Squire
Kel set her glaive to one side and rested her quiver on the boulder. Quickly she strung her longbow and laid it down. She checked the weapons on her belt—sword, dagger, warhammer behind her right hip—and took a mouthful of water.
Jump whuffed; Kel’s four sparrows fled the wood, shrieking. In the distance Kel heard an alarm call from more sparrows in an otherwise silent wood. The Scanrans were advancing. Dom signaled the man on his right; Kel signaled the last man in the squad on her left. She then drew a griffin-fletched arrow from her quiver and set it to the bowstring. Carefully she looked around the side of the boulder.
There they were, still ill-defined lumps of movement behind the screening brush at the edge of the trees thirty yards ahead. Two taller moving shapes looked to be horsemen—nobles, then, or officers. Among the Own there were two opinions: kill the soldiers because they fight and officers are useless, or kill the officers because they think and the soldiers will break up and panic without them. Kel and Dom belonged to the second camp. As the Scanrans exploded from cover, shrieking war cries, both Kel and Dom waited until the two horsemen emerged. As one they stood behind their covering rocks and loosed. Dom hit his man in the thigh. Someone else’s shot caught that Scanran in the shoulder; he reeled in the saddle and fell.
Kel shot her officer squarely in the throat. He too dropped. Kel ducked as arrows rattled on the stones around her, and fitted another arrow to her string. Up she went, taking a perilous moment to choose her target: a blond man the size of a bear, frothing at the mouth as Scanrans did when they claimed war demons had possessed them.
This is for you, thought Kel, and loosed. Her arrow punched into the frothing man’s eye. He dropped like a stone, war demon or no. Kel took cover to choose two arrows this time, holding one in her mouth as she set the other to her string. Once more she chose a target and shot; the man she hit keeled over as she put her second arrow to the string. About to draw, she stopped. The enemy was racing back into the tree-cover. Dom signaled everyone to stop and save arrows. The squad on Kel’s left did the same.
“Nice shooting, Kel,” Dom said with approval, taking a swallow of water.
“It’s these feathers the griffins gave me,” she told him, showing him one. “I think if I shot straight in the air I’d still hit a target.”
“Modest, modest, modest,” he teased, shaking his head. “Do you think it’s a requirement for lady knights or something? Lady Alanna isn’t modest—at least, not about the things she does well.”
Nari and her trio zipped past, crying the alarm. Dom and Kel readied to face the enemy’s next rush. The Scanrans were more careful this time. Arrows preceded them, raining behind the squads’ rock wall. A man yelped on Kel’s left; another screamed on Dom’s far right. Dom cursed. Now Scanran foot soldiers came on in a single ragged line, instead of each man charging as he pleased. They had shields, round ones they tried to keep overlapped with their neighbors’ as they advanced. Dom’s men shot at their thighs or at those who didn’t keep their heads down. Kel trusted to the griffin fletching and shot at eyes and throats when they became visible. Five shots later, the Scanrans retreated again.
Dom sagged against his rock. “Mithros, I hate it when the enemy learns new things!”
Kel, sipping water, asked, “What things?” She took a handkerchief from her pouch and blotted her face.
“Formation to create a shield wall. Advancing in order,” replied Dom. “Curse this Maggur what’shis-name. He’s trained with a real army, or he’s studied them. Did you see that ugly one back on the edge of the trees, the one with the peaked fur hat?”
“Mage?” asked the man on Dom’s far side.
Dom nodded. “My arrows all swerved when I shot at him. I can hear him singing back there—he’s cooking up something nasty. Probably something to hide them on the next advance.” He sucked a tooth in thought. “Kel, I’ve got an idea. Nobody can lie around griffins, right? Maybe some of that carries over to their feathers. Maybe you could see through illusions if you tied some on your forehead, over your eyes.”
Kel shook her head. “This had better not be a joke to make me look silly. If you say Sakuyo laughs, you will be in deep trouble.”
“Saku—what?”
“A Yamani god. On his feast day people play tricks on one another, and if someone gets angry, the other one says Sakuyo laughs.” She always carried spare griffin feathers in her belt pouch, just in case. She took two out and used a pair of handkerchiefs as a band to hold them over her eyes. Holding two arrows, she slid up until she could look over her sheltering rock. The old man in the pointed fur cap stood just in front of the trees. He sang as he hopped around a tiny fire that cast off threads of glittering smoke. Around him the enemy was massing, preparing to attack.
