DargonZine |
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| Despatches from the Field | (Special War Recap) | |
| Heroic Couplet | Jeff Lee | Yule, 1014 |
| For What We Are About To Receive... Part I | John Doucette | Yule 14, 1014 |
| 'Bout 'Majin | Orny Liscomb | Firil, 1016 |
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(C) Copyright August, 1993, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd
<White@DUVM.BitNet>. All rights revert to the authors. These stories
may not be reproduced or redistributed (save in the case of
reproducing the whole 'zine for further distribution) without the
express permission of the author involved.
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(This is a comprehenisve review of the Baranur-Beinison war, which started rather a few volumes ago. Enjoy.)
Nober. A time of endings and beginnings. The year is 1013 B.Y.
and there are numerous celebrations being planned to mark the turning
of the year. Just a few short weeks earlier, King Haralan had
celebrated his thirty-sixth birthday. Sir Edward Sothos, Haralan's
close friend and advisor and the kingdom's Knight Commander, would
soon celebrate his thirty-first.
Winter had come slightly earlier than expected and displayed a
ferocity such as few could remember. The storms raging outside Crown
Castle's environs went almost un-noticed. Inside the castle, the
nobles of the land were engaged in heated debate and exchanging even
hotter words in the great War Council called by the King.
The past year had been a tumultuous one for the third-largest
kingdom on the continent. Early in 1012, rumors began circulating that
Bichu, an island Empire south and west of Baranur was planning to
invade. Almost nothing was known about Bichu. Other than the fact that
the Bichanese warriors, samurai they were called in the native tongue
of Bichu, were fanatical in battle and were said to possess swords of
un-matched quality, the most the average Baranurian knew of Bichu, if
they knew of it at all, was that they were alien and they wanted their
land. Thus spoke the rumours.
The truth was very different. In reality, the rumours had been
started by a group of nobles and merchants from Duchy Dargon, in the
extreme northwest. This small group of individuals had been persuaded
to stir up trouble by agents of the Beinisonian Emperor, Untar II. The
general idea was to make Baranur and Bichu go to war so that the
Beinisonian Empire could then move on Baranur, which would have been
weakened considerably by the war, thus adding the lands of Baranur to
Beinison only a modicum of effort.
To this end, the conspirators planned the assassination of
several of Baranur's nobles, chief among these the Duke of Dargon
himself. The assassination attempt against the Duke failed, but
resulted in the death of one of the heirs of the Barony of Connall.
The Connall family were relatives of Duke Dargon and with him had been
among the most vociferous in their protestation against going to war
with Bichu. Since the Barony now had only one surviving member of the
ruling family, the decision of whom to choose as successor to the late
Baron was now academic. Luthias Connall was invested as Baron Connall
by his cousin the Duke and all seemed fine.
All was not fine, though. Duke Dargon had appointed Connall as
Duke's Advocate, chief upholder of the King's Justice in the Duchy. As
Duke's Advocate, it fell to Luthias to investigate the conspiracy. The
primary conspirator, Baron Coronabo, contrived to have evidence
planted in Duke Dargon's office that implicated the Duke as the man
behind the plot to have Baranur go to war with Bichu, and thus the man
responsible for Connall's twin brother's death.
Connall was forced to investigate the charges and he concluded,
however reluctantly, that there was indeeed evidence to proceed to
trial. By Baranurian law, a high-ranking noble such as a Duke had to
be tried before the King in Magnus. Sir Edward, in Dargon to judge a
tournament, escorted Duke Dargon to Magnus for the trial. Defending
Dargon was Lord Marcellon of Equiville, Dargon's father-in-law and
former Royal Magist. As Duke's Advocate for Duchy Dargon, it fell to
Baron Connall to prosecute.
By summer, 1013, it was over. Working together, Marcellon and
Connall had exposed the real conspirators and proved Dargon's
innocence. King Haralan called a War Council of respected nobles from
throughout the Kingdom. This Council would give the King advice on how
to respond to the Beinisonian plot. An early decision was made to send
Count Connall, newly created as such in reward for exposing the
conspiracy, to Beinison as Ambassador. There he would inquire to the
Beinisonian Emperor as to his intentions towards Baranur.
