588 lines
28 KiB
TeX
588 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-lest-dawn-fail}{%
|
|
\chapter*{Interlude: Lest Dawn Fail}\label{interlude-lest-dawn-fail}}
|
|
|
|
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-lest-dawn-fail}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Lest Dawn Fail}
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``The moon rose, midnight eye
|
|
|
|
Serenaded by the owl's cry
|
|
|
|
In Hannoven the arrows fly
|
|
|
|
Hold the wall, lest dawn fail
|
|
|
|
No southern song for your ear
|
|
|
|
No pretty lass or merry cheer
|
|
|
|
For you only night and spear
|
|
|
|
Hold the wall, lest dawn fail
|
|
|
|
Come rats and king of dead
|
|
|
|
Legions dark, and darkly led
|
|
|
|
What is a grave if not a bed?
|
|
|
|
Hold the wall, lest dawn fail
|
|
|
|
Quell the tremor in your hand
|
|
|
|
Keep to no fear of the damned
|
|
|
|
They came ere, and yet we stand
|
|
|
|
So we'll hold the wall,
|
|
|
|
Lest dawn fail.''}{Lycaonese folk song, origins unknown, dated before annexation by the
|
|
Principate}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
``Walk me through it,'' Marshal Ranker of the Hungry Dog tribe said.
|
|
|
|
She still thought of herself by that name, though her tribe was decades
|
|
dead. She'd slain it with her own two hands, conscripting every male of
|
|
fighting fit and taking them up north to throw her lot with the rebels
|
|
of the civil war that enthroned Malicia. The matron-attendants, women
|
|
and children had been split among other tribes according to ties of
|
|
kinship, the ancient records of the Hungry Dogs sent down into the dark
|
|
beneath the Eyries to add to the ever-swelling chronicles of the fallen
|
|
and the failures. The Black Knight flicked those eerie green eyes at
|
|
her, unreadable.
|
|
|
|
``You were briefed on the plan before we followed it,'' he reminded her.
|
|
``You saw it unfold.''
|
|
|
|
He spoke Lower Miezan with that slight burr to his voice that was the
|
|
mark of Callowans and Duni both, one of the thousand reasons Wastelands
|
|
used to look down on the pale-skinned westerners.
|
|
|
|
``I know the plan as it was told us,'' the old goblin said. ``That is
|
|
the surface. Tell me the underpinnings, how it was woven together.''
|
|
|
|
It was a guilty pleasure of hers, to tease out the inner workings of her
|
|
old friend's mind. The cold method in it was like poppy to her kind,
|
|
cunning viciousness put to murderous purpose. Had he been born of her
|
|
people, Ranker would have killed anyone with the slightest claim on him
|
|
and made the man her consort. There were still matrons in the Eyries
|
|
that whispered he was utterly wasted on \emph{humans}, a species whose
|
|
idea of thought was laughable at the best of times. Broad-teeth monkeys
|
|
who stumbled through Creation blindly, never a moment of their lives
|
|
aware of how fragile and vulnerable they were until the Gobbler
|
|
swallowed them whole. Amadeus, though? Oh, he ever slept with one eye
|
|
open. A frail creature surrounded by a sprawling world of hostile
|
|
demigods, he was the closest that misbegotten species would ever get to
|
|
whelping one of her people.
|
|
|
|
``Is there a point?'' the dark-haired man mused. ``Already it has
|
|
ended.''
|
|
|
|
``There is always a point,'' she said, and bared her yellow teeth at
|
|
him. ``I learn, you learn. All rise.''
|
|
|
|
His own words, these last few, thrown back into his lap. One of their
|
|
very fist conversations, years before she sacrificed her reign to earn
|
|
yet greater victory. The glint in his eyes turned amused. That would not
|
|
have been enough to ply him, in the old days, but Captain was lost and
|
|
Scribe currently set to other purpose. He would speak. The urge was
|
|
there for all villains, and she was providing him a culvert that did not
|
|
endanger him or his designs. The threats had passed with the coming of
|
|
night, though dawn would bring them anew.
|
|
|
|
``There were three forces to reckon with, in this scheme of mine,'' the
|
|
Black Knight said. ``The first was the heroes in the northern valley.''
|
|
|
|
Nine slayers sworn under the Heavens, leading the assault of the
|
|
crusaders. The Legions had protocols to face these, but not in so great
|
|
a number. Though far from invincible, they were a mighty force.
