I woke at four, same as every training day.
Morning pressed close and cool around the camp, a breath held before a shout. Lanterns guttered along the lane between tents, throwing soft halos on damp earth and stray boot prints. Somewhere a kettle ticked over a low flame; somewhere else a whetstone whispered across steel in steady strokes. The air tasted of ash and leather and the faint copper of old blood that never quite left the training grounds. Beyond the outer wall, the sky was only a shade lighter than night, a thin seam of gray stitched along the horizon. For once, there was no banter at wash basins, no jibes about snores or sore backs. Voices were hushed, movements neat and economical, men saving chatter the way soldiers save breath on a hill. Every sound felt magnified: the thud of a trunk lid, the squeak of a strap, the click as a buckle found its hole. I tied my laces twice, then once more for no good reason, palms dry and strangely careful, as if this day might shatter if I handled it wrong.
The feeling in my chest was a mess of excitement and nerves, wound tight enough to hum. I’d been outside Stonegate’s walls before, march drills, night sentry rotations in the fields, but today was the first time I would walk out to meet something that wanted me dead. Not training blades, not straw dummies, not sparring partners who pulled the last strike. Wolves. A real pack. The instructors liked to say even a mid–Tier 1 wolf could take down an unawakened recruit who panicked. Our alpha was supposed to be high Tier 1. My mind kept replaying that math: twelve middling wolves could chew through formation if a line wavered; one fast mistake could become ten. And yet under the fear, there was a steadier current, belonging. We were part of something bigger than any one of us, links in a chain that only worked if each link did its job. Out there, we’d stand or fall together. That thought didn’t quiet my heartbeat, but it gave it a rhythm.
We weren’t in trainee kits today. The quartermaster’s clerks had laid out proper soldier issue the night before, and even the smell felt different, oiled iron instead of splintered ash wood, cured leather instead of canvas patched and re-patched. Our spears were still ash-shafted, but the tips were steel leafheads, socketed and peened tight with iron pins. Our round shields were layered wood with rawhide facing and a boss of blackened iron at the center; the rim was hooped with banding to take glancing bites. Boots were hobnailed and new-stiff, the kind that find your blisters before you find your stride. A short mail shirt hung to mid-thigh over a padded gambeson, heavy enough to change the way your shoulders remembered your own weight. A kettle helm with a nasal bar completed the set, visorless for visibility, and suddenly the world had a rim around it, the brim cutting the sky to a circle when I looked up.
The uniform did something to the mind. I’d felt like a boy last night, counting breaths to fall asleep. Now the weight on my shoulders said: You are a soldier; stand like one.
By the time I reached the assembly point, the sky had thinned to pewter. Acting sergeants had their squads lined in four neat blocks, with the city watch scouts, a hard-faced ten in mottled cloaks, lounging off to one side, wolfish themselves, all quiet eyes and economy of motion. Sergeant Kestrel stepped into the open space between us and the scouts, hands behind his back, helm tucked under one arm. Firelight from the last of the night braziers picked out the seams in his jaw like chisel marks.
“This will be my last full briefing until we reach the camp,” he said. “After this, I speak to your acting sergeants, or I call formations by signal. You will move when told. You will not improvise. You will not chase. If you break ranks to be a hero, I will leave you to be a lesson.”
He let that hang, then continued.
“Three formations for today’s work. Learn the names. Learn what they do.
“First: the March Column. Two files, five men each, spears upright. Shields slung but reachable. Scouts wide to front and flanks. This is how we move on road or trail. If contact is light, the column can bloom into line in three breaths.“Second: the Boar’s Snout. That is a wedge, pointed front, two trailing flanks. It breaks lines. Against beasts, the wedge drives a spearpoint through their rush. The tip must be steady and quick; the flanks must not lag. If the point hesitates, the wedge collapses and you die.
“Third, useful for wolves, the Hedge. Shields tight, ankles nearly touching, a ring with overlapping bosses and spearheads angled out. The second rank kneels inside to brace the first. The Hedge doesn’t chase. It bleeds what comes to it. When the alpha overcommits, we counter with a short Hook, two files peel to one side to stab the flank and return.”
He glanced along the ranks, measuring. “We camp five kilometers north of Stonegate. Most beasts will avoid a unit this size, but not all. We march in combat-ready spacing. You keep a listening silence. If I signal ‘Hedge,’ your feet should be moving before your mind finishes the word.”
Enjoying the story? Show your support by reading it on the official site.
He pointed his chin at the scouts. “City watch will mark sign: scat, scrapes, trails, wind. You will watch how they work. If you have forgotten the bestiary your instructors battered into you, habitats, habits, tells, then you should have visited the library on break days instead of sleeping like laundry.”
A few chuckles. He didn’t smile.
“Acting sergeants, last checks.”
