Daybreak:Volume 3 Chapter 6: Difference between revisions

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===Chapter 6 - Unquestionable Authority===
===Chapter 6 - Unquestioned Authority===


According to Trinitian history, the dragonlord Hyperion had been born on the 'day of the longest night' during year one of the Dragon Age -- the same year when the nomadic dragonkind made landfall upon this world. Twelve centuries later, this youthful draconic messiah would 'save the world from its sins' by sacrificing his own life to shut down the Abyssal Rift, gateway to the demonic realm where all the evils of the universe manifested in physical form.
Kaede found herself departing Weichsel just as its people began preparations for a major holiday.


It came as no surprise that the image of Hyperion casting the unnamed ritual -- later named the ''True Cross'' -- would become the most pervasive symbol of the Trinitian Church, or that this historic birthday would mark the second holiest day of the year for its faithful.
According to the official history of the Trinitian Church, the dragonlord Hyperion had been born on the 'day of the longest night' during year zero of the Dragon Age -- the year when the stellar-nomadic dragonkind made landfall upon this world. Twelve centuries later, this draconic messiah would 'save the world from its sins' by sacrificing his own life to shut down the Abyssal Rift, gateway to the demonic realm where all the evils of the universe manifested in physical form.


That birthday was only three days away. Yet despite the holy time, Kaede found herself standing in an empty field eight kilopaces away from the city with the assembled Knights Phantom of the ''Ghost Riders''. It had taken both days since meeting with King Leopold before Pascal could conclude his obligations in Nordkreuz. The landgrave had done what he could to kick off the recovery efforts, and Kaede had spent much of this time helping assess local talents to whom they could entrust the daunting task of rebuilding.
It came as no surprise that the image of Hyperion casting the unnamed ritual -- later named the ''Ritual of the True Cross'' -- would become the most pervasive symbol of Trinitian belief. The timeline of how this spell came to be would also mark the holy days of the Trinitian Church: when it was approved, when Hyperion led his eleven other siblings to begin casting the spell, and when the dragonlord sacrificed his life to finish the ritual.


Now, a fresh cold front had arrived from the north. Amidst the light flurry of snow, a galloping mass of phantom steeds and wagons rode out of the sun in the east. But as Kaede stared at the distant dawn, she pondered just how exactly did soldiers celebrate a white Christmas in wartime.
The first of these three milestones was on January 19th, when Hyperion made his case before the Triumvirs, the three most powerful dragonlords who governed the rest of their race. After being challenged over numerous issues and being forced to defend his creation, Hyperion at last received permission to cast his spell and bring an end to the Dragon-Demon Wars.


Well, half of her was wondering -- it helped to take her mind off things. The other half was too busy being distracted by a cramping stomach as she struggled not to double over in pain.
This day was now known as the Epiphany, or 'Liturgy Day'.


''The Period of Christmas... God I hate you,'' she blasphemed in the safety of her own mind.
It was also only two days away.


It was almost daunting to realize that roughly one-quarter of all women suffered through this on the jolliest week of the year.
Even the inhabitants of a devastated city like Nordkreuz had begun preparing for this holy day. Repairs to the damaged cathedral took priority as the Bishop of Nordkreuz prepared for his all-day mass. Older children decorated the buildings with garlands and ornaments while their parents were hard at work. Meanwhile every restored bakery across the city began producing a triangular confection known as a 'triumvirate cake', which was stacked together in a way that distinctively reminded Kaede of a Hojo Kamon -- a symbol more widely known as the 'Triforce'.


"<u>Kaede did you take some tea before leaving?</u>"
Unfortunately, despite Kaede's interest, she would not remain in the city to see the celebrations. Instead she rode behind Pascal and saluted towards the podium where the King stood to inspect the troops.


The familiar, soothing voice over telepathy lead Kaede to turn about. Her eyes soon met Ariadne's supportive smile just a few paces away.
The battalion-sized expeditionary force marched down Nordkreuz's main street as they made their departure. The army's martial orchestra filled the air with rowsing music, while countless inhabitants of the city had assembled outside to bid them farewell.


The Duchess-to-be and newly named commander of the ''Ghost Riders'' stood next to another white pegasus. Her flowing pink hair and the burning-red fabrics of her open-front uniform skirt billowed in the lakeside breeze. Beneath her collar was a newly minted Knight's Cross and the rank insignias of a Major, as she had been promoted twice in a row for receiving proper Knight Phantom status.
A new cold front had arrived from the North Sea, and a gentle flurry was descending from the skies as they strode along. Kaede had done some shopping yesterday for thicker, velvet leggings and a furry winter coat. The soft, tight fabric that stretched across her legs beneath her short skirt still weren't like the pants Kaede wore before coming to this world. Nevertheless, these 'yoga pants' were the closest garment available while still being considered acceptable for women -- or at least, women of military rank.


"<u>No. I've only been drinking it before sleep,</u>" Kaede pressed a forearm rune containing one of the ''Telepathy'' spells to reply.
''Though these are unfairly comfortable compared to men's pants,'' Kaede thought as she sat in the saddle of a disturbingly immaterial 'horse'.


"<u>Have some with your meals this week as well. Parzifal had asked some of the commoner medics what they did to relieve menstrual cramps. They said that chamomile tea helps, especially with ginger, peppermint, or raspberry leaves added to it.</u>"
The ''Phantom Steed'' she now rode in was considered the most mana-efficient means of long-distance travel in Hyperion. The spell, when not adapted from its original form by the Knights Phantom, created a semi-physical 'horse' that held good weight and was immune to fatigue. The problem for Kaede was that the mount looked insubstantial. It felt as though she sat atop a sculpted cloud of dense black smoke, which triggered her mental safety alerts even as the mount trotted across firm ground.


''She could tell?''
Her discomfort only grew worse as the group reached the collapsed south gate and took to the air. The ''Phantom Steeds'' climbed into the skies as they accelerated to a full gallop. Kaede felt queasy in her stomach as she rode over the lake's waters at roughly five stories' height and eighty kilopaces per hour. She desperately clung onto the saddle horns with her small hands.


The Samaran girl's eyes opened wide in response, eliciting a sympathetic nod from the noblewoman whose blessing of magic meant she was above the commoners' problem of monthly period pains.
''Thank Buddha at least my period is over,'' the familiar couldn't help thinking.


"<u>It's been enough days since your last time. I took a guess since you looked like something was physically upsetting you. I'm guessing you have a thirty-day cycle then?</u>"
Perhaps it was a good thing that Pascal didn't trust her riding skills, or lack thereof. He had cast a sticking spell which glued her butt to the saddle. It wasn't comfortable, as she couldn't shift in her seat at all. However it at least ensured she couldn't fall off.


Kaede couldn't respond. Given the importance of the female bodily rhythm, she ''really'' should have been tracking her cycle. But after the last time, she had almost forgotten entirely about it until this morning. Had her undergarments not come with self-cleaning enchantments, she would have made a mess in Pascal's bed.
"<What do you think, Kaede?>" Pascal's voice pulled Kaede back to the present.


''Can't even keep up with the least time consuming of 'feminine routines','' she thought with a heavy sigh. ''So much for getting used to being a girl.''
"<Huh? Sorry, I wasn't listening,>" Kaede replied in a sheepish tone. She had been so caught up staring at the lake's waters beneath her that she zoned out.


"Assuming it stays consistent," Kaede muttered, remembering Parzifal's warning that many girls also had irregular cycles.
"<Pay attention.>" Pascal demanded in a clearly disgruntled tone. "<We are officially on a military operation now!>"


As informative the conversation was, it only focused her attention on the cramps and made them feel worse.
"<Give the girl a break, it's her first time flying in a saddle.>" Ariadne's gentle voice defended Kaede in the telepathic network they shared. "<Kaede, I was asking Pascal if he has a good idea for a unit name. The phantom grenadiers have been officially elevated to knights, and official companies of the Knights Phantom all have unit names. It's a black mark on morale for them not to have one. But the men also can't agree on anything.>"


Thankfully for Kaede, the reason for their wait soon arrived as shadow hooves touched down upon the snowy ground. The hundred steeds of the understrength ''Falcon Force'' Knights Phantom were followed by light wagons from the 36th Logistics Company -- these vehicles drawn by two ''Phantom Steeds'' apiece and stayed afloat thanks to ''Levitation'' spells.
Kaede gave it a quick thought. Given the Phantoms' modus operandi, the answer seemed quite simple:


They were why she stood waiting far outside the city: to minimize the chances of Gabriel's spies knowing just how much support the Princess really received.
"<nowiki><I</nowiki>n my world, there was once a famous formation that advanced so quickly through enemy lines that neither friend nor foe could keep track of it. They called it the ''Ghost Division''.>"


Four members of the King's Black Eagles also rode within the formation, as Pascal had requested a squad to help with intelligence gathering. His unspoken goal was to keep King Leopold informed through sources that His Majesty would trust beyond any doubt, thereby transforming the expedition's successes into further military support.
The Samaran girl then paused briefly as she had to remind herself that it was also a ''Nazi'' formation. Though it was admittedly led by the chivalrous Erwin Rommel, who even buried commandos who tried to assassinate him with honors.


It was a double-edged sword, as even the closest of allies spied upon one another. Yet as Kaede picked the familiar sight of a petite dhampir waving from within the formation, she couldn't help but return a smile.
"<That is oddly fitting,>" Pascal added in amusement. "<Considering during the run-up to the Battle of Nordkreuz, we couldn't even figure out where you were, since you were being led by a madman.>"


"Welcome to Nordkreuz Sir," Pascal began as he lead the salute towards the highest ranking officer of the expedition.
"<Who ye calling a madman, you twerp?>" The gruff voice of Colonel Hammerstein responded.


Colonel Walther von Mackensen was a square-faced, stiff-jawed man who appeared to be in his early forties. His height must be nearing two meters (almost 6'5"), for the colonel towered over his cavalrymen even as they remained sitting on their mounts. A pair of neatly trimmed handlebar mustaches accentuated his stern countenance, and the piercing blue gaze beneath his chestnut hair felt as keen as any saber.
"<Ah, sorry S...>" Pascal had almost called him 'Sir' before remembering they were now the same rank. Though Hammerstein still held seniority and was therefore the official commander of the expedition. "<nowiki><I</nowiki> did not realize Ariadne looped you in, Colonel.>"


Apart from the black-on-burning-red uniform of the Knights Phantom, he also wore his iconic hat -- tall and made of black bearskin with the skulls and crossbones emblem. It was matched by every man in the ''Falcon Force'' company, which gave birth to the nickname their enemies knew best: the ''Death's Head''.
"<You think I'm gonna just leave you alone to build your harem?>" The Colonel snarled as he highlighted the fact that everyone else in chat was a young woman.


"Major von Moltewitz. Your Highness," the Colonel nodded to both Pascal and Sylviane, his expression showing not the least bit of change despite coming face-to-face with the royal princess he captured a decade ago.
In addition to Kaede and Ariadne, there was also Princess Sylviane and Captain Cecylia von Falkenhausen. The young dhampir had been promoted after the successful completion of her mission to bring Elspeth to Nordkreuz, as well as her part during the Manteuffel Incident. She had been assigned to this expedition, along with a squad of the King's Black Eagles, because of her experience working in Rhin-Lotharingie and her close ties to Princess Sylviane.


