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EXCERPT
Aerynn Land
by
Lisa Gabriella
Chapter One
The farther north we went, the more numerous and troublesome
were the rumors and reports coming down from the front to
diminish our morale and confidence. Often during the march
and voyage, Berrym went aboard the Royal Barge, ostensibly
to discuss the reports with me. However, on each visit he
spent some time with the Princess and her entourage.
I have never agreed with the custom of females following the
army into battle. In times of peace or war, they are far too
much of a distraction. Even a warrior of Berrym's caliber
could be diverted from his main purpose. All of his mind
should have been on the task ahead. But when I told him so,
he just laughed and clapped my shoulder.
“They give me a reason to fight. Don't worry, old comrade, I
shall be a true hero defending our land.”
Soon we encountered the first elements of our retreating
frontier defense forces, straggling groups of deserters who
looted the villages as they fled southwards along the banks
of the river. With very little ceremony, and no hesitation
at all, Berrym beheaded several of them and spiked their
heads on spears. These stood erect along the bank as an
example and a warning. Then he gathered up the other
survivors and regrouped them under reliable officers. No
further desertions followed and the troops stood to the
colors with a new spirit.
Our fleet came to the line of hills to the north of The
Capital, overlooking the great river. In defiance of his
orders from Nembyt, Berrym stationed a tactical reserve
legion of three battlegroups there under the command of his
trusted Battlegroupleader Remhyt. Then we sailed on
northwards to take up our positions on the border, and there
to await the approach of The Conqueror.
The fleet lay at anchor along the river, battle ready, but
the vessels were under minimal crews. The fighting males
were disembarked with the main body of infantry and deployed
as land fighters immediately to the west out from the river.
I prevailed upon the King to have the Princess and her
little son to remain on board the large and comfortable
barge that had brought them there. It was nicer and safer
out on the water, and their escape would be swifter if our
army met with any unplanned misfortune. But His Majesty went
ashore with the army, and set up his camp on the higher
ground above the valley fields.
There was an abandoned town there. Years before inhabitants
had fled from that place because of a border dispute with a
previous northern governor. There had been foraging troops
and bloody little skirmishes thereabouts, and the farmers
had simply given up on any further attempts at trying to
work those fertile but dangerous fields.
The name of the deserted town was Klontyrf. The flood of the
Shannyn River had begun to subside some weeks prior to our
arrival there. And even though the irrigation canals were
still running strongly, and the fields were morasses of dark
mud, the main waters had retreated back between the
permanent banks of the salty water.
Within the restrictions placed upon him by Nembyt, Berrym
set about preparing to meet the oncoming threat. The
battlegroups encamped in their order of ranking. Hemyn
commanded the craft on the river and the legion of crews
next to it. Berrym himself had the center legion with his
flanks in between. Krytas had the legion of the far left
wing.
The dark valley, stretching to the tall distant cliffs on
either side, was deep and wide. No army could traverse out
in the barren higher peaks beyond it. But our force was
indeed quite secure and impregnable within it. All that we
knew of the Great Invader Army was that it had come
overland, leaving its deeply keeled ships in the northern
ports, and that it had no flat bottomed river craft. Berrym
expected to meet them on land, and to fight an infantry
engagement. Our Army Commander knew that the Invader Army
could not navigate the mighty river, and so he should be
able to bring them to battle on this field of his own
choosing. Ideally, this would not have been there at
Klontyrf, but Nembyt had made that decision for him. The
town of Klontyrf itself was on a low place with open
untended fields around it. At least it commanded a good
view, and the enemy would be under our observation long
before they could engage and drive in our pickets.
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