《The Queen's Guard》Chapter 21: Night Watch
Advertisement
Kaczmarek was completely right, I had to admit, and the Ostwald here was very little different to the forests before Kurnich where we had occasionally had to leave the road -- first to avoid the wyvern, then to reach the hunters’ cabin. The biggest difference to this journey, of course, was the fact that we were making it in darkness apart from the light of the single lantern. Once we were fifty metres into the woods, the jäger had opened up the rest of the shutters to allow it to light more than one direction, but it was still only a little light and the footing would be treacherous by day.
I found myself envying the horses their iron-shod hooves, which splashed through the water and bit through the mud to strike true onto earth beneath, or bit into the twisting roots that interrupted the path at intervals. My own boots were not hobnailed, only deeply scored, and they slid in the mud or glided off tree roots far too easily for my liking. More than once I stumbled and only barely caught myself before planting face-first in the water, and His Highness ahead of me was faring little better. He pressed on admirably, though, still uncomplaining.
My head was still on a swivel, looking from side to side into the forest searching for any hint of movement. It was something of a fool’s errand and I knew it -- my eyes were night-blinded by the lantern light -- but the woods made me uneasy. I wished we could have done this by day.
Ahead, Kaczmarek seemed to have no such concerns, her posture relaxed. If one hand wasn’t occupied with the reins of her horse and the other with the lantern, I guessed they would be swinging loosely at her sides. She knew the woods well, I supposed, and I reminded myself that this close to Kurnich the forests barely counted as wild. Of course that didn’t mean they were entirely safe or that children could play in them or anything, but the chances that a pack of greatwolves or the like was prowling about was almost nil.
I finally breathed a sigh of relief when the path ahead widened out and then abruptly stopped where the road cut across it. The road itself was only just broad enough to take a wagon, with enough room cleared for two to pass each other if the drivers left the road carefully, and relatively level and paved. The main thing about the road in my eyes, though, was that it was well-travelled and straight enough one could see ahead for some distance.
Or, well, one would be able to see ahead for some distance by day and in more clement weather. Or if you had an immensely powerful light, I thought whimsically for a moment. The idea of walking around with a beam of light as intense as the sun amused me briefly.
Though the trees were for the most part cut back over the road, we had decided not to mount up tonight. The lantern light wasn’t enough to see everything by, and it was all too possible that a narrow branch or a reaching twig could catch a rider in the eye, or simply strike them on the head if it were heavy enough. The road was, however, wide enough that we could walk three abreast instead of in single file, and I took the opportunity to check on the prince.
Advertisement
“Everything alright, your Highness?”
“Quite fine, gefreiter,” he assured me. “Although, what was that song the jäger used earlier? Why did the Torreans let us pass? Some kind of code?”
Kaczmarek and I stifled laughter, I more successfully than her.
“No, your Highness,” I said, “It’s a Szekeryan dirge. Suppose you’re a common soldier on patrol, sir. It’s dark and stormy, you’re cold and wet and can’t see more than ten metres. Then you hear a woman singing and three riders come out of the dark, sir, and completely ignore you. They thought we were spirits, your Highness, or ghosts or devils.”
The prince was silent for a moment, then laughed quietly. “Well, if it works, it works. Excellent job, Jäger Kaczmarek.”
“Thanks, your Highness,” the jäger in question said, still a little breathless from choking down laughter. “I hope to never do it again.”
“I can’t fault you there,” he said drily. “I too hope when I’m dead I’ll rest easy in my grave. An afterlife of scaring Torreans in the rain sounds dismal.”
That set us both off in a round of undignified -- well -- giggles, again. The weight of the darkness seemed a bit less for a while, though the rain continued to come down in shifting sheets around us and drip from the reaching trees above.
***
We had been riding for what felt like an hour -- time was difficult to gauge, with the moon behind the clouds -- when Kaczmarek called a halt, gesturing to a narrow trail I would have taken for an animal path.
“There’s an old set of boulders through here where we can crash for the rest of the night,” she said. “It’s not exactly a bed and hot meal, but it’s safer than sleeping on the road, and the rocks keep most of the wind out so we can make a lean-to.”
“Will we get the horses down the path?” I asked, eyeing the encroaching branches.
“Should be fine. Shouldn’t be thick new growth yet, and giant deer use this trail sometimes. Not as big as a horse, but pretty big.” She gestured vaguely, indicating a height somewhere around my shoulder level, and shrugged. “Worst case I think they can shove through it.”
