You find the Experimental Corps' tents exactly where you expected to. However, you also find what seems to be the whole of the Experimental Corps itself there as well, a strange enough thing; while the King's regiments do have something of an insular quality during normal times, such distinctions rarely hold any substance in times such as these. Tonight, Highlanders drink with line infantry, and lancers dice with artillerymen. Even your own dragoons have scattered to the winds, seeking old friends among the men of other regiments.
Yet here you see no Line Infantry orange or Lancer blue, only solid masses of dark green, broken up only by the light blouses and woollen jackets of the camp followers among them.
"What do you want?" an enlisted man calls out, his words taut and hostile, perhaps a result of the contents of the half-empty bottle he sloshes about in one hand.
"I'm here on Major Reyes's invitation," you reply.
The drunken Experimental seems less than impressed. "Yeah, and me mum's Saint Stanislaus. Piss off," he replies with an egregious lack of respect. Perhaps he does not see the lieutenant-colonel's insignia on your collar and shoulders.
"Now then, Maitland, is that any way to speak to an officer?" enters a vaguely familiar voice, whimsically lilting with a Warburtonian accent. "This is none other than the good Sir Alaric d'al Ortiga, who saved Mister Lewes and I last year." The speaker steps out of the shadows, a big sergeant with a head of curly hair and the most impressive set of sideburns you have ever seen.
"Don't mind Maitland, sir," the Sergeant mutters to you under his breath. "He's a fine rifleman but loses his manners at the bottom of a bottle, so he does. I'll knock his teeth out and have him recite you an apology later," he says with a grin. "The Major and Mister Lewes are this way, if you'd follow me."
-
The Sergeant leads you to a large fire-lit clearing in the centre of the Experimentals' camp, where Major Reyes and Lieutenant Lewes sit surrounded by perhaps two or three dozen officers and men in green. Almost every one of them has some sort of bottle or flask in their hands. The only exception sits at the edge upon a camp stool, plucking the strings of a Takaran shamisen and accompanying the carousing of his comrades with the words to The Last Grenadier in a well-worn voice.
"Good evening, sir!" Reyes calls out as he spots your approach. "Gentlemen! A seat for Colonel Ortiga! Quickly now!" he calls out.
At once, some of the men in the circle shift, and one fellow produces another camp stool and places it next to where the green-jacketed Major lounges upon the packed earth.
"More comfortable than a saddle, ain't it?" he remarks as you sit down, his breath smelling sharply of alcohol. With one hand, he offers you the open silvered flask in his hand, its surface still emblazoned with the regimental crest of the 8th of Foot. "Have a drink, sir?"
With a nod of thanks, you tip a little of the flask's contents into your mouth, doing your best not to cough as it burns and pillages its way down your throat and proceeds to lay siege to your gut.
"Strong stuff, ain't it?" Reyes says with a grin. "Nothing like what the lads are drinking though, and most of them can't even stomach what Lewes is pouring down his misbegotten gullet."
"It's an acquired taste, sir," Lewes replies, his sullen tone made joking by his crooked grin.
Reyes snorts derisively. "Perhaps in the sense that only one with no taste could acquire it," he retorts as he returns his subordinate's grin, sharing between them what must be a much familiar joke.
"Is there a reason why your men keep to themselves like this?"
"I beg pardon, sir?" Reyes replies, trading question for question.
"You could go to the camp of any other regiment tonight and find visitors from other units sharing drinks and stories," you clarify. "Yet there are no such visitors here. In fact, judging by the demeanour of the man whom first greeted me, I could almost say that your men don't care much for the soldiers of other regiments."
"They don't care much for us, either," Lewes answers bitterly. "Putting on the green coat means making yourself a target for the army's contempt."
"Lewes has the right of it," Reyes adds sourly. "I suppose it must be different for you—after all, you dragoons do skirmish work yourselves—but the officers of the Line Infantry hold us in very low esteem. They do not like how we fight; they think it dirty, beneath them. The fact that we operate under the personal sanction of the King does not better their mood, either."
"I don't understand," you reply. "Are you not all recruited from the Line Infantry? Even if the officers show their contempt, why would their men display so much antipathy to their former comrades?"
