stMjMNES3:Another Go

Worst orders ever, but thats because I cant do much without knowing anyone but barbarians.
 
Ignazio felt the glaring sun beating down on his back; in his ears rang the melody of a thousand hammers striking down on the heads of a thousand nails intertwined with the harmony of a thousand saws cutting there way through a thousand wooden beams; throuh the beaded sweat streaking down his sun-bronzed face he could see a thousand worksites for a thousand buildings stretching as far as his eyes could see. Slowly, Ignazion stood up from his work, staightening out his sore back until he stood erect, straight as an arrow in flight. Looking around, he felt a sense of pleasure, even if in his muscles he felt great ache and pain.

"Tullia! Tullia!" Ignazio called out to his wife, "Bring some cold water, the day is hot and the work is hard!"

"One minute, dear." Tullia called back. Seperating herself from the gaggle of women who had formed in Giada Frozzi's completed garden, Tullia carried herself over to the well, one of the few structure finished for miles around, and peered into its depths. Gazing at the dark water, Tullia became enraptured by the quiet depths of the deep, shadowy liquid that flowed up from out beneath the earth only to be trapped within the dank shadows of the well's walls.

"Tullia! Tullia!" Ignazio's voice rang out through the air above the chorus of bron striking bronze and wood. Hearing her husband's voice, Tullia was startled out of her reverie. "Tullia, what is the matter?" Ignazio called again, her deep baritone voice rolling through the air like the deep thunder of Jupiter.

"Nothing my dear!" Tullia's alto-pitched voice calling back, its notes sliding through the air like those of a bird's song, vibrating back and forth with a nature all their own. Tullia quickly tied her bucket to the available rope before tossing it in and reeling it back up filled with the cool, refreshing liquid contained within the the stone lined walls of the well. Taking hold of the bucket, Tullia ran as fast as she could upon the short legs the g-ds had blessed her with. Finally, Tullia came to where her husband was waiting, sitting on a boulder that needed still to be removed, wiping the persperation from his face and upper body as he waited for the water his wife had run to fetch for him.

"Here you go," Tullia said mekely, averting direct eye contact with her husband as she handed him the bucket and drinking ladle, "I'm very sorry it took so long. When I got to the well," at this point Tullia tried to force herself to look into her husband's face, but her head shot right back down to face the ground as soon as her eyes could see the dark stuble on his chin before continuing, "I looked into the water and I just sort of"

Ignazio cut his wife off by reaching his hand over to her chin and lifting her head so that she would see the smile on his face. "It's alright," he said, staring into the azure blue of her irises with the mahogany brown of his, "don't worry about it, just go start backing bread for dinner; I will be very hungry when I finish."

Tullia, relieved that her large, powerful husband was not angry with her, wuickly scurried off to the communal bakery, another of the few finished buildings to be found, where she went about the work of preparing bread for that night's dinner.

Turning his attention to the cool, briskly refreshign water, Ignazio drank several ladles before setting the bucket aside and returning to work. Picking up his saw, Ignazio returned to the tedious labor of cutting wood for his new house. As the fierce, noonday sun beat down on his sun weathered back and the harmonious choir of hammers, saws, nails, and wood rang in his ear, Ignazio smiled. He, and all of the many men and woman who toiled and labored along side of him, were truly blessed. Here, along the Crati and Croscili rivers they were able to have a hand in shaping the future of La Republicca; here, among the rolling green pastures below the grandiose mountains and hills in between the rivers and the sea a new city for Calabria was rising through the industry of her people, a new capital was being formed on this site; Sybaris was to be a shining beacon of Calabrian culture, wealth, and power, Sybaris, the capital of La Republicca.

OOC: Please change my capital Sybaris, which on the scale of the map does not need to be shifted from the Calabrian capital's current position.
 
I thought they were due Tuesday...they will be comins today.
 
"Countrymen, fellow citizens, brothers," the voice of General Mirodionus rang through the air to the ears of the assembled men. General Mirodionus was the greatest fighting man La Republicca had ever seen. In public life he was a senator and in private life a merchant in Sybaris, but now surrounded by his fellow soldiers on the dusty plain breathing in the remnants of long forgotten days swept up from the ground by mellow winds the blew incessesantly but brought naught of the calm relief of a sumjmer breaze in the plains of dear Calabria, he was a general.

