10-15-2003, 03:25 PM
An Ominous Conversation in Atma's Tavern
The two veterans sat with their backs to the eastern wall of Atma's Tavern, their earthenware mugs half-filled with Kingsport Bitter, the only beer in stock. Before them sat the remains of a meal, evidently an unsatisfactory one judging by the amount of food left on their baked clay plates. The larger man, a broad shouldered giant wearing the blue face paint of the Northern Tribe of the Snake, picked up a piece of stewed eel still smothered in onions and capers, pondered it briefly, and then carelessly tossed it through the window to his left. The sound of street cats and stray dogs scrambling for this morsel was brief and chaotic, quickly fading as one animal apparently made off with the prize.
"If I have to eat another meal of eel and onions, Frug, I'll sign on as a caravan guard and personally take Warriv into the cattle country of Ensteig, pick out a herd, and drive it back to this Lightforsaken hole so that the Legion can eat properly." He lifted his mug and swallowed half of its remaining contents, giving the impression that he was trying to wash both the flavor and memory of his dinner from his waking mind.
His companion, a smaller, leaner and darker complexioned man nodded slowly in agreement but did not raise his mug. He was not the sort to complain about his meals, even if he too yearned for just one meal of roast beef haunch cooked on a spit with peppers and sage. He broke away from contemplating the inside of his mug and abruptly nudged the big man in the ribs. A tall, athletic, blonde woman clad in chain mail and leather had just entered the room, pausing in front of the bar as her eyes slowly adjusting to the relative dimness of the tavern's interior.
"Well, OcchiD'Merc, connesieur of fine food and drink," he offered, "it looks like your review of Atma's kitchen is at an end. Sergeant Sarisa's here, no doubt looking for us. I guess it's back to the guardrooom for these two legionaires." He reached to his right to grab his steel helm, then leaned down to pick up the long pike laying at his feet beneath the table. He started to rise as the tall woman, spotted the two men and strode purposefully across the room in their direction.
She motioned him back to his seat with her left hand, shaking her head, then stopped to stand with one foot on the bench across the table from him and the other foot on the ground. Turning her head to the left, she raised two fingers of her left hand to her lips and gave out a piercing whistle.
"Dernek," she barked in a voice used to authority and obedience, "two pitchers and another mug here, but leave your food in the pot. I'm here with thirsty news that won't wait." Across the tavern, the bartender could be seen hurridly complying with the wishes of this imposing warrior woman. She turned back to the two men, nodding as she noted the large man raising his mug to finish off his ale in a long quick swallow. She addressed the smaller man.
"You can remain seated, Frug, the news can wait until Dernek arrives with the pitcher. The Sergeant is buying this round." She sat down, straddling the bench, and then kicked her left leg over it and pivoted to face the two men. Peeling off her chainmail gloves, she flexed her fingers and rolled her shoulders, then leaned forward with both forearms on the table.
"So, Corporals, I see that you are tired of fish and onions. Well, this may be your last meal of such for fare for quite a while." She paused to see if her insinuation sparked any interest, but got nothing from the two men but their attention. And obviously, their curiosity.
"Sergeant, something tells me that I had better bid Adelia goodbye this evening," the big man growled, "you don't usually start bying drinks until right before an operation." His eyes moved to his right slightly. "Here's the beer."
She looked up as Derek scuttled over with a tray bearing two large ewers spilling ale over their edges, and a mug. She grabbed one ewer and the mug while Dernek set the other ewer on the table and hustled off without his usual exchange of banter. It was no secret that this woman made him nervous.
Frug watched as OcchiD'Merc filled his mug, and then the Barbarian's own. Lifting his drink to his lips, he leaned back against the wall again, his helm forgotten, and watched Sergeant Sarisa efficiently fill and then drain a mug. She closed her eyes and made a rumbling noise of obvious satisfaction, then returned her attention to the two soldiers sitting across from her, both of whom had taken a single draught before lowering their mugs and attending to her.
