Scout Lore
Scout Lore
Alright, now listen well. At the end of this valley there are two trails leading out and to the east. The leftmost looks easiest, but it isn't: it ends in a steep defile about half a mile from here. Lead your men the other way instead. Beyond there's a river, and the bridge has been destroyed. Don't worry, I found a ford off to the north, good enough for men, horse, and wagons. Just opposite the bridge Osric's men are waiting. He's got about two score archers hidden in the underbrush, while the main body of his troops are camped in a meadow just beyond those trees there. No - those trees. A pretty shabby lot, all long pikes and leather armor. They look like easy pickings, but it's a trap - Osric himself is with a company of elite troops hidden in reserve at the end of the meadow. Nasty bunch: heavy horse, the rest of his archers, and some strange tattooed fellow I'll wager is a spell slinger. Caught a bit of what they were saying, and it looks like they're expecting us. That's about the size of it, scout's honor, and if you don't believe me, you can ride ahead yourself and see.
How did I get so close? Well, it's what you pay me for, isn't it? I've been living on my own in the wild since I was ten years old. I know to stick to game trails, weave fronds into my hair, and paint my face green and brown so as not to be seen. I'faith, I could crawl right through a dry briar patch without making mark or sound. I grew up in the streets of Rovayle, as poor and cunning a guttersnipe as you could imagine. Crept through my share of creaky hallways and narrow windows before they banished me, and in the times since, I've only gotten sharper. I can see a squirrel in the boughs of a tree a league away, and hear the whisper of an owl in flight. No wolf or Wyldkind's ever got the drop on me, and none ever will.
In my day I've worked with all sorts of Scouts, from woodfolk to farmer's sons to strange, ugly folk I'd swear was part Orc. Some have lived in the woods all their lives while others found their way there, like me. Don't much matter in the end, after all - if we do our job, you lot always come through fine. I've seen enough idiots get slaughtered to know what happens to an army without any scouts. Some scouts swear allegiance to a prince or bishop or clan, but most just live from job to job, seeing the world one sneak at a time. A good scout's worth more than gold, and trust me, commander, you're working with the best. I thought of swiping Osric's helm from his luncheon table and bringing it back to you as a prize. No, I was that close, and I could've gotten back past their guards, too. But then he'd know I'd been there, see, and he'd know that you know where he is. Can't have that, right?
Back to business. Osric's thinking you'll just barrel right up the valley and into him, and if we turn to the north for the ford, his archers'll see it. I can manage to find another way. Pull your men back, then veer north to that promontory there… no, that one there with all the trees. Then we can cut straight across the ford and pinch his reserve right in the arse before he knows we're there. With all due respect sir, it seems a worthy plan to me. But whatever you're going to do, you'd best be quick. Osric will have scouts of his own, sure as snow in the North, and I guarantee you that they're watching us and counting your troops right now.