“What do you see?” asked Dom. “I can’t see a thing.”
“You can’t see the enemy?” Kel whispered.
“Everything turns to kind of a smoky blot about ten feet in front of us,” he replied. “Now we know what the mage is up to.”
Kel exhaled. Dom was right. With those feathers against her skin, she saw what the others could not.
“When in doubt,” the mage Numair Salmalín had taught the pages, “shoot the wizard.”
Kel straightened, drew her bowstring back to her ear, and loosed. The old man pointed to her arrow and screeched. It slowed in midair, then sped again, knocking off his fur cap. Kel laid the second arrow to the string the moment she loosed the first, in case he magicked her first shot. That arrow struck the old man squarely in the chest. He grabbed the end of the shaft, greatly surprised, and fell into his fire, smothering it.
Instantly the Own shot a deadly rain of arrows that flew at the Scanran lines. The northerners retreated, howling, until they were out of sight and out of range.
“Who took care of the mage?” Raoul asked.
Kel jumped a foot. She didn’t even know he was behind her. He laid a hand on her arm. “Steady on,” he said, then asked Dom, “Well?”
Dom pointed at Kel as she peeled the band from her forehead, showing Raoul the griffin feathers.
“May I borrow that?” Raoul asked.
“Of course,” Kel told him. She tied it to his forehead.
“I’ll bring it back. Good work, you two. Try to save arrows.” Raoul hurried back down the line of men, walking half-bent so he didn’t give the enemy a target.
Word came to Dom: the man who had screamed during the second volley of arrows was one of his corporals, Derom. He was dead.
“Stay here,” Dom told Kel. “I’ve got to shift the line so we don’t have a gap.” He ran behind the rocks as Kel sent her sparrows to keep watch in the woods.
Here they came with the alarm. Arrows flew in their wake, a dark wave that crested the sheltering rocks. Dom, returning to his post, went down face-first. An arrow was buried in the thick muscle between his neck and shoulder. He grimaced and got to one knee; the man on his far side crawled over to help him up.
The rain of arrows stopped. “Nari, get my lord,” Kel told the sparrow, watching the trees for Scanrans. Nari soon returned, Raoul behind her.
“Dom’s hit,” Kel said, without taking her eyes from her view. The Scanran archers were putting up a fresh rain of arrows to keep everyone pinned down. There was something about the way they fell that bothered her. I’m sorry, Dom, thought Kel, straining her eyes to see the enemy’s movements. I’ll go all shaky over you when this is over.
Arrows fell, some of them like rain. They’re shooting down, Kel realized. But from where? She fit an arrow to her bow and slowly looked around her rock shield, waiting for movement in the wall of greenery. There. They had climbed the trees. An arrow shattered on the rock just beside her.
She hand-signaled the archers’ new positions to the man on her left and to the man who’d helped Dom, then swung her longbow up and loosed. There was a scream, then a crash of broken tree limbs. The archer plummeted to the ground. A second Tortallan arrow dropped another archer; a third fell
halfway to the ground, where he was trapped by a tangle of branches.
“Nice shot,” Raoul said in her ear, approving. “Take command of Dom’s squad.”
Kel stared at him. “What about Symric?” she asked, naming Dom’s other corporal.
“A good man, but no commander. Dom knows it was a mistake to promote him. Worse, Symric knows. You’ve got the squad, Kel.” Raoul gripped her arm, making sure he had her undivided attention. “There’s a least one giant on our left. I think the foot soldiers will try to rush the center of our line while the giant rushes our left flank. Kel, you’ve got our right. If they get around you here, we’re cooked, do you understand?”
Kel nodded.
Raoul squeezed her shoulder through her mail. “Mithros guide you,” he said.
“And you, sir,” she replied. This might be the last time they ever spoke. Giants were clumsy, but they were big, and Raoul was just one man.
No, she told herself firmly. The men of the Own won’t sit back and let him do it alone. She watched for a second as he went back to his work, then prepared to do hers.