|
|
|
|
``Great power on the march,'' Ranker said.
|
|
|
|
``At the time, significant only as an accumulation of strength,'' the
|
|
green-eyed man noted. ``By gathering together without a single unifying
|
|
story, they stripped themselves of Above's protection. They made
|
|
themselves \emph{fallible}.''
|
|
|
|
``But remained a significant force,'' she probed.
|
|
|
|
``That is so,'' he agreed. ``And they would have become truly dangerous
|
|
if they were allowed to turn into the rear guard for the retreating army
|
|
of Procer. Nine heroes, facing the horde? Most would have perished, but
|
|
at the cost of thousands on our part. Therefore, they had to be
|
|
dispersed.''
|
|
|
|
``Costly to achieve through force of arms,'' Ranker commented.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, but this was no heroic band,'' the Black Knight said. ``Simply an
|
|
assembly of heroes. And so, in the absence of a clearly dominant Named
|
|
or a unifying threat, they developed a point of failure: lack of chain
|
|
of command. Without central authority giving orders, the heroes had to
|
|
rely on their personal judgement when presented with a choice. Judgement
|
|
that was shaped by wildly different origins and cultures. There would be
|
|
no unified response. To disperse the cluster of heroes, then, we needed
|
|
only present them with a decision.''
|
|
|
|
``The Tenth,'' Ranker smiled.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``O Great Destroyer,'' Legate Obasi said, kneeling at his general's
|
|
feet. ``The time has come to strike.''
|
|
|
|
The ancient creature known as Nekheb let out a sigh, nearly sending him
|
|
tumbling down the slope. Scales like midnight and eyes of gold that
|
|
stood tall as a horse, the dragon was one of the living wonders of
|
|
Creation. Magic made flesh, holiest of all the children of the Gods.
|
|
|
|
``I was just getting comfortable,'' General Catastrophe said, wiggling
|
|
in its nest of melted stone. ``It can wait until tomorrow.''
|
|
|
|
Obasi had learned to understand the mood of his draconic master and
|
|
winced at the tone. In court such a visible betrayal of his thoughts
|
|
would have been disgraceful, but Holy Nekheb had never bothered to learn
|
|
to read the faces of men. It was beneath them, admittedly. The
|
|
dark-skinned legate still panicked at the idea that his general might
|
|
decide to slumber then and there. It might be for mere hours, but there
|
|
was no guarantee. After the Conquest the ancient creature had slumbered
|
|
for seven months on the Blessed Isles and eaten anyone trying to wake
|
|
it. The Soninke's predecessor had been stuck in the very uncomfortable
|
|
position of needing to explain that to the Tower.
|
|
|
|
``The scheme of the Carrion Lord is in need or your greatness, O
|
|
Peerless Ancient,'' Obasi tried. ``Without your grace, the might of the
|
|
Empire can only fail today.''
|
|
|
|
The massive dragon clicked its teeth unhappily.
|
|
|
|
``This is true,'' they conceded. ``You are all idiot hatchlings.''
|
|
|
|
Legate Obasi prostrated himself, sincerely hoping no rivulet of liquid
|
|
rock would make it down to him while he did.
|
|
|
|
``Your discernment is without rival, O Mighty One,'' he said. ``Yet have
|
|
the men of Procer not defied your greatness? Only yesterday, did one of
|
|
their own not attempt to slay you?''
|
|
|
|
The dragon's nostrils flared.
|
|
|
|
``An archer,'' it rumbled. ``I \emph{hate} archers. They're worse than
|
|
sea snakes, though not nearly as clever. You speak true, minion-thing. I
|
|
name you one of my heralds for the worth of your advice.''
|
|
|
|
This made it the third instance this year the legate was granted this
|
|
boon. Holy Nekheb had some difficulty telling apart humans, he had come
|
|
to suspect. Or simply did not care enough to try. Obasi stayed
|
|
prostrated as long as he could, though he had to hastily crawl away when
|
|
the dragon rose to its feet and spread its wings. The master took flight
|
|
without further deigning to engage in conversation and the legate
|
|
hurried towards the rest of the officer cabal. The other necromancers
|
|
looked as exhausted as he did, even though they'd inhaled one
|
|
strengthening concoction after another during the night on the march.
