General Keinarsh was commanding on the Central front. I knew very little about her career, and had no way to judge if she could hold her own against superior Crolian numbers.
I'd had 14 regiments, to face 20 Crolian regiments. If she was facing the same kind of odds ... my first priority had to be to help her. Moving forward, in the north, and occupying territory, wouldn't do us much good.
And a Crolian victory against Keinarsh could cancel out everything we'd done at Kesmansha.
- "You'll command here." I told Langoret.
She simply nodded.
- "Your regiment stays. But I'll take Yna."
- "I understand." Yna was too aggressive to waste in a defensive or positional role.
- "You'll have Tudino. But I'll take Neslann." Both regiments had suffered casualties, but I liked Neslann, and wanted her with me. I also couldn't leave Langoret with only the weakest regiments.
I left her General Leydz, and all four of the Penchen regiments. Senau could stay, as liaison officer. Much as I liked their fighting qualities, they couldn't keep up with Westrons on the march.
Langoret would have 6 regiments, and more guns than she knew what to do with. There was no way to tell exactly how many Crolians had died at Kesmansha - perhaps 4 or 5 thousand. We'd also taken over 3000 prisoners.
There was also no way to know how many men they were able to collect and re-form. But one thing was for sure: they didn't have many guns left. We had captured most of their cannon.
- "One hundred and three." said Tallia.
The Crolians weren't mad enough to attack Langoret when she had that many guns. They probably didn't have the confidence, anyway, after Kesmansha.
I would march south, then, with Yna and Neslann, Votuda and Cyrte, Avette and Semmana, plus Faregil and Frad. Isa would go with me, of course.
- "You'll stay with Langoret." I told Tallia.
- "But you need me." she protested.
- "Langoret needs you more." I said. "She has all those captured guns to deal with ... and prisoners."
- "You don't want me with you."
There was no arguing with Tallia when she took that tone. We were inside my command tent, and I'd already sent my bodyguard outside, so that we could have a private conversation.
Rather than argue with her, I simply picked Tallia up, and carried her to my camp bed.
- "Oh, no. No - nono." she said. But she didn't fight me very hard as I stripped off her breeches. Nor did she resist when I kissed her inner thighs, and worked my way to her core.
"Ohh ... really? she said.
***
Isa had been reminding me, at least once a week, that I needed to spend some time with Tallia.
- "You were right." I told her.
- "She's going to miss you." said Isa.
***
'It is not I who commands the army, but forage and flour
.' Frederick the Great said that. For some reason, it had always stuck in my head.
But now we had to try moving an army - a small army, without a supply train. Every soldier would carry ammunition, water, and food for 6 days. We would also have our 3-pounder guns, so many of the troops would have to carry round shot.
- "We'll run out of food - won't we?" asked Faregil.
I hoped that we could move fast enough, and get to our destination before we ate all of our food. I didn't want to pillage my way across Crolian territory, 'living off the land'. Mercenary armies in the 30 Years' War had left complete destruction in their wake, and turned most of Germany into a desolate wasteland.
Napoleon's troops had stolen and requisitioned food wherever they marched, earning them the hatred of the people they robbed. In Spain, that strategy backfired - badly.
I didn't want to establish some kind of precedent in the here and now, but the Crolians hadn't been gentle when they crossed into Westron territory. 'Liberating' a few herds of Crolian oxen might not be the end of the world.
- "What are we going to do without artillery?" asked Avette.
- "Remember Limset?" I said. "But we may not have to fight at all. If we appear on their flank, the Crolians won't feel very comfortable about attacking our Central army."
We moved. I had Talley's maps, based on the best information the Woles could provide. The land we passed over was undefended; no enemy forces contested our passage.
But we didn't find the herds I'd been hoping for. The Crolian army, it turned out, had already requisitioned most of the animals in this province to stock their supply depots. The local farmers weren't expecting us, of course, and we arrived at speed, so that we did find some of the livestock they'd hidden from their own troops.
Our troops wanted meat, but they had to take what they could find: sometimes onions, sometimes a root-vegetable like a turnip.
- "Just because it's edible doesn't mean we should eat it." complained Neslann.
Fortunately, we were eating up the leagues as we marched. All of our training was paying off. The troops complained about the food, about the cannonballs they had to carry, and the surliness of the local population. But they didn't complain about the pace I was setting, or the distance we covered.
Maybe they were too tired.
There was one obstacle looming, ahead of us, which had me worried. The Vonau river was too broad and deep to ford, or even swim.
Three bridges spanned the river.
They were all held against us.
We had perhaps three days' food remaining, most of it unappetizing for Westrons. Talley's maps had very little information about the lands to the east. But if we went west, that would eventually put us behind our own Central army.
Better than nothing, perhaps - but it wasn't what I'd hoped to achieve.
I gave the troops a day's rest, while I cudgeled my brains to find a better option. Isa listened as I suggested a few crazy plans. I sent patrols to look for possible fording sites.
In the end, it was Colonel Neslann who came up with a stroke of genius. What follows is Yna's description of what happened.
We were opposite the bridge at Smund ( the westernmost of the three bridges). Neslann spoke to the Captain of her rifles, then to her 2nd Company commander. She got out her writing materials, and wrote a short letter. She sealed the letter, and then, almost immediately, broke the seal.
- "What are you doing?" I asked.
Neslann crumpled the letter a little, then dropped both letter and envelope into the dust.
- "Has to look like it's travelled a bit." she said. She collected her now soiled paper, and stuffed it back into the dirty envelope.
Then she turned to me. "Let's go." she said.