"It is an honor to be working with your Sir, and I apologize for any offense the political arrangements might have caused," Pascal conveyed humbly in a display of just how much he respected this man.
''It was also shrewd for Sylviane to bring them along,'' Kaede thought.


"That I am to take my orders from a mere Major?"
After all, Black Eagles were the eyes and ears of the King. The information they sent back would be trusted by King Leopold. This meant that as long as Sylviane did well, she would bolster the King's confidence in their alliance and receive additional support.


The Colonel's smile came out more like a sneer, despite his utter lack of malice.
However, the same Princess also did not take well to Hammerstein's crass remarks:


"Your father would be proud of the work you have done, both in Skagen and here in Nordkreuz," von Mackensen spoke in a low bass that carried his own version of the aristocratic drawl. "So long as you continue to display qualities worthy of your blood and lineage, I do not mind taking orders from a junior. But make no mistake that I shall not hesitate to disregard a foolish order."
"<Watch your tongue, Colonel!>" The Princess reprimanded sternly. "<His Majesty the King might look the other way from your profane mouth, but I certainly do not. You will learn to act with ''due courtesy'' in the presence of a lady, or by Holy Father's name I will have you ''taught manners.''>"


"I shall strive to meet your expectations," came Pascal's sincere reply.
''Scary,'' Kaede immediately thought back to her decision to keep her head low and not antagonize the Princess. In hindsight, it had definitely proved to be the correct choice.


It became clear that this man respect two traits above all, although Kaede had to guess which one would win out in a contest between the two: ''competence or blood?''
Even Colonel Hammerstein seemed slightly cowed as he answered:


The answer to that only grew more complicated as the old cavalrymen turned towards Ariadne:
"<Yes, Your Highness. I meant no offense, just old habits with the men.>" He apologized. "<nowiki><I</nowiki>n any case I agree with the Dame Kaede's suggestion: ''Ghost Riders'' would make a fine title, even if I'm no longer the man in command.>" He added with a disgruntled tone.


"Major von Zimmer-''Manteuffel''," he uttered her second surname with clear, unmasked contempt. "Although we are both Phantom commanders, rank and seniority dictates that I shall be your direct superior and you shall obey my orders. Is that understood?"
"<You do not like your new command with the ''North Wind?''>" Pascal asked in curiosity.


''No wonder Pascal had picked him during the 'Manteuffel Incident','' Kaede thought. ''He must consider 'treason' the eighth and ultimate sin.''
"<They're good boys, but morale is low since they're the only Phantoms to be defeated in decades.>" Hammerstein answered before his words turned to complaint. "<My main gripe is the trend. Every time I get a unit up and running, with tight camaraderie and fighting like a well-greased machine, they unroot me to stick me somewhere else! Like the unit I just groomed has nothing to do with me no more! I mean even my sidekick got promoted during Nordkreuz. But me? Still Colonel!>"


She certainly did not miss that von Mackensen proved as shrewd as he was belligerent. Within moments of their meeting, he had already laid the basis for undermining Pascal's command should the young lord fail to meet his standards. Given their difference in both rank and reputation, Kaede had little doubt whom the soldiers would obey.
"<Colonel Sir, you're lucky you didn't get ''demoted'' for what you did in Skagen,>" Cecylia spoke. "<Still, the fact you're always placed to lead units in need of reorganization shows His Majesty's confidence in your abilities to train excellent troops. After all, everyone in Weichsel knows that there's no commander more lionized by his soldiers than you.>"


Meanwhile, the noble lady herself managed -- just barely -- to swallow her own pride and anguish as she returned a perfect salute.
"<Ha!>" Hammerstein's voice immediately turned jovial. "<Well I certainly do appreciate the King's confidence!>"


"Yes Sir!"
It rather amazed Kaede just how easily Cecylia turned Hammerstein's grievances into a reaffirmation of loyalty.


"Your Highness," the Colonel's penetrating gaze swept back to Sylviane once more. "Regardless of my appraisal of the Major, you have my word of honor that I shall see our objectives through. The ''Falcon Force'' is one of most esteemed formations of Weichsel. We shall fight to the last man to defend your honor and uphold the rights of succession as ordained by the Holy Father himself."
The severity of his every demeanor left no doubts among his listeners: this was no declaration made for diplomatic posturing or foreign relations. It was an oath sworn by a diehard adherent of the traditional military caste who truly believed in each and every word.
Taken aback, the Princess scarcely had time to say "thank you" before her fiancé replied with beaming confidence:
"I would not worry about that. We shall make our enemies fight to the last man first."




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"<u>Hey Cecylia, I thought you had told me that Hyperion armies didn't use firearms-- I mean black powder armaments? What about those mortars then?</u>"
Unbeknownst to the others, Ariadne was having a private conversation with the Princess. The young lady had been surprised when she received a ''Farspeak'' call from Sylviane, even though they were already on the same ''Telepathy'' network. She temporary severed her link to the others as she answered the call:


The journey ahead was long and quiet, as everyone weaved their own web of telepathy while tireless mounts carried them across the clouds. To keep herself occupied, Kaede had asked Pascal to link the dhampir Black Eagle trainee into their private channel, which also connected to Sylviane.
"<Your Highness?>"


It was a blessing that speaking in telepathy did not require any movement from her jaws, as her teeth were clenched to endure the cramps that seized her abdomen. Kaede had turned up the heat through her enchanted undergarments' temperature controls to help relieve the pain. The cold front from the north might have brought low clouds that masked the expedition's movement into Rhin-Lotharingie. But the feel of freezing winds gusting past her thin body only seemed to worsen her agony.
Ariadne had met the Princess once before during her time at Alisia Academy. However the reception back then had been... cold, to say the least. Ariadne never understood why Pascal courted her when he was already betrothed. She only knew that her vanity had gotten the better of her at the time. It was a huge boost to her ego to think that even an intellectual like Pascal might prefer her over the Crown Princess of the Empire.


''Why couldn't the past week have been 'that time of the month'? At least I could've stayed in bed,'' she complained bitterly in thought as she awaited the topic of distraction.
"<Lady Ariadne,>" Sylviane began in a polite, cordial voice as she looked upon Ariadne from a dozen paces away. "<nowiki><I</nowiki> never had a chance to thank you properly for your actions in helping Pascal and Kaede at Alisia. Perceval told me that you were instrumental in foiling the assassination.>"


"<u>I believe I mentioned that elite and specialist troops used some black powder weapons,</u>" Cecylia's mental voice returned in her soft soprano. "<u>The mortars are considered 'specialist weapons', just like the Knights Phantom's grenades.</u>"
Yet despite the warm tone, Ariadne couldn't help but feel more suspicious. The young lady knew from the first time their eyes met that Her Highness did not like her, and not just because of her short courtship with Pascal in the past.


Kaede hadn't even noticed until now, thanks to the auto-translation magic Pascal worked into the familiar bond. But the Imperial language word for 'mortar' literally meant 'arcing grenade launcher', three words slammed together in true Germanic fashion.
Uncertain of the Princess' aims, Ariadne decided to bow slightly and answered with cautious professionalism:


"<u>But unlike the grenades, these aren't hidden inside some warded extra-dimensional space most of the time,</u>" Kaede countered. "<u>So what makes them acceptable as effective weapons when other black powder technologies aren't?</u>"
"<Pascal represents the alliance between Weichsel and Rhin-Lotharingie. It was my duty as a knight of Weichsel to protect him. And I am thankful that Your Highness picked me for this campaign.>"


This time, it was Pascal who answered:
"<Much as I'd like to take credit, Lady Ariadne, I'm afraid your thanks are owed to General Wiktor,>" Sylviane replied. "<nowiki><I</nowiki>t was he who recommended you to lead the new Phantom company in Colonel Hammerstein's stead.>"


"<u>It is not their effectiveness that is questioned; it is their reliability. Mortars make only a fraction of the Weichsel artillery forces, most of which are still equipped with traditional torsion siege engines. Their destructive capabilities are a blessing for battles, especially against troops in heavy armor. But as a specialist, support weapon, their limited deployment also means their loss could not decide a battle by itself.</u>"
''So it was Cecylia's father who granted me this opportunity,'' Ariadne thought.


"<u>It's probably harder to grasp since you're from a world without magic,</u>" Cecylia patiently added. "<u>But black powder's vulnerability to the elements means it's ''extremely'' susceptible. The smallest ember causes it to combust; the slightest spark ignites it; a mere splash of water renders it useless -- these are all effects that even the most ''basic'' of spells could conjure.</u>"
After the Manteuffel Incident, it was apparent to everyone in the Manteuffel Clan that they had lost the King's trust. Ariadne knew she was lucky that she had been hospitalized at the time. It kept her from being caught up in the incident and allowed her to still receive her promotion from the air battle.


Kaede knew that there were many modern explosive compounds that mitigated or even avoided these pitfalls. But of course, since Hyperion never embraced the earliest form of gunpowder, they also lacked the incentive to research more stable blasting compounds. It had taken centuries on Earth before Alfred Nobel invented dynamite, the first 'safe' explosive; on Hyperion, this process could take millenniums.
However, the same could not be said for many other members of her family, who had either been demoted or reassigned to less influential commands. The Duchy of Polarstern had been seized from the main family for General Neithard's treachery -- a move which fractured the Manteuffel Clan as the branch families all cut their ties to limit the damage they might receive from the fallout. Even Ariadne's betrothal to Perceval had been downgraded, as Duke Mathias of Baguette requested a patrilineal marriage which would keep her children from bearing the Manteuffel name.


"<u>But you also have defensive spells and wards to counteract that...</u>"
"<Hence I wanted to tell you, Lady Ariadne, that I still owe you a personal debt of gratitude,>" Princess Sylviane continued with a smile. "<You were able to put aside your differences with Pascal to aid him in his hour of greatest need. And for that I shall forever be thankful.>"


"<u>Sure, except most of those spells -- like the often used ''Legion Resistance'' -- only reduced the damage dealt by elemental magic; they don't negate it outright,</u>" Cecylia went on. "<u>I mean there are spells that can, but those spells are also one, harder to cast and two, drain more of our precious ether reserves -- which is a fairly big deal when the ''Legion'' spellword duplicates the same effect across an entire squad or platoon.</u>"
"<Your words alone do me honor, Your Highness.>" Ariadne gave a humble response, mostly as she couldn't think of what else to say.


It was one of those arguments that reminded Kaede: in war, or perhaps society in general, everything had to be considered in scale. It wasn't enough that a requirement could be met; the solution must also satisfy the objective in ''quantity'' to be truly effective.
"<There is one other question I wanted to ask though.>" The Princess spoke next as their eyes met. It immediately made Ariadne realize that this was the ''real reason'' why Sylviane began this conversation.