|
|
The Carrion Lord had sent the Tenth Legion into mountains that separated
|
|
the valleys north and south, and only a mere bell ago had they reached
|
|
their destination. Beneath the cliff they stood atop fortifications
|
|
could be glimpsed, walls and towers and some peasant bastion. No living
|
|
host could had taken the hard paths through ravines and harsh slopes the
|
|
Tenth Legion had marched through in the dark, but theirs was not the
|
|
strength of the living. Only a mere three hundred of their legion drew
|
|
breath, and they'd been the ones to trail behind as the undead advanced
|
|
silently. Obasi gestured for one of the corpses to bend and sat on its
|
|
armoured back, catching his breath.
|
|
|
|
``The Great Master takes the field,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``They were in a mood?'' Legate Kalaman asked.
|
|
|
|
``Settling down for a nap,'' Obasi sighed.
|
|
|
|
They shared a grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``Well, the crusaders will know we're here soon enough,'' Kalaman said,
|
|
brushing back her dark tresses. ``Best we get the dead moving before
|
|
they send the rear guard after us.''
|
|
|
|
The sorcerers huddled together and wove their magic, taking the reins of
|
|
the army spread across the mountains.Silently, inexorably, Legion X
|
|
Horribilis began to climb down the cliffs.
|
|
|
|
Towards the lightly-guarded enemy camp.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Some would stay,'' the Black Knight said. ``But few. Undead and a
|
|
dragon would by the lure of promised victory. The Procerans would
|
|
shortly panic, realizing they had lost their camp and risked
|
|
encirclement.''
|
|
|
|
Ranker sucked at her teeth, pleased at the cunning involved. That part
|
|
had unfolded exactly as he said. Of the nine heroes leading the host,
|
|
only four had remained when Nekheb appeared behind the crusaders and
|
|
displayed his wroth. The rest had hurried back to kill the draconic
|
|
general before it could slaughter the entire rear guard. The gates of
|
|
the Twin had opened when they were too far to easily return, and out had
|
|
poured the Legions of Terror. The sortie had run straight into the four
|
|
heroes and been stopped cold as the four Named scythed through
|
|
legionaries like ripe wheat. Impressive, but ultimately doomed. It took
|
|
five mage lines assembled for ritual to drive them back, but back they
|
|
were driven. From there, the steel wrote the song. Veteran legions under
|
|
Grem's personal command hammered through the levies at the front until
|
|
they broke and fled, collapsing the lines of fantassins behind them. The
|
|
actual casualties the Procerans took, by Ranker's reckoning, were fairly
|
|
light for a rout. Two, maybe three thousand. It was the enemy commander
|
|
that salvaged the mess, riding down with her Neustrian cavalry to put
|
|
iron in southern spines. The moment the front was stable she ordered a
|
|
full retreat, the Legions in close pursuit.
|
|
|
|
The rest of the morning was spent breaking a sequence of holding actions
|
|
by the Procerans as the crusaders tossed away men trying to slow the
|
|
Legions. Heroes swelled those ranks more often than not, but they were
|
|
offered the greatest of all insults: irrelevance. They stood proud and
|
|
powerful, unbroken by the steel of the Legions. Yet the men died around
|
|
them as they did, and they could not hold back an army by themselves. It
|
|
was unfortunate that heroic presence meant the trade of lives involved
|
|
always sharply in favour of the Procerans, but it was the trade of
|
|
casualties for a tactical advantage and so had remained acceptable in
|
|
Ranker's eyes. More so because, all the while, the Tenth Legion had been
|
|
forming at their back. Nekheb allowed itself to be chased away when the
|
|
heroes arrived spoiling for a fight, but by then nearly three thousand
|
|
undead were on the ground. The heroes engaged as reinforcements
|
|
continued to climb down, preventing further advance but little else.
|
|
They were still fighting when the first ranks of the Proceran retreat
|
|
arrived shortly after Noon Bell.
|
|
|
|
``Winning the battle was not the objective,'' Ranker said.
|
|
|
|
``Not at that juncture,'' Amadeus agreed. ``There was a temptation, I
|
|
will not deny. With the Tenth in the camp, there was no real chance for
|
|
the crusaders to man the fortifications. Which were built to face the
|
|
opposite direction of our advance, regardless. If I'd taken the field
|
|
myself and we'd pressed the advantage, we would have slain a great many
|
|
of them.''
|
|
|
|
``You didn't,'' Ranker said.
|
|
|
|
``Because it would have been committing too early,'' Black said. ``The
|
|
second force to reckon with had not yet been neutralized. It would have
|
|
left us exposed if we'd acted without considering her.''