“Let’s just try it, Schreiner,” His Highness chipped in, to my surprise. It was uncommon for him to voice an opinion on these things, although I supposed the last few days had been a bit odd. Either the choice had been obvious or there’d been none at all. “If need be we can come back about. I should dearly love to stop for the night.”
“As you say, your Highness. I think we’d all love to,” I said. And with the jäger as well we’d be able to take shifts and sleep properly, too, although perhaps not for as long as either of us would like. Still, two of us somewhat tired was certainly better than just me, completely exhausted.
Kaczmarek led the way down the path, which narrowed quickly and soon I was walking in front of Munter, pushing withy branches away as they flicked back off His Highness’s mount ahead of me. It was not far before the path broadened again, opening up into a small clearing with a collection of moss-covered boulders. The largest stood well above my height, looming in the darkness. The jäger walked around the side of the rocks, where their arrangement left a vaguely square nook perhaps two metres deep and two metres wide, open to the sky but with some space where one might huddle under the overhang to keep out of the rain -- if the rain weren’t running down the rock through the moss, dripping all the way, that is.
Advertisement
The light of the lantern flashed off a few well worn staves set at the back of the nook and Kaczmarek made a pleased noise. “I was hoping there’d be some poles left. We can out up a lean-to, then.”
I tethered the horses and freed the bundles we’d need for the night, setting them on a groundsheet, while the jäger went about setting the poles up. Some of the rocks, I realised, were not there wholly naturally but had been arranged into rough cairns by past travellers. Those cairns were large enough to support the staves, with a little careful moving and stacking, and in blessedly little time we had a canvas sheet stretched overhead with the rain gently drumming on it. Kaczmarek laid out two bedrolls and affected a courtly manner, bowing and gesturing.
“Your retire for the evening, your Highness,” she said in a nasal voice. I winced. That didn’t even make sense.
The prince just shook his head. “Thank you, jäger.” He ducked under the lean-to and shed his cloak, shaking some of the water off it, then paused. “What shall I do with this?”
“Just fold outsides to outsides and set it by on the groundsheet,” I suggested. “It won’t dry in this weather no matter what you do, sir. May as well just try to keep the insides dry for now.”
He nodded and fumblingly folded together, dropping it in a barely-tidied heap. “Will there be anything else tonight?” He asked.
“No, your Highness. Get some sleep,” I encouraged him. “More long days ahead, sir.”
He mumbled something in response and collapsed on one of the groundsheets.
Kaczmarek crouched beside me. “Can I have first watch? I’m a night owl anyway, and I’m still too jumpy to sleep.”
“I don’t mind.” I shrugged. I was worn down enough from holding my footing in the woods, and staring about non-stop as well, to be sure I’d sleep immediately I hit the sack. I was a little surprised she wasn’t as well. “Will you be able to tell when your watch ends?”
“No problem,” she assured me. “You just get your sleep, gefreiter. I’ll dim the lantern, but keep it burning in case we need it.”
“As you say, jäger. Then, good night.” I unbuckled my belts and cast off my sodden coat, but didn’t strip any further. I was still not wholly comfortable, animals and men and things halfway between lurking in every shadow in my mind. It was with the grip of my scimitar in hand that I stared up at the roof of the lean-to, listening to the rain until sleep closed my eyes.
What seemed like an instant later, I woke with a start to something shaking me, blade halfway free of the scabbard before I realised it was Kaczmarek.
“Bleeding Heavens, man, you always sleep like that?” She hissed at me, recoiling.
“Only in an undefended camp in the middle of nowhere, closer to the enemy than my own.” I hissed back, sliding the blade back home and rolling over to crawl far enough out of the lean-to to stand. “Nothing while I slept?” I asked in a more normal low voice. She shook her head.
“Nope, not a peep. Told you.”
The initial surge of adrenaline from being woken had worn off leaving me a bit muzzy, so I just nodded. “Alright. Get some sleep.”
I picked up my coat and shuddered. It was, of course, still heavy with water. I set it aside again and opted to wrap myself in the cloak I’d unpacked last night instead. It wasn’t much for immediate warmth, but it kept the wind out and it’d keep my body heat in given time. If the air had been chilly when we set out, now it was bitingly cold. Not enough to frost, I hoped for the sake of the crops, but enough sitting about in just damp shirtsleeves would have you blue and frozen. We would have to make better shelter tomorrow -- today, rather -- with a proper fire to warm and dry by, or I feared the cold would overcome us. The melting of the snows didn’t banish winter’s icy claws. It only took the edge off them, so they took longer to cut to the bone.