"<u>Soldiers also have body armor and padded clothes to help absorb the lingering damage that passes through, not to mention people could endure minor burns. But what do you think happens to the infantrymen who are trying to load a black powder projectile?</u>"
"<Do you resent Pascal for his involvement in the recent incident?>"


Kaede shivered as that horrific explosion during the Air Battle of Nordkreuz replayed in her mind's eye: the sight of a fireball engulfing dozens of comrades, of mangled bodies, severed limbs, and burning carcasses. Scenarios like that didn't just kill the unfortunate troopers caught by the blast either; it also demoralized entire armies and made soldiers distrust the very weapons held within their hands.
It was an astonishingly blunt question for one born into royalty. But at the same time, it also represented Sylviane offering her an opportunity: a direct question that sought a straightforward answer. And judging the sincerity of that answer would help separate treachery from trustworthiness.


The Knights Phantom were elites with exceptional gear, discipline, and morale. They could be entrusted to use the most dangerous and destructive armaments for equivalently high returns. But the average soldier or conscript farmer? Individuals who quaked in their boots from 'just' the looming death of a massed cavalry charge?
Ariadne exhaled the breath she'd been holding without realizing. The problem with being honest was that far too often, the truth resisted simplicity. It was much harder to grasp how one ''truly'' felt about a topic as complicated as this. Instead it was far easier to wear a falsified mask.


''...They would desert their weapons and run.''
"<Not particularly,>" the young lady began with uncertainty. Yet it was also the most accurate answer, and she made sure Princess Sylviane knew this by steadily holding her gaze. "<Either my uncle really was a traitor and Pascal simply upheld his sworn duty to family, King, and the Holy Father, or he has been played like a pawn in a plot far beyond our skill.>"


"<u>Combine this with the fact that black powder couldn't even be stored in large quantities,</u>" Cecylia continued. "<u>I mean: destroying ten thousand arrows? That takes work, or at least powerful spells that few mages could cast. But ten thousand stones of black powder? Even a child could light a match. Then what do you do with those 'firearms'? Use them as clubs?</u>"
Ariadne then took a brief pause before she concluded: "<nowiki><i</nowiki>n either case, Pascal isn't the one for me to blame. Not for this incident at least.>"


"<u>It'd be worse than a Lotharin army without arrows,</u>" Sylviane commented dryly.
The fact he was to blame for many other complications in their past was left unsaid.


The Rhin-Lotharingie military was heavily dependent on its massed archery, courtesy of a national sport that taught every self-respecting man how to shoot and hunt. The common recruit also came with axes, mostly of the treefelling variety. But without ammunition and forced to engage as light infantry, even a victory would leave the army in ruins.
There was no immediate response. It took several moments before the Princess lifted her scrutiny and calmed the atmosphere with slow, gentle nods.


An army that emphasized firearms only made this worse, as the Swedish Carolean Army of the 17th century learned that even muskets with bayonets were a poor replacement for proper melee weapons like the sword.
It was also the first time that Ariadne saw Sylviane truly smile at her. Not a fake smile well practiced among aristocrats, but a true smile from the heart itself.


On Earth, early firearms like the arquebus were unreliable, inaccurate, and had a dismal effective range. Their greatest benefit over archery was that a conscripted farmer could be expected to become proficient within weeks of training rather than years. But on Hyperion, where massed deployment of gunpowder troops posed both unique logistical challenges and significant tactical vulnerabilities, it was unsurprising that the military establishment kept to their traditional ways.
"<Your Highness really has no need to doubt me,>" Ariadne then offered a sincere bonus. "<Given my past with His Grace, it's ''impossible'' for anything more than respect to develop between us, and even that His Grace has yet to rebuild. Furthermore, my engagement with Lord Perceval of Baguette is one of true affection, and not mere politics as some would believe.>"


"<u>If that's the case, then what makes mortars so special that they could at least make a limited deployment?</u>"
As the Princess' smile broadened ever so slightly, Ariadne realized that her gamble had paid off. At least part of the royal resentment must have come from perceiving her as a potential challenge. Sylviane might even have misunderstood the years of feuding between Ariadne and Pascal as a form of obsession, since love and hate were often two sides of the same coin.


"<u>There are two main benefits to mortars,</u>" Pascal began. "<u>The first is that, like all other grenades, mortar shells are encapsulated. The casing wouldn't stop proper assault spells from detonating the powder, but it at least offers some protection from fire, and more importantly -- the weather.</u>"
"<nowiki><I</nowiki>t's a relief to hear you say that, Lady Ariadne, not only of Pascal but also of Perceval,>" the Princess confirmed it with a seemingly casual reply. "<nowiki><I</nowiki>t has become clear to me that Lord Perceval is a man of great moral integrity, one whom I would be blessed to have as an advisor in the future. As such, I certainly wish the best for your marriage.>"


Pascal had actually shown Kaede a Weichsel 'tandem-charge mortar round' yesterday. Within the thin iron casing were two cylinders of black powder separated by an air gap, held apart by light springs and secured with safety pins. When a shell was dropped into the mortar tube, its momentum would force the upper container to fall onto the lower one. This drove a flint ignition rod into the lower powder chamber where it scraped against a sharply angled steel file. The sparks would then detonate the lower charge, hurling the shell's remnants into the air while igniting the timed fuse to its upper powder chamber. Mortar gunners could even adjust this fuse through a screw on the side, with veterans aiming for the ideal 'airborne burst' where shrapnel rounds exploded just overhead the target for maximum mayhem.
The young lady's eyes swelled. To hear such confidence from the Crown Princess certainly heralded a bright future for her husband-to-be.


It was an impressive design, despite its crude triggering mechanism. On Earth, it would take until the 19th Century -- half a millennium after the first arquebus saw mass deployment -- before the percussion cap was developed to allow for sealed cartridges that could fire reliably in any weather. Yet on Hyperion, the advancement of grenades had already bypassed that and went straight onto the modern 'tube mortars' first invented in World War I.
However Sylviane still wasn't finished:


"<u>The other benefit is that it is an indirect artillery weapon,</u>" Pascal highlighted the high trajectory firing arc that defined mortars. "<u>This means we could fire it from within trenches and deep pits, where they would not only be hidden but also protected from most attack spells. A ''Resistance Screen'' could even be applied on top of the pit to protect the weapon and its crew from overhead spell bursts.</u>"
"<nowiki><I</nowiki>f there is any time in the future when you need a favor from me, please do not hesitate to ask.>"


Kaede nodded in acknowledgment, her curiosity finally satisfied enough to move onto the next question:
''A personal favor from the Princess,'' Ariadne's eyes widened to the size of saucers as she realized just what she had received. She had heard that the Princess was a generous lady. But this was a huge boon that anyone who understood politics had to appreciate!


"<u>So apart from grenades, launchers, and flamethrowers, are there any other combustible weapons that Hyperion actually uses?</u>"
"<Thank you, Your Highness, truly.>" A slightly-awed Ariadne responded with a humble bow.


"<u>Satchel charges? I guess they're just oversized pillow grenades, hehe,</u>" Cecylia mused openly.


"<u>Same with the bangalore torpedo javelins that Garona Hippo-Cuirassiers use,</u>" Sylv added, making the auto-translation magic adapt yet more foreign terms to Kaede's dictionary.


It was Pascal who finally found the answer:
<nowiki>----- * * * -----</nowiki>
 
"<u>Mines.</u>"
 
Without proper firing pin technology, Kaede doubted Hyperion mines could self-detonate. But that never stopped the partisans of World War II from rigging manually-triggered minefields to devastating effect.
 
"<u>Oh, and the Imperials have rocket carts that could launch salvos up to four dozen.</u>"
 
Pascal appended it as though it were an afterthought, but Kaede's eyes bulged upon hearing it:
 
"<u>They have ''Katyusha Rocket Launchers''!?</u>"
 
"<u>They took that idea from the eastern Dawn Imperium, actually,</u>" Cecylia clarified.
 
"<u>It was impressive for about two battles</u>," Pascal commented in a voice that was anything but impressed. "<u>Before... I cannot remember the name, but she created a counterspell by adapting the self-guided ''Ether Seeker'', which simply destroyed the heat-propelled rockets in mid-flight.</u>"
 
Once again, human ingenuity proved that magical and physical technology mixed in ways that would alter the development of both sciences.






<nowiki>----- * * * -----</nowiki>
The first day had proved uneventful. The Knights Phantom rode over a thousand kilopaces to reach their planned campsite -- a natural spring deep inside one of the many forests that covered the Rhin-Lotharingie landscape. The battalion had some trouble landing due to the Reiter Support company's light wagons. Their ''Levitation'' spells allowed them to float in the air behind the pulling ''Phantom Steeds'', but this made them about as maneuverable as huge gliders being towed behind an airplane.
 


Kaede continuously updated the World Expedition Map as the group made their way into Rhin-Lotharingie. And as she did so on the second day, she came to notice the first obstacle to their plans.


The first day had proved uneventful, as the Knights Phantom rode over a thousand kilopaces to reach their planned campsite -- a natural spring deep inside one of the many forests that covered the Rhin-Lotharingie landscape. But on the second day, as Kaede continuously updated the Vintersvend Expedition Map, she would notice the first obstacle to their plans.
She had been in a private conversation with Pascal on the 'most powerful weapon' from the world where she came from. She had brought up nuclear weapons in passing to Pascal before, but her master seemed far more interested in the details this time. Not being a physicist, Kaede could only describe what she knew in general details. The thermonuclear city-killer used shaped-charge blasts to focus enough energy to split uranium in nuclear fission, which in turn created enough energy to split deuterium and tritium -- double and triple bonded hydrogen -- in nuclear fusion.


Just fifty kilopaces ahead was the expedition's first staging point. But instead of unmarked ruins atop a barren hill, Kaede's magical map marked the target coordinates as the ''de Villars encampment''.
She was surprised that Pascal had enough understanding to keep up. In fact it quickly became clear that he had a better understanding of molecular chemistry than she did. Though given Hyperion's research into lightning and alchemy, perhaps she shouldn't be surprised by their grasp of electrons and atomic charge.


Her first reaction was to double-check the location with Pascal. They were correct.
Then, when they were just fifty kilopaces short of reaching the expedition's next staging point, Kaede noticed a problem.


...Which meant they had a problem.
Their destination was a stone circle in northern Rhétie, just across the South Lotharingie River from Belges. It was the closest 'faerie ring' to Nordkreuz that didn't lie deep in Gabriel's domain. However, instead of unmarked ruins sitting atop a barren hill, Kaede's magical map labelled the target coordinates as the 'Lynette encampment'.


"<u>There must be at least five hundred troops there if the map could detect and mistake it for a large village,</u>" Kaede noted based on her past observation, when she had compared a scan of Nordkreuz's surroundings to the local maps.
"<There must be at least five hundred troops if the map could detect and mistake it for a large village.>" Kaede noted based on past observations, when she compared scans of Nordkreuz's surroundings to the local maps.