|
|
|
|
``The Witch of the Woods,'' the old goblin said.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The tower had cracked, like wet clay left too long under the sun. Wekesa
|
|
still felt dismay at the memory. It had been purely kinetic force, that
|
|
much he'd ascertained, but there had been no record of such a working in
|
|
the Tower's scrolls and his study of the creational cascade had failed
|
|
to divine anything useful. He'd tied the tower's protective wards into
|
|
the the flanking mountains after the first blow, but all that had
|
|
achieved was the powdering of at least half a ton of stone when the
|
|
Witch struck again. There'd been few legionaries left inside, by then,
|
|
but those that remained were instantly pulped by the impact. Warlock had
|
|
been wary enough he'd moved out of the tower towards the mountains, and
|
|
it was the only reason he wasn't dead. The Procerans had swarmed the
|
|
broken tower, afterwards, but most of the legion that'd defended it had
|
|
already retreated. It was all he'd promised Amadeus, and he gave it no
|
|
more thought after that. That pair of spells had heralded the escalation
|
|
of the duel into a higher realm of arcana, and the failure of his
|
|
defence had forced him to go on the offensive.
|
|
|
|
More than an hour had passed since then, Wekesa thought, and he idly
|
|
adjusted the bubble of force around him to dampen sound as the peak to
|
|
his left exploded.
|
|
|
|
Illusions were allowing him to keep one step ahead. The girl had a
|
|
working that allowed her to see through them -- Dion's Gaze, he
|
|
recognized -- but she had to abandon her offensive to find him every
|
|
time she used it. She'd followed him into the mountains, and now they
|
|
could fight without concern for their surroundings. A storm brewed in
|
|
the sky above them, this one not of his making. He could feel it
|
|
strengthening, the lightning concentrating in a killing stroke she would
|
|
cast down when she found him. Her casual shattering of mountaintops was
|
|
an attempt to flush him out, though an unsuccessful one so far. Wekesa
|
|
had been biding his time thinning boundaries to place his own killing
|
|
blow, allowing her the run of the range. There was advantage in making
|
|
her act in the open, as he now intended to demonstrate. With the storm
|
|
now nearing its peak, the conditions had become acceptable.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Imbricate},'' he said.
|
|
|
|
Seven-hundredth and twenty-second Hell. A hellscape of unending
|
|
sprawling tempests, bereft of all devils save those who crawled beneath
|
|
the earth. His thoughts burned as he oversaw the alignment, blood
|
|
thrumming with sorcery, until Hell and Creation snapped into place. It
|
|
had been wise precaution to mute sound, Warlock decided, for the howl of
|
|
wind was deafening. Lightning thundered down, hundreds of strands, and
|
|
flashing lights danced across the peaks. The roar of avalanches by the
|
|
dozens devoured the rest of the song and he laughed, runes shining
|
|
around his wrists as he wove the lightning into spears and struck at the
|
|
Witch. The murderous child took it in stride, force spinning around her
|
|
and making a wheel of the power he sent at her. She released it when his
|
|
strikes ebbed, released a ring of pure lightning that shattered another
|
|
two peaks. As he rode the storm, so did she. Discarding any notion of
|
|
digging him out of his hole, she called on the Helian Sun and parted the
|
|
storm with dawn's coming. Scorching light burned all in sight, but
|
|
destruction was an old friend to Wekesa. He knew it better than her.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Reflect},'' he hissed.
|
|
|
|
His mind spun, sights in the thousands flooding it, until he found the
|
|
realm he'd sought. The most beautiful of his tricks, the one truest to
|
|
the essence of sorcery. A lie told Creation: that its lay was as that of
|
|
the Hell he had sought, as if they were perfect reflection. No great
|
|
toil of alignment here, only the barest of efforts as he matched the
|
|
realms. The sky went crimson, great shapes forming in depths that did
|
|
not exist within Creation, and hellflire began to rain. The Witch would
|
|
learn today why men had named him Sovereign of Red Skies.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``The landslides cost us more than them,'' Ranker said.
|
|
|
|
Amadeus conceded the point with an inclination of the head. As well he
|
|
should. The last word from the Ninth was that Sacker had lost over seven
|
|
hundred to an avalanche. While a mile away from the duel of the mages.