"Greiz has called a muster, men, and we'll be putting our boots on for a trek West. To Westmarch." She paused while she poured another mug full of ale. "There is a reason for the beef shortage here, even though the caravan routes are open." She set the ewer down and raised the mug to her lips. She paused again, then frowned as the question she was hoping to evoke did not come with sufficient speed. Closing her eyes, she took a healthy swallow of beer and returned to mug to the table before announcing:
"The cattle are revolting."
The two men looked at her in complete puzzlement, then at one another, and then back to the Sergeant.
Frug was the first to bite at the proffered bait.
"What was that again, Sergeant? The cattle are . . . revolting?"
Sergeant Sarisa smiled. "Yes indeed, you heard it rightly. After ages of meekly going to the slaughter for our hunger's sake, the cattle of the West have risen up against their herders and ranchers, and are slaughtering them with, of all things, halberds."
OcchiD'Merc's eyes popped open and a mouthful of ale erupted from his lips in a golden spray of brewed mist. He slammed his mug on the table.
"Sergeant, I may be dumb, and I may drink too much, but I cannot believe that you come here and expect me to believe that a bunch of cows are wielding pole arms against their masters. You need to get in out of the sun, Sarge, or at least knock it off with the late night discipline parties." He reached up and wiped the ale from his lips, ignoring the expended liquid on the table's top.
Sarisa's face hardened. The lilt went out of her voice as it lowered a register in a no-nonsense tone.
"Shattershaft and Charis Greizman just returned this morning with the news. They were out surveying an area north of Tristram for a local lord, where our Engineer is supposed to build a small watchtower, when they witnessed the slaughter of most of a town by a herd of cows." She drank down the rest of her second mug.
"They were able to lead a counterattack and drive off the main herd, but not before the village of Greenmeadow was reduced to an outdoor charnel house."
Her voice lowered further.
"The odd part is that the cows were walking on their back legs."
Frug made a quick sign of the Sun over his chest, an old Westmarch ward agaist evil. Sarisa glanced at him with a slight furrowing of her eyebrows, and then continued.
"Shatter tells me that they were led by a huge bull who shot lightning from his horns. They chopped and hacked at any and everything. People, dogs, mules, chickens: anything that moved. Greiz has, just this afternoon, received a lucrative contract from the King of Westmarch to mount a campaign against this self styled Cow King and his thrice bedamned cattle. We march at dawn."
The big man stared at her with disbelief. Setting down his mug, he spoke weary with bitterness in his voice.
"I thought we destroyed all of those demons when we defeated Baal, up north. I thought all of this crazy magic and evil was ended. I thought we would go back to fighting in the usual wars between barons and kings and dukes." He turned to his left and spit forcefully out of the window. A surprised yowl and scampering of padded feet pointed to his missile having hit a feline target somewhere out in the street. "I have done more than enough demon hunting: enough for seven lifetimes."
Sarisa's eyes turned the color of blued steel.
"So, Lance Corporal, do you intend to breach your contract? Do you intend to leave the Legion early?" She reached for a chain glove and began to pull it onto her right hand.
Occhi shook his head, eyeing her golved hand warily.
"No, I will march to the Legion's drums, as I always have, Sergeant." He downed the rest of his beer and quickly refilled his mug from the ewer.
"I had just hoped to have a few more weeks here with Adelia. I have convinced her, finally, to leave Jehryn's harem and move in with me. Somehow, I don't see her finding a flat without me most evenings as secure as the a silk bedecked room within the palace walls."
He gulped down his ale. "So much for the love life of a Legionaire." The cynicism in his voice could have frozen sand.
He slammed his mug back down to the table and stood abruptly, his eyes smoldering in barely supressed emotion. Leaning down, he reached beneath the table and picked up his lance. Gripping it half way down its length, he looked down at Sarisa and Frug.
"You tell Sergeant Pygmy, and Greiz for that matter, that I will make muster: For The Greater Glory Of The Legion." He made a noice in his throat. "And for what it's worth, you can tell them that I intend to roast a few steaks before this campaign is done. I have been eating nothing but fish for the last forty days." He smiled slightly. "That, if nothing else, is about to change." Turning from his companions, he walked briskly from the bar and out into the afternoon sun.