"<u>The encampment is not named by unit designation either, which means that it is probably a patchwork force -- some hastily assembled battlegroup named after its commander</u>," Pascal surmised. "<u>Good chance they are here on orders from the pretender Gabriel, since he's the one having difficulty making the various formations obey him.</u>"
"<The encampment is not named by unit designation either. That means that it is likely a patchwork force -- some hastily assembled group named after its commander.>" Pascal surmised. "<Good chance they are here on orders from that pretender Gabriel.>"


"<u>You're right,</u>" Sylviane agreed. "<u>A regional lord would send a full unit, not a hodgepodge that doesn't even have a battalion name.</u>" Then, with rising concern: "<u>But that would mean he anticipated me coming this way.</u>"
"<nowiki><I</nowiki> think you're right,>" Sylviane agreed. "<Gabriel took the majority of Belges's formations with him, and those that remained still have garrison duty. This is likely a scraped-together force. Though that implies that he anticipated me coming this way.>"


The Princess left unsaid that hundreds more men could lay waiting in ambush just ahead.
The Princess left unsaid that hundreds more men could lay waiting in ambush just ahead, merely spread out enough that the map failed to pick it up.


"<u>He could also be covering all the likely routes,</u>" added Hans-Canaris Oster after Pascal weaved the intelligence analyst into the telepathy web. "<u>Duke Gabriel's leading commander is Count van Coehoorn, a defensive theoretician who pays great attention to detail even in his everyday life. My guess is that he probably has all the likely routes covered. But Gabriel's main force -- his loyal troops from Fryslân -- would probably be kept as a reserve. Given his precarious hold on power, I doubt he'll deploy it until he ascertains Your Highness' intentions.</u>"
"<He could also be covering all the likely routes.>" Major Hans Ostergalen added after Pascal weaved the intelligence officer into the telepathy web. "<Duke Gabriel's leading commander is Count Marten van Coehoorn, a defensive theoretician who pays great attention to detail even in his everyday life. My guess is that he'll try to cover all likely routes.>"


"<u>So you think this is just a screening force then?</u>" Sylviane inquired.
"<Then this is just a picket,>" Pascal remarked.


"<u>More like a picket: to deter if you're few in numbers, to raise alarms if you come in force,</u>" Hans replied. "<u>Gabriel's first priority must be to locate your whereabouts now that we've left Nordkreuz.</u>"
"<That's my thought as well,>" Hans agreed. "<They won't be the most loyal or battle-worthy. But they might be able to hold out long enough to send out a message about Your Highness' whereabouts.>"


"<u>In either case, we should know in a moment when Reynald gives me an update,</u>" Pascal spoke of the redheaded ''Winterslayer'', who scouted ahead of the main formation with three of his men.
"<nowiki><I</nowiki>n either case, let's wait here until Reynaud or the scouts return with information on just whom we're dealing with,>" Sylviane decided.




Line 209: Line 184:




"<u>Reynald estimates the camp to be around six hundred men,</u>" Pascal passed the word several minutes later. "<u>The soldiers are also constructing wooden cabins, so they seem to be assigned here as a long-term picket.</u>"
"<We estimate the camp to be around six hundred men.>" Kaede heard the redheaded Reynaud report after making it back to the main group. "<The soldiers are constructing wooden cabins, so they seem to be assigned here as a long-term picket. They also have the hill ringed in wooden stakes and a chest-high palisade, as well as wooden hedgehogs to deter cavalry charges.>"
 
After all, only the aristocratic elite -- or at least wealthy cavalrymen -- could afford the comfort of expandable cabins during a campaign. The average commoner had to suffer a miserable tent.


"<u>Much shorter once they pass word to Alis Avern that we came through,</u>" Colonel von Mackensen warned. His words followed closely by Hans:
"<Sounds like they have already had a day to dig in,>" Pascal frowned. "<And the next stone circle outside Belges is more than eight-hundred kilopaces away.>"


"<u>And the next stone circle isn't for another twelve-hundred kilopaces, assuming Gabriel didn't picket that one as well.</u>"
"<That's assuming Gabriel didn't picket that one as well,>" Sylviane pointed out.


"<u>You are suggesting that we annihilate them?</u>"
"<Six hundred half-organized men is nothing for two Phantom companies,>" Colonel Hammerstein declared. "<With our strength, we can overrun them with ease before they even get a ''Farspeak'' link online. Be good exercise for the men!>"


Pascal sounded wary as he spoke. But the Colonel? His voice held only stern determination, as though the enemy was just another faceless foe instead of the Princess' own countrymen in a civil war:
Pascal had sounded wary as he spoke. But the Colonel? His voice wasn't just confident but also eager. It was as though the enemy was just another faceless foe for him to kill, and not the Princess' own countrymen in a realm divided by civil war.


"<u>We should wait until past midnight before assaulting their camp. With our firepower, we shall overrun them before they even get a ''Farspeak'' link online.</u>"
"<Sylv?>" Pascal called out to his fiancée, who had remained speechless for the past minute as she pressed her index finger against her teeth.


"<u>Sylv?</u>" Pascal called out to his fiancée, who had remained speechless for the past minute.
"<<nowiki>I'm</nowiki> trying to remember... I feel like I've ''met'' a Lady Lynette before, who married across the country to these parts,>" Sylviane noted.


"<u>Sorry...</u>" came a sheepish reply. "<u>I'm trying to remember... I feel like I've ''met'' a Major from the de Villars family before.</u>"
For several moments the telepathy network fell silent. Then, it was Lady Mari who spoke:


For several moments the telepathy chatroom fell silent. Then, it was Lady Mari who spoke:
"<Lady Lynette ap Cadell de Luxeuil. Your Highness attended her marriage ceremony five years ago.>"


"<u>Lady Lynette de Villars. Your Highness attended her marriage ceremony three years ago.</u>"
"<She's a Brython from Ceredigion then?>" Sylviane seemed to remember as she asked.


"<u>She's a Brython from Ceredigion then?</u>" Sylviane noted her name.
"<Yes,>" answered Mari. "<nowiki><I</nowiki> believe Your Highness had asked her why she decided to marry a nobleman from across the country. She replied that she was 'tired of Ceredigion pretending it wasn't part of the Rhin-Lotharingie Empire'.>"


"<u>Yes. I believe Your Highness had asked her why she decided to marry a nobleman from across the country, and she replied that she was 'tired of Ceredigion pretending it wasn't part of the Rhin-Lotharingie Empire'.</u>"
"<Though wasn't her husband from Rhétie?>" Sylviane wondered next. "<Why would she be doing Gabriel's bidding?>"


Kaede almost snorted. Even without being an island nation like Great Britain, the Kingdom of Ceredigion seemed to stay aloof of its obligations to the greater union; its leaders would feign detachment from the Rhin-Lotharingie collective whenever it benefited them.
"<Far as I know from the Black Eagles, Duke Hugh has neither declared for nor against the pretender,>" Pascal added.


"<u>Why would somebody like that bow to a pretender from Fryslân,</u>" Hans puzzled out loud.
"<Maybe Duke Hugh and the Rhétie nobles are trying to walk a fine line,>" Kaede voiced her hypothesis. "<They won't openly declare for Gabriel, but they won't go against a minor request from him either. That leaves them with both options later should they pick a side.>"


"<u>Because Gabriel commands the authority of the capital at Alis Avern,</u>" Sir Robert pitched in. "<u>Just because someone is loyal to the country doesn't mean they are loyal to a specific crown.</u>"
"<Slippery bastards,>" Colonel Hammerstein grunted in disapproval.


"<u>Then, it's clear... Pascal, what do you think?</u>"
"<Then, it's clear what should be done.>" Sylviane declared. "<Pascal, what do you think?>"


The Princess somehow expected her fiancé to know her plans for the next step, which he did:
The Princess somehow expected her fiancé to know her plans for the next step. Though to Kaede's amazement, he did:


"<u>It will be risky.</u>"
"<nowiki><I</nowiki>t will be risky,>" he stated. Yet his tone of confidence seemed the exact opposite, as though he was encouraging her on.


Yet his tone of confidence seemed the exact opposite, as though he was encouraging her on.
"<Nothing ventured, nothing gained.>" Sylviane seemed to take a deep breath as she steeled her nerves. "<nowiki><I</nowiki> have to start somewhere.>"


"<u>Nothing ventured, nothing gained,</u>" Sylviane seemed to take a deep breathe as she spoke to herself. "<u>I have to start somewhere.</u>"
Then, before anyone could object, the Princess raised her voice to her armigers and the hundreds of Knights Phantom behind her.


Before anyone could object, the Princess raised her voice to the crowd:
"Everyone! Form up! And follow me!"
 
"All knights! Form up! And follow me!"




Line 261: Line 232:




Lynette stared at the mossy granite of the stone circle as she sat outside her expanding cabin. For a noblewoman from Ceredigion, this was probably the least impressive stone circle she had seen. The formation was little more than a ring of two dozen jagged, uneven rocks, reaching up to between knee to chest height.
Countess Lynette ap Cadell de Luxeuil stared at the mossy granite of the stone circle as she sat outside her expanding cabin. For a noblewoman from Ceredigion, this was probably the least impressive stone circle she had ever seen. The formation was little more than a ring of two dozen jagged, uneven rocks, which reached up to about chest-height.


But in the end, size didn't matter, only the function it served.
But in the end, size didn't matter, only the function it served.


The stone circles had many nicknames: faerie rings, Tylwyth crossroads, Sidhe pathways, et cetera. They were ruins of a bygone era, infrastructure built by an ancient race. The era recorded by the Book of Invasions had long past. The Faerie Lords had returned to their otherworld realm, but the legacy they left behind would linger on.
The stone circles had many nicknames: faerie rings, Tylwyth crossroads, Sidhe pathways, et cetera. They were ruins of a bygone era, infrastructure built by an ancient race. The era recorded in the ''Book of Invasions'' had long passed. The Faerie Lords had returned to their otherworld realm, but the legacy they left behind lingered on.
 
Nor were the stones mere decoration. They were built according to the ley-lines: some at major junctions, now enveloped in cities and citadels; others at mystical locations of exceptional magical power, sacred to followers of the Old Faiths. The one she guarded lay at an unusual intersection -- an outbound fork in the local ley-line.
 
Their purpose? Transit hubs to an ancient magic, an art lost to most.
 
Most, but not all.
 
''A faekissed Princess of the Empire,'' Lynette thought to herself. ''A true scion of the otherworld.''
 
The late emperor Geoffroi had married the daughter of some obscure Count, so it had gone unnoticed by most. Yet through her, the royal line of House de Gaetane acquired the lingering bloodlines of the ancient Sidhe.
 
But the Princess? She was an Autumnborn. They tended to favor acumen, though not as logical as their cold and stoic winter brethren. They also leaned towards envy, though never as passionate as their summer kin.


...And most famous of all, they had awful, terrible springtime allergies that even magic failed to suppress. If memories served, the Princess looked downright miserable during the outdoor ceremony of Lynette's traditional Ceredigion wedding, in May.
Nor were the circles mere decorations. They were built according to the ley-lines. Some stood at major junctions, now enveloped by cities and citadels. Others sat at mystical locations of exceptional magical power, sacred to followers of the Druidic faith. The one she guarded lay at an unusual intersection -- an outbound fork in the local ley-line.


