Letho
07-11-07, 08:50 PM
((Closed to Lucien.))
DAY 1
Letho walked before a group of his newest recruits at an agonizingly slow pace with a solemn frown cresting his brow. His hands were joined behind his back, his eyes studious as he examined the hodgepodge assembly that he was supposed to turn into soldiers. From what his eyes assessed, it seemed like an impossible mission. Amidst the fifty enlistees that stood before him in what looked like a poor copy of an attention stance, half a dozen looked like something he could work with. The rest were either too aged, or too green, or too female to ever don the black cloak of the Wolf Brigade. Half of them wouldn’t last longer then a month, the Marshal knew. This wasn’t the first time that he was given the Unwanted.
That was how the recruitment master back at the main CAF barracks called the lot he sent to Letho’s boot camp in Red Fort. The Fort wasn’t much of a fortress really; just a collection of brick buildings surrounded by wooden palisades situated on the outskirts of the Slums District of Radasanth. Prior to the defection of the Marshal to the side of the Empire, the compound had been abandoned, left for squatters and homeless. The first group of Unwanted – the recruits that all other Empire military branches rejected – cleaned the place up, cut down the thicket. The second brought up the palisades. The third one now stood before Letho Ravenheart and he was starting to feel a little bit like a babysitter with a sword. His Wolf Brigade was a brigade just by name; he didn’t have nearly enough men to form a proper regiment.
There were a few good men, however, that this training camp brought to surface. One of them was standing between the Marshal – a Captain now by CAF rank – and the rest of the troops. Sergeant Denny T. Goris was a soldier through and through... once upon a time. Now he was an aged man with a shiny bald head and a face whose wrinkles had wrinkles. Almost all of his front teeth were missing – some lost in fistfighting, others fell victim to cigars he liked to smoke off duty. His constitution was unimpressive, nothing but wiry legs, spindly arms and twitchy hands he held on his hips as his blue eyes burned holes in faces. And even if he wasn’t dressed all in black as all Wolves were, there was little doubt that he was a mean son of a bitch.
“I am going to be blunt with you, recruits,” Letho finally began, stationary before what loosely resembled a square formation. “You are not going to have an easy time here at Red Fort. Just because others rejected you does not mean you will find lenience here. Lenience is what makes lax soldiers, and lax soldiers get killed in combat. And I do not let expandable soldiers ride beside me in combat. That is why more then half of you will never attain this uniform. But those of you that endure these three months would become more then just soldiers. You would become the tools of the Empire, helping to preserve its stability.”
The Red Marshal spoke in his lordly voice, the kind that made lesser men cower, but they still didn’t have a honest ring. It was mostly because Letho didn’t quite believe in them. Perchance he was fighting for the Empire, but he didn’t do so willfully. The Coalition – a behind-the-scenes, non-government organization – used Myrhia as a bargaining chip, coercing the Ranger to become a turncoat and fight alongside the Empire. Though he didn’t exactly fight for the Empire. The Coalition merely placed him in such a position to gain trust of the current government. From what he could gather, the Coalition wanted neither side to win in this Civil War. The Rangers sold themselves out to the three overseas nations and the Empire was naught but a throng of brutes. The Coalition sought balance, sought to destroy both factions and let a new nation rise from the ashes. But for that they needed Letho to tear the Empire down from the inside out. And he couldn’t do that until the brass trusted him to be a good little soldier. So he did his job, thinking as little as possibly of all these conspiracies.
“I leave you now to Sergeant Goris. He’ll introduce you to the compound and your duties.”
The bald man saluted his superior in a stringent, martial manner, but the moment his Captain swung the scarlet cape over his shoulder and turned around, the recruits were in his crosshairs. “Yes, let us do the introduction!” the Sergeant spoke, his voice much more mundane then Letho’s, but twice as loud. “I’ll introduce you first. You are now officially mucus! Green, repulsive, slime fresh out of the nose! You all wear green because you’re greenhorns! In fact, you’re worse then greenhorns! You make those cubs all look like highly decorated heroes!” He walked in front of the first row with uncannily long strides, pausing sporadically to scream his words into the face of whoever had the misfortune to capture his attention.