Frug picked up the ewer and slowly refilled his mug. Lifting it to his lips, he smiled sardonically at Sergeant Sarisa, and drank deeply of the Kigsport Bitter. Sarisa refilled her mug.
Frug lowered his mug slightly, and looked deeply into Sarisa's eyes -- then he winked. With a broad grin, he lifted his mug in a toast, which Sarisa copied.
Out of long habit, their voices raised up in the shout heard on battlefields all over Sanctuary as their two mugs slammed together to shatter in a spray of clay and golden ale:
"TO THE GREATER GLORY OF THE LEGION OF GREIZ!!!"
Breaking into the shared laughter at some running inside joke that only old campaigners seem to know, the arose, wiping the ale from their hands and faces, and picked up their equipment. Then, side by side, they walked out into the street, leaving the remaining customers at Atma's Tavern shaking their heads at the loss of sanity that marching through the desert tends to cause.
Accompanying Poetry, From the Desert Rain
Back in the Tavern, a drunken Amazon lifted her face from the puddle of beer on the bar in front of her. That shout for the Legion had roused her from her dazed stupor and close communion with the mahogany of the bar. She stared blearily at Dernek and waved away his move to refill her mug. Standing up shakily, she staggered over to Geglash's table in the center of the room and stepped up onto it, a display of leg strength and balance that earned a gasp of approval from the few patron who noticed her feat.
Geglash lifted his face from his wine glass in an attempt to look up underneath her leathern skirt, only to meet the heel of a hard leather boot that sent him crashing to his back on the floor, out cold. Rendered unconscious, he missed her recitation of The Lament of the Legion.
Facing the remaining drunks in the room, Xan the Legionaire put her arms on her hips, unfocused her eyes, and began a strained chant.
"Foot--slog--foot--slog--sloggin' over Anauroch!
Foot--foot--foot--foot--sloggin' over Arreat!
Boots--boots--boots--boots--movin' up an' down again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Seven--six--eleven--five--nine-an'-twenty mile to-day!
Four--eleven--seventeen--thirty-two the day before!
Boots--boots--boots--boots--movin' up an' down again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Don't--don't--don't--don't--look into the demon's eyes!
Jab--Jab--Jab--Jab--thrust the pike into his gut!
Boots--pikes--boots--pikes--movin' up an' down again
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Try--try--try--try--to think o' something different!
Oh--Sweet--Light--keep--me from goin' lunatic!
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--thrusting' in and out again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
Count--the--imps--and--Lightning bugs and Blood Maggots!
If--your--eyes--drop--Ice Spawn get atop o' you!
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--thrustin' in and out again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
We--can--stick--our--pikes into a Crushing Beast!
But--not--but--not--stand the chronic sight of those,
Boot--pikes--boots--pikes--movin' up an' down again,
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
'Taint--so--bad--by--day because o' company!
Night--brings--dark--dreams--forty thousand thrustings from
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--harvesting the gore again
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
I--'ave--marched--six--weeks in Hell an' certify
It--is--not--fire--devils, imps, or anything
Boots!--boots!--boots!--boots!--movin' up an' down again,
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!"
This poem gets into the grittier side of the Legion of Greiz, and why they spend so much of their "off time" in the seedy bars of Lut Ghloein.
(Note: The most effective meter I have found for reading this poem aloud, is to drag the first four words of each line forcefully from your gut, and then expel the last phrase of each line in one exasperated breath. Picture the speaker as a footsoldier, one of Greiz' mercs, muttering this under his breath as his column marches through the dusty wastes of the Anauroch Desert, or across the Arreat Plateau.)
