Saturday, June 21, 2025

Roseman's Farm

 

 The Duke of Wellington, when confronted with someone who tried to blackmail him by threatening to publish letters of his to his mistress, said "Publish and be damned" So here I go publishing, and I suspect I was already damned, but this certainly won't help. 

The disaster of Powers' Gate broke something in me. I am sure I wasn't the only one of Lobar's Wolves that felt that way, but fuck the Wolves, I was too busy trying not to die to worry about them. I suppose I should have cared, after all Lobar's Wolves had fed me for quite some time, and food is important to maintaining life. However, that kind of thinking was way beyond me after Powers' Gate. Powers' Gate made me want to curl into a ball and die. In fact, several people became quite worried that I would just go ahead and do what Powers' Gate failed to do, and kill myself. I don't know if that was the best idea, but a lot of people who pretended to give a shit about me were concerned it was the path I was going to take.The irony of people thinking I was going to off myself after a surviving a battle in which several people would have happily made me unalive, wasn't lost on me, but irony and all its complicated machinations wasn't exactly something that I was particularly worried about.

 However, offing yourself if you plan to do it right, takes a fair amount of thought. A fair amount of planning and an idea about what comes next. Not to you because you are as dead as dead can be, but to the poor sons of bitches you've left behind to clean up your shit. Shuffling off this mortal coil is easy enough, there are pills to make it happen, there are guns galore to put to your forehead, or in your mouth. There are even ways to make it happen where it looks like an accident. Jumping/falling in front of a train springs to mind. These ideas, and more (which we will save for a later day) all came to mind as I staggered away from Powers' Gate. I couldn't understand what happened at Powers' Gate, It was quite simply a disaster.

Disasters are hard to process, the mind can't grasp the information the world is feeding it. It is like the eruption of Vesuvius. It comes out of nowhere, at least to you, and it destroys everything in its path. It simply does not compute. You weren't prepared for this, and even if you had pretended you were, you really weren't ready for the scope of this. Powers' Gate was the hammer and you were the nail. It slammed into you like a shit ton of bricks, and left you pondering why you were left alive. The educated amongst us call it survivor's guilt. The survivors just call it being lucky. At the time, I called it a mistake. A mistake I thought long and hard about rectifying. 

Moral cowardice was the main reason I didn't finish what Powers' Gate had started. It is a lot easier to be physically brave/stupid when you are doing it in front of a crowd or as a group of people. Collective bravery comes from not wanting to be the first bastard to piss yourself, and run away screaming from potentially becoming thought about in the past tense. I drifted after the Gate, I had no desire to rejoin the remains of Lobar's Wolves (now branded La Compagnie du Chapeau, whatever the fuck that meant), and continue the soldiering life. 

I wasn't anybodies idea of Napoleon, but being a soldier was all that I knew. It was what I had been for the majority of my adult life, and now I was over it. It was wrenching, what was I to do now? Become a fucking farmer, planting some sort of seed I knew nothing about to raise crops I had no idea what to do with? Maybe go to sea and become a sailor, tricky since I was a sinker not a swimmer, and knew fuck all about the sailing life. Factory life? Being a wage slave had no appeal to me, but here I was shiftless, homeless, and clueless. Take the veil, or become a monk? Tricky to do that, when one doesn't believe in god (or at least the current, most popular god). Therefore, I doubted the priesthood was the answer to my question of how to stay alive. It was in this very confused state that I stumbled upon Roseman's Farm.

Despite the years that have passed since, I remember the exact moment I ran into Roseman's Farm. It wasn't planned, and it wasn't something that I saw coming, it just kind of happened. I didn't have Lobar's Wolves or Claudell's Marines at Roseman's Farm, it was just me. It was a simplified version of single combat, and it was all the more intense for that. Divisions and divisions of screaming men trying to murder each other for the love of God, King, and Country are all very confusing, and it is easy to get lost amongst the numbers, but here at Roseman's Farm it was just me, and well Roseman, the owner of aforementioned farm.

This "single combat" was new to me, and I must confess rather confusing. How does one hide in this situation? How does one pretend not to be terrified? Terror, when  you are feeling it among a few hundred other people isn't as awful as one would think. Terror when there is no one to share it with, is crippling. You can't make this type of terror unhappen. It strikes deep inside of you, and makes you want to be anyone else but yourself right now. 

I spent a considerable amount of time on Roseman's Farm. I learned a fair amount about myself, the wolf that raised me, and life in general. If you consider Roseman's Farm a battle, which I am not sure that you should, I would count it as a victory. I walked away from Roseman's Farm, which was the goal. Sometimes walking away is as good as it gets. We don't have to bring back cannons or flags of the "enemy" to adorn the halls of our fair city to prove our success. Sometimes just not losing is to be considered a win.

At the time, I had no idea that this was the first "battle" of Roseman's Farn. After all, it was just a speck on the map, not one that would stand out to anyone making any sort of useful map. A map that I was going to pull out of its case and find a black spot on, and decide that was where I needed to go next. 

 

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