The summer also saw the arrival of a most unexpected embassy from
the Empire of Galicia, Sir Edward's homeland. Galicia had, for several
hundred years and by it's own choice, been isolated from the outside
world. It maintained a policy of aggressive neutrality. No one was
permitted to cross the border in either direction excpet by direct
command of the Emperor, Nyrull I. The origin of this policy was
unknown save by the Galicians themselves and they weren't talking.
Thus, the arrival of an embassy from the Galician Emperor was an
occasion of note.
Haralan was pleasantly surprised to find that the ambassador had
instructions to work out some sort of trade agreement between the two
nations. He was less than happy when his Knight Commander nearly took
the ambassador's head off, quite literally, when the two met.
Sir Edward and the ambassador had been old foes from their days
as mercenaries in the chaotic Kingdom of Alnor, built on the ruins of
the ancient Fretheod Empire on the continent of Duurom. Moreover,
Ambassador Myros was also Baron of Alphoria. For close to a thousand
years, Alphoria had been held by the Sothos family. Myros took great
delight in informing Sir Edward that Edward's father, Dion, had been
executed for treason. Adding to Sir Edward's rage was the fact that
Myros was accompanied by his wife, Elaine. Elaine Myros, formerly
Elaine Janos, daughter to the former Count Janos, had been the object
of Edward's affection eight years earlier in Galicia. Edward had
killed the son of one of Galicia's powerful Dukes in a duel over
Elaine and was forced into exile. Myros knew full well the history
between his wife and Edward and took further delight in seeing
Edward's reaction. The War Council dragged on into winter, awaiting a
reply from Count Connall, and the Galician embassy stayed to observe.
Ambassador Myros had his own personal agenda in coming to
Baranur. He was part of a cabal, headed by Duke Markin, the father of
the man Edward killed, that was plotting to overthrow the Galician
Emperor. Myros saw in the embassy a perfect opportunity to recruit
allies and a source of men and material for the coming coup.
With Myros was a sorceress by the name of Celeste. She professed
to be in Myros' service, but in reality, she was a member of The
Order, a secret organization of Galician mages dedicated totally to
preserving the Empire. The Order's leader, the Primus, had instructed
Celeste to report on Myros' activities. Myros was known to The Order
as one of the cabal and they hoped to learn more about Myros' plans
while in Baranur and about Baranur itself. Celeste, too, had her own
agenda to pursue. While reporting on Myros, she hoped to utilize the
information she gained to turn the situation to her best advantage.
The end of the War Council was spectacular. An Ambassador arrived
from Beinison with a gift -- the head of Luthias Connall in a golden
box. On the same day, just after the "gift" had been opened, an
assassination team from Galicia arrived with the intent of "removing"
Myros and his chief advisors.
The result of these two events was that an angry King declared
war on Beinison and Myros escaped while his underlings died. In a move
that surprised the whole Baranurian Court, Celeste, leader of the
assassination team, offered Sir Edward the coronet of Alphoria by
Nyrull's command. Sir Edward refused, saying his oath to his friend
and King, and the coming war, demanded that he stay in Baranur.
The new year would bring red war to the Kingdom of Baranur and
the tales the bards would tell would be ones of great heroes and even
greater tragedies.
Deber, 1013, finds the Kingdom of Baranur gripped by the worst
winter in living memory. War has come to Baranur, a war of inaction --
nothing can move through the heavy snows and freezing cold.
Into this frozen hell journey brave men and women on struggling
horses. They carry messages to all corners of the Kingdom, announcing
war. The people have not been expecting war, not with Beinison and the
news comes as a shock. In the barracks and cantonments of the Royal
Army, the shock is a double one. For with the declaration of war comes
orders from the Knight Commander -- Move south with all haste. In the
dead of winter, the commanders of the Royal Army stare with
incredulity at seemingly impossible orders.
Edward Sothos, Knight Commander of the Royal Armies, knows how
difficult the orders are. He gives them because he has no other
choice. The Royal Army can muster 43,000 warriors at the start of
Deber. Fourteen thousand in each of the Northern and Southern Marches
and fifteen thousand at Magnus. Another 10,000 are being recruited and
trained and must remain in their training schools. The Militia of the
Kingdom, 50,000 strong, are mobilizing also though the quality of the
Militia Regiments varies widely.
