no further - a nordurlandes tale
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NO FURTHERby Matthew Acheson
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NO FURTHER
by Matthew Acheson
I have neglected this journal for some weeks I only wish it mattered. Whether anyone
will ever read these words, I cannot say, for I am more afraid now than ever that mankinds days
are drawing to an end. In truth, these feeble scratchings are little more than a distraction to still
the tremors in my hands, and settle the writhing serpents in my belly. My men should not see me
troubled so.
Today marked the first day of the third year of this war.
It will be remembered as the day the ancient castle city of Eastport fell; its proud spires
toppled, buildings shattered, people ravaged. The men of my legion stood shivering in our
animal skin cloaks and patchwork of metal armor, and watched the carnage from the palisade
atop Hommlands Hill the last iron mine in the East that has not been overrun.
Their arrival was a terrible sight. The light from the full moon cast a strange, eerie glow
upon the host of pale corpse things and their shrieking masters which stretched across the vale
for miles in every direction. They swept the valley like a flood that left only ash, carrion, and
pestilence in its wake.
The dead shambled through a rain of flaming arrows and stones, and assaulted the city for
three nights without pause. The Earl of Gosford and his men slew them by the hundreds, and
thousands, but they came on relentlessly and without fear, until the bodies of the twice dead were
piled so high the others used them as ramps to scale the mossy granite walls. Eventually, the
bastions of the outer city were taken, and the iron studded oak gates of the ancient citadel
battered down.
In all my days on this earth I have never imagined such carnage. The stink of ash and
brine and rotting flesh is heavy about this place, and when I close my eyes I can still see the fires,
and hear the screams. My hands now suffer from a shaking sickness that only setting quill to
parchment seems to put right, and I cannot rid myself of this uneasy feeling in my stomach.
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Soon, they will come for us too.
When it was over, one of my men threw down his sword and shield and wept openly in
front of all. There is no end to them, he sobbed as he retched into the high grass. Later he was
caught deserting, and I had him tied to a post and whipped by one of my junior officers as an
example to the others.
These are hard, brutal times when a boy must be flogged bloody for doing what his
commander has considered more often than he can recall. Sometimes, when I am alone and cold
in my bed, I dream of shedding the mantle of this responsibility and returning home to my Gwen
and our little ones. But after all that I have seen, I wonder if I could truly lay down this burden.
Could I pass the cup, and trust other men to stand at the edge of the black pit and hold their
torches out into the darkness through all the long watches of the damnable night? Nothing is
simple anymore.
Today, I feared the men were close to breaking, and called them together to give some
words of encouragement. When they formed up, I walked down the line and saw an army of
weary friends and strangers clad in torn, faded tunics and rusted mail, their faces drawn and
haggard. Most of our legions original five thousand had fallen over years of fighting, and those
few hundred that remained were bloodied, bent, and cleaved. How could I speak of honor, duty,
and sacrifice when so many had already fought and died at my command in a war that somebelieved could not be won?
I cleared my throat and prepared to remind them that our 6th Legion was all that stood
between the enemy, a hundred villages, a thousand farms and the sea. But when the moment
came my voice faltered and salty tears streaked down into my beard. It was all I could do to
thrust my sword in the air and call out the legions motto no further! We all shouted the damn
thing until we were red-faced and hoarse. I pray it was enough.
Sir Belric sat beside me in the mess tent at dinner, and counseled that in the morning we
should throw open our gates, and lead our knights and infantry down into the valley below.
Bring battle to them for once, he said.
There was a feverish gleam in his eyes when he spoke, which I have seen before. It is a
look some men get when they have stood too long in shadow, seen death, hopelessness and
despair, and no longer have any fear. I clapped my graying friend on the shoulder, served him a
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second helping of hard-bread and mutton stew, and said nothing. It took half a mug of wine to
dam the rivers in my eyes, and dull the aching in my throat.
We must not lose hope.
I have been standing watch on the palisade walls with my men for most of the afternoon.
Dusk is approaching, and there is a terrible screeching in the hill country around us. It is a bone
chilling sound, and one of the new recruits standing watch beside me trembled like a leaf until
fear ran streaming hot down his leg. I do not envy his youth and inexperience; those of us who
are long veterans of this war know well the source of those inhuman shrieks, and the pale faces
with black eyes that leer and hate and murder beyond the edge of the light.
It wont be long now before the shriekers are upon us, biting, howling, and tearing their
way through men that I have shivered beside and bled with all these long years. I cannot begin to
describe how weary and hollow that thought makes me feel. They are all my brothers, or near
enough.
We have made what preparations we could, wrapping arrows in oil-soaked rags, filling
casks with burning pitch, and digging covered pits. I have instructed my officers to douse the
tents and thatched huts of our encampment with oil. Every man of us agrees that when the end
comes we will not allow ourselves to be taken. I intend to bury this journal, so that perhaps the
lives and deaths of the men of the 6th Legion will not be forgotten. I can only hope and pray thatthere will be people left in this world to read it.
Sir Lancaster has offered to take command of the wall so I can steal a few moments of
rest. I close this book and put my quill down bleary eyed and exhausted to the bone.
* * * * * * * * *
Night is upon us, black as pitch, and there is no moon. I hear a shrill brass cry in the
darkness a watchers horn is blowing. Our camp is all shouts and chaos. The horses are braying
and kicking, and the dogs have gone feral. There are pale, hunchbacked shapes lingering at the
edge of the firelight, hissing at us from the gloom. I have never been so afraid.
They are coming.