This poem is a parody of Rudyard Kipling's poem, called of course
BOOTS
Infantry Columns
The two veterans sat with their backs to the eastern wall of Atma's Tavern, their earthenware mugs half-filled with Kingsport Bitter, the only beer in stock. Before them sat the remains of a meal, evidently an unsatisfactory one judging by the amount of food left on their baked clay plates. The larger man, a broad shouldered giant wearing the blue face paint of the Northern Tribe of the Snake, picked up a piece of stewed eel still smothered in onions and capers, pondered it briefly, and then carelessly tossed it through the window to his left. The sound of street cats and stray dogs scrambling for this morsel was brief and chaotic, quickly fading as one animal apparently made off with the prize.
"If I have to eat another meal of eel and onions, Frug, I'll sign on as a caravan guard and personally take Warriv into the cattle country of Ensteig, pick out a herd, and drive it back to this Lightforsaken hole so that the Legion can eat properly." He lifted his mug and swallowed half of its remaining contents, giving the impression that he was trying to wash both the flavor and memory of his dinner from his waking mind.
His companion, a smaller, leaner and darker complexioned man nodded slowly in agreement but did not raise his mug. He was not the sort to complain about his meals, even if he too yearned for just one meal of roast beef haunch cooked on a spit with peppers and sage. He broke away from contemplating the inside of his mug and abruptly nudged the big man in the ribs. A tall, athletic, blonde woman clad in chain mail and leather had just entered the room, pausing in front of the bar as her eyes slowly adjusting to the relative dimness of the tavern's interior.
"Well, OcchiD'Merc, connesieur of fine food and drink," he offered, "it looks like your review of Atma's kitchen is at an end. Sergeant Sarisa's here, no doubt looking for us. I guess it's back to the guardrooom for these two legionaires." He reached to his right to grab his steel helm, then leaned down to pick up the long pike laying at his feet beneath the table. He started to rise as the tall woman, spotted the two men and strode purposefully across the room in their direction.
She motioned him back to his seat with her left hand, shaking her head, then stopped to stand with one foot on the bench across the table from him and the other foot on the ground. Turning her head to the left, she raised two fingers of her left hand to her lips and gave out a piercing whistle.
"Dernek," she barked in a voice used to authority and obedience, "two pitchers and another mug here, but leave your food in the pot. I'm here with thirsty news that won't wait." Across the tavern, the bartender could be seen hurridly complying with the wishes of this imposing warrior woman. She turned back to the two men, nodding as she noted the large man raising his mug to finish off his ale in a long quick swallow. She addressed the smaller man.
"You can remain seated, Frug, the news can wait until Dernek arrives with the pitcher. The Sergeant is buying this round." She sat down, straddling the bench, and then kicked her left leg over it and pivoted to face the two men. Peeling off her chainmail gloves, she flexed her fingers and rolled her shoulders, then leaned forward with both forearms on the table.
"So, Corporals, I see that you are tired of fish and onions. Well, this may be your last meal of such for fare for quite a while." She paused to see if her insinuation sparked any interest, but got nothing from the two men but their attention. And obviously, their curiosity.
"Sergeant, something tells me that I had better bid Adelia goodbye this evening," the big man growled, "you don't usually start bying drinks until right before an operation." His eyes moved to his right slightly. "Here's the beer."
She looked up as Derek scuttled over with a tray bearing two large ewers spilling ale over their edges, and a mug. She grabbed one ewer and the mug while Dernek set the other ewer on the table and hustled off without his usual exchange of banter. It was no secret that this woman made him nervous.
Frug watched as OcchiD'Merc filled his mug, and then the Barbarian's own. Lifting his drink to his lips, he leaned back against the wall again, his helm forgotten, and watched Sergeant Sarisa efficiently fill and then drain a mug. She closed her eyes and made a rumbling noise of obvious satisfaction, then returned her attention to the two soldiers sitting across from her, both of whom had taken a single draught before lowering their mugs and attending to her.
"Greiz has called a muster, men, and we'll be putting our boots on for a trek West. To Westmarch." She paused while she poured another mug full of ale. "There is a reason for the beef shortage here, even though the caravan routes are open." She set the ewer down and raised the mug to her lips. She paused again, then frowned as the question she was hoping to evoke did not come with sufficient speed. Closing her eyes, she took a healthy swallow of beer and returned to mug to the table before announcing:
"The cattle are revolting."