“You’re here because nobody else wanted to train your sorry, soggy, lazy be-hinds! Well, guess what?! We don’t want you either!!! If you want a chance to serve the Empire and earn your pay, you’re going to have to step out of that shithole your call your life and impress me! If you fail to do so, we’ll throw you out through the Yellow Gate! If you decide that you’re too much of a pussy and too little of a man, just walk out through the Yellow Gate! If you ever feel the need to go running for your mommy’s teats or your woman’s cunt, just take a stroll through the Yellow Gate. Do you know why we call it Yellow Gate?!” The question was thrown into the face at a rotund hill of a man with a flabby gut that spilled from under the olive green shirt and over the belt of his pants. The fat enlistee was some good six inches taller then the Sergeant, but his face was too timorous to be anything but confused. “Do you, sonny?!”
“N-No.”
“No? NO? The last word out of those stinking jabbering holes in your heads will be SIR! Now, do you know why we call it the Yellow Gate?!” the bald officer shouted again, this time loud enough for a thick vein to pop halfway up his sweaty skull.
“No, sir!” the big man responded, trying to look dignifying.
“Because only yellowbellies walk through it!! Are you a yellowbelly, boy? I can see you have plenty of belly, and so far it looks mighty yellow to me!” As if to clarify this point, Sergeant Danny Goris launched the hairy knuckles of his right hand into the flaccid flesh of the man’s abdomen, sending him staggering backwards a step before he fell on his knees, short of breath. “Get up! Get up or I’ll make your pal here fetch a cart and drive you out of that Gate! If you can’t take a punch in that gut of yours, what good are you to me in a battle?!”
The fallen man stared in disbelief from below, searching for help in the eyes of his comrades and finding none. Everybody else was quite content with the fact that the Sarge hadn’t pick on them on the first day. He regained his footing slowly and reassumed the attention stance as well as his aching stomach allowed. The boot camp Sergeant only snarled and moved away, shaking his head.
“This had to happen to me. Why, if our Captain wasn’t so damn benevolent, I’d have you all out of here before breakfast. As it is, I have to do my duty. So let us have a nice stroll through the compound... AT RUNNING SPEED! NOW MOVE IT!!!”
DAY 1
Letho walked before a group of his newest recruits at an agonizingly slow pace with a solemn frown cresting his brow. His hands were joined behind his back, his eyes studious as he examined the hodgepodge assembly that he was supposed to turn into soldiers. From what his eyes assessed, it seemed like an impossible mission. Amidst the fifty enlistees that stood before him in what looked like a poor copy of an attention stance, half a dozen looked like something he could work with. The rest were either too aged, or too green, or too female to ever don the black cloak of the Wolf Brigade. Half of them wouldn’t last longer then a month, the Marshal knew. This wasn’t the first time that he was given the Unwanted.
That was how the recruitment master back at the main CAF barracks called the lot he sent to Letho’s boot camp in Red Fort. The Fort wasn’t much of a fortress really; just a collection of brick buildings surrounded by wooden palisades situated on the outskirts of the Slums District of Radasanth. Prior to the defection of the Marshal to the side of the Empire, the compound had been abandoned, left for squatters and homeless. The first group of Unwanted – the recruits that all other Empire military branches rejected – cleaned the place up, cut down the thicket. The second brought up the palisades. The third one now stood before Letho Ravenheart and he was starting to feel a little bit like a babysitter with a sword. His Wolf Brigade was a brigade just by name; he didn’t have nearly enough men to form a proper regiment.
There were a few good men, however, that this training camp brought to surface. One of them was standing between the Marshal – a Captain now by CAF rank – and the rest of the troops. Sergeant Denny T. Goris was a soldier through and through... once upon a time. Now he was an aged man with a shiny bald head and a face whose wrinkles had wrinkles. Almost all of his front teeth were missing – some lost in fistfighting, others fell victim to cigars he liked to smoke off duty. His constitution was unimpressive, nothing but wiry legs, spindly arms and twitchy hands he held on his hips as his blue eyes burned holes in faces. And even if he wasn’t dressed all in black as all Wolves were, there was little doubt that he was a mean son of a bitch.