Halvern, my acting sergeant, moved down our line, tapping shield rims, tugging straps, giving a nod here and a knuckle-thump there. “Latch,” he said to one recruit, and the man fixed a loose chin strap with fumbling fingers. Halvern stopped in front of me and rapped my spear’s socket, testing the pin. “Good. Tent prep and cooking when we camp, Edward. Don’t burn the pot like last month.”
“That was one time,” I muttered.
He grunted.
We stepped off at first light.
The march wasn’t a parade. It was a steady, hungry kind of movement, the kind that respects distance without fearing it. The column formed by squads, two files across the track, ten men long, with a gap between blocks so commands could flow up and down. Scouts went forward in pairs, bows unstrung but strings ready, blades loose in sheaths. Two more pairs ghosted the flanks, and a last pair hovered behind, eyes back-trail. The kettle helms changed the music of the road; the world was all footfalls and harness creaks and the faint ring of iron bosses bumping together on uneven ground.
We kept to the cart track until the fields gave way to scrub, then took a narrower hunter’s path that serpentined through alder and beech. The city walls receded behind us like a promise we were choosing to ignore. Kestrel called water breaks by hand sign rather than voice; acting sergeants echoed with the same gesture, and the column uncoiled just enough to sip from skins without losing shape. No one sat. You don’t sit unless told to, not because you’re made of iron, but because rising together matters more than resting alone.
Medieval marching, though I didn’t use the word in my head, was logistics disguised as walking. We kept the pace that mail would bear without boiling men alive. We shifted files on slopes so those with shorter legs didn’t anchor the entire line. When the scouts signaled mud at a low place, the acting sergeants passed the call for staggered spacing, single file through the muck, re-form on the far bank without chatter. Twice, the scouts led us off the deer path to skirt briar patches that could snag scabbards and trip ankles. Once they halted us with a hand held high, then knelt to show Kestrel a tuft of gray caught on a broken branch. He rolled the hair between his fingers and thumb, sniffed it, and gave a single nod: fresh. I felt my stomach do a slow, strange turn.
By midmorning, we reached a knoll tucked above a shallow stream. The place had been used before; you could see it in the faint trenches half-swallowed by grass and the blackened circle where stones had once rimmed a cookfire. The stream, I learned, had a shallow ford to the west and a muddy bank to the east, so if anything charged the camp at night, you’d know where their feet would slip.
“Same plan as briefing,” Halvern said. “Lines on the north and west edges, brush wall in front to foul a rush. Fires low in the hollow. Tents on the lee side in four rows. Edward, Garron, tents, then cook. Water team’s Joss and Bren. Wood team, back file.”
Garron grabbed a bundle of stakes, and we set to work. Level ground, corners staked, guy lines taut, canvas snug. The rope bit cold into my fingers, but we finished fast. By then the wood team had a stack ready, and the water team was filling skins at the stream.
I lit the cookfire in the hollow, just enough heat, no smoke, and set the iron pot. Barley, salt pork, and a few stubborn onions went in, the smell curling low over the camp. Around us, shield racks and spear posts went up, and a latrine trench was dug downwind. Kestrel walked the perimeter once, silent approval in the lack of corrections.
When the stew was ready, Garron ferried bowls to the squads. No one smiled wide, but shoulders eased as they ate.
After mess, Halvern gathered us in a half-circle and ran through signals: halt, lower stance, watch, hook, kneel, wheel. Each man mirrored them back; hesitation earned a repeat.
“City watch will range this afternoon,” Kestrel called. “We hold camp and rest. Dusk, short formation drill. Night, first and second watch doubled.”
I drew second watch, good enough. With duties done, I sat near the spear racks, running through my breath pattern, adjusting gambeson ties. Around me, men checked weapons, scouts tested the stream’s current, and a pair of recruits walked the Hedge’s footwork with shields low.
I pictured the formations in motion: Hedge braced tight, Hook snapping shut on a flank, Stagger shifting to match broken ground. Tried to feel where my own feet and spear point would be when the push came.
Halvern appeared, nodding at the pot’s skin of stew. “Good work,” he said. Then, quieter: “Check your kit again. Everyone misses something the first time.”
I did, and he was right, a strap slightly loose, a knot redone.
By late afternoon, shadows pooled at the knoll’s base. Scouts returned in pairs, calm and silent. The last gave Kestrel a small nod.
“Drill,” he said. “Hedge on me.”
We locked shields, spearpoints bristling. Kestrel walked the line, nudging here, tapping there, making us kneel and rise until thighs burned. The second rank practiced the Hook, peel, thrust, return, until smooth.
When he called it, dusk had settled. First watch checked perimeter ropes and lit shielded lanterns. The rest of us crawled into tents, armor loosened but boots within reach.
I lay on my side, eyes on the narrow triangle of night beneath the canvas. Outside, the camp breathed: a cough, the quiet scuff of a sentry’s turn, the faint clink of a pot. Tomorrow, we’d find the pack, or it would find us.