The Top of the Mountain - Part 8

Still, he could find no evidence of it. They behaved as if the situation they were in was entirely routine. Each man found his place in his squadron as ranks were formed up. They walked with the same sort of absentminded diligence that one would expect from labourers performing the menial tasks of the day. Samuel had an ill premonition watching them. He would never have expected it before, but it seemed that there was a point of emotionlessness that would be a negative for a soldier.

They did not even seem to sport the usual fear that even veteran men were surrounded in during tense moments, so extensive was their exhaustion. There was no excitement, no thrill, no anger, no anything. They were just tired, that was all that they felt. Samuel couldn't imagine an army worse off than that. Not when they needed to overcome a foe so numerically superior to them. Even an army half traumatized by terror seemed preferable.