
| DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 2 |
In the Spring of 1012 B.Y., the Beinison Empire was looking to
expand. For centuries, the Empire had been continuously increasing its
holdings bit by bit until, by 1012, it had become one of the premier
powers on the continent.
Now, Untar II, Beinison's newest, and youngest, Emperor, decided
the time was right for Beinison to make a bid for absolute and
undisputed mastery of northwestern Cherisk and from there go on to
dominate the entire continent. To do this, Untar would have to conquer
or otherwise control the Kingdom of Baranur and the Galician Empire.
Untar and his advisors quietly began sending agents into both of
Beinison's larger neighbours, having already ruled out any action
against the tiny kingdoms of Lederia and Comarr as an unwarranted
diversion of resources. The information coming out of Galicia was sparse
and unreliable. Many agents failed to return and those that did barely
managed even that. The Galicians had closed their borders some centuries
before and were, apparently, very determined to maintain the current
state of affairs. Untar's agents in Baranur, however, reported much
different results. The information flowing into Untar's Summer Palace in
Cabildo was both exhaustive and accurate. Untar and his inner circle
decided that Baranur would be dealt with first before turning Beinison's
attention to the problem of Galicia.
As Autumn, 1012, approached, Beinisonian agents were slowly making
their way north, for it was in Baranur's Northern Marches that Untar had
detected just the right kind of weakness he could exploit. The Northern
Marches were sparsely populated and, more importantly, far from Magnus,
Baranur's capital. As well, the people of the Northern Marches were not
particularly war-like, the last serious conflict to occur there being
the fighting in the Great Houses War nearly a century-and-a-half ago.
This was in sharp contrast to the Southern Marches, long a target for
Beinisonian raids.
Untar's agents sought out those whose ambition and desire for
wealth or power outweighed their loyalty to King and Country. One such
was Baron Coranabo, a minor lord with holdings in the Duchy of Kiliaen
very near to the Barony of Shipbrook in Duchy Dargon. Coranabo had long
coveted the now-vacant Coronet of the Barony of Shipbrook, and the
agents of Beinison offered money and the promise of more land should
Coranabo work for Beinison against Baranur.
Coranabo agreed and together with Untar's agents, set about a
campaign to destabilize Duchy Dargon sufficiently that a power struggle
in the north, possibly even outright warfare, would erupt, distracting
King Haralan's attentions from his southern border.
While this was going on, Untar summoned his generals and admirals
to him in Cabildo. There, he informed his officers that the Beinison
Empire would undertake a concerted effort to conquer Baranur by force of
arms and that this would begin in the Summer of 1014, perhaps as early
as Autumn, 1013, and that he, the Emperor, wished to have a plan for
such a campaign presented to him as soon as possible.
By early 1013, Untar's agents had sufficiently infiltrated
Baranur's Northern Marches that the second part of the plan to
destabilize Duchy Dargon could proceed. Also at this time, Untar's
generals had come back to their Emperor with a plan as bold and
audacious as it was simple: Baranur would be subjected to a two-pronged
attack, the main effort in the south with a strong diversion/raid in the
north. The exact details had yet to be worked out, but Untar gave his
approval and the armies of Beinison began to quietly mobilize.
Events now began to move rapidly forward as Untar's agents put the
second phase of their plan to destabilize Duchy Dargon in motion. An
attempt to assassinate Duke Dargon as Winter drew to a close was a
partial success. Though the Duke was not harmed, nor was the secondary
target of the assassins, in the confusion of the botched assassination
attempt's aftermath, Beinisonian agents were able to plant documents
indicating that Duke Dargon, then in the midst of a dispute with
King Haralan over taxes, had been in contact with agents of the Beinison
Empire and was prepared to sell-out to Beinison.
This fabricated evidence was "discovered" with the "aid" of
Baron Coranabo and, in the Summer of 1013, Duke Dargon was summoned to Magnus
to be tried before the King on the charge of treason. The evidence was
discovered to be false by Baron Luthias Connall, the prosecutor, and
that not only was the evidence false, but that Baron Coranabo had been
working for Beinison all along.
The trial turned into a Council of State, called by King Haralan to
determine what action, if any, should be taken against Beinison. As this
Council got underway, Baron Connall (now newly-created Count) was sent
to Beinison as Ambassador with instructions to negotiate and attempt to
puzzle out Beinison's true intentions towards Baranur.
By late Autumn, 1013, the Council had dead-locked on the issue of
whether or not to take action. The Knight Commander of the Armies,
Sir Edward Sothos, head of the Royal Army, argued, surprisingly, against a
military response. He knew the Kingdom was in no state to take on
Beinison.
