"WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH!"Charon wrote:Admiral Ross was happy to be rid of the troops that had been stored in his holds. That many days at sea had begun to get them too eager for land again, not to mention the rivalries that hade begun to act up in such closed quarters. Out in the open and on dry land again however, tempers had died down. But now they were Caustus' problem. He had the enemy navy to worry about now though. They'd gone into hiding for now, maybe permanently, but part of the reason they were down here was to stop the pirate raids, it wouldn't do if they didn't manage to do that.
Admiral Ross looked out over his flagship, The Wyrm. The sailors were beginning to replace the ballistae that had been taken off to make room for the troops, so they would be at least partly capable of being useful in the coming fight.
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Markus Caustus sat in his tent as the rest of the men set up for the night. Tomorrow they would move North, towards the Orc city. It was under 30 kilometers. If the men rushed they could make it in a day, then the seige could begin. With any luck, they would be able to take the city, and from there things would only get more difficult. Scouts were out in the woods now, watching for signs of the Orcs. The army would have plenty of time to form up. Taking a deep breath, Caustus returned to the maps, looking for best routes and defendable positions.
13,500 men and 500 horses were setting up in the growing field of tents, men chattered among each other of the feats they would accomplish in battle and the glory they would bring back to their home. Priests walked among the men, praying in Pendran for the men, some of whom bowed and took part in the moving ceremony. Seperated from the rest of the army were two groups of rune-carved men. Who were themselves seperate from each other. The first group which was much larger were sharpening their blades, and praying to Dahhok. These were Dahhok's Chosen, the religious berserkers who had been carved with the runes of the Leroani. Unlike the others, these 2,000 men were silent in their religious musings adn preparations for death. The third camp was very small, only 100 men. But these were perhaps the most frightening, the Leroani were here to defend the army and break the walls once the seige began.
The war cry echoed in the scout team's ears as upwards of a dozen orcs vaulted a fallen log and charged towards them, axes held high in the air. Orcs, it seems, weren't hard to watch for signs of.