The two men looked at her in complete puzzlement, then at one another, and then back to the Sergeant.
Frug was the first to bite at the proffered bait.
"What was that again, Sergeant? The cattle are . . . revolting?"
Sergeant Sarisa smiled. "Yes indeed, you heard it rightly. After ages of meekly going to the slaughter for our hunger's sake, the cattle of the West have risen up against their herders and ranchers, and are slaughtering them with, of all things, halberds."
OcchiD'Merc's eyes popped open and a mouthful of ale erupted from his lips in a golden spray of brewed mist. He slammed his mug on the table.
"Sergeant, I may be dumb, and I may drink too much, but I cannot believe that you come here and expect me to believe that a bunch of cows are wielding pole arms against their masters. You need to get in out of the sun, Sarge, or at least knock it off with the late night discipline parties." He reached up and wiped the ale from his lips, ignoring the expended liquid on the table's top.
Sarisa's face hardened. The lilt went out of her voice as it lowered a register in a no-nonsense tone.
"Shattershaft and Charis Greizman just returned this morning with the news. They were out surveying an area north of Tristram for a local lord, where our Engineer is supposed to build a small watchtower, when they witnessed the slaughter of most of a town by a herd of cows." She drank down the rest of her second mug.
"They were able to lead a counterattack and drive off the main herd, but not before the village of Greenmeadow was reduced to an outdoor charnel house."
Her voice lowered further.
"The odd part is that the cows were walking on their back legs."
Frug made a quick sign of the Sun over his chest, an old Westmarch ward agaist evil. Sarisa glanced at him with a slight furrowing of her eyebrows, and then continued.
"Shatter tells me that they were led by a huge bull who shot lightning from his horns. They chopped and hacked at any and everything. People, dogs, mules, chickens: anything that moved. Greiz has, just this afternoon, received a lucrative contract from the King of Westmarch to mount a campaign against this self styled Cow King and his thrice bedamned cattle. We march at dawn."
The big man stared at her with disbelief. Setting down his mug, he spoke weary with bitterness in his voice.
"I thought we destroyed all of those demons when we defeated Baal, up north. I thought all of this crazy magic and evil was ended. I thought we would go back to fighting in the usual wars between barons and kings and dukes." He turned to his left and spit forcefully out of the window. A surprised yowl and scampering of padded feet pointed to his missile having hit a feline target somewhere out in the street. "I have done more than enough demon hunting: enough for seven lifetimes."
Sarisa's eyes turned the color of blued steel.
"So, Lance Corporal, do you intend to breach your contract? Do you intend to leave the Legion early?" She reached for a chain glove and began to pull it onto her right hand.
Occhi shook his head, eyeing her golved hand warily.
"No, I will march to the Legion's drums, as I always have, Sergeant." He downed the rest of his beer and quickly refilled his mug from the ewer.
"I had just hoped to have a few more weeks here with Adelia. I have convinced her, finally, to leave Jehryn's harem and move in with me. Somehow, I don't see her finding a flat without me most evenings as secure as the a silk bedecked room within the palace walls."
He gulped down his ale. "So much for the love life of a Legionaire." The cynicism in his voice could have frozen sand.
He slammed his mug back down to the table and stood abruptly, his eyes smoldering in barely supressed emotion. Leaning down, he reached beneath the table and picked up his lance. Gripping it half way down its length, he looked down at Sarisa and Frug.
"You tell Sergeant Pygmy, and Greiz for that matter, that I will make muster: For The Greater Glory Of The Legion." He made a noice in his throat. "And for what it's worth, you can tell them that I intend to roast a few steaks before this campaign is done. I have been eating nothing but fish for the last forty days." He smiled slightly. "That, if nothing else, is about to change." Turning from his companions, he walked briskly from the bar and out into the afternoon sun.