After half an hour on watch, I was beginning to agree with Kaczmarek’s dismissal of the danger. The only interruption to the quiet dripping of the forest was the occasional croaking of a frog or singing of a cricket that had found shelter from the rain. No branches stirred, no puddles splashed, no twigs cracked.
I took to whittling away at a stick with my knife as I waited, looking up to gaze around the clearing between every couple of strokes, just in case. The night slowly wore down with the carving, until eventually the hint of a grey dawn began showing through the trees and I rose, rolling my shoulders with a fusillade of pops that had me wincing. Time for a cold breakfast of dry bread, cheese, and plain water, and another day of long riding. I sighed, and woke the others.
Advertisement
- In Serial18 Chapters
Gaming The System
Jack desperately wants someone to believe him. He is seeing blue boxes that seem to know everything about him. He reveals himself to his family and neighbors, only to learn that some things are better kept quiet. At least he isn't alone. His childhood best friend seems to have powers too. How far down does this rabbit hole go? This is my first attempt at writing. Expect the genre to wander. Currently on Hiatius.
8 120 - In Serial59 Chapters
Reincarnation Of A Humble God
Finished as the #3 Story in ScribbleHub's Adventum Contest! A woman dies in a rather embarrassing way, and is reborn into a shapeless void, as a god. Now, after accidentally renaming herself "Snooze", she has become a Level One God, and must learn everything she can about how to control her new abilities--including Creation Management! A silly stitch of fate, Snooze begins to grow more powerful as she combines elements, creates a world, and has to combat the flighty whims of her rosy-glowing archangel named Meat. This is a work of comedy (or an attempt at it, in any case.) Illustration for the cover is by the wonderful and talented dathie / @dathieart (on Instagram) ----- This is LitRPG-Lite. There are gaming elements, and abilities that can be leveled up, but the system isn't sophisticated.
8 207 - In Serial31 Chapters
Flowers on a Broken Path
The paths to the heavens have been broken and only weeds grow in the garden of life. A time of change has swept the lands of Eltraya as a portal into the newly discovered continent of Samar had brought their two peoples into contact 10 years ago. Different lifestyles and magics are showing men and women in both continents a new way of living. While the nations on both continents scramble to understand the natives on the other side of this recently created "Gate to Prosperity", their greatest minds are realizing that this portal that exists may not be the only one. In the Kingdom of Eich a group of children are slowly coming into their power. If events had been different they may have lived their lives in obscurity, but the smallest of events led to their rise to fame. Call them as you wish, Heroes, Devils or Gods, it's only a matter of perspective. To them, it's the story of their life. But above all it's the story of the boy who was named after a flower.
8 132 - In Serial13 Chapters
Laws of Defiance
SynopsisThe story revolves around multiple characters in an intricate web of complex stories and adventures. However the most pivotal character in the novel is Ornias, the so called """"living divine artifact,"""" and his role in the ever changing world of Yeshir. Ornias is in fact the embodiment of a divine artifact that came from the heavens and enshrouded him at birth. Regular Divine artifacts have never been known to meld with a person before, and are instead used to increase an individuals Cultivation methods. Ornias so far is the only known exception. After much deliberation and suffering during his younger years he eventually will find his role in the full scheme of things. Come read and find out the fate of Ornias as well as many other pivotal characters. ****Mature Warning***** Contains material that emphasizes rape occurred but does not describe the act in progress. If you are easily offended by such things please tread carefully. I made sure it only lightly touched the subject.*May contain graphic descriptions of death and gore.*May contain sensual material not appropriate for younger audiences.****Mature Warning****#As a side note I want to thank many fellow members of the community for continuous welcoming constructive criticism. If not for members of the community my writing capabilities as an author would be rather lacking. I'm am still improving my writing and I will constantly be going back and changing previous chapters to provide better readability, personality, and intrigue.
8 103 - In Serial16 Chapters
Advent Noion
Advent Noion:an original adventure/slice of life/comedy set in an underground fantasy world.the sections are short with quick and chaotic progression, so don't expect too much! hope you enjoy it and thanks for reading.
8 231 - In Serial11 Chapters
48 Hours
Currently on HIATUS. Can you imagine living the same 48 hours over and over again? Martin has. In fact, he has relived the same 48 hours twenty three times and counting. How? He doesn't know. He wants to find out. He's a coward though. It'll be hard. But eventually? He'll get there. Updates irregularly. Usually once a week, sometimes more, sometimes less.
8 118