|
|
Her entire rear guard swallowed by rocks, along with more than a few
|
|
engines. In the northern valley, the costs had been no less steep. The
|
|
mage officers of the Tenth had still been in the mountains when the two
|
|
Named had begun slinging their spells, and half of them had been lost
|
|
making their escape even as the battle around the Proceran camp erupted.
|
|
The matron had forgot quite how terrifying Warlock could be, when let
|
|
loose, but for all that terror the Witch had been every bit his match.
|
|
And in their struggle, they had wrecked the Vales beyond recognition.
|
|
The southern Twin was buried in stone along with most the valley before
|
|
it, while a stray lance of lightning had hit the peak above the northern
|
|
one, making half the mountain collapse atop it. That alone would not
|
|
have cut retreat entirely for the Legions, but then Warlock had begun
|
|
throwing down mountains to replace those he'd broken and it had gotten
|
|
much, much worse. Half a city's worth of brimstone had tumbled down the
|
|
slope of the northern valley after being batted aside contemptuously by
|
|
the Witch of the Woods, and there was no going around \emph{that}.
|
|
|
|
Even now they could not be certain of how much of the Vales had been
|
|
wrecked by what was already being called the Waltz of Wroth. Both passes
|
|
were now closed, that much was certain, but scrying across the broken
|
|
mountain range had proved impossible and so no fresh report could be had
|
|
from General Sacker. Assuming she was still alive.
|
|
|
|
``Only the third force remained in play, after that,'' Black noted. ``It
|
|
was always going to be the most difficult to predict, as its nature was
|
|
bound to be reactive. In a sense, Wekesa's enthusiasm was a boon. It
|
|
created an obvious opening, and the Heavens never can resist a
|
|
spectacular entrance.''
|
|
|
|
``Militarily speaking, the entire notion was absurd,'' Ranker said. ``If
|
|
one of my staff officers suggested such a thing, I would have them
|
|
demoted back to the ranks.''
|
|
|
|
``That there would be intervention was a given,'' Amadeus said. ``We
|
|
were, at that point, winning. The Tenth weakened when we lost the
|
|
officers, but Nekheb was still looming and we had them bottled up.''
|
|
|
|
The Princess of Neustria had exerted herself all morning in the
|
|
prevention of a rout, but when the battle around the camps unfolded
|
|
she'd plunged back into the deeps. It was a simple question of room.
|
|
There were only two gates allowing entry into the fortifications where
|
|
the Procerans had placed their camp, and limited space within. It'd been
|
|
impossible for her to get a significant portion of her host through
|
|
before the Legions under Grem hit her back, and from there the
|
|
beginnings of a massacre had taken place. The crusaders had trampled
|
|
each other trying to flee Legion blades, and though heroes had attempted
|
|
to hold the back Nekheb had kept them on the backfoot by making the
|
|
occasional pass. Squeezed by the Praesi shield wall, drowning in
|
|
crossbow fire and munitions, the Procerans had died in droves.
|
|
|
|
``The Champion was holding the line,'' Amadeus mused. ``Ah, the pretty
|
|
bait that was. If I'd gone to kill her, before the hour was done I would
|
|
have died.''
|
|
|
|
The third force had been the White Knight, riding through the broken
|
|
mountains with every single horseman under Prince Kaus Papenheim charge
|
|
the flank of the Legions at the darkest hour.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Grem heard them long before he saw them. His people knew that sound
|
|
better than any other on Creation, the thunder of hooves. The doom of
|
|
horde and clan, the mounted killers from the West. That these had sworn
|
|
oaths to the First Prince instead of the King of Callow made little
|
|
difference. The odds of there being a usable pass after Wekesa and the
|
|
Witch smashed apart the mountains were infinitesimal, he knew, but the
|
|
Heavens had worked with lesser numbers. He'd been warned, that there
|
|
would be a hidden knife near the end. His warlord's instincts had not
|
|
dimmed with age. The Marshal of Praes glanced at the signal mage that
|
|
had been his shadow all day.
|
|
|
|
``All mage lines for the Third,'' he said, ``are to send fireballs and
|
|
echoes in the pass, try to collapse it. And get Mok started on
|
|
contingency Misfortune.''
|
|
|
|
For any cavalry not led by a hero, this would have been an imbecile's
|
|
suicide. The source of the charge was a narrow break in the mountainside
|
|
atop a rocky hill at an almost ninety degree angle, all of it leading
|
|
straight into a dark upright crevasse. With the White Knight at the tip
|
|
of the charge, all these damning details would mean was mild
|
|
inconvenience. Sorcery flared and the opening was drowned in flame and
|
|
booming sounds, but no avalanche took. It had been worth making sure.
