The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality

Chapter 153: The Garrison Revolt



Chapter 153: The Garrison Revolt

The Southmark’s Third Garrison mutinied on an Ironday.

Not for ideology. Not for revolution. Not for the grand causes that historians attributed to mutinies when they wrote about them decades later. The Third Garrison mutinied because Corporal Dren Harwick — twenty-six years old, Human, three years of service, married to a woman he saw eleven days per year — was told that his leave request had been denied for the fourth consecutive time, and the denial pushed a man who had been bending for three years past the point where bending was distinguishable from breaking.

"I am not reporting for the night watch," Dren said. He said it to his sergeant — a career soldier named Tomas whose own leave had been denied twice and who understood the feeling but not the expression of it. "I am going home. My wife is in Mill Creek. I have not seen her in four months. I will return in seven days."

"Corporal, leave denial is a command decision. You can appeal through—"

"I have appealed three times. The appeals were denied with the same form letter. The letter says ’operational requirements preclude leave at this time.’ Operational requirements. We’re guarding a trade bridge that sees forty wagons per day and hasn’t been attacked in six years. The operational requirement is *standing here*, and I have been standing here for four months while my wife stands alone."

"If you leave post without authorization—"

"Court-martial me. I’ll take a court-martial over another month of watching empty road."

Dren left. He walked out of the garrison gates at the seventeenth hour, in uniform, carrying his personal effects, and was stopped by exactly nobody because the gate guard — Corporal Fellis, who had also been denied leave — watched him go and decided that stopping a friend for the crime of wanting to see his wife was something he chose not to do.

The chain reaction was immediate. Within two hours, fourteen soldiers had left the Third Garrison. Not together — individually, each one making the same calculation Dren had made: the punishment for leaving was less painful than the condition of staying. By dawn, thirty-one soldiers — twenty percent of the garrison’s combat strength — were absent from post.

The commanding officer — Captain Larent, a noble-born officer from House Veyrath’s minor branch, who had been posted to the Southmark as a career step and who treated the posting as a waiting room rather than a responsibility — woke to discover that a fifth of his garrison had walked out in the night and that the remainder were watching him with the flat, assessing stare of soldiers who were deciding whether to follow.

***

The mutiny spread — not through conspiracy but through *example*. The Third Garrison’s walkout reached the Second and Fourth Garrisons through the military’s informal communication network, which operated faster than the official chain of command because informal networks weren’t slowed by procedure.

The Second Garrison — forty kilometers east, guarding the Ashwall’s central section — experienced a work stoppage. Not a walkout — the soldiers remained at post. But they stopped performing maintenance duties, drilling, and the non-essential military functions that consumed seventy percent of a garrison’s daily activity. They stood watch. They did nothing else. The work stoppage was technically within regulations — soldiers were required to perform assigned duties, and the stoppage carefully targeted duties that hadn’t been formally assigned that day, exploiting the procedural gap between standing orders and daily assignments.

The Fourth Garrison — the Southmark’s engineering corps, responsible for Ashwall maintenance — submitted a collective grievance. The grievance was formal, signed by sixty-three soldiers, and complained about pay (sixteen Marks per month for enlisted soldiers, compared to twenty-two Marks for equivalent civilian positions), leave policy (an average of twenty-three days per year, compared to the Ministry of Coin’s standard of thirty-eight), and officer quality (nobles who viewed garrison command as resume padding rather than service).

"It’s a class revolt," Thresh analyzed. He and Ryn were in Ashenveil, reading the Ministry of Scrolls’ dispatches about the Southmark situation. "Not a military revolt — the soldiers aren’t refusing to fight. They’re refusing to accept peacetime conditions that are worse than civilian equivalents. The military’s compensation and leave policies were designed during the war era, when soldiers accepted hardship because the danger was real. The danger has diminished. The hardship hasn’t. The gap produces resentment."

"Noble officers commanding commoner soldiers."

"Noble officers who obtained their commissions through house connections rather than merit, commanding commoner soldiers who obtained their positions through economic necessity. The class structure that the Kingdom On Merit theoretically eliminates is preserved inside the military, because the military’s officer appointment process — unlike the Academy’s entrance exam — still favors house connections."

***

The mutiny ended in six days.

Not through force — King Aldren refused to send troops against troops, understanding that soldiers fighting soldiers was the fastest way to turn a labor dispute into a civil war. The resolution came through negotiation — direct negotiation between the Crown’s military affairs office and elected representatives of the garrison soldiers. *Elected* representatives — the soldiers had organized themselves, selected spokespeople through informal vote, and produced a collective bargaining position that was coherent, specific, and fundamentally reasonable.

The terms

Pay Enlisted base pay increased from sixteen to twenty Marks per month. Officer pay unchanged — the officers hadn’t mutinied, so the officers’ pay was not relevant. The increase cost the Ministry of Coin approximately 84,000 Marks annually — significant, but manageable within the existing military budget by reducing equipment procurement delays.

Leave Minimum thirty days annual leave for all enlisted personnel. Denial of leave required the personal authorization of the garrison commander (not a subordinate officer), with written justification copied to the Ministry of War.

Officer quality A new requirement that garrison commanders complete the War College’s command certification program — a six-month course that had previously been recommended but not required, creating a gap that allowed politically-connected but professionally unqualified nobles to receive command postings.

"The terms are reasonable," Aldren said, signing the agreement. "Which is precisely why they should have been implemented before a mutiny was necessary."

The soldiers returned to post. The thirty-one walkouts were pardoned — not for altruistic reasons but for strategic ones, because court-martialing twenty percent of a garrison for leaving a posting that the Crown acknowledged was inadequately managed would produce a recruitment crisis that was more expensive than the pardon.

Corporal Dren Harwick returned from Mill Creek after seven days. He had seen his wife. He had eaten home-cooked food. He had slept in his own bed. He returned to the garrison and resumed his duties with the quiet satisfaction of a man who had broken a rule and been proven right.

The mutiny was over. The reforms were implemented. And the kingdom’s military — the institution that the Sovereign had built to defend 1.4 million people — had added a new mechanism to its operational toolkit collective bargaining. The mechanism was not in the founding documents. The mechanism was not designed by the Sovereign. The mechanism had been invented by Corporal Dren Harwick, who missed his wife.

Systems design meets human need. The system bends or it breaks. This time, it bent.


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