Chapter 39: New Horizons
*****
The Picard capital city of Daban looked eerily quiet.
At least, that was the consensus of the various commanders closest to the city, many of them sending their reports directly to Jack aboard his flagship
Destiny
.
"It's almost too quiet," reported one destroyer commander. "I don't see a single sign of occupation anywhere. If the Swabians are still here, they're disguised well enough or perhaps they've pulled back from the city in preparation for a trap."
Jack had to agree with their consensus. There was nothing ominous about the city. In fact, it appeared to be nothing short of a beautiful early spring day in Picardy. The temperature wasn't as cold as it had been in prior weeks and there were only big, white clouds in the sky.
Spring had finally sprung in the West, and with it came the reminder that Jack had now spent two years on this mission that initially brought him to the other side of the world. In those two years, everything had changed. Not only his allegiances and his preconceived notions but also the very core of his identity had changed.
When he initially entered the West two years ago, he was simply Commander Jack Easterbrook, a loyal officer of the Javan Empire.
Now, he was King Jack Kincardine of Galicia, leading a multi-nation alliance against the most dangerous threat in this hemisphere. He'd certainly been met with some success in that endeavor. Apulia, Galicia, and Naxos were now free from hostile rulers.
Picardy would be next, and this battleground island that had caused so much bloodshed in the last year and a half would finally be free.
That is, as long as Jack could figure out what the Swabian Army under General Ferberg was up to. If they weren't in Daban, had they pulled back to the interior? Were they in Zarah, taking advantage of shorter supply lines back to Swabia?
Part of him questioned whether they were even here in Picardy at all.
Jack's radio crackled and he instantly recognized the voice.
"Go ahead, Aedan," said Jack.
The Picard King didn't mince words when he began to speak. "Jack, I'm hearing reports the city is without any resistance. I'm requesting that you allow my Picards to be part of the very first wave to enter the city. I want Daban to be liberated by her own people."
It was an easy request for Jack to honor. After all, he'd already anticipated that Aedan would make the petition once the time was right.
"Go ahead, Aedan, and good luck," said Jack. "Go take back your city."
Although he couldn't see the Picard King, who was floating on his own warship some distance away, Jack suspected that Aedan was wearing a beaming grin at this moment.
Jack turned to look at Abigail who was seated next to him. "Bring the
Destiny
in closer to the shore. I want our guns ready in case the Swabians are waiting for us. Give orders to the rest of your task force to do the same."
Abigail grinned at him. "You got it, husband."
Rather than meet her smile, Jack looked back out to sea. He was acutely aware of the empty seat on the other side of him, the traditional seat that Kat used when aboard the
Destiny
.
That wasn't by coincidence. At this very moment, Kat was aboard the
Visby
, which was on the other side of Daban harbor. Her official stated reason for not being aboard the
Destiny
was that it was too risky to have all of Galicia's leadership on the same ship but Jack knew that to be bullshit.
The simple fact of the matter was that for the first time since they'd been together, Abigail and Kat were having a massive argument.
Or rather, they
thought
they were having a massive argument. It had all started simply enough, at least by Jack's reckoning. What should have been a simple apology and an overstatement snowballed into something that was capable of ripping the two women apart. The unfortunate matter of all of it was that Jack was caught in the middle.
It all started the day they left Naxos which just so happened to coincide with the date that Jack's son John turned six months old. There were some melancholy feelings going around, as John was back in Galicia, safe and sound with his grandmother while his parents attended to the war.
The spark that started the argument started simply enough.
"I just miss my baby," said Kat as she paced around their shared quarters on the
Destiny
. "I want to be able to hold him on a day like today, and I can't. It just makes me so upset."
Abigail tried to comfort her with an embrace. "Everything will be just fine. He's in perfectly capable hands right now. I know it's hard but it'll be all right."
Kat shook her head. "You just don't understand what it's like. He came from me. I hate being separated from my baby, no matter if he is in good hands."
That small statement was enough to spark the flame.
Abigail pulled back slightly. "What do you mean I don't understand? I'm just as much as a mother to him as you are. At least, that's what you've always said. What did you mean by that, Kat?"
Unfortunately, Kat didn't make it any better with her next statement.
"Yeah, but you didn't actually
birth
him, which is what I meant," said the blonde Galician queen. "I think that bond is a little stronger is what I'm saying."
It was an entirely stupid thing for her to say but once it was out there, things escalated quickly. What had started as some tense back-and-forth soon escalated to raised voices and quickly to yelling.
Kat wasn't entirely to blame for her statements. Jack thought she could have been more sensitive to the matter but Abigail had her share of blame as well.
"Just because you're the one that actually had Jack's child, you think you're better than me, don't you!" she yelled back at Kat.
Finally, Jack had to separate them. He'd been bewildered to watch the event unfold, never knowing anything but friendship between his two wives. To see them get so vicious with each other defied everything he thought he knew.
In retrospect, it was naive of him to think that it might just blow over by the next day. A few flippant comments by each party was enough to bring the water to boiling once more, and then something extraordinarily happened.
They simply stopped speaking to each other.
It had been three days since they last spoke, and Jack was unsure of what to do now more than ever. Trying to talk with either woman about the other was an exercise in futility. Passions were just running too high to even contemplate a reconciliation.
"I'm not going to apologize," said Kat behind crossed arms. "She said some really hateful things and she took my comments out of context."
"If she thinks I'm just going to forget everything she said, she has another thing coming," said Abigail with a raised chin. "She thinks she's better than me just because she has John. I'm not going to stand for it."
Despite his many pleas to reason, they were just going to be upset with each other for the time being. It was an added level of stress on Jack's shoulders that he didn't need right now. All the tension of running the war was downright exhausting, but simply knowing that he couldn't come back to his two wives to find happiness made things downright miserable.
Finally, Jack accepted that they would have to work things out on their own, but he still hated to be apart from one of them at all times. At a time like this, he could have used the extra support.
Jack's radio crackled again, bringing him back to the present. Aedan was now giving the order to the Picard troops in the first wave to load into the launch boats. Jack watched the action from afar using his binoculars, seeing the Picard troops climb down from their ships and begin the short jaunt to the shore.
Meanwhile, the city of Daban was still quiet. There were no sounds of artillery or gunfire. No one waited to contest the arrival of the Picards. Jack had to wonder if the Swabians had truly surrendered the city without a fight.