NL Vol. I: No Longer Displaced
Written by Sober + Wing
No Longer Displaced - VF8, © 2017 Sober and Wing
Because Tail demanded Sober and Wing write something, and Barrier really had no say in the matter… Mares.
.NLD Chapter 23 - Game-changer
Luna lightly swatted Amora's flank, causing the mare to jump back from the
crack in Tail's ajar door. The doctor quietly swore through her clenched
muzzle, and she jerked her head around to find the Princess of the Night
staring down at her with a jovial expression that might as well have bled
amusement.
"Peeping, Major?" Luna's teasing voice kissed Amora's ears as the alicorn
moved to peek through the crack as well. "I knew Captain Barrier was eye
candy, but I never thought he would be your type—"
"Oh, not like that!" Amora hissed, brushing the diarch with a dismissive
wave. "I got curious. Barrier was all weird and junk when he returned,
mumbling some shit about things not being the same. They've just been
talking about tactics though, and occasionally, they flip through that book
you gave her. Some of the stuff they're talking about is marginally
unsettling. Starting to make me wonder where you dug this guy up,
Princess."
When Luna didn't respond right away, Amora leaned until she caught sight of
the barest hints of a smile. The unicorn was met by an ensnaring teal iris
that sparkled with mischief. "Tail's real training begins today, and it
appears that she accepted her captain's proposal." Luna pivoted away from
the door frame and let out a giddy giggle.
Amora pursed her lips to the melody, and confusion crafted a firm grip upon
her features. "Care to explain that one, Princess? Am I going to need to
pick out a dress? I mean—they didn't elope in Las Pegasus, but—"
Luna's giggle fanned into a round of boisterous laughter that sent a ripple
of dread through Amora's coat. She scrunched up, much in the manner a cat
would if utterly terrified. There is no way they hadn't been heard—
"Would you two shut the Tartarus up out there?" Barrier's shout poured
through the doorway. "We're trying to study in here! Go find some other
patients to spy on. I got this one back into bed all by myself. She's in
good hooves, and she's busy."
"Ams!" Tail's bubbly cheer followed suit. "I'm learning things—in bed!
Don't worry about me. I'm sure Captain Barrier will come get you if I need
anything." She slammed her forehoof against a page in one of the books.
"And doesn't this principle only work on a macro scale? If Cantersville had
been a single front assault, couldn't the flanking forces just have
coordinated some kind of pinching maneuver?"
"Mhm, things worked at Cantersville because the lines of communication
between the flanking forces ran slower than the centrally located ones.
Here, the flanks didn't really know they were flanks, and they absolutely
have to be in the know for a pinch to be effective. Even on a smaller
scale, that's hard shit to do. Take the pincer movement. It's not just
about the edges. You have to have the numbers to risk baiting with a weak
center, and the timing has to be just right. The battlefield is a dynamic
place. There are always multiple answers in play. Runners and scouts are
key for obtaining information and coordinating an appropriate response.
It's one of the many reasons why lieutenants are told not to fuck over
their sergeants, ever."
Tail's uninjured wing fluttered as he spoke. There was something about his
cadence, in this setting, that was remarkably different and yet strikingly
familiar. He was responding to her questions, and he grew his enthusiasm to
emphasize those extra little tidbits of knowledge. He was teaching her—and
not in the we're-on-the-field way. He was teaching her in a way
that honestly made her feel at home, and as her sights wandered over his
charcoal-colored contours, she couldn't help but think, It's actually pretty cute.
"Awareness is pretty much what it boils down to. If you're blind, then
you're going to get yourself killed. If you're blind and in charge, you're
going to get everypony else killed along with you. The Battle of Greifen is
a damn good example of the intelligence extremes. One side thought its
forces were too great in number and that its flanks were covered, and the
other had complete command of the terrain. The numbers got bucked, hard."
The pegasus maintained her silence, listening as she fell into a
patent-pending, academic stare. It was impossible for her to turn away from
him. It was impossible for her not to get lost in the lecture—until she
realized that he had stopped talking and was flashing her a cocky grin that
screamed, 'Caught red-hoofed!'
"Something on your mind there, Cadet?" Barrier said with a gritty tenor
that made the mare stutter.
"N-no—Well, yes, actually. I mean—mm—how do I say this? I think…" Tail's
voice drifted away as her cognitions took a brief, tangential stroll. "I
think I've been carrying the same type of prejudice that others have
carried for me, and I think I owe you an apology, Captain."