“I am going to be blunt with you, recruits,” Letho finally began, stationary before what loosely resembled a square formation. “You are not going to have an easy time here at Red Fort. Just because others rejected you does not mean you will find lenience here. Lenience is what makes lax soldiers, and lax soldiers get killed in combat. And I do not let expandable soldiers ride beside me in combat. That is why more then half of you will never attain this uniform. But those of you that endure these three months would become more then just soldiers. You would become the tools of the Empire, helping to preserve its stability.”
The Red Marshal spoke in his lordly voice, the kind that made lesser men cower, but they still didn’t have a honest ring. It was mostly because Letho didn’t quite believe in them. Perchance he was fighting for the Empire, but he didn’t do so willfully. The Coalition – a behind-the-scenes, non-government organization – used Myrhia as a bargaining chip, coercing the Ranger to become a turncoat and fight alongside the Empire. Though he didn’t exactly fight for the Empire. The Coalition merely placed him in such a position to gain trust of the current government. From what he could gather, the Coalition wanted neither side to win in this Civil War. The Rangers sold themselves out to the three overseas nations and the Empire was naught but a throng of brutes. The Coalition sought balance, sought to destroy both factions and let a new nation rise from the ashes. But for that they needed Letho to tear the Empire down from the inside out. And he couldn’t do that until the brass trusted him to be a good little soldier. So he did his job, thinking as little as possibly of all these conspiracies.
“I leave you now to Sergeant Goris. He’ll introduce you to the compound and your duties.”
The bald man saluted his superior in a stringent, martial manner, but the moment his Captain swung the scarlet cape over his shoulder and turned around, the recruits were in his crosshairs. “Yes, let us do the introduction!” the Sergeant spoke, his voice much more mundane then Letho’s, but twice as loud. “I’ll introduce you first. You are now officially mucus! Green, repulsive, slime fresh out of the nose! You all wear green because you’re greenhorns! In fact, you’re worse then greenhorns! You make those cubs all look like highly decorated heroes!” He walked in front of the first row with uncannily long strides, pausing sporadically to scream his words into the face of whoever had the misfortune to capture his attention.
“You’re here because nobody else wanted to train your sorry, soggy, lazy be-hinds! Well, guess what?! We don’t want you either!!! If you want a chance to serve the Empire and earn your pay, you’re going to have to step out of that shithole your call your life and impress me! If you fail to do so, we’ll throw you out through the Yellow Gate! If you decide that you’re too much of a pussy and too little of a man, just walk out through the Yellow Gate! If you ever feel the need to go running for your mommy’s teats or your woman’s cunt, just take a stroll through the Yellow Gate. Do you know why we call it Yellow Gate?!” The question was thrown into the face at a rotund hill of a man with a flabby gut that spilled from under the olive green shirt and over the belt of his pants. The fat enlistee was some good six inches taller then the Sergeant, but his face was too timorous to be anything but confused. “Do you, sonny?!”
“N-No.”
“No? NO? The last word out of those stinking jabbering holes in your heads will be SIR! Now, do you know why we call it the Yellow Gate?!” the bald officer shouted again, this time loud enough for a thick vein to pop halfway up his sweaty skull.
“No, sir!” the big man responded, trying to look dignifying.
“Because only yellowbellies walk through it!! Are you a yellowbelly, boy? I can see you have plenty of belly, and so far it looks mighty yellow to me!” As if to clarify this point, Sergeant Danny Goris launched the hairy knuckles of his right hand into the flaccid flesh of the man’s abdomen, sending him staggering backwards a step before he fell on his knees, short of breath. “Get up! Get up or I’ll make your pal here fetch a cart and drive you out of that Gate! If you can’t take a punch in that gut of yours, what good are you to me in a battle?!”
The fallen man stared in disbelief from below, searching for help in the eyes of his comrades and finding none. Everybody else was quite content with the fact that the Sarge hadn’t pick on them on the first day. He regained his footing slowly and reassumed the attention stance as well as his aching stomach allowed. The boot camp Sergeant only snarled and moved away, shaking his head.
“This had to happen to me. Why, if our Captain wasn’t so damn benevolent, I’d have you all out of here before breakfast. As it is, I have to do my duty. So let us have a nice stroll through the compound... AT RUNNING SPEED! NOW MOVE IT!!!”