Lewes shakes his head. "It's more simple than that. Those of us who're born common, we're brought up to follow," he answers, the bitterness in his voice growing by the moment. "When a man who speaks the right way and carries himself just so, his orders are to be obeyed, his claims to be accepted as fact. After a while, you start doing it without thinking."
"Mind you," Reyes interjects, "they're right, those officers; there's a difference between facing a man in battle and slitting his throat as he sleeps, or shooting him from a bush as he eats his supper." He shakes his head. "Perhaps one day, all our wars will be fought in such a manner. Some part of me would rather be ashes in the wind before that."
"Is it a good idea to get this drunk the night before a battle?"
Lewes responds with a bitter chuckle. "No. I'll be waking up with my head rattling like a drum; most of us will."
"Then why do it?" you ask. "Would it not be better to fight a battle unencumbered by roiling guts and a headache?"
The green-jacketed Lieutenant shakes his head. "Headache or no, they'll fight just as hard and shoot just as well," Lewes proclaims, his words halfway between boast and statement of fact. "Besides, there's little time for fires and gin when you're trying to stay hidden. The men don't often have a chance to spend a whole evening sitting on their arses, getting tattered. For a lot of them, it's going to be their last."
Your eyebrow rises of its own accord. "You expect heavy losses tomorrow?"
"There are many ways for a skirmisher to die in an open battle," Reyes answers. "We could be trapped in a crossfire, caught by a rush of enemy infantry, but there is no death that a rifleman fears more than being run down by cavalry. We don't have close-order drill or bayonets to fight them off with, and we can't flee from them without horses of our own."
The Major shakes his head sadly. "I would rate my men the best of their kind in creation; they fear neither heaven nor earth. What they do fear are cavalrymen, and Khorobirit's army has tens of thousands of them."
Reyes offers you a thin, meaningless smile. "So, I let them drink; this time tomorrow night, most of them may well be dead."
"I don't suppose either of you have any advice?"
"Coming to us for advice?" Lewes asks, as lips curling into a crooked grin. "The mighty cavalryman? Knight of the Red and all that brasswork? I wouldn't have believed it if I'd not just heard it with me own ears."
You smile back, perhaps a little sheepishly. You suppose it is rather odd for a cavalry officer to be asking infantrymen for advice. "I could use all the wisdom I can get," you reply. "I'm not so discriminating as to turn away practical knowledge, no matter where it comes from."
"All right, how about this?" the green-jacketed Lieutenant replies with an amused chuckle. "Never trust any man above the rank of colour-sergeant!" he shouts out, loud enough for every man in sight to hear, and loud enough to elicit barks of laughter from every single one of them, officers and men.
Reyes is quick to reply. "On the contrary, that would mean ignoring a bit of advice that has served me quite well over the years." He reaches out with his free hand, flicking the lieutenant's pips on Lewes's collar. "Never take advice from scruffy, unshaven lieutenants jumped up from the ranks!"
A fresh wave of laughter washes over the clearing, just as loud as the last. Reyes leans back and takes a deep slug from his flask.
"In all earnestness though, sir," he continues, this time directing his words to you alone. "I do have advice: never lose sight of your men. Keep your graces about you when you are with them, knock a few heads about when needed, that will remind them that you are their officer. Yet if they see that you are willing to drink with them, they will be more easily convinced that you are willing to die for them."
For a moment, Reyes looks away, at the carousing shapes of his own men. A fond smile forms itself on his lips. "Convince them of that, and they will never fail you."
"I should be going. Good night, gentlemen."
"Already, sir?" Lewes asks. "You've just got here."
"I am sure the good Lieutenant-colonel has more important things to do, more exalted people to see," Reyes replies easily. "After all, he is not pariah-among-regiments, like us."
The more junior man nods, both in reply to his own commanding officer and to you in farewell. "Watch yourself out there tomorrow; there's bloody few proper officers in this army without their heads stuck up their arses. We can't afford to lose any of you."
"Saints go with you, sir," Reyes adds, a more traditional goodbye to see you off as you leave the Experimentals behind you.
1) I shall seek out Cazarosta; no doubt he could use the company.
2) Perhaps Lord Marcus is up for one last game of Tassenswerd.
3) No, tonight I would have no company, save my thoughts.