20:40 December 1, 1898 76th Gaean Rifle Division, far from An.
Official Kills: 17
Kursei, just a young man from the southern reaches of Moacia, looked up into the sky trying to find the bright North Star that he’s always read about. The sun already set. but a dark, significant hue of red bled on the corners of the sky, illuminated by the inferno. Several minutes of searching was interrupted by a rifle shot. He didn’t flinch since it had the distinct echo of an Iseltov rifle. A hand smacked his chest down in the trench. The hand came from Tupor, his spotter, who came back with coffee in a metal cup.
“What are you doing?” Tupor took a sip at his coffee.
Kursei made a frustrated breath and looked back down at the faint battlefield in the red light, bodies, half bodies, quarter bodies, and eighth bodies littered the Aelu-lands, “Trying to find the north star.”
Tupor chuckled in a whisper, “You’re an astronomer too? I thought your botanical observations were too much.”
“Fuck you.”
“Did Lara -teach- you-”
Kursei threw a punch at Tupor and caused his coffee to spill over his hand and on the ground.
Tupor shook his head as he twitched his burnt hand, his face cringed with pain, “Iaaah!.. Feh-... I-I forgive you Kursei. Mentioning Lara was a bad idea, and besides... Gaea needs more to drink than blood.”
The two went pensively silent. The mention of blood made the smell of flesh more noticeable to Kursei. His hands began to tremor as black smoke in the distance started to etch out into a picture of Lara. Color formed inside the lines that sketched her face. Her skin’s tone was deathly pale and her eyes turned grey. Skin peeled off her face, then muscles shrunk, and finally the remaining flesh charred off on top of a burnt skull. Kursei unscrewed the cap off his flask and held the strong alcohol concoction over his nose to soften the smell, then finally taking a drink. The sketch disappeared. Tupor’s pensiveness broke with Kurseis laughter, and then he joined him..
Tupor reached over and patted Kursei’s shoulder, “Terrible, Time to meet our quota right? We need to make 10 shots and a kill. If we keep putting it off, they’ll shoot us, remember? One kill, ten shots!”
Kursei took a peek over the top of the trench, “I’ve killed 17, what more do they want”
His spotter also inched his head up, “All you’ve killed is photos, watches, mugs, canteens, and a dog.”
“Hey! I thought that dog was one of those werewolves!” He then looked around him and noticed the flag of the other division next to him. He took out his rifle, “We need to shush, we’re near the Harad’zhi lines. Time to work.”
Kursei crawled up to the top of the trench and popped open the scope cover closest to him. Tupor scrambled up beside him and looked out with his binoculars. He scanned the reddish horizon for any bright yellow lights, “I think they know that there are snipers now.”
“Poorly disciplined snipers at that, what will they do without their dog?”
“I heard dog saliva has healing properties”
“You’re full of shit.”
“I think even the werewolves have the same saliva”
“Now you’re zoologist?”
“Oi-Ieh! Just ask Sarah tomorrow in the hospital. I can shoot your foot to make her more approachable.”
“Hoi! ‘Sarah! Sarah! Myy foot got shot and I have a question about dog saliva.’ Let’s keep Sarah out of this.” Tupor stopped suddenly, “I see something.”
Kursei popped the other scope cover off, “Pussy. She’ll know you can take a bullet.”
“About 500 meters, fuck you. She’s probably off with some Harad-swine.”
“Who knows? Maybe she wants your pretty Ozian eyes!”
“Rip a cock, Moaz.”
After a brief moment of scanning with his scope he said, “I don’t see it.” Kursei looked over at Tupor to see the direction he was scanning. He looked back into his scope and found what he was looking for. He paused a moment, trying to make out what he was looking at. “Is that a lighter?”
“I have no idea anymore, shoot it.”
After fifteen seconds he squeezed the trigger. He looked over to his spotter and he looked back at him. Kursei furrowed his brows, making a face at Tupor. Tupor looked into his binoculars and looked back making a shrugging motion. Kursei yawned and descended down the trench to light off a zuavka cigarette, and then he offered one to Tupor per usual, payment for all his recorded lies.
The two laughed again. Official Kills: 18
12:06 December 6th, 1898
Imperial Commissar Altan Kuz was a respected man of the Imperial Harad Army for his language talents, and unfortunately damned to keep the Gaean forces in line. Before the war, he thought this task was a waste of his time, spending his spare time learning the Moaz accent as well as translating several pieces of Ozian Poetry. Notably he loved to read from “the potter”, Suiza, and especially the ironies of Palpui. Aside from the book work, he would often join his fellow comrades in their merriment. The thought of war never crossed his mind when he was among the Gaean forces. Altan was definitely never assimilated into the Gaean culture either, he never understood the Day of Fire as anything but pyromania and drunkenness, Mai’vok as lust and drunkenness, and Aravitai as drunkenness and drunkenness.
The war changed everything, including his post. Before the Gaean forces were shipped out the Haradrim high command scrambled the imperial commissars, probably to reduce attachment to the Gaeans. This made his job more demanding than he ever thought possible. His new post’s leader was questionable. He had to put off the confusingly hilarious Palpui to cheer up an ill-mannered Ozian lieutenant named Veist Poelsho. He was informed that this lieutenant was responsible for the Harad’s pyrrhic victory during the wars with Ozia. Somewhere in his miserable head was a tactical genius. Altan found himself playing an imperial babysitter.
For what was half day for the enlisted men and Altan, was morning for Lt. Poelsho. The commissar never thought to check Poelsho’s room anymore. Discovering him with an empty bottle of spirit and slumped over his desk was a sign that he slept soundly. However when his bottle was only half empty, he knew he’d be irritable. The supply train suspiciously ran out of zuavka, and recently he took up his back up vice, alcohol. What was left of the Zuavka was smoked up in two days. Thankfully, the bottle was empty.
Altan patted his shoulder, the lieutenant sprung up and liberated a stronger aroma that had been hiding the whole night;. Altan squinted and moved his nose away, “Good day, Lieutenant…”
The lieutenant looked at the new drool stain on his holy book. Ever since the zuavka vanished he looked elsewhere to enchant his spirit, “I read! Read in the chronicles last night, too long I’m afraid… I’m going to need more drinks Commisar.”
“Understood Lieutenant, you do know it’s approaching that time again? We are scheduled for an attack at 12:30 today.”
“I don’t remember hearing this, we attacked yesterday.”
“No, our line was attacked yesterday, and you were even at the meeting with the General.”
“I don’t remember this.”
“Well if you miss another attack coordination, the General was going to have you hung for insubordination.” The commissar grabbed an opened letter on his desk, “You remember this don’t you!?”
The lieutenant looked at a page in the Chronicles, “Where’s my gun?”
“On you lieutenant, what’re you reading?”
“And my helmet?”
“On your head lieutenant. What’re you reading?”
He stood up, ignoring his question, with a slight fumble, “I’m ready.”