The two of them were taken, along with the mass of soldiers, deeper into Ernest, down its paved streets. Neither of them had been to a city before, and they marvelled at the stonework of all the ancient buildings. They weren't alone in that. Like a crowd of pigeons, the peasants looked as one at all the new sights that they had to drink in. The Blackthorn soldiers shook their heads in disgust at the sight.
And then there was a sight that stunned both Blackthorn men and peasants alike. When they neared the encampments of those captured Emerson soldiers. More than ten thousand men, in hundreds and hundreds of tents, spread deeply across the more open spaces of the city. Their fires filled the air with smoke, and their cook pots boiled from their rations.