Berker shifted his weight in his seat, matching the jostling of the train as it careened down the track. His left arm was bent at the elbow, which elbow dug into the seat’s unyielding wooden armrest, driven down by the weight of his head. Berker’s breath misted on the glass of the window, turning the view of the Yenehir River into something resembling a badly-taken photograph. It wasn’t the Yenehir anymore though, Berker reminded himself. He tried to remember the name the Haradrim gave it, since he might have to use it in conversation with the locals or with command, but all he could remember was the useless Eruvite name, “An”. An, like Annuminas, the city at which the train would deposit them, and about which Berker had been told so very little during the pre-entrainment briefing. He turned away from the now very foggy window to his companion in the train compartment, Mazhar.
“What do you think Annuminas will be like?” he asked simply. Mazhar looked up at Berker from the piece of paper he was holding, his mouth a firm line. He folded it carefully and put it in his pocket before answering.
“You weren’t in Rehemat, were you?” Berker looked at him, confused. He wondered how this question was supposed to answer his own, and figured if he kept silent Mazhar would continue developing his thoughts until they took him to a more relevant place. “Of course you haven’t,” he continued, confirming Berker’s suspicions. “You joined the Guards long after that fiasco ended. I remember the Battle of Say’un. The garrison barracks I was in was located in the middle of town, and when the city rose up against us, we were penned in. We had to fight our way out, block after block, losing men, it seemed, every few seconds. Only about a fifth of us made it out of that city alive…
“I don’t know what Annuminas is like now, but when we get there, it will be like that.”
“It will be glorious,” said Berker, leaning forward. “The Rehemati veterans are heroes, and you’ve never mentioned it!”
“It’s not you that needs to know my story,” said Mazhar, drawing into himself. “I will be rewarded, or not, regardless of whether anyone on Taijitu knows.”
Great, thought Berker, not only is he old, but he’s also religious. I couldn’t have gotten stuck with anyone else?