|
|
Grem One-Eye watched grimly as the flank of Mok's legion pivoted to meet
|
|
the coming enemy. Sappers ran ahead to sow the fields with caltrops as
|
|
the two cohorts of trained pikemen formed in ranks. The ogre general's
|
|
men were no Ironsides, but they were a heavy infantry legion
|
|
nonetheless. Regulars dragged to the fore spikes of iron or wood and
|
|
hammered them in a line three deep according to the standard pattern,
|
|
angling them so they would be aimed at the belly of the horses.
|
|
|
|
As a welcoming gift, a pair of sappers with munitions-loaded crossbows
|
|
shot clay balls at the narrow opening and green flames took to the rock.
|
|
Thin was the hope that this would stop the enemy, but all eventualities
|
|
should be covered if the cost was appropriate and two spheres was cheap
|
|
enough. Mages, crossbowmen and sappers formed up behind the pikemen in
|
|
good order, ranks of regulars serving as shield. Ranker's Fourth and the
|
|
Twelfth had the front, so he could put his entire attention into this.
|
|
The battle for the Vales would be won or lost here, and as Wekesa had so
|
|
kindly deigned to drop a mountain down their only path of retreat there
|
|
was no room left for mistakes. \emph{You have to let them win}, Amadeus
|
|
had said. \emph{The Heavens need their due, before we steal it, else
|
|
another path will be taken.} It might be his old friend was right, but
|
|
Grem would not send men to die without doing his utmost to keep them
|
|
alive.
|
|
|
|
The enemy appeared in a flash of blinding Light, evaporating the
|
|
goblinfire-touched stone as the White Knight charged through. Behind him
|
|
followed the mounted strength of Procer, pouring out like a stream of
|
|
steel-clad death. He did not need to give orders in the matter of
|
|
answer. Balls of flame bloomed across the ranks of the Third and hit the
|
|
charging enemy, but Light burned and dispersed them like wisps of smoke.
|
|
Crossbows fired in a perfect volley, and these drew some blood, but none
|
|
touched the White Knight or the men behind him -- as if the hand of some
|
|
god steered away harm. The horsemen charged down the slope with
|
|
unnatural grace, not a one stumbling over the harsh incline or jagged
|
|
stones, and so the entered the killing field. The caltrops lasted a
|
|
single heartbeat before the hero raised his blade high and a searing
|
|
flame swept before him, clearing a path. The sappers fired their opening
|
|
salvo, sharpers and brightsticks. It was like throwing an egg at a wall.
|
|
Explosions that should have shredded men and horses instead merely
|
|
singed them, the light that should have seared eyes into blindness was
|
|
laughed off.
|
|
|
|
Horns sounded, deep and promising ruing. The horsemen took three
|
|
volleys, before reaching Mok's pikemen. Arrows and fire, the billowing
|
|
poisonous clouds of smokers and the hard bark of sharpers killing less
|
|
than \emph{thirty}. This, Grem thought, was the face of the enemy. Of
|
|
the Heavens putting their hand to the scale, making mockery of the
|
|
strivings of men. For a single moment, as the pikemen clashed against
|
|
the cavalry, it seemed like the legionaries would hold. It passed, pikes
|
|
glancing off armour as the entire first rank of the cohorts were
|
|
brutally trampled. In that first heartbeat, Grem One-Eye lost at least
|
|
two hundred men. The relentless brutality of the carnage almost awed
|
|
him. Horsemen continued to pour out of the passage and slowly the Third
|
|
Legion began to bend. Like a man with a knife slid into the belly,
|
|
groaning in pain. \emph{Now, Black}, he thought. \emph{Now, damn you}.
|
|
|
|
A roar older than even the coming of knights cowed the battlefield, and
|
|
the orc grinned with all teeth bared. Orcs had never quite forgot that
|
|
sound, even though the dragons that had once ruled the Steppes were long
|
|
gone. Above, wreathed in the noonday sun, a madman was riding a dragon.
|
|
And in the claws of that great beast was a massive chunk of stone, still
|
|
dripping melted rock where it had been burned out. A silver arrow
|
|
punched through the dragon's wing, and as it screamed another buried
|
|
into its flank, but still the glorious bastards flew and down went the
|
|
stone. Dropped in front of the very opening from which horsemen poured,
|
|
sealing it shut.