Sir Edward knows his troops will be facing the full might of the
Beinisonian armies and so he gives the order for all available troops
to bolster Knight Captain Martis Westbrook's Army of the Southern
Marches. The Northern Marches, under the command of Knight Captain
Ailean of Bivar, is stripped of troops -- Sir Ailean is left with only
five thousand out of his original force of fourteen thousand. The
Magnus Garrison remains as a strategic reserve.
As the preparations go on, Edward and Marcellon are summoned
south by the Duke of Pyridain. A man sufering heavily from his travels
has come from Beinison. He claims to be a Baranurian subject and says
he has information for the Knight Commander.
With spring almost upon the land, Edward and Marcellon arrive to
interrogate the traveller. They discover him to be none other than
Luthias Connall, whose very "execution" by the Beinisonians was the
spark that started the war, very much alive and in very bad condition.
From him, they learn that the Beinisonians are planing a surprise
attack on the Laraka River, Magnus' economic lifeline and, now,
under-defended. They also learn that the enemy does not plan to wait
until summer, the traditional campaign season, to attack. Sir Edward's
strategy of concentrating his forces in the south will blunt the
enemy's main attack but has left the entire Northwest open to
invasion.
By Melrin, the Royal Army is reeling from losses on both fronts.
In the South, the enemy's main army shattered Knight Captain
Westbrook's force at Oron's Crossroads. Virtually the entirety of the
Noble Houses of the Southern Marches is annihilated and a goodly
portion of the Pyridain Militia with it. In what will become
recognized as one of the great blunders of the war, the Beinisonian
Emperor, Untar II, allows Martis Westbrook to extricate over half her
19,500 troops unmolested. These troops will continue to be a drain on
Beinisonian resources throughout the war.
Untar's main army, the Fist of the Emperor, goes on to reduce
Pyridain City (defended by the remnants of the Baranurian heavy
infantry that fought at Oron's Crossroads), and begins its march on
Magnus, laying waste to the countryside as it goes.
In the North, 20,000 troops commanded by an up-and-coming field
marshal of the Beinisonian army, Joachim Vasquez, lands at Sharks'
Cove (Duchy Quinnat) on the mouth of the Laraka River. Sir Ailean of
Bivar meets this attack at the water's edge with 5,500 men. The
Baranurian forces give the elite light troops of the enemy a good
thrashing but are finally overwhelmed. Lord Morion of Pentamorlo
rallies the survivors and begins a long and gruelling retreat down the
Laraka. He plans to make his stand at Gateway Keep, 250 leagues north
of Magnus and designed for just this purpose.
Vasquez moves quickly in pursuit, but is delayed at Port Sevlyn,
a city of 10,000 halfway between Sharks' Cove and Gateway Keep and
thus a vital base of supply. One of the Duchy of Quinnat's Militia
Regiments garrisons the city and determines to hold off the enemy for
as long as possible.
The 1,000 defenders hold off the enemy army for three days, an
incredible feat of arms. At the end, Vasquez orders the garrison, and
half the populace, put to the sword as an example to discourage
further resistance. He leaves some troops to garrison the city and
moves off down the Laraka towards Gateway and Magnus.
As Yule, 1014, reaches its midpoint, three great armies threaten
Baranur. In the South, Untar and the 30,000 strong Fist of the Emperor
are drawing ever closer to Magnus and if not checked will arrive by
Seber. On the Laraka, Vasquez has received reinforcements and is
preparing to launch an attack on the desperate defenders of Gateway
Keep. In the North, a force of 15,000 approaches Dargon City from the
sea undetected.
To counter the threat to the capital, the Knight Commander has
sent Baranur's heavy cavalry, the 8,000 strong Royal Hussars, to aid
Lord Morion in his defence of Gateway Keep while other forces begin
the march toward Magnus, hoping to reach the city before the enemy.
The spring of 1014 has been one of blood and death. The coming
summer promises to be one of carnage and horror unsurpassed.