Peter Graham
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2007
- Messages
- 1,616
General Jonathan Nicolson
When it All Went Wrong and the pitiful remnants of humanity still left in Western Europe were struggling to survive in the radiation blasted rubble of the cities and towns, a series of edicts were discovered, all of which had been pinned to the walls of crumbled Town Halls from Ireland to Italy on the night of the twenty ninth of February 2017.
Scrawled on grubby, waxed pieces of paper and signed off in the name of General John Nicolson, these edicts announced the imminent arrival of the Regiment of the New Dawn, who would impose military law "for the good governance of the people and for the restitution of the fallen models of parliamentary democracy."
Each town was ordered to deliver up a tithe of what little resources its occupants had scrimped together as "payment or billet for the men and women of the Regiment." Tithes were to be made ready for collection on the first of April, failing which the Regiment would treat those who defied them as "unlawful humans".
But the people of Bruges refused to pay. Instead, as the deadline day drew near, they decided to trust in the wisdom of their leader, the redoubtable idiot savant known as
Jan Der Koninck
When it All Went Wrong and the pitiful remnants of humanity still left in Western Europe were struggling to survive in the radiation blasted rubble of the cities and towns, a series of edicts were discovered, all of which had been pinned to the walls of crumbled Town Halls from Ireland to Italy on the night of the twenty ninth of February 2017.
Scrawled on grubby, waxed pieces of paper and signed off in the name of General John Nicolson, these edicts announced the imminent arrival of the Regiment of the New Dawn, who would impose military law "for the good governance of the people and for the restitution of the fallen models of parliamentary democracy."
Each town was ordered to deliver up a tithe of what little resources its occupants had scrimped together as "payment or billet for the men and women of the Regiment." Tithes were to be made ready for collection on the first of April, failing which the Regiment would treat those who defied them as "unlawful humans".
But the people of Bruges refused to pay. Instead, as the deadline day drew near, they decided to trust in the wisdom of their leader, the redoubtable idiot savant known as
Jan Der Koninck