Barrier's head listed, and he inhaled sharply as though he had intended to
deliver some sort of rebuttal. Tail beat him to the punch.
"What I mean to say is that I don't think anyone in the guard expected much
from me. What could a physicist possibly do, right? Now, you're going over
all of this historical material with me, and I would never have expected it
from you." She scooted towards the edge of the mattress, plucked her
glasses from her muzzle, and set them directly in front of Barrier's icy
eyes. "You're pretty brilliant, Barrier."
The unicorn caught his breath. "Well," he began while one of his forehooves
ventured to play with the spectacles, "protecting others takes more than a
sound body. It requires a sound mind." He carefully removed the glasses and
placed them back atop Tail's muzzle. "Though, your compliment is
appreciated."
A budding smile fought against some resistance as it gradually spread
across Barrier's countenance. Its appearance made the mare's heart beat
just a little bit harder, and her own giddy smile abruptly formed.
"Do I need to be concerned?" Barrier spotted the exuberant expression.
"Take me to dinner first—once you become a colonel—Cadet. Regulations
prohibit such a joyous exchange between a D.I. and his trainee." He tapped
one of the books. "Any other questions you'd like to get out of your system
before we move on to my part of the plan?"
Tail laughed, and a portion of her mind pondered the potential reaction if
Amora had still been shamelessly stalking. "Maybe I'll hold you to that,
Sweety," she chirped before reaching to grab her book on the discourse of
war. "But for now, I actually do have another question. The Tartarus was up
with the Battle of Agincolt?"
Barrier's coat bristled at the name and his ears shot upright. "Ah, Faust!
Agincolt! What a buckin' disgrace that was. That, my cadet, is what happens
when you let pompous, useless nobles dictate what war with griffons should
be about. Knights fight knights! For honor and dignity!" He scowled and
threw a leg into the air. "Griffons don't know anything about honor or
dignity! Well—they didn't then. Archers raked the flanks. Agincolt was a
massacre. It was after that that the executors took a more active role in
managing things, so I guess it led to some progress. Just a damn shame it
cost so many lives."
The pegasus gave a curt nod. "Loss of life, especially when it's pointless,
is something that is really difficult for me to grasp." She lifted her head
as one of her cognitive gears lurched forward. "Given that you're from that
time, you experienced it, right? Death—" Tail shuddered before she took a
deep, stilling breath. "It's something that no training can prepare for,
isn't it?"
"It's…" Barrier chewed on it for a few seconds. He looked away from his
cadet, though his thoughts could not keep his body from instinctively
shifting closer to his underling. "No, it's not, but I'll do my best to
give you all the training I can. It will never prepare you for the first
time, or whenever you face it after that. History doesn't often give second
chances, Tail. It normally just repeats the same garbage over and over.
With you, I feel like I have a chance to make sure the shadows stay away."
"I'll do my best, sir. I had no intention of turning back when we started.
I have no intention of turning back now that you've offered more help."
Barrier scratched along his jawline and snorted. "Well, that's good because
I have plans for you." He plucked three smaller books from the pile and
magically pressed the literature into Tail's fluff. "Read these and
memorize everything in them. Summer Sun is in under one month, and I plan
to use it as an opportunity to insert a major evaluation into your record.
Those materials cover urban guard details, command structure, and
procedures. You'll be taking control of the squad for the day, which means
you'll be giving the orders to Indar and Bonecrusher while the three of you
serve protection duties."
Tail's pupils dilated, her ears splayed, and her mouth hung open in
disbelief. "You're putting me in charge of the squad for the Summer Sun
Celebration?"
"Yup." Barrier flicked his blue tail in time with the single-word delivery.
He smirked and shot a sidelong glance at the shocked pegasus.
"You do realize that Bonecrusher is going to eat me alive, right?" A wave
of shivers rolled beneath Tail's lavender fur, and her forelegs flinched at
the thought.
The captain chuckled. "I don't think she'll be eating you alive after you
bucked her jaw. Besides, I had my words with Crusher. She won't be a
problem. You just need to focus on getting better and making the most of
your time. According to that pancake-thieving doctor of yours, you won't be
cleared for combat for two weeks. That's not really a problem so long as we
can get you exercising again sooner. No hesitation on those manuals. Jump
in and go to town. If you have any questions, ask me.
"I'm not going to put it any simpler. Show that you can responsibly and
effectively command a small unit, and those accomplishments will become the
keystone of my final B.C.T. report. You've told me before you couldn't
quit. Let's see if you can sprint towards the finish line."