All debate was closed, however, when Untar sent an Ambassador to
Haralan bearing the head of Luthias Connall as Untar's answer to what he
thought of bringing the crisis to a peaceful conclusion. Haralan ordered
a War Council to be struck at once and all through the long winter, the
Council debated, and, in a session marked by an assault on the
Ambassador from Galicia by political enemies at home that left several
guards dead and the Ambassador fled, the decision was taken to go to war
and to attack Beinison in the Summer of 1014.
During the Winter, Baranur's Knight Commander, Sir Edward, began
sending more and more troops south to meet the threat posed by the
armies of Beinison. At full mobilization, Baranur could field 114,000 to
Beinison's 120,000, a figure which gave Sir Edward confidence that
Beinison would not be able to defeat Baranur with such a small margin of
difference.
Baranur's strength was deceptive, however. Her standing army
numbered 42,000, not counting the troops the various nobles could raise
on short notice. The Militia, which comprised 50,000 troops, could be
raised fairly quickly, but the quality of the troops varied widely, from
the battle-hardened and competent Militias along Baranur's border with
Beinison to the very green and untested Militias of the Northern
Marches. An additional 10,000 troops could be mustered within a few
weeks of an emergency by recalling discharged veterans to the colours,
but these troops, too, would take time to get re-accustomed to life
under the war-banner. Even given these obstacles, Sir Edward felt
confident that all his troops would be fully trained and ready to fight
by Summer.
Unbeknownst to Sir Edward, Untar had already set in motion the
machinery of invasion. Untar's generals had refined their earlier plan
of attack. One hundred thousand of Beinison's one hundred-twenty would
be hurled at Baranur as soon as the snow began to melt from the roadways
and the ice began to break up on the sea. Beinison would not wait for
the traditional Summer campaigning season.
As the violent storms of late Winter and early Spring coming in off
the Valenfaer Ocean began to lessen both in frequency and strength,
35,000 soldiers of the Beinison Empire, including Beinison's famed elite
Light Infantry Regiments, boarded ship and, escorted by the bulk of the
Beinisonian navy, headed north.
At the same time, 65,000 troops, among them the feared Knights of
the Star, crossed the Baranur-Beinison border all the way from the tiny
kingdoms of Lederia and Comarr, perched ever-so-precariously between
Baranur, Beinison, and Galicia, to the Valenfaer Ocean, driving the
unprepared and scattered Baranurian forces before them.
In position facing them were the 20,000 troops under command of the
Knight Captain of the Southern Marches, Dame Martis Westbrook. During
the Winter, Sir Edward had stripped the garrisons of the Northern
Marches to send to Dame Martis the reinforcements he knew she would need
for the planned attack on Beinison that coming Summer. Winter, 1014, was
the coldest, most brutal Winter in living memory and movement in the
deep snows and bitter cold had been near-impossible. The result was that
when the Beinison invasion force crossed the border, the majority of the
15 Regiments, 15,000 troops, sent south by Sir Edward were not yet
half-way to the border, forcing Dame Martis to deploy her available
forces in a thin screen that only served to delay the advance of the
Beinisonians.
Sir Edward, accompanied by the Royal High Magist, Lord Marcellon,
hurried south as best he could through the Spring mud in order to make a
first-hand assessment of the developing situation. Upon arriving at
Dame Martis' field headquarters near a small crossroads town called Oron's Crossroads,
Sir Edward went into deep conference with Dame Martis and
immediately issued orders for the activation of all Militia Regiments
throughout Baranur. He also sent word to the local Dukes requesting that
they make haste to Dame Martis' headquarters without delay with as many
troops as they could muster on short notice. As well, Sir Edward sent
word to Magnus that the Royal Hussars, Baranur's elite heavy horse,
should make immediate preparations to move south, a clear indication of
the seriousness of the crisis.
It was at this time that a man, by his dress a noble of high rank,
was brought into the headquarters in a state of near-total collapse and
close to death. Marcellon examined the man, practicing his healer's art
to try and save the poor unfortunate. It was during this examination
that Lord Marcellon discovered, to his utter shock, that the man before
him was none other than Count Luthias Connall.
Luthias told a tale of being imprisoned, drugged, and tortured. The
"head" that those at the War Council thought was his was, in reality, a
magical construct of Beinison's feared mage, the powerful Mon-Taerleor,
like Lord Marcellon, a former student of Styles, one of the greatest
magicians of the age. Luthias also imparted information he had overheard
about the Beinisonian invasion plans. What he related spelled potential
disaster for Baranur.
Luthias told Sir Edward that 35,000 troops, the very same ones that
had boarded ship at Cabildo just as the invasion rolled across the
border, were headed north under large escort. Their objective was to
land at the mouth of the Laraka River, a vital economic and
communications lifeline with Magnus, and to march on the capital, hoping
to take the city before sufficient force could be brought to bear to
stop them. What Luthias did not know was that the Beinisonian force was
to spilt into one group of 20,000, which would march on Magnus, and a
smaller group of 15,000, which would sail for Dargon City and use the
city as a base from which to conquer the disorganized Northern Marches.