"Answer me this," Mirodionus carried on, "why do we stand here today? Why do we stand here today, on this desolate plain, thousands of miles from our wives and mothers, fathers and sons, living off of land we have never seen before and fighting along men who do not even speak the same language?" A general murmur went up among the men, though it was likely just as much complaints of the dust settling on their spears as finding an answer for their commander's question.

"We stand here today," the General continued in the calm, dignified voice of the many aged senators to whom he was forced to listen to for so many years now, "for La Republicca!" The last statement burst from his throat with the power of a thousand drums. With a unison of motion, the men turned their attentionj away from the rags with which they tried desperately to polish their bronze blades and shileds.

The air still ringing with the force of his voice, the General continued, "We stand here today my brothers because we are men, Calabrian men, and Calabrian men never, never bow to anyone!" The last statement came out with such fury that his eyes dilated with the power of it, gleaming in the dim, shadowed light as if light from behind by a million suns and a million moons.

"We stand here today, my friends, because we love our freedom! We stand here because we are willing to fight, and to die for the republic! We stand here because we are true men, true Calabrian men, who refuse," and this, he emphasised, with the force of a wild boar crazed in the hung, and with the same glazed eyes the the general bore now, "who refuse, to be ruled by anyone but ourselves! Pescara is a nation ruled by dictators and kings, and we are a nation ruled by senators, and consuls!" Suddenly, the General ceased turning his head away, as his breathing slowed, the glaze and glow of his eyes quieted, and even the air seemed to grow still, the wind refusing the blow and the dust refusing to drift as if both, like the soldiers, were fixated on the glorious image of a man before them standing in peace and harmony but also with a hidden force only just having quieted.

"We stand here," he continued, his voice calm and quiet, such that the soldiers had to strain to here it, but still with a clearness like that of a mountain stream, "in the end, not for ourselves, but for out family and for our country." Slowly, now, he turned his head back to the soldiers in his eyes, blue as the Mediterranean sea, the men now saw not fury, not peace, but simply power, might, and glory raging forth like a tidal wave upon the sea or a charging bull out in the field, continuing, he said with the force of a thousand men and a thousand horses, a thousand bulls and a thousand boars, a thousand winds and a thousand waves, "We fight, for La Republicca!"
 
The Lost Scrolls of Nubia
Chapter 1
The Gathering​

Drifting in and out of sleep, Eanatum tossed and turned. His dreams raced through his unconscious and weary mind while images of his mother and fierce battles plagued his thoughts. With a sudden jolt his body jerked up. Slowly opening his eyes, Eanatum squinted into the night sky. His eyelids were heavy with sleep but startled by his dreams and the message by his mother, he rubbed them with his fists and pulled himself up. His tribe was still asleep scattered along the Great River's banks. Gingerly stepping over motionless bodies, Eanatum stopped at his good friend Haqikah and nudged his side. "What is it Eanatum" he whispered. "Wake Khons and Minkabh. We must go. I had a dream".

Slipping among his tribes people, Eanatum finally stopped at Nathifa, his wife, and kissed her head.

"Lets go!" He loudly whispered to the three friends. "I will tell you of the dream on our way."

"Where are we going?" Asked Khons.

"We are going to the Shluh."

And with that, the four men slinked into the abyss of Horus's cloak. Hidden by night Eanatum trudged his tired feet in the sands of the desert. The Nile glistened with the many gods above, each adding their own little light to the Great River. Slowing himself down to a steady pace, he peered through the thick expanse of night. Looking back, Eanatum signaled with his hand to his friends. “This is it” he whispered. “That didn’t take long at all.” replied Khons. “We must move silently, they’re still sleeping.”

The four men once again slipped in and out among the sleeping bodies until they came to Bebti, leader of the Shluh, first born of Osirus. Carefully nudging him as not to wake the violent man, Eanatum whispered, “I am Eanatum. I have been spoken to by the goddess Sekhmet. My prophecy has been given to me and I am to join the tribes of this land together to lead them into battle against the mighty Egyptians. Will you join us?”

“I too have heard this prophecy from the great Osirus and you have been named leader of this soon to be civilization. But I am apprehensive of what is to come. You must prove to me that you are capable of leading my men and there is only one way to do so.” Replied Bebti. “You must fight my greatest warrior. I you are to pin him into submission. I will consider your leadership and will tell my people. Come, we must talk.”

The five men walked over to the smoldering ashes of the campfire to discuss the prophecy. The fight would be in the morning and Eanatum was seized by concern.
 
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