âSo, out with it. Whatâs my task?â Cambyses asked after calming out a bit and wiping her tears off.
âLetâs go to the medical camp first. I wanna inspect the wounded.â Alexander replied in a seemingly unrelated note and started quickly making his way to the clinic.
âOh, donât you have more important stuff to do?â Cambyses asked in surprise, hastily following in tow.
After all, it was Alexander that specifically instructed to spread the information as quickly as possible.
âCamius is more than enough. His mouth never stops moving.â He assured. âNow, what do you think of the offer they made me?â Alexander asked somewhat cryptically.
Cambyses frowned at the question.
She personally thought it was a great offer. She thought that finally all his hard hard work had paid off.
But if he was asking her, it probably meant she was wrong and that there was something off.
But what was it?
âYou mean they were lying?â She asked, confused.
âUmm⊠yes and no. Itâs a bit more nuanced than that.â Alexander hinted ambiguously. âBut, carry on. Elaborate. What do you mean by lying?â
â Uhhh, that they would find a reason not to make you captain. Like manpower or supplies shortages. Or give you bad and wounded soldiers orâŠ..okay I donât know.â Cambyses confessed, clearly finding faults with her own reasoning.
âThatâs a good theory.â Alexander nodded. âBut any such measures would be temporary. Do you really think supply and manpower problems or subpar soldiers can stop me?â He asked with a big grin on his face.
âOf course not. Anyone who knows anything about you would know just what kind of knack you have for turning trash into treasure.â Cambyses lampooned internally.
âSo what could they do?â Cambyses straightforwardly asked.
âWell, I donât know for sure. But hereâs what I would do. Disband the third phalanx.â
âDisband the third phalanxâŠ..?â Cambyses repeated, confused and horrified.
What does âdisband the third phalanxâ mean? Even if the entire phalanx is killed, a new third phalanx will be made.
The only theoretical way to do it would be if they only ever have two phalanxes.
âI can see youâre having some wild thoughts thereâŠ.hehe.â Seeing Cambysesâs incessant frown, Alexander chuckled. He could almost see the mental gymnastics she was doing.
âWhat I mean is that the survivors will most likely be added to the four other phalanxes in the short term. .đđđ
In the long run, a new sixth phalanx will probably be formed using them. And what will happen to the third phalanx you ask? âThe third phalanx will forever be dedicated to the memory of our founder, Constans and the soldiers he ledâ, will be the slogan. What do you think?â Alexander inquired.
âI think you havenât slept in a long time.â Cambyses curtly replied, absolutely not convinced.
âHaha, I too wish to sleep, my dear. But, it is not being paranoid if someone is out to get you.â Alexander reasoned.
âJust think about it. Constans was the muscle that formed this mercenary group. Isnât it romantic to have the memory of âan eternal warriorâ dedicated to a unit? A brave warrior that died in battle and had his deeds immortalized. Is it really that impossible?â
âYes, it is. Your idea of a unit dedicated to Constans being purely decorational is absurd. As a matter of fact, it should be the strongest unit to honor his legacy.â Cambyses rejected his rhetoric.
Such practices were almost unheard of. It had only happened to a small number of kings and even then the chosen unit would usually not be in active military service but something like the royal guards.
For such a thing to happen in a mercenary group was unthinkable. Especially not if it meant such blatantly cheating someone as popular as Alexander.
âAlexander you yourself should know how far-fetched this âexplanationâ is. Thereâs no way thatâs going to happen. Are you sure youâre not reading into this too deeply?â Cambyses tried to convince Alexander.
Alexander will be the first to admit his theory of turning the third phalanx purely decorational a bit far-fetched.
He came up with it while talking to Cambyses and didnât have the time to think too deeply about it.
But the aim of this conversation was not to determine if there really was a scheme to get him.
It was to convince Cambyses that there was a plot to get him and to bring her to his side.
Frankly, even Alexander himself was not too sure if there really was something or if he was just imagining things.
But it didnât matter.
Whether or not there actually was a scheme to deny his freedom was irrelevant.
What was relevant was that Alexander suspected there was a scheme.
And since there was a chance, he chose to attack first.
Alexander was by nature an aggressive individual who believed in the first strike advantage and preferred to be the attacker than be the defender.
But, for his attack to succeed this time, he needed to convince Cambyses and get her to his side.
So he stated, â That was just one way they might do it. There are several more.â
âAnd I very much wish I am wrong,â Alexander wished. â But do you remember the exact wording of the offer? They said âwe will make you captain tomorrow.â The keyword here being âtomorrowâ. Why tomorrow? Why not today or now?â
âSemantics Alexander, semantics. They just said so because you will be freed tomorrow. Thereâs nothing more to it than that. I think youâre finding holes because you want them to.â
âNothing would make me happier than to be wrong.â Alexander proclaimed. âAnd youâre wrong about one thing. I most likely wonât be freed tomorrow. The exact condition was if we won this battle, I would be set free. Everyone just simply assumed victory was in the bag and started celebrating early. Now, they will find a way to keep me.â
âThatâŠI donât believe they will do that. Everyone knows just how hard you worked to get your freedom. They just canât take it off at the last minute on a technicality. Not everyone is out to get you, you know.â
âMaybe not Nestoras, but what about the old geezer? That geezer has always hated my guts but still puts on the face of a saint because I am useful to him. Donât tell me you never noticed?â
âThatâŠokay, Alexander, whatâs the point of telling me all this?â This time her tone changed into a sharp one. She could feel Alexander was leading her on to somewhere dangerous.
âSay if a sword was placed against your neck and asked to choose between me and the geezer, who would you choose?â Alexander asked in a mysterious tone.
ââŠ*Silence*âŠâ
She simply walked slowly forward with a dazed look, trying very hard to remove the image that subconsciously appeared in her mind.
How could she not understand the hidden meaning behind his question?
âAlexander, what are you intending to do? Aristotle is considered by everyoneâŠâ
âHold on there, I never said anything about doing anything, But just think about it. Just think about it.â Alexander emphasized in a reassuring tone.
But far from being reassured, this only alarmed Cambyses to no end.
By how Alexander seemed to refuse to talk about it and denied everything, it most likely meant he had already made up his mind and was merely informing her.
âAlexander, donât do anything stupid in a moment of rage. I of all people know just how hard you worked to get your chance at freedom. But rashly lashing out wonât do you any good. Cambyses changed her tone to a pleading one.
âWhen have I ever done anything rashly? Donât worry, I know my limits. â He assured in a comforting tone.
This alleviated Cambysesâs worries to an extent. She knew Alexander wasnât anything like the hot-blooded boys of his age. In fact, most times he was unnaturally cool-headed.
This, paired with the fact that she could think of no way that Alexander might secretly off Aristotle, somewhat eased her mind.
âThatâs good. Just be a little more patient, okay dear?â Cambyses lovingly soothed her lover.
She breathed a mental sigh of relief as she put the matter off to the back of her mind, chalking it off as Alexander merely venting, half because of rationalizing it, half because she wanted to.