Steiner
Bishier than thou
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2002
- Posts
- 2,381
He smiled. "I'm not sure. I think so. I hope so. Still, what can I do if everyone surrenders? And those bastards up there are close now, I can tell. They won't resist effectively any more than the Spaniards could, once they've foreign armies crawling around in their country. They'll panic and capitulate and that'll be the end of France. And of the war."
Something in his tone sounded regretful, he realised.
"I will miss it. And the lads. But peacetime soldiering won't be like this - away under a foreign sky with the civilians off our backs, a good general and all we need to be happy soldiers. Food, ammunition and an enemy that's not as good at killing as we are."
He shrugged deprecatingly at her description of him as a hero. "I suppose you're right. Leastways I've a sword from the patriotic fund as says I'm a hero. Still, what do you suppose THAT will be worth when the merchants and their wives no longer tremble at the spectre of Boney?"
He waved to the men as he entered the South Essex lines and led her to his quarters - a pair of tents stood in the midst of the headquarters.
"I'm not sure if we'll have much time for talking, Miss Savage. I'm expecting allies shortly, and then I've got to go for a stroll up that wee bit of a hill there." he waved his hand dismissively at the steep slope some miles away. "But this evening, I imagine I'll be all yours. There's your carriage, miss."
Something in his tone sounded regretful, he realised.
"I will miss it. And the lads. But peacetime soldiering won't be like this - away under a foreign sky with the civilians off our backs, a good general and all we need to be happy soldiers. Food, ammunition and an enemy that's not as good at killing as we are."
He shrugged deprecatingly at her description of him as a hero. "I suppose you're right. Leastways I've a sword from the patriotic fund as says I'm a hero. Still, what do you suppose THAT will be worth when the merchants and their wives no longer tremble at the spectre of Boney?"
He waved to the men as he entered the South Essex lines and led her to his quarters - a pair of tents stood in the midst of the headquarters.
"I'm not sure if we'll have much time for talking, Miss Savage. I'm expecting allies shortly, and then I've got to go for a stroll up that wee bit of a hill there." he waved his hand dismissively at the steep slope some miles away. "But this evening, I imagine I'll be all yours. There's your carriage, miss."