''I really should have noticed back then.''
Their purpose was to function as transit hubs. It was an ancient magic, an art lost to most, but not all.


But Lynette didn't. She didn't realize Sylviane's lineage until fresh orders arrived from Alis Avern. Why else would the new, self-proclaimed emperor want her to camp atop ancient ruins that only the Faekissed could still activate?
''A faekissed Princess of the Empire,'' Lynette thought to herself. ''A true scion of the Faerie Lords.''


A paid genealogist took less than an hour to ascertain her thoughts.
The late emperor Geoffroi had married the daughter of some obscure count, so it had gone unnoticed by most. Yet through her, the royal line of House Gaetane acquired one of the lingering bloodlines of beings from the Otherworld.


Lynette was raised under the cross. She upheld the Holy Father just like most of modern Ceredigion. But within their hearts and memories, there would always be a soft spot for the Old Faiths and the ancient Faerie Lords.
The Princess was an autumnborn. They had awful springtime allergies that even magic failed to suppress. If memory served, Sylviane looked downright miserable during the outdoor ceremony of Lynette's traditional Ceredigion wedding, in May.


It was an odd tradition. The Sidhe -- or 'Tylwyth', as they were called in the Brython language -- were anything but just. The Seelie Court proved impulsive and chaotic, while the Unseelie Court stood callous and demanding. The Faerie Lords were legendary in many aspects, but being good rulers was not one of them.
Lynette had been raised under the cross. She believed in the Holy Father and had never converted to the Druidic faith. But even amongst the Trinitians of Ceredigion, there would always be a soft spot in their hearts and minds for those of fae lineage. The faekissed represented a connection to their ancestors, a bridge that could connect modernity with ancient history.


It certainly didn't help that they occasionally kidnapped human children to be raised among their own kind, leaving behind a changeling surprise for the poor mothers.
It was an odd sentimentality. The Faerie Lords -- or 'Tylwyth' as they were called in Brython -- were anything but just. The Seelie Court proved impulsive and chaotic, while the Unseelie Court stood callous and demanding. They were legendary in many aspects, yet being good rulers had never been one of them. It also didn't help that they occasionally kidnapped human children to be raised among their own kind, leaving behind a changeling surprise for the poor mothers.


Nevertheless, the common peasant would be ecstatic to have an empress of Sidhe blood, however diluted it became after countless generations. But Lynette was the educated daughter of an Count; she had to ask herself the important question first:
Regardless, the common peasant would be ecstatic to have an empress of fae blood, however diluted it might be after countless generations. Nevertheless, Lynette was the educated daughter of a count. She had to ask herself the important question first:


''Would a Faekissed -- an immature, twenty-year-old at that -- truly be good for the present dilemmas facing Rhin-Lotharingie?''
''Would a faekissed -- an immature princess only twenty-one years of age -- truly be good for the present dilemmas facing Rhin-Lotharingie?''


Gabriel might be a pretender, but he was also shrewd and cunning. His charisma had seduced even the Papal Inquisition, whose templar forces he threw into the grinder like pawns. Even his organizational prowess had proved itself in seizing the crown, as nobody in Alis Avern had even realized before he dealt the fatal blow.  
Gabriel might be a pretender, but he was also shrewd and cunning. His charisma had seduced even the Papal Inquisition, whose Knights Templar he threw into the grinder like pawns. Even his organizational prowess had proved itself in seizing the crown, as nobody in Alis Avern even realized what was happening before he dealt the fatal blow.


A pretender who could best an emperor monikered 'the Great'. Perhaps he really was the Holy Father's gift in Rhin-Lotharingie's hour of greatest need.
A pretender that could best Emperor Geoffroi, who had been monikered 'the Great'. Perhaps Gabriel really could bring salvation in Rhin-Lotharingie's hour of greatest need.


''But if that's the case, then why is he just sitting there!? Why isn't he heading south, toward the front lines that pushes ever closer to my homeland?''
''But if that's the case, then why is he just sitting there in Alis Avern!? Why isn't he heading south, toward the front lines that push ever closer to my homeland?''


Lynette still had her fists clenched when the encampment's northeastern sentry called out:
Lynette's fists were still clenched when a sentry called out:


"INCOMING AIRBORNE FORMATION!"
"INCOMING AIRBORNE FORMATION!"


Then, fear pierced the warning tone as the cry turned shrill.
Then, fear pierced the air as the cry turned shrill.


"PHANTOMS!!!"
"PHANTOMS!!!"


Weichsel might be a nominal ally of the Empire now, but no veteran would forget the terror that struck deep into Rhin-Lotharingie during the War of Imperial Succession ten years ago.
Weichsel might be a nominal ally of the Empire now, but no veteran would forget the terror that struck deep into Rhin-Lotharingie during the War of Imperial Succession ten years ago. The dread was further heightened as Knights Phantom dove down from the clouds behind the white-blue flames of an Oriflamme Paladin.


...Especially not when Knights Phantom dove down from the clouds behind the white-blue flames of an Oriflamme Paladin. Leading the charge was Crown Princess Sylviane and her armigers, the ''crème de la crème'' of Rhin-Lotharingie's knights.
Crown Princess Sylviane led the charge herself. And behind her followed ten royal armigers and several hundred Knights Phantom. These were the finest soldiers of both Weichsel and Rhin-Lotharingie. There was no chance that Lynette could fight them and win!


Lynette could feel her nape hairs stand up in cold sweat as she pulled her shield and flail off her armored back.
The Countess could feel her nape hairs stand up in cold sweat. Nevertheless she pulled her longbow off her armored back before crying out:


"FORM UP! AIR DEFENSE!"
"FORM UP! AIR DEFENSE!"


She had no air cavalry, no rangers, only archers led by a handful of her own armigers.
She had no air cavalry, no rangers. Her band of largely militia archers was led by only thirty professional armigers.


She had accepted this mission because she had no intention of defying the capital. But now, she wasn't sure it was the right choice.
She had accepted this mission from Duke Hugh in place of her bedridden husband, who was still recovering from a riding accident. It seemed an easy task to curry favor from one of the most powerful families of Rhin-Lotharingie. But now, Lynette was certain it hadn't been worth it.


Against an Oriflamme and over a hundred Phantoms, her men didn't stand a chance.
Against an Oriflamme and three hundred Phantoms, her men didn't stand a chance.


But to her dying moment, Lynette would never be as surprised as when the burning chevron that soared straight towards her -- a scalpel about to take the head of the commander -- shot back up in an acrobatic loop before braking to a hover above the camp.
But to her dying moment, Lynette would never be as surprised as when the burning chevron that soared straight towards her -- a scalpel about to take the head of the commander -- shot back up in an acrobatic loop before braking to a hover above the camp.


"SOLDIERS OF RHIN-LOTHARINGIE!" came the Princess' magically amplified shout.
"SOLDIERS OF RHIN-LOTHARINGIE!" The Princess' magically amplified shout reverberated across the air.


Hundreds of bows rose. Countless arrows were ready to fire. But the ''Cerulean Princess'' paid them no attention as she address the camp with all the authority of a true sovereign.
Hundreds of bows rose. Countless arrows were aimed for release. Yet the ''Cerulean Princess'' paid them no attention as she addressed the camp with all the authority of a true sovereign.


She did not yell following those opening words. She did not bellow for attention or gesture with melodramatic theatrics. Instead, her magnified voice began slow, calm, and methodical; even as it rang with the confidence of the Holy Father himself:
She did not yell following those opening words. She did not bellow for attention or gesture with melodramatic theatrics. Instead, her magnified voice began slow, calm, and methodical, even as they rang with the confidence of the Holy Father himself:


"I ''am'' Crown Princess Sylviane Etiennette de Gaetane. But I come to you today, not as an aspirant for the throne, or royalty demanding of your obedience, or even a commandant calling upon your service. I stand before you, as a woman of the Lotharin plains, a daughter of her forests, a comrade to all who stand shoulder to shoulder on the front lines of our faith, and most of all -- a ''paladin'' sworn to uphold her duty to kingdom, empire, and the Holy Father."
"I am Crown Princess Sylviane Etiennette de Gaetane. But I come to you today, not as an aspirant for the throne, or royalty demanding of your obedience, or even a commandant calling upon your service. I stand before you, as a woman of the Lotharin plains, a daughter of her forests, a comrade to all who stand shoulder to shoulder on the front lines of our faith, and most of all -- a ''paladin'' sworn to uphold her duty to kingdom, empire, and the Holy Father."


The entire camp had fallen to an eerie silence. Even the birds of the nearby woods fell quiet, their attention enthralled by the burning figure in the skies.
The entire camp had fallen to an eerie silence. Even the birds of the nearby woods fell quiet, their attention enthralled by the burning figure in the skies.


"Even as I speak before you now, the evil hordes of Cataliya advances through our countryside," Princess Sylviane then made the first gesture, her finger pointed sharply to the southwest as she gradually built up her tone. "Those slaves of corrupt tyrants from the demon-tainted continent know no honor, no faith. They were trained from boyhood to obey, to submit as blindly to their immoral masters as they do to their false god. They follow orders without question -- whether they be to pillage the homes of our countrymen; to slit the throats of our sons and ravish the innocence of our daughters; even to desecrate the holiness of our faith and the grace of our Lord and Savior who died for the world's sins."
"Even as I speak before you now, the evil hordes of Cataliya advance through our countryside," Princess Sylviane then made her first gesture, finger pointing sharply to the southwest as she gradually built up her tone. "Those slaves of corrupt tyrants from the demon-tainted continent know no honor, no faith. They were trained from boyhood to obey, to submit as blindly to their immoral masters as they do to their false prophet. They follow orders without question -- whether they be to pillage the homes of our countrymen, or to slit the throats of our sons and ravish the innocence of our daughters! They would even desecrate the holiness of our faith and the grace of our Lord and Savior who died for the world's sins!"


Lynette had yet to hear any tales of atrocities from the south. Unlike her simple-minded soldiers, she would not be so easily agitated by such an eloquent canvas of blood and debauchery.
Lynette had yet to hear any tales of atrocities from the south. Unlike her simple-minded soldiers, she would not be so easily agitated by such an eloquent canvas of blood and debauchery. But Her Highness did have a point:


But Her Highness did prove a point: the Cataliyan Ghulams were raised as slave-soldiers before given their freedom upon entering the professional ranks. These were men who knew no fear and harbored no ethics. Under a chivalrous lord, they might maintain discipline and stay their hand. But it would take only one order, one sinful moment of man, before the tears of women and the blood of men ran a new river to the sea.
The Cataliyan Ghulams were raised as slave-soldiers before being given their freedom upon entering the professional ranks. These were men who knew no fear and harbored no ethics. Under a chivalrous lord, they might maintain discipline and stay their hand. But it would take only one order, one sinful moment of man, before the tears of women and the blood of children ran a new river to the sea.