Frug picked up the ewer and slowly refilled his mug. Lifting it to his lips, he smiled sardonically at Sergeant Sarisa, and drank deeply of the Kigsport Bitter. Sarisa refilled her mug.
Frug lowered his mug slightly, and looked deeply into Sarisa's eyes -- then he winked. With a broad grin, he lifted his mug in a toast, which Sarisa copied.
Out of long habit, their voices raised up in the shout heard on battlefields all over Sanctuary as their two mugs slammed together to shatter in a spray of clay and golden ale:
"TO THE GREATER GLORY OF THE LEGION OF GREIZ!!!"
Breaking into the shared laughter at some running inside joke that only old campaigners seem to know, the arose, wiping the ale from their hands and faces, and picked up their equipment. Then, side by side, they walked out into the street, leaving the remaining customers at Atma's Tavern shaking their heads at the loss of sanity that marching through the desert tends to cause.
Accompanying Poetry, From the Desert Rain
Back in the Tavern, a drunken Amazon lifted her face from the puddle of beer on the bar in front of her. That shout for the Legion had roused her from her dazed stupor and close communion with the mahogany of the bar. She stared blearily at Dernek and waved away his move to refill her mug. Standing up shakily, she staggered over to Geglash's table in the center of the room and stepped up onto it, a display of leg strength and balance that earned a gasp of approval from the few patron who noticed her feat.
Geglash lifted his face from his wine glass in an attempt to look up underneath her leathern skirt, only to meet the heel of a hard leather boot that sent him crashing to his back on the floor, out cold. Rendered unconscious, he missed her recitation of The Lament of the Legion.
Facing the remaining drunks in the room, Xan the Legionaire put her arms on her hips, unfocused her eyes, and began a strained chant.
"Foot--slog--foot--slog--sloggin' over Anauroch!
Foot--foot--foot--foot--sloggin' over Arreat!
Boots--boots--boots--boots--movin' up an' down again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Seven--six--eleven--five--nine-an'-twenty mile to-day!
Four--eleven--seventeen--thirty-two the day before!
Boots--boots--boots--boots--movin' up an' down again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Don't--don't--don't--don't--look into the demon's eyes!
Jab--Jab--Jab--Jab--thrust the pike into his gut!
Boots--pikes--boots--pikes--movin' up an' down again
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
Try--try--try--try--to think o' something different!
Oh--Sweet--Light--keep--me from goin' lunatic!
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--thrusting' in and out again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
Count--the--imps--and--Lightning bugs and Blood Maggots!
If--your--eyes--drop--Ice Spawn get atop o' you!
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--thrustin' in and out again!
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
We--can--stick--our--pikes into a Crushing Beast!
But--not--but--not--stand the chronic sight of those,
Boot--pikes--boots--pikes--movin' up an' down again,
There's no discharge from Greiz' War
'Taint--so--bad--by--day because o' company!
Night--brings--dark--dreams--forty thousand thrustings from
Pikes--pikes--pikes--pikes--harvesting the gore again
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!
I--'ave--marched--six--weeks in Hell an' certify
It--is--not--fire--devils, imps, or anything
Boots!--boots!--boots!--boots!--movin' up an' down again,
There's no discharge from Greiz' War!"
This poem gets into the grittier side of the Legion of Greiz, and why they spend so much of their "off time" in the seedy bars of Lut Ghloein.
(Note: The most effective meter I have found for reading this poem aloud, is to drag the first four words of each line forcefully from your gut, and then expel the last phrase of each line in one exasperated breath. Picture the speaker as a footsoldier, one of Greiz' mercs, muttering this under his breath as his column marches through the dusty wastes of the Anauroch Desert, or across the Arreat Plateau.)
This poem is a parody of Rudyard Kipling's poem, called of course
BOOTS
Infantry Columns
Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the Men 'O War!
In War, the outcome is never final. --Carl von Clausewitz--
Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum
John 11:35 - consider why.
In Memory of Pete
In War, the outcome is never final. --Carl von Clausewitz--
Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum
John 11:35 - consider why.
In Memory of Pete