line along the coast, but around them several polis continued to claim themselves the remnants of the Atlanteans. Beyond those, the northern savages and eastern hordes continued to sweep across the outskirts of the once-Empire, sacking what villages remained. But the most tempting targed lay east along the coast, to where the ruined city of Aquilonia stood, its marble columns broken and scattered. Ioannes was not prone to flights of fancy or fond of ceremony, but his wife had proposed the idea of being formally crowned as the next Emperor of the Atlanteans from the capital of the Old Empire. He had already sent birds and messengers to the dozen remaining independent polis, inviting them to travel to Aquilonia themselves to pledge Ioannes their fealty.

And so it came to be that when the army had finally been assembled they turned east, following the contours of the bay to their right. It would be a long march to Aquilonia, even if Ioannes followed his earlier precedent and raced ahead with his cavalry, but he was content to trot along and watch the crashing of the waves. Depending on events once his forces arrived at the capital, it might be the last moment of tranquility for some time.
My only minor, mostly-baseless criticism is that it seems a little bit strange for the ambitious leader of a mercenary company to also value friendship and loyalty. Generally mercenaries were considered to be of very wavering loyalty (which seems to match the character's goal to eventually carve out a kingdom for himself) -- hence why the term nowadays describes someone who forgoes ethics for the sake of money.
...The seventh person ducks.
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