Unfortunately, humans sinned aplenty, especially among the infamous decadence of the south.
Unfortunately, humans sinned aplenty, especially among the infamous decadence of the south.


Without independence, without both military power and legal authority, the various Lotharin cultures would have no way to defend themselves. They would be just another subjugated people, prostrated before the whims of foreign foes.
Without independence, without both military power and legal authority, the various Lotharin cultures would have no way to defend themselves. They had learned under centuries of brutal Imperial occupation what it felt like to be subjugated people, who must prostrate themselves before the whims of foreign rulers.


"The Caliphate comes with chains and yokes to enslave our society, our culture, our faith." The Princess then closed a fist before her chest: "Our nation sits upon the brink of disaster. Our land calls for our every aid! ''Tens of thousands'' have answered! Yet even as they drench the fields in foreign blood, the armies of this so-called 'Khalifa' continue to struggle, to advance, to threaten our families, our lands, our way of life! In this titanic struggle for the very existence of our identity, we must ''unite'', to turn and face our common foe! Not to squabble among ourselves for crowns and power and gold!"
"The Caliphate comes with chains and yokes to enslave our society, our culture, and our faith." The Princess then closed a fist before her chest. "Our nation sits upon the brink of disaster. Our land calls for our every aid! ''Tens of thousands'' have answered! Yet even as they drench the fields in foreign blood, the armies of this so-called 'Khalifa' continue to attack, to advance, to threaten our families, our lands, our way of life! In this struggle for the very existence of our identity, we must ''unite!'' To turn and face our common foe, not to squabble among ourselves for crowns and power and gold!"


From the corner of her eyes, Lynette could see that all but a small fraction of her soldiers had completely forgotten about their weapons; their bows now hung loosely to one side as their spellbound stares transfixed themselves upon the Oriflamme Princess. Many, like her, even nodded along in agreement, embers of patriotic zeal burning within their eyes.
From the corner of her eyes, Lynette could see that all but a small fraction of her soldiers had completely forgotten about their weapons. Their bows now hung loosely to one side as their spellbound stares transfixed themselves upon the Oriflamme Princess. Many, like her, even nodded along in agreement, as embers of patriotic zeal burned within their eyes.


In the span of just moments, the charisma of this twenty-year-old girl had enraptured the thoughts of several hundred men.
In the span of just moments, the charisma of this twenty-one years old girl had enraptured the thoughts of several hundred men.


"It is for this reason that I come before you," Her Highness continued on, her rising fervor working itself up into a shout once more. "Our ally, King Leopold of Weichsel, warden of the Trinitian March, has pledged his support in the name of the Holy Father! His first wave of men and supplies ride with me, to reinforce our southern lines which so desperately need all aid! We come before you for passage, to gate south for the salvation of our realm! I care not for whom your loyalties are sworn to. But ''if you have any pride left as a protector of Rhin-Lotharingie, YOU WILL STAY OUT OF OUR WAY!''"
"It is for this reason that I come before you," Her Highness continued on, her rising fervor working itself up into a shout once more. "Our ally, King Leopold of Weichsel, warden of the Trinitian March, has pledged his support in the name of the Holy Father! His first wave of men and supplies ride with me, to reinforce our southern lines which so desperately need all aid! We come before you for passage, to gate south for the salvation of our realm! I care not for whom your loyalties are sworn. But ''if you have any pride left as a protector of Rhin-Lotharingie, YOU WILL STAY OUT OF OUR WAY!''"


For a brief second, Lynette felt the air knocked out of her breathe as the intensity of the Princess' final words struck home. To notice her own swelling hopes and unmasked guilt, to realize that her command was on the brink of mutiny, to visualize the crowning halo of light surrounding that burning-blue hair...  
For a brief second, Lynette felt the air knocked out of her lungs as the intensity of the Princess' final words struck home. To notice her own swelling hopes and unmasked guilt, to realize that her command was on the brink of mutiny, to visualize the crowning halo of light surrounding that burning-blue hair...  


The floating figure before them no longer seemed a mere girl who happened to draw the straw of royalty.
The floating figure before them no longer seemed a mere girl who happened to draw the straw of royalty.
Line 361: Line 320:
''She is an Empress in the making.''
''She is an Empress in the making.''


On that day, Lieutenant-Colonel Lynette de Villars became the first Rhin-Lotharingie commander who swore an oath of fealty beneath the banner of Crown Princess Sylviane.
On that day, Countess Lynette became the first Rhin-Lotharingie commander who swore an oath of fealty beneath the banner of Crown Princess Sylviane.


She was joined soon after, by all six-hundred-and-forty-three of her men.
She was joined soon after, by all six-hundred-and-forty-three of her men.

Latest revision as of 05:31, 27 January 2022

Chapter 6 - Unquestioned Authority

Kaede found herself departing Weichsel just as its people began preparations for a major holiday.

According to the official history of the Trinitian Church, the dragonlord Hyperion had been born on the 'day of the longest night' during year zero of the Dragon Age -- the year when the stellar-nomadic dragonkind made landfall upon this world. Twelve centuries later, this draconic messiah would 'save the world from its sins' by sacrificing his own life to shut down the Abyssal Rift, gateway to the demonic realm where all the evils of the universe manifested in physical form.

It came as no surprise that the image of Hyperion casting the unnamed ritual -- later named the Ritual of the True Cross -- would become the most pervasive symbol of Trinitian belief. The timeline of how this spell came to be would also mark the holy days of the Trinitian Church: when it was approved, when Hyperion led his eleven other siblings to begin casting the spell, and when the dragonlord sacrificed his life to finish the ritual.

The first of these three milestones was on January 19th, when Hyperion made his case before the Triumvirs, the three most powerful dragonlords who governed the rest of their race. After being challenged over numerous issues and being forced to defend his creation, Hyperion at last received permission to cast his spell and bring an end to the Dragon-Demon Wars.

This day was now known as the Epiphany, or 'Liturgy Day'.

It was also only two days away.

Even the inhabitants of a devastated city like Nordkreuz had begun preparing for this holy day. Repairs to the damaged cathedral took priority as the Bishop of Nordkreuz prepared for his all-day mass. Older children decorated the buildings with garlands and ornaments while their parents were hard at work. Meanwhile every restored bakery across the city began producing a triangular confection known as a 'triumvirate cake', which was stacked together in a way that distinctively reminded Kaede of a Hojo Kamon -- a symbol more widely known as the 'Triforce'.

Unfortunately, despite Kaede's interest, she would not remain in the city to see the celebrations. Instead she rode behind Pascal and saluted towards the podium where the King stood to inspect the troops.

The battalion-sized expeditionary force marched down Nordkreuz's main street as they made their departure. The army's martial orchestra filled the air with rowsing music, while countless inhabitants of the city had assembled outside to bid them farewell.

A new cold front had arrived from the North Sea, and a gentle flurry was descending from the skies as they strode along. Kaede had done some shopping yesterday for thicker, velvet leggings and a furry winter coat. The soft, tight fabric that stretched across her legs beneath her short skirt still weren't like the pants Kaede wore before coming to this world. Nevertheless, these 'yoga pants' were the closest garment available while still being considered acceptable for women -- or at least, women of military rank.

Though these are unfairly comfortable compared to men's pants, Kaede thought as she sat in the saddle of a disturbingly immaterial 'horse'.

The Phantom Steed she now rode in was considered the most mana-efficient means of long-distance travel in Hyperion. The spell, when not adapted from its original form by the Knights Phantom, created a semi-physical 'horse' that held good weight and was immune to fatigue. The problem for Kaede was that the mount looked insubstantial. It felt as though she sat atop a sculpted cloud of dense black smoke, which triggered her mental safety alerts even as the mount trotted across firm ground.

Her discomfort only grew worse as the group reached the collapsed south gate and took to the air. The Phantom Steeds climbed into the skies as they accelerated to a full gallop. Kaede felt queasy in her stomach as she rode over the lake's waters at roughly five stories' height and eighty kilopaces per hour. She desperately clung onto the saddle horns with her small hands.

Thank Buddha at least my period is over, the familiar couldn't help thinking.

Perhaps it was a good thing that Pascal didn't trust her riding skills, or lack thereof. He had cast a sticking spell which glued her butt to the saddle. It wasn't comfortable, as she couldn't shift in her seat at all. However it at least ensured she couldn't fall off.

"<What do you think, Kaede?>" Pascal's voice pulled Kaede back to the present.

"<Huh? Sorry, I wasn't listening,>" Kaede replied in a sheepish tone. She had been so caught up staring at the lake's waters beneath her that she zoned out.

"<Pay attention.>" Pascal demanded in a clearly disgruntled tone. "<We are officially on a military operation now!>"

"<Give the girl a break, it's her first time flying in a saddle.>" Ariadne's gentle voice defended Kaede in the telepathic network they shared. "<Kaede, I was asking Pascal if he has a good idea for a unit name. The phantom grenadiers have been officially elevated to knights, and official companies of the Knights Phantom all have unit names. It's a black mark on morale for them not to have one. But the men also can't agree on anything.>"

Kaede gave it a quick thought. Given the Phantoms' modus operandi, the answer seemed quite simple:

"<In my world, there was once a famous formation that advanced so quickly through enemy lines that neither friend nor foe could keep track of it. They called it the Ghost Division.>"

The Samaran girl then paused briefly as she had to remind herself that it was also a Nazi formation. Though it was admittedly led by the chivalrous Erwin Rommel, who even buried commandos who tried to assassinate him with honors.

"<That is oddly fitting,>" Pascal added in amusement. "<Considering during the run-up to the Battle of Nordkreuz, we couldn't even figure out where you were, since you were being led by a madman.>"

"<Who ye calling a madman, you twerp?>" The gruff voice of Colonel Hammerstein responded.

"<Ah, sorry S...>" Pascal had almost called him 'Sir' before remembering they were now the same rank. Though Hammerstein still held seniority and was therefore the official commander of the expedition. "<I did not realize Ariadne looped you in, Colonel.>"

"<You think I'm gonna just leave you alone to build your harem?>" The Colonel snarled as he highlighted the fact that everyone else in chat was a young woman.

In addition to Kaede and Ariadne, there was also Princess Sylviane and Captain Cecylia von Falkenhausen. The young dhampir had been promoted after the successful completion of her mission to bring Elspeth to Nordkreuz, as well as her part during the Manteuffel Incident. She had been assigned to this expedition, along with a squad of the King's Black Eagles, because of her experience working in Rhin-Lotharingie and her close ties to Princess Sylviane.

It was also shrewd for Sylviane to bring them along, Kaede thought.

After all, Black Eagles were the eyes and ears of the King. The information they sent back would be trusted by King Leopold. This meant that as long as Sylviane did well, she would bolster the King's confidence in their alliance and receive additional support.

However, the same Princess also did not take well to Hammerstein's crass remarks:

"<Watch your tongue, Colonel!>" The Princess reprimanded sternly. "<His Majesty the King might look the other way from your profane mouth, but I certainly do not. You will learn to act with due courtesy in the presence of a lady, or by Holy Father's name I will have you taught manners.>"

Scary, Kaede immediately thought back to her decision to keep her head low and not antagonize the Princess. In hindsight, it had definitely proved to be the correct choice.