|
|
|
|
``First Legion,'' Grem One-Eye roared. ``Forward!''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Invicta} was the cognomen bestowed upon his men by the Tower.
|
|
Undefeated. They would not fail that name today.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``They managed to retreat anyway,'' Ranker said.
|
|
|
|
The heroes, even after it all, had held long enough for a retreat. Only
|
|
two of the nine had perished, the White Knight joining his fellows to
|
|
escape. The horseman he had brought were not so lucky. Amadeus shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``There was only so much victory to be had,'' he replied. ``Papenheim
|
|
came to us with sixty thousand men. He should now have slightly under
|
|
forty.''
|
|
|
|
The Legions had bled as well, she thought. Twenty-four thousand had
|
|
garrisoned the Red Flower Vales, when the Iron Prince came calling.
|
|
Sixteenth thousand now camped on the western side of the passage the
|
|
battle had been fought over. Sacker's legion should still have the
|
|
better part of it intact, but even so the losses had not been
|
|
negligible. At least, she decided, five thousand in full. Against an
|
|
army of mortals, the Vales could have been held against two hundred
|
|
thousand until the end of time with the numbers they'd had. How starkly
|
|
heroes turned the tide, even when checked by stratagem. Ranker shook her
|
|
head, the two of them standing under a moonless night as exhausted
|
|
legionaries slumbered in the distance. Too tired to even make cooking
|
|
fires for what few rations they had.
|
|
|
|
``Has Warlock made contact?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
The Black Knight shook his head.
|
|
|
|
``He might be dead, Amadeus,'' she said as gently as her people knew
|
|
how.
|
|
|
|
The pale-skinned man shook his head again.
|
|
|
|
``I would know,'' Amadeus simply said.
|
|
|
|
She left it at that, the two of them standing in silence. Grem's tent,
|
|
she saw even from so far away, was still lit. The orc did not know the
|
|
meaning of rest, even in his old age.
|
|
|
|
``We have lost the Vales,'' Ranker finally said.
|
|
|
|
Black laughed.
|
|
|
|
``There are no more Vales to be had,'' he replied. ``It will take months
|
|
for the crusaders to dig through the collapse, even with sorcery. Not
|
|
unless the Witch intervenes and if she does\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Warlock strikes,'' Ranker murmured.
|
|
|
|
If he was still alive, of which there was no proof.
|
|
|
|
``If Hasenbach could so easily employ the Stairway ritual,'' Black said,
|
|
``she would not have stopped at a single passage through the Whitecaps.
|
|
Multiple points of entry into Callow would have been a much greater
|
|
strategic threat.''
|
|
|
|
That was true enough. The Black Queen's army was strong and
|
|
well-trained, but it also had limited numbers. She would have been
|
|
forced to allow one of the invading armies free hand in Callow while she
|
|
dealt with the other, which would have been disastrous on many levels.
|
|
|
|
``True as that might be, we're still on the wrong side of the pass,''
|
|
Ranker reminded him. ``Our supply lines are cut, the full muster of
|
|
Papenheim's reunited army is less than a day away and our only paths for
|
|
retreat involve months of marching through enemy territory.''
|
|
|
|
If they succeeded at giving the Iron Prince the slip, she thought,
|
|
smashing the Proceran border army in the south and retreating through
|
|
the lands of the League of Free Cities might be feasible. The
|
|
alternative was heading for the Stairway, which was much less appealing
|
|
even though the march would be much shorter. An army under Princess
|
|
Rozala Malanza was retreating towards the pass, as of the last reports.
|
|
The old goblin was not eager at the notion of forcing a narrow passage
|
|
filled with hero-led Procerans.
|
|
|
|
``Are we?'' the dark-haired man asked.
|
|
|
|
Ranker's large eyes blinked.
|
|
|
|
``You see us as stranded, old friend,'' Amadeus said. ``I see us as
|
|
\emph{freed}. Callow is safeguarded for some time yet. No longer in need
|
|
of our vigil.''
|
|
|
|
The goblin licked her lips.
|
|
|
|
``And we're at the gate of the Principate's heartlands,'' she murmured.
|
|
|
|
``Come, Ranker,'' the Black Knight grinned. ``Let's have a drink with
|
|
Grem, and discuss our invasion of the Principate of Procer.''
|