Welcome back gentle reader
Only one chapter to go after this one! Originally I had intended to tell this story from multiple viewpoints, perhaps concentrating on a single individual character's point of view each chapter. I may still try that out in a different book or series where there are less moving parts, but for this effort I decided to stay focused on what Jebidiah was up to. As complex as the storyline is, the different viewpoints can get massively confusing. Just look at Jordan's Wheel of Time series after book 8. His series will always be one of the top 3, but man he had a lot going on and a group of us on Dragonmount tried to chart it all out. I added Kelek's perspective into the mix just because her thought processes and reasoning are not something I could portray through Jebidiah's guessing, plus her antics will only increase as we go along through the overall story arc. Kelek is based on one of my daughter's characters and the fun we had with her was something I just had to memorialize. Another of my daughters started with an Orc Bard, but well, let's just say that one got out of hand quickly. I may reprise her character at some point. Back to my point, there are more of these changes in perspective in the remaining chapters, I hope it does not detract or distract.
Once again the standard disclaimer, multiply ages by roughly two to get equivalent Earth ages. Everyone is a consenting adult.
-- Somewhen, Somewhere --
Comlain watched the activity on the material plane with growing concern, approaching panic. Someone had put a piece into play he had not foreseen and the shadow the large figure cast upon the land below it filled him with a sense of dread he had not felt in a long time. How had he misjudged this so completely? It would not be long before the shape reached its destination.
-- Chapter 14: Soldier's Rest --
-- Third Tenday of Yantaen 813 AGR --
Fate does not seek our consent.
- Goodkind
"There sure are a lot of them." Jebidiah thought to himself. He stood on the southern ramparts of the city wall, looking at the enemy arrayed before the city, just out of bow and spell range. He was, however, well within both ballista and catapult range and was reminded of it every few minutes. The defenders of the wall were resting, mostly sitting with their backs to the merlons lining the parapet, waiting for action if and when an attempt to storm the walls would happen. The nearest archers sitting near him, from where Jebidiah watched the activity beyond the walls, were his own soldiers; he recognized most of the faces around him.
There was much debate, most of it heated, about how the Faltha forces managed to set up a siege along with heavy ranged weapons and siege towers without notice. Magic was the obvious answer, but it did nothing to explain what magic it was. Jebidiah had not really cared, what was important to him was what they were planning on doing about the siege. The planned response did not sit well with him. "I don't like this, Hiro."
"Which part, Jebidiah? There are too many things I don't like, you need to pick one."
Jebidiah snorted but didn't answer right away, watching intently as a ballista crew frantically cranked away on the winch mechanism. Dana stood by his side, examining the field with equal interest. Stern, Olga, and Yantzee we arrayed a little further along the wall, Stern and Olga conversing with each other in too low a voice to be overheard.
"We could always do what we did last time, attack them at night with just the ten of us." Stern said, pulling himself out of his private conversation.
"That was fun." Olga said with a grin.
"It was something," Jebidiah had to admit. He began to take a pull from his wineskin.
"There's a bit more than a company out there, Stern." Yantzee said with his own grin.
"Target rich environment."
Dana let out a loud guffaw before catching herself and cutting it off while Jebidiah sprayed the wine in his mouth out over the wall and sputtered. "I was drinking, damnit. Fuck that was painful."
The laughter around him did not help his dignity. "What do you know of sieges, Hiro?"
"I now have several hours of experience, what would you like to know?"
Jebidiah rolled his eyes. "Is it going to be one of those afternoons?"
"The prospect of death at the hands of several thousand enemies chunking large rocks and giant pointy sticks at you tends to sharpen the mind and wit, it puts things in perspective."
"Don't get all philosophical on me now, Yantzee. Seriously, if you were them, what would you be doing right about now, or in the next couple hours? Continue chunking large rocks and giant pointy sticks?"
"Honestly, no. I would have charged the walls first, expecting to be repelled, but they completely gave up surprise to lay into a siege. I don't have an answer for that one. Tactically it was a blunder, and their current arrangement and lack of activity calls into question their strategy but I don't have all the information and I'm not in charge."
"It was damned stupid," Dana added. "They had surprise on their side. Should have moved on the walls in the darkness instead of standing out there and going 'BOO!' at daybreak."
"How many are there by your guess?" Jebidiah was having difficulty estimating the enemy numbers.
"Looks close to 5,000. A full army, five divisions by my guess."