Even Colonel Hammerstein seemed slightly cowed as he answered:

"<Yes, Your Highness. I meant no offense, just old habits with the men.>" He apologized. "<In any case I agree with the Dame Kaede's suggestion: Ghost Riders would make a fine title, even if I'm no longer the man in command.>" He added with a disgruntled tone.

"<You do not like your new command with the North Wind?>" Pascal asked in curiosity.

"<They're good boys, but morale is low since they're the only Phantoms to be defeated in decades.>" Hammerstein answered before his words turned to complaint. "<My main gripe is the trend. Every time I get a unit up and running, with tight camaraderie and fighting like a well-greased machine, they unroot me to stick me somewhere else! Like the unit I just groomed has nothing to do with me no more! I mean even my sidekick got promoted during Nordkreuz. But me? Still Colonel!>"

"<Colonel Sir, you're lucky you didn't get demoted for what you did in Skagen,>" Cecylia spoke. "<Still, the fact you're always placed to lead units in need of reorganization shows His Majesty's confidence in your abilities to train excellent troops. After all, everyone in Weichsel knows that there's no commander more lionized by his soldiers than you.>"

"<Ha!>" Hammerstein's voice immediately turned jovial. "<Well I certainly do appreciate the King's confidence!>"

It rather amazed Kaede just how easily Cecylia turned Hammerstein's grievances into a reaffirmation of loyalty.



----- * * * -----


Unbeknownst to the others, Ariadne was having a private conversation with the Princess. The young lady had been surprised when she received a Farspeak call from Sylviane, even though they were already on the same Telepathy network. She temporary severed her link to the others as she answered the call:

"<Your Highness?>"

Ariadne had met the Princess once before during her time at Alisia Academy. However the reception back then had been... cold, to say the least. Ariadne never understood why Pascal courted her when he was already betrothed. She only knew that her vanity had gotten the better of her at the time. It was a huge boost to her ego to think that even an intellectual like Pascal might prefer her over the Crown Princess of the Empire.

"<Lady Ariadne,>" Sylviane began in a polite, cordial voice as she looked upon Ariadne from a dozen paces away. "<I never had a chance to thank you properly for your actions in helping Pascal and Kaede at Alisia. Perceval told me that you were instrumental in foiling the assassination.>"

Yet despite the warm tone, Ariadne couldn't help but feel more suspicious. The young lady knew from the first time their eyes met that Her Highness did not like her, and not just because of her short courtship with Pascal in the past.

Uncertain of the Princess' aims, Ariadne decided to bow slightly and answered with cautious professionalism:

"<Pascal represents the alliance between Weichsel and Rhin-Lotharingie. It was my duty as a knight of Weichsel to protect him. And I am thankful that Your Highness picked me for this campaign.>"

"<Much as I'd like to take credit, Lady Ariadne, I'm afraid your thanks are owed to General Wiktor,>" Sylviane replied. "<It was he who recommended you to lead the new Phantom company in Colonel Hammerstein's stead.>"

So it was Cecylia's father who granted me this opportunity, Ariadne thought.

After the Manteuffel Incident, it was apparent to everyone in the Manteuffel Clan that they had lost the King's trust. Ariadne knew she was lucky that she had been hospitalized at the time. It kept her from being caught up in the incident and allowed her to still receive her promotion from the air battle.

However, the same could not be said for many other members of her family, who had either been demoted or reassigned to less influential commands. The Duchy of Polarstern had been seized from the main family for General Neithard's treachery -- a move which fractured the Manteuffel Clan as the branch families all cut their ties to limit the damage they might receive from the fallout. Even Ariadne's betrothal to Perceval had been downgraded, as Duke Mathias of Baguette requested a patrilineal marriage which would keep her children from bearing the Manteuffel name.

"<Hence I wanted to tell you, Lady Ariadne, that I still owe you a personal debt of gratitude,>" Princess Sylviane continued with a smile. "<You were able to put aside your differences with Pascal to aid him in his hour of greatest need. And for that I shall forever be thankful.>"

"<Your words alone do me honor, Your Highness.>" Ariadne gave a humble response, mostly as she couldn't think of what else to say.

"<There is one other question I wanted to ask though.>" The Princess spoke next as their eyes met. It immediately made Ariadne realize that this was the real reason why Sylviane began this conversation.

"<Do you resent Pascal for his involvement in the recent incident?>"

It was an astonishingly blunt question for one born into royalty. But at the same time, it also represented Sylviane offering her an opportunity: a direct question that sought a straightforward answer. And judging the sincerity of that answer would help separate treachery from trustworthiness.

Ariadne exhaled the breath she'd been holding without realizing. The problem with being honest was that far too often, the truth resisted simplicity. It was much harder to grasp how one truly felt about a topic as complicated as this. Instead it was far easier to wear a falsified mask.

"<Not particularly,>" the young lady began with uncertainty. Yet it was also the most accurate answer, and she made sure Princess Sylviane knew this by steadily holding her gaze. "<Either my uncle really was a traitor and Pascal simply upheld his sworn duty to family, King, and the Holy Father, or he has been played like a pawn in a plot far beyond our skill.>"

Ariadne then took a brief pause before she concluded: "<in either case, Pascal isn't the one for me to blame. Not for this incident at least.>"

The fact he was to blame for many other complications in their past was left unsaid.

There was no immediate response. It took several moments before the Princess lifted her scrutiny and calmed the atmosphere with slow, gentle nods.

It was also the first time that Ariadne saw Sylviane truly smile at her. Not a fake smile well practiced among aristocrats, but a true smile from the heart itself.

"<Your Highness really has no need to doubt me,>" Ariadne then offered a sincere bonus. "<Given my past with His Grace, it's impossible for anything more than respect to develop between us, and even that His Grace has yet to rebuild. Furthermore, my engagement with Lord Perceval of Baguette is one of true affection, and not mere politics as some would believe.>"

As the Princess' smile broadened ever so slightly, Ariadne realized that her gamble had paid off. At least part of the royal resentment must have come from perceiving her as a potential challenge. Sylviane might even have misunderstood the years of feuding between Ariadne and Pascal as a form of obsession, since love and hate were often two sides of the same coin.

"<It's a relief to hear you say that, Lady Ariadne, not only of Pascal but also of Perceval,>" the Princess confirmed it with a seemingly casual reply. "<It has become clear to me that Lord Perceval is a man of great moral integrity, one whom I would be blessed to have as an advisor in the future. As such, I certainly wish the best for your marriage.>"

The young lady's eyes swelled. To hear such confidence from the Crown Princess certainly heralded a bright future for her husband-to-be.

However Sylviane still wasn't finished:

"<If there is any time in the future when you need a favor from me, please do not hesitate to ask.>"

A personal favor from the Princess, Ariadne's eyes widened to the size of saucers as she realized just what she had received. She had heard that the Princess was a generous lady. But this was a huge boon that anyone who understood politics had to appreciate!

"<Thank you, Your Highness, truly.>" A slightly-awed Ariadne responded with a humble bow.


----- * * * -----


The first day had proved uneventful. The Knights Phantom rode over a thousand kilopaces to reach their planned campsite -- a natural spring deep inside one of the many forests that covered the Rhin-Lotharingie landscape. The battalion had some trouble landing due to the Reiter Support company's light wagons. Their Levitation spells allowed them to float in the air behind the pulling Phantom Steeds, but this made them about as maneuverable as huge gliders being towed behind an airplane.

Kaede continuously updated the World Expedition Map as the group made their way into Rhin-Lotharingie. And as she did so on the second day, she came to notice the first obstacle to their plans.

She had been in a private conversation with Pascal on the 'most powerful weapon' from the world where she came from. She had brought up nuclear weapons in passing to Pascal before, but her master seemed far more interested in the details this time. Not being a physicist, Kaede could only describe what she knew in general details. The thermonuclear city-killer used shaped-charge blasts to focus enough energy to split uranium in nuclear fission, which in turn created enough energy to split deuterium and tritium -- double and triple bonded hydrogen -- in nuclear fusion.

She was surprised that Pascal had enough understanding to keep up. In fact it quickly became clear that he had a better understanding of molecular chemistry than she did. Though given Hyperion's research into lightning and alchemy, perhaps she shouldn't be surprised by their grasp of electrons and atomic charge.

Then, when they were just fifty kilopaces short of reaching the expedition's next staging point, Kaede noticed a problem.

Their destination was a stone circle in northern Rhétie, just across the South Lotharingie River from Belges. It was the closest 'faerie ring' to Nordkreuz that didn't lie deep in Gabriel's domain. However, instead of unmarked ruins sitting atop a barren hill, Kaede's magical map labelled the target coordinates as the 'Lynette encampment'.

"<There must be at least five hundred troops if the map could detect and mistake it for a large village.>" Kaede noted based on past observations, when she compared scans of Nordkreuz's surroundings to the local maps.

"<The encampment is not named by unit designation either. That means that it is likely a patchwork force -- some hastily assembled group named after its commander.>" Pascal surmised. "<Good chance they are here on orders from that pretender Gabriel.>"

"<I think you're right,>" Sylviane agreed. "<Gabriel took the majority of Belges's formations with him, and those that remained still have garrison duty. This is likely a scraped-together force. Though that implies that he anticipated me coming this way.>"

The Princess left unsaid that hundreds more men could lay waiting in ambush just ahead, merely spread out enough that the map failed to pick it up.

"<He could also be covering all the likely routes.>" Major Hans Ostergalen added after Pascal weaved the intelligence officer into the telepathy web. "<Duke Gabriel's leading commander is Count Marten van Coehoorn, a defensive theoretician who pays great attention to detail even in his everyday life. My guess is that he'll try to cover all likely routes.>"

"<Then this is just a picket,>" Pascal remarked.

"<That's my thought as well,>" Hans agreed. "<They won't be the most loyal or battle-worthy. But they might be able to hold out long enough to send out a message about Your Highness' whereabouts.>"

"<In either case, let's wait here until Reynaud or the scouts return with information on just whom we're dealing with,>" Sylviane decided.


...


"<We estimate the camp to be around six hundred men.>" Kaede heard the redheaded Reynaud report after making it back to the main group. "<The soldiers are constructing wooden cabins, so they seem to be assigned here as a long-term picket. They also have the hill ringed in wooden stakes and a chest-high palisade, as well as wooden hedgehogs to deter cavalry charges.>"

"<Sounds like they have already had a day to dig in,>" Pascal frowned. "<And the next stone circle outside Belges is more than eight-hundred kilopaces away.>"

"<That's assuming Gabriel didn't picket that one as well,>" Sylviane pointed out.

"<Six hundred half-organized men is nothing for two Phantom companies,>" Colonel Hammerstein declared. "<With our strength, we can overrun them with ease before they even get a Farspeak link online. Be good exercise for the men!>"

Pascal had sounded wary as he spoke. But the Colonel? His voice wasn't just confident but also eager. It was as though the enemy was just another faceless foe for him to kill, and not the Princess' own countrymen in a realm divided by civil war.