Sir Edward hurried north, fast messengers preceding him, ordering
the Hussars to turn 'round and make for Magnus with all speed. He also
sent word of the impending attack on the North to the King, asking that
the King order the forces of the various nobles in the Northern Marches
to send what force they could to the aid of Knight Captain Sir Ailean of
Bivar, who now prepared to face the coming invasion at Shark's Cove, a
port at the mouth of the Laraka, with just over five thousand men.
Knight Captain Sir Ailean, meanwhile, drew up his tiny force at
what he determined was the most probable landing site for the
Beinisonian force, a stretch of beach just north of Shark's Cove. There
he was joined by Lord Morion and a group of five hundred former students
from Lord Morion's warrior school.
As the Beinisonian invasion force approached, the Baranurian Fleet
of the North, aided by the majority of the Laraka River Flotilla,
sortied in an attempt to stop the Beinisonians. The attempt was a
failure. Losses were high on both sides. The Baranurians were
annihilated and the Beinisonian invasion force landed in safety.
Knight Captain Sir Ailean met the enemy literally at the water's
edge, his better-armoured troops succeeding, for a time, in holding back
Beinison's Light Infantry Regiments. Beinison's greater weight of number
ultimately prevailed, however. Knight Captain Sir Ailean perished
leading a rearguard while Lord Morion led just over two thousand
survivors away from the enemy.
Following the north bank of the Laraka, Lord Morion mercilessly
forced-marched his troops to Port Sevlyn, a large port-city halfway
between Shark's Cove and Magnus. There, he attempted to convince the
Lord Mayor to order the city's two Militia Light Infantry Regiments to
follow Lord Morion and declare Port Sevlyn an Open City in order to
spare it from the wrath of the advancing Beinisonians.
The Lord Mayor refused, saying he could not give up Duke Quinnat's
home without a fight. He also pointed out to Lord Morion that if the two
Militia Regiments stayed in the city, the Beinisonians might possibly be
delayed a day or two, time that Lord Morion could use to reach and
fortify Gateway Keep, a small military town that commanded the river
approaches to Magnus. Lord Morion departed with his troops and the
inexperienced Militia Regiments prepared to meet the enemy.
Lord Morion had barely departed when the Beinisonians arrived. The
Beinisonian commander, General Joachim Vasquez, asked for the city's
surrender, and, when the Lord Mayor refused, ordered four of his best
Regiments to attack. To everyone's surprise, the Baranurian Regiments
held off the enemy, though at great cost. General Vasquez attacked again
and again, reluctant to commit too many of his troops, anxious that his
force not be reduced too much -- he still had to reach and take Gateway Keep
and then move on Magnus, all before the enemy could mount an
effective defence.
The increasingly-desperate defenders of Port Sevlyn fought as if
they were possessed, holding off attack after attack for the better part
of five days. Finally, on the sixth day of the siege, with fewer than
300 out of 2,000 troops left, the defenders were overrun as Vasquez
threw his entire force at the Militia Regiments on the city walls.
Realizing the danger to his mission the delay the six-day siege
represented and the absolute necessity of avoiding a repetition,
General Vasquez ordered that half the population of Port Sevlyn be put to the
sword in order to demonstrate the penalty for resisting the forces of
the Beinisonian Emperor. After slaughtering 5,000 civilians, Vasquez
departed after the fleeing Lord Morion, leaving two Regiments in the
city as a garrison.
Lord Morion, meanwhile, was busily digging-in outside Gateway Keep.
Lord Morion and the just-over two thousand survivors of Sir Ailean's
doomed attempt to stop the Beinisonians from landing, arrived at Gateway Keep
as the siege of Port Sevlyn was entering its sixth day.
Lord Morion's troops had just completed a march worthy of note as a feat of
arms. Ever since the defeat at Shark's Cove, Lord Morion had driven his
troops with unflagging ruthlessness, covering the 550 leagues to Gateway Keep
in just over eleven days, an average of 50 leagues a day, an
accomplishment that elite troops would be hard-pressed to match, much
less a mostly-green force that had fought and suffered a terrible
defeat.
Giving thanks to every deity he could think of, Morion prepared to
move his troops into Gateway for some well-deserved rest only to find
that the Keeper would not admit the Royal troops, saying that "this
conflict does not concern Gateway Keep". Furious, Lord Morion made camp
and began the construction of field fortifications at the only ford
giving ready access to Gateway Keep. Morion knew his preparations were
more-than-likely futile, but he was sick of running.
Morion's troops finished their fortifications certain in the
knowledge that the pursuing Beinisonians were, at best, a day away.
Lord Morion and the Regimental Commanders did what they could to keep up
their troops' morale and determination to hold the enemy as long as
possible.
