There was never an actual formal surrender. The fighting just 
graduallydiminished as the legions slowly swept the city. Larger pockets of 
resistancewere bypassed until the smaller ones had been taken. Then those were 
graduallyground down.    Bitt picked up his pen again and added more.“Dear 
Lord. What a bland statement forsomething so terrible. Every street and 
building was bitterly contested.Fighting raged from floor to floor and room to 
room. The streets were piledwith debris creating roadblocks that had to be 
taken one at a time. Peopleclimbed to the rooftops and rained death down onto 
the attacking Legionnaires.And when they ran out of arrows and spears they 
threw bricks, stones, rooftiles and they even levered down sections of the 
walls themselves. They tookthe city but the legions paid a high price.”    He 
put down his pen and waited for the inkto dry before continuing his reading.    
Thedefenders died hard and honorably. They fought well. There was not one part 
ofthe city that was not contested and all had to be taken by sword and pilum. 
Allexcept two places.    Thefirst was the great Library itself. The Legion was 
forbidden under pain ofdeath from getting anywhere near it. That place was to 
be taken by the forcesof the Magna Bibliotheca - the grand library of the 
empire alone.    Bittunraveled more of the scroll as he read and a small page 
of parchment came intoview at the bottom. Someone had carefully placed the 
parchment there. Curioushe picked up the small piece and found there was 
writing on it. It was done isa spidery scrawl so unlike the rest of the scroll. 
So very unlike the writingof a professional scribe.    “Istill remember the day 
the city fell. Many memories haunt me but one stands outamong the rest. 
Technically the city had fallen and the worst of the looting andkilling had 
ended. The survivors on both sides tended to their wounded. Thefighting for the 
Library continued at a ferocious rate. Everyone had beenordered away from it 
and even the Legionnaires gave it a wide berth. In frontof the main entrance 
was a plaza. A large group of Legionnaires had gathered atthe far edge (outside 
of arrow range). They had set up a group of chairs,tables, couches and even 
blankets laid on the paving. Many were wounded andwere being tended by the 
medicus; the healers. Others just seemed to be tired.At first the group was 
angry and gave me and my cousins a difficult time butfood and drink were 
brought out and soon the mood mellowed.   “All eyes were turned to the Great 
Library and the events happeningthere. The outer wall was breached and the 
fighting moved into the courtyardbeyond. And then into the interior of the main 
building itself. The soldierswere intently watching and would shout and cheer 
at a particularly exciting orinteresting scene. They cheered the loudest when 
someone died. It seemed to belike some sporting event. Like watching their 
favorite team playing. At first Iwas angry at them for cheering the deaths of 
people from a fellow clan andthose just defending their homes. But then I 
noticed they cheered the loudestwhen an ATTACKER died. When someone or 
something from the Grand Library waskilled or destroyed. Some were even keeping 
count. Others were betting on whowould get killed next!”   “Only later was it 
explained. When the final assault on the city wasplanned the Commander had 
asked that the powerful troops and forces of theLibrary take part. The giant 
and ogres would have smashed the walls easily. Andthe summoned and undead 
things would wreak havoc on the defenders. ManyLegionnaire lives would have 
been spared and perhaps more of the defenderswould have surrendered in fear of 
them. But that was not to be. “Your pettydesires are of no concern to me,” the 
Grand Librarian said. “I care only forwhat truly matters; the utter destruction 
of the true enemy. I will not wastemy power on small, trivial things. The city 
is yours; if you can take it. Donot annoy me again with such stupid requests or 
your death will be slow andpainful.” So the attack went on without them. I will 
admit to pride in knowingthat clan and kindred killed many legionnaires. Some 
say as many as eight inten died in the assault. Many of the survivors blamed 
the deaths of theircomrades on the Library. ‘If those ogres had been there to 
smash down thebuildings we wouldn’t have had to clear them one at a time. A 
library magecould have taken down that damn doe easily. Instead I lost ten 
goodlegionnaires before we managed to kill that mage.’ I heard those and 
similarwords many times.   “Worse still; afterward the Grand Library accused 
the legion of stealinggoods that rightfully belonged to them. The fact that 
those goods belonged toneither and had been looted from the dead bodies of the 
true owners was ignoredby the Library.”   “Legate Tetrinius took a careful 
count of the forces the Library broughtto the city and how many they left with. 
He noted that many did not survive.The Grand Library people looted the library 
and left with surprising haste. Noteven lingering to be certain that the 
Cairrge Brachaidhe was truly wiped out.That surprised everyone. They went to 
all that effort to defeat their enemy anddidn’t inflict the killing blow. Many 
said they no longer had the forces to doit. Too many had been killed. Most 
exciting was the rumor that the GrandLibrarian herself had died. She was last 
seen by the legion entering thelibrary they were attacking. Certainly, no 
legionnaire ever saw her again aliveafter that.”   ‘Trevonna Dalachaie’    
There was nothing else on the parchment. Noteven a date.    Carefully, so as to 
not damage the writingalready there he added his own. “Thisbares out what we 
know. The Magna Bibliotheca withdrew with unexpected haste.And they did not 
bother any of the clans for several decades. But they arestill about. And we 
fight them still.    He finished reading the history.    What was left of the 
legion wasunceremoniously sent back to Gamellae with little thanks from an 
ungratefulemperor. Upon arriving home they found that the Parthians had used 
theirabsence to attack and raid. It took two years of hard campaigning to drive 
themback. Rebuilding the legion back to full strength took almost a decade. In 
someways it never did fully recover.
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