"<Sylv?>" Pascal called out to his fiancée, who had remained speechless for the past minute as she pressed her index finger against her teeth.

"<I'm trying to remember... I feel like I've met a Lady Lynette before, who married across the country to these parts,>" Sylviane noted.

For several moments the telepathy network fell silent. Then, it was Lady Mari who spoke:

"<Lady Lynette ap Cadell de Luxeuil. Your Highness attended her marriage ceremony five years ago.>"

"<She's a Brython from Ceredigion then?>" Sylviane seemed to remember as she asked.

"<Yes,>" answered Mari. "<I believe Your Highness had asked her why she decided to marry a nobleman from across the country. She replied that she was 'tired of Ceredigion pretending it wasn't part of the Rhin-Lotharingie Empire'.>"

"<Though wasn't her husband from Rhétie?>" Sylviane wondered next. "<Why would she be doing Gabriel's bidding?>"

"<Far as I know from the Black Eagles, Duke Hugh has neither declared for nor against the pretender,>" Pascal added.

"<Maybe Duke Hugh and the Rhétie nobles are trying to walk a fine line,>" Kaede voiced her hypothesis. "<They won't openly declare for Gabriel, but they won't go against a minor request from him either. That leaves them with both options later should they pick a side.>"

"<Slippery bastards,>" Colonel Hammerstein grunted in disapproval.

"<Then, it's clear what should be done.>" Sylviane declared. "<Pascal, what do you think?>"

The Princess somehow expected her fiancé to know her plans for the next step. Though to Kaede's amazement, he did:

"<It will be risky,>" he stated. Yet his tone of confidence seemed the exact opposite, as though he was encouraging her on.

"<Nothing ventured, nothing gained.>" Sylviane seemed to take a deep breath as she steeled her nerves. "<I have to start somewhere.>"

Then, before anyone could object, the Princess raised her voice to her armigers and the hundreds of Knights Phantom behind her.

"Everyone! Form up! And follow me!"


----- * * * -----


Countess Lynette ap Cadell de Luxeuil stared at the mossy granite of the stone circle as she sat outside her expanding cabin. For a noblewoman from Ceredigion, this was probably the least impressive stone circle she had ever seen. The formation was little more than a ring of two dozen jagged, uneven rocks, which reached up to about chest-height.

But in the end, size didn't matter, only the function it served.

The stone circles had many nicknames: faerie rings, Tylwyth crossroads, Sidhe pathways, et cetera. They were ruins of a bygone era, infrastructure built by an ancient race. The era recorded in the Book of Invasions had long passed. The Faerie Lords had returned to their otherworld realm, but the legacy they left behind lingered on.

Nor were the circles mere decorations. They were built according to the ley-lines. Some stood at major junctions, now enveloped by cities and citadels. Others sat at mystical locations of exceptional magical power, sacred to followers of the Druidic faith. The one she guarded lay at an unusual intersection -- an outbound fork in the local ley-line.

Their purpose was to function as transit hubs. It was an ancient magic, an art lost to most, but not all.

A faekissed Princess of the Empire, Lynette thought to herself. A true scion of the Faerie Lords.

The late emperor Geoffroi had married the daughter of some obscure count, so it had gone unnoticed by most. Yet through her, the royal line of House Gaetane acquired one of the lingering bloodlines of beings from the Otherworld.

The Princess was an autumnborn. They had awful springtime allergies that even magic failed to suppress. If memory served, Sylviane looked downright miserable during the outdoor ceremony of Lynette's traditional Ceredigion wedding, in May.

Lynette had been raised under the cross. She believed in the Holy Father and had never converted to the Druidic faith. But even amongst the Trinitians of Ceredigion, there would always be a soft spot in their hearts and minds for those of fae lineage. The faekissed represented a connection to their ancestors, a bridge that could connect modernity with ancient history.

It was an odd sentimentality. The Faerie Lords -- or 'Tylwyth' as they were called in Brython -- were anything but just. The Seelie Court proved impulsive and chaotic, while the Unseelie Court stood callous and demanding. They were legendary in many aspects, yet being good rulers had never been one of them. It also didn't help that they occasionally kidnapped human children to be raised among their own kind, leaving behind a changeling surprise for the poor mothers.

Regardless, the common peasant would be ecstatic to have an empress of fae blood, however diluted it might be after countless generations. Nevertheless, Lynette was the educated daughter of a count. She had to ask herself the important question first:

Would a faekissed -- an immature princess only twenty-one years of age -- truly be good for the present dilemmas facing Rhin-Lotharingie?

Gabriel might be a pretender, but he was also shrewd and cunning. His charisma had seduced even the Papal Inquisition, whose Knights Templar he threw into the grinder like pawns. Even his organizational prowess had proved itself in seizing the crown, as nobody in Alis Avern even realized what was happening before he dealt the fatal blow.

A pretender that could best Emperor Geoffroi, who had been monikered 'the Great'. Perhaps Gabriel really could bring salvation in Rhin-Lotharingie's hour of greatest need.

But if that's the case, then why is he just sitting there in Alis Avern!? Why isn't he heading south, toward the front lines that push ever closer to my homeland?

Lynette's fists were still clenched when a sentry called out:

"INCOMING AIRBORNE FORMATION!"

Then, fear pierced the air as the cry turned shrill.

"PHANTOMS!!!"

Weichsel might be a nominal ally of the Empire now, but no veteran would forget the terror that struck deep into Rhin-Lotharingie during the War of Imperial Succession ten years ago. The dread was further heightened as Knights Phantom dove down from the clouds behind the white-blue flames of an Oriflamme Paladin.

Crown Princess Sylviane led the charge herself. And behind her followed ten royal armigers and several hundred Knights Phantom. These were the finest soldiers of both Weichsel and Rhin-Lotharingie. There was no chance that Lynette could fight them and win!

The Countess could feel her nape hairs stand up in cold sweat. Nevertheless she pulled her longbow off her armored back before crying out:

"FORM UP! AIR DEFENSE!"

She had no air cavalry, no rangers. Her band of largely militia archers was led by only thirty professional armigers.

She had accepted this mission from Duke Hugh in place of her bedridden husband, who was still recovering from a riding accident. It seemed an easy task to curry favor from one of the most powerful families of Rhin-Lotharingie. But now, Lynette was certain it hadn't been worth it.

Against an Oriflamme and three hundred Phantoms, her men didn't stand a chance.

But to her dying moment, Lynette would never be as surprised as when the burning chevron that soared straight towards her -- a scalpel about to take the head of the commander -- shot back up in an acrobatic loop before braking to a hover above the camp.

"SOLDIERS OF RHIN-LOTHARINGIE!" The Princess' magically amplified shout reverberated across the air.

Hundreds of bows rose. Countless arrows were aimed for release. Yet the Cerulean Princess paid them no attention as she addressed the camp with all the authority of a true sovereign.

She did not yell following those opening words. She did not bellow for attention or gesture with melodramatic theatrics. Instead, her magnified voice began slow, calm, and methodical, even as they rang with the confidence of the Holy Father himself:

"I am Crown Princess Sylviane Etiennette de Gaetane. But I come to you today, not as an aspirant for the throne, or royalty demanding of your obedience, or even a commandant calling upon your service. I stand before you, as a woman of the Lotharin plains, a daughter of her forests, a comrade to all who stand shoulder to shoulder on the front lines of our faith, and most of all -- a paladin sworn to uphold her duty to kingdom, empire, and the Holy Father."

The entire camp had fallen to an eerie silence. Even the birds of the nearby woods fell quiet, their attention enthralled by the burning figure in the skies.

"Even as I speak before you now, the evil hordes of Cataliya advance through our countryside," Princess Sylviane then made her first gesture, finger pointing sharply to the southwest as she gradually built up her tone. "Those slaves of corrupt tyrants from the demon-tainted continent know no honor, no faith. They were trained from boyhood to obey, to submit as blindly to their immoral masters as they do to their false prophet. They follow orders without question -- whether they be to pillage the homes of our countrymen, or to slit the throats of our sons and ravish the innocence of our daughters! They would even desecrate the holiness of our faith and the grace of our Lord and Savior who died for the world's sins!"

Lynette had yet to hear any tales of atrocities from the south. Unlike her simple-minded soldiers, she would not be so easily agitated by such an eloquent canvas of blood and debauchery. But Her Highness did have a point:

The Cataliyan Ghulams were raised as slave-soldiers before being given their freedom upon entering the professional ranks. These were men who knew no fear and harbored no ethics. Under a chivalrous lord, they might maintain discipline and stay their hand. But it would take only one order, one sinful moment of man, before the tears of women and the blood of children ran a new river to the sea.

Unfortunately, humans sinned aplenty, especially among the infamous decadence of the south.

Without independence, without both military power and legal authority, the various Lotharin cultures would have no way to defend themselves. They had learned under centuries of brutal Imperial occupation what it felt like to be subjugated people, who must prostrate themselves before the whims of foreign rulers.

"The Caliphate comes with chains and yokes to enslave our society, our culture, and our faith." The Princess then closed a fist before her chest. "Our nation sits upon the brink of disaster. Our land calls for our every aid! Tens of thousands have answered! Yet even as they drench the fields in foreign blood, the armies of this so-called 'Khalifa' continue to attack, to advance, to threaten our families, our lands, our way of life! In this struggle for the very existence of our identity, we must unite! To turn and face our common foe, not to squabble among ourselves for crowns and power and gold!"

From the corner of her eyes, Lynette could see that all but a small fraction of her soldiers had completely forgotten about their weapons. Their bows now hung loosely to one side as their spellbound stares transfixed themselves upon the Oriflamme Princess. Many, like her, even nodded along in agreement, as embers of patriotic zeal burned within their eyes.

In the span of just moments, the charisma of this twenty-one years old girl had enraptured the thoughts of several hundred men.

"It is for this reason that I come before you," Her Highness continued on, her rising fervor working itself up into a shout once more. "Our ally, King Leopold of Weichsel, warden of the Trinitian March, has pledged his support in the name of the Holy Father! His first wave of men and supplies ride with me, to reinforce our southern lines which so desperately need all aid! We come before you for passage, to gate south for the salvation of our realm! I care not for whom your loyalties are sworn. But if you have any pride left as a protector of Rhin-Lotharingie, YOU WILL STAY OUT OF OUR WAY!"

For a brief second, Lynette felt the air knocked out of her lungs as the intensity of the Princess' final words struck home. To notice her own swelling hopes and unmasked guilt, to realize that her command was on the brink of mutiny, to visualize the crowning halo of light surrounding that burning-blue hair...

The floating figure before them no longer seemed a mere girl who happened to draw the straw of royalty.

She is an Empress in the making.

On that day, Countess Lynette became the first Rhin-Lotharingie commander who swore an oath of fealty beneath the banner of Crown Princess Sylviane.

She was joined soon after, by all six-hundred-and-forty-three of her men.



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