The Baranurians waited three days before their enemy made his
appearance. Once again, the defenders faced the Light Infantry Regiments
of the Beinisonian army, and once again, the Baranurians held the enemy
off, but just barely. When night fell, Morion had lost nearly a third of
his strength. He knew he would not hold his improvised fortifications
for a second day.
As the second day of Morion's desperate stand dawned, things were
happening inside Gateway Keep that were to prove of tremendous
importance to those facing the Beinisonians outside. Goren Winston,
rightful Keeper of Gateway, slipped into the fortress to confront his
brother, Ne'on, who had usurped Goren's place. Goren found Ne'on to be
possessed by a demon or spirit and was forced to kill his younger
brother so that Goren might thwart the spirit's plan and bring Gateway Keep
back into the war against the Beinisonians.
Outside on his makeshift fortifications, Morion had committed the
last of his reserves and knew that the end was near when the closed
gates of the keep opened. Morion tried to conduct an orderly withdrawal
but his troops, who had faced deepest adversity for so long, finally
cracked. Almost as one, the entire defending force broke and ran for the
inviting safety of Gateway's stone walls. The Beinisonians, their
discipline intact, pursued the fleeing Baranurians. Barely one thousand
survived to gain the protection of the walls.
For the next three days, the garrison, augmented by the remnants of
Morion's force, held the enemy off as Gateway was slowly pounded to
rubble by the siege engines Vasquez had brought up the Laraka by ship.
On the third day, what was left of the defenders were preparing for the
final stages of the siege when the Hussars, all eight Regiments, and a
small contingent of samurai from Bichu, arrived from the south under the
command of the new Knight Captain of the Northern Marches, Luthias
Connall.
Connall quickly formed his Regiments and threw all eight thousand
heavy horse at the surprised Beinisonians. Nearly half the enemy force
fell victim to the long, killing lances of the Hussars before Vasquez
could affect a retreat.
Connall pursued the retreating Beinisonians all the way to Shark's Cove,
where he forced Vasquez to do battle. At the same time as Connall
was arriving at Shark's Cove, the Baranurian and Beinisonian navies were
nearing the small port at the Laraka's mouth, the Beinisonians intent on
rescuing their expeditionary force, the Baranurians just as intent on
preventing such a rescue.
The battle, when it occurred, lasted nearly all day, on land and at
sea. The warships of the two navies savaged each other, dozens of ships
and hundreds of sailors vanishing beneath the waves. On land, the
desperate defenders held off attack after furious attack while the
Beinisonian transports began loading troops.
Finally, his line threatening to break, the Baranurian navy
endangering the transports, Vasquez called a halt to the evacuation and
sailed for home. Seeing this, the Baranurian navy made one last attempt
to crack the Beinisonian line. The remnants of the Beinisonian fighting
navy gallantly put themselves in harm's way to allow the transports to
escape.
The battle came to an end, on land and at sea, when Duke Dargon's
flagship and the Beinisonian flagship became locked in battle. The Duke
was severely wounded and fell overboard. He was rescued and eventually
recovered, though the healers were forced to remove his badly-injured
forearm. The Duke's flagship defeated the enemy flagship and, upon seeing
this, the Beinisonian navy's resolve faltered and the remnants fled for
home along with the transports. The Beinisonian troops left on shore
fought on for a few bells more until, at sunset, stranded and facing
destruction, the survivors surrendered.
The immediate crisis on the Laraka was over. Magnus was safe, for a
time, a very brief time, for Sir Edward had received word that a huge
army under the direct command of Emperor Untar II himself was
approaching the Crown City. The Knight Commander of the Armies sent
messengers speeding throughout the kingdom, summoning all who could
quickly reach Magnus to the capital's defence.
An army of nearly 20,000 gathered at the capital, preparing to meet
the enemy. The enemy they found, however, was not the Beinisonians. For
many months, political maneouverings had been underway to get
Sir Edward, a Galician, removed as Knight Commander. Most vocal in his
opposition to Sir Edward was Duke Northfield, the most powerful of the
Great Houses. King Haralan resisted the pressure until, with the bulk of
the Beinisonian army bearing down on Magnus, Northfield threatened to
take his troops out of the army if he was not given command of the
defence of the Crown City. Knowing that Northfield would take not only
his personal troops but those of other nobles as well, Haralan
reluctantly assented to placing Northfield over Sir Edward.
The Baranurians met the enemy on several leagues outside Magnus.
Outnumbered two-to-one and out-generalled, the Baranurians were
hard-pressed. The end came when Northfield, seeing his flank turned,
panicked and fled with his troops. Sir Edward took charge and managed to
salvage the situation by getting the bulk of the army away from the
field and to Magnus. Severely weakened, Magnus' defenders manned the
walls and prepared for a siege.
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