
Dawn seemed to come a little earlier that day, the sun's radiant beams jumping gleefully from behind silver clouds with their own celestial agenda, warm and ready for around the next fourteen hours to revolve around them. For the mortals below, however, this harkened the beginning of a sweltering day on the edge of the desert, and for that matter put into question whether the great goddess herself had requested the very sun to come sooner so that her men might march out as quickly as possible.
The men were dressed in their finest armor, gleaming breastplates and shields of gold alongside rank patches and banners of scarlet with the Empire's emblem as a warning to all ahead. First were the cavalry, scouts in the forefront a half mile ahead to wave messages with mirrors and flags as need be. Some smiths in the city had spent half the night readying saddles and spears for the men who had none of their own, as so many new riders had been chosen from ordinary men over the last couple years since the last great war. All, at least, had some form of sword already and were trained decently enough in using them, as was also the case for the infantry walking just behind them. Archers were guarded in lines and patches throughout, fresh feathers on the shafts of their stock of arrows. Whether they were painted red or just unwashed from the blood of freshly-plucked chickens, only the heat of the day would show.
Much like the night before in her dining chambers when Koridai's officials had so recently planted their share of the seeds of war with the Alliance, Chikara herself wore far less than her soldiers - and knew no one would dare to question it except the haughty clerics she had left far behind in the city. The battlefield would be no place to wear ceremonial robes, nor did a god have much use in bulky protective armor. The woman's fine cotton shirt was airy and loose, simple unbleached white from neck hip with tawny pants and boots below. Her elbows and knees were padded, a habit from centuries of enjoying rough play in the battlefield and when sparring at home. The usual assembly of weapons hung low on the thick belt around her waist, her sword, whip, and that random magical spork all ready to cut into human flesh, as also was expected of the freshly sharpened dagger against her thigh. Perhaps not as well carved as the one she'd 'borrowed' from her despicable daughter, but it didn't need to be pretty to stab well. The only part of her kept confined and bound was the mess of red hair she had in leather strings braided behind her head, no crown or other adornment visible to distinguish her to an adversary or even to any of her men who were naive enough not to recognize who she was.
She made earnest attempts all morning to keep conversation with the ordinary soldiers she insisted on walking beside, keeping up morale with witty old war stories and Q and A on weapon techniques that some of the greener young soldiers dared to ask about. A couple of them hung especially close, pink-cheeked in admiration. Yet for the most part the others had the good sense to not look her in the eyes and risk going insane, not be smitten by a woman eons older than them and with a history that included murdering off their forefathers, and especially not risk saying the wrong thing in front of their national leader- and an almighty god. And despite her best efforts, she constantly found herself separated from the majority of the foot soldiers by a rather intimidating force: her own Praetorian, riding high on ebony black horses to guard her even in the midst of a grand army, her personal soldiers above all else.
The modest goddess had no trouble searching for Steel as the day began to wear on; he tended to ride closer than any and had all the regalia expected of one of the greatest leaders of the Empire. When she wished to get a better perspective of their surroundings, Chikara simply strode over behind him to a second riderless horse roped to his own and saddled herself up. This much she did now as distant hills rose ahead of them, the petite leader relaxing her feet into the stirrups and leaning forward to pat the muscular neck of the beast beneath her.
Their fastest riders had been sent out ahead of them at daybreak in several directions with orders on which landmarks to find and report back on, and easily should have begun to arrive within the hour. Like the rest of the army, Chik's anxiousness at their return was growing visible. "We need to be ready for the worst when they return. If we are lucky, all our soldiers will come back with news that no Alliance soldiers were within their sights, and then we shall rest easy that the enemy has made little progress since our last reports. Otherwise, we will at best receive news back of the number to expect…and at worst expect no news at all." This, obviously, would only happen if all of those riders had been captured or killed. The longer they waited with no word back, the more she expected this to be their only reality.
"I am more than appreciative for your enduring protection of me, Lord Steel," the lady spoke quietly, trying to keep their conversation as private as it could considering the circumstances. "Everyone should be ready for a little bit of madness when I push the mass of our army through space itself to the doorstep of our enemy's encampment to surprise them, and your help will obviously be instrumental in keeping the order. However, I hope you're fully aware that when we get into the thick of things I will be releasing a bit of the hold I have on my powers. Rest assured that I will have full control over the forces that protect our country and destroy our enemies, but it is unlikely that you'll want to be in my way."
She leaned back, relaxing momentarily with a soft sigh. "I meant what I said last night. Not a one of their men is going to live through this. I only hope we can say the opposite of our own."