+ + + +
Candlelight danced over the glossy surfaces of smoothed stone. Archways,
long forgotten by the outside world, circumscribed a room just big enough
to fit a round table for seven. Like the space in which it sat, the wooden
planks seemed worn with age, but the carvings of equine heroes that adorned
its edges and legs commanded respect.
"Proud," Shining Armor sighed as he sat upon one of the similarly themed
chairs, "shouldn't one of the princesses be here for this impromptu
meeting?"
A purple unicorn scoffed in retort as a hoof sculpted his jet-black mane.
In a gaudy tone that trumpeted from the stallion's lungs, he spoke, "No, we
have to consider that the princesses have been compromised in their
decision-making through some sort of manipulated allegiance. My requests
for a discharge of Ms. Tail and a reassignment of her injured squadmate
were hastily denied by a captain whose contrived file reads like a foals'
tale. Magic Barrier is a fraud—"
"Enough, Proud," Shining snapped. He glared through the pony's sandy gold
irides, and his teeth ground the bits of devoured anger. "Magic Barrier's
credentials are solid. Stop wasting this council's time with your game of
tangentials. What is it that you want?"
"Special treatment, unorthodox training, assaulted an actual soldier,
incapacitated through her own act of violence… Tail is simply unfit to have
her commission combat certified. I want the current training invalidated. I
want her discharged. I—"
"You want her program," the raspy voice of Spitfire ascended to grasp the
reins of the conversation. "I don't know much about Captain Barrier, but if
Shining, Celestia, and Luna say he's qualified to do the job, then I'm not
going to question that job. I think the Equestrian Army is getting antsy.
Luna's going to throw a fit in your face when she hears about this. You
know that, right?"
"I'm merely performing my duty within the confines of the law, Captain
Spitfire. Princess Luna can say whatever she pleases, but that mare is the
perfect example of what happens when our creeds are tossed aside."
Seriousness wiped the subtle curvatures from Proud's lips, and his gilded
gaze held firm against the suddenly risen frame of Captain Armor. "I want a
vote, here and now, as to whether Ms. Tail should be stripped of her
assignment and discharged."
"I support her," Shining angrily sneered. The royal guard replanted his
armored forehooves atop the table. "Now speak your votes!"
"The Air Force stands with Shining," Spitfire chimed immediately. "Colonel
Tail has been a valuable asset to our group. Half the damn guard has been
in a scuffle. I'm not going to turn her away for showing some spine, and
I'm certainly not going to support this ridiculous attempt at a power
grab."
"There is no power grab here, Spitfire. I just strongly believe Ms. Tail
does not belong amongst our family," Proud answered rather calmly before he
glanced to his left. "What is the position of the Equestrian Navy, Aph?"
A pink earth pony mare leaned over the table. She sighed, brought her
muzzle to rest atop the wood, and scanned the group with green sights that
navigated interfering bangs of the deepest blue. "We don't condone acts of
aggression against our own."
Proud's golden eyes snatched the light of the flickering flames and shared
the stallion's budding excitement.
"Personally," Aph continued, "I think both aggressors should be discharged,
but that's not up for vote right now. Perhaps we can get to the other one
next."
Shining let out a disgruntled breath. "Looks like it falls on you to put an
end to this travesty, Colonel." The eyes of the room followed the
stallion's voice to a chair seemingly shrouded in darkness.
"Indeed," Proud interjected, "let Equestrian Intelligence put an end to
this charade with knowledge and fact."
"Hmm," a stallion hummed from the shadows before the light from the candles
reflected off his opened, amber-kissed eyes. "Captain Armor, you have the
most direct line of contact with Ms. Tail out of everypony here. Please
wish her the best of luck in her future endeavors." The officer paused when
Proud Valiance gleefully clapped his forehooves together, a glee which
terminated the instant a lavender foreleg tossed a manila folder in
Shining's direction. "Right, because we'll be approaching her once she
finishes her training with Captain Barrier. I think she might be the
perfect candidate to head the creation of our new division."
Spitfire's snickering at Proud's abrupt defeat barely made it to Shining's
senses while the Captain of the Royal Guard curiously stared at the folded
cardstock. All that was written upon it were the words
Mavericks' Wild. For several seconds, Armor stood in silence, his
head occasionally flicking to some internal beat of cognition. His breath
hitched when he remembered exactly which colt he was dealing with, and he
dropped down into his seat before a hearty laugh echoed through the
chamber. "Thank you, Colonel Wing. I'll be sure to pass on your terribly
vague, yet unvague message."
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