Kel turned. Men from the caravan had crept up while she and Raoul talked. They shifted Dom onto a blanket, and carried him to the scant safety uphill. Kel moved to Dom’s position and signaled the squad to gather. The sparrow Nari had gone to scout; Jump had his nose in the air. They would sound the alarm if the enemy moved in.
The men clustered around her, keeping an eye on the open ground in front. Symric, the remaining corporal, watched her with haunted eyes. “Fulcher’s got Derom’s old place by the river,” he whispered. “He’ll sing out if he sees anything.”
Kel nodded. “Lord Raoul’s put me in command,” she told them firmly. She thought she heard a sigh of relief from Symric, but she wasn’t sure.
“You aren’t even—” someone hissed. Kel looked at him: Wolset, a man who talked bigger than he was.
“Shurrup,” growled Symric. “Better Kel than me.”
She told them Raoul’s orders and sent them back to their places, with instructions to spread the line out now that they were short two men. Symric she kept with her. Maybe Raoul thought she could command these men, but she wanted one of them near to advise her, just in case.
Once the men were moving, she turned back to the view and picked up her bow, listening for movement in the trees ahead. Something was not right. She strained her ears and heard the noises of men crashing through the woods, but their sounds were fading.
“They’re moving off,” Wolset hissed. In shifting to fill the gaps Wolset had placed himself on the corporal’s right.
“Shurrup,” ordered Symric.
“I’m telling you, they’re leaving,” argued Wolset. “We can reinforce the center of the line instead of dawdling here—”
Kel had to do something. He’d call for a vote next, while the Scanrans prepared their next move. She had to risk getting shot.
Kel got up and walked over to him. Grabbing his mail and the shirt under it, she twisted hard and yanked until his face was near hers. “Listen, yatter-mouth,” she whispered, locking her eyes on his, “shut up, do as you’re told. Or you’ll have worse than Scanrans to fret over.” She tightened her grip as he struggled. “Do you understand?”
Wolset nodded, his face beet red. Kel dropped him. “Next time remember I’m bigger than you,” she told him.
The men were sneaking wide-eyed glances at them. When Kel glared, they turned their eyes front.
Jump whined. Kel stared at him—had she ever heard him whine before?—and listened to the sounds in front. The noise of movement faded, as if the Scanrans worked their way to the center and to Kel’s left, away from her position. Why? She heard a roar and the clang of battle, but in the distance. She settled down to wait, puzzled, but sure of herself. It didn’t matter if the whole Scanran army attacked on the left. Raoul’s orders were clear.
Sparrows exploded from the trees opposite and sped across the open ground, screaming. They tumbled to the dirt behind Kel, so clearly terrified that it frightened her. Jump paced and whined, then stood on his hind legs to watch the trees.
“Maybe we should . . .?” Symric hissed across Wolset, jerking his head to the left. “At least send a man for word?”
Kel checked that her sword and dagger were loose in their sheaths, shifted her warhammer to the back of her belt, where she could reach it easily, and made sure her glaive lay under her hand. Then she shook her head. “Something’s out there. These birds aren’t scared of much. Neither’s Jump.”
“It’s probably a cat,” someone muttered.
Kel ignored that. She and these animals had done too much together for her to discount them now. The mutterer would learn his mistake soon enough.
There—a sound, the crack of breaking twigs, a series of thumps like running feet in the brush. Branches flailed. Kel snatched up the bow and put an arrow to the string, drawing it. She loosed just as the black thing burst from the trees ahead, but the arrow glanced off its head.
Kel gaped. She had never seen anything like this. The long, black, curved shape that served as a head swiveled back and forth on the dull metal body without exposing a neck. The eyes were set deep in the metal, if those dark pits were eyes. The limbs seemed formed of large metal-coated bones—giants’ bones?—and fine metal chains and rods that acted like muscles. Pulleys served as joints. There were three joints in each limb between the splays of knife-tipped digits on its feet and hands and the limb’s connection to the body. That gave the thing two extra elbows and two extra knees. Its slender tail coiled and whipped, snakelike; it was tipped with a ball of spikes. The whole construction was nearly seven feet tall.
The thing stood erect at the center of the meadow, curved head questing. Could it smell? Kel wondered. A visor that might be lips clacked open, revealing a mouth full of sharp metal teeth as long as Kel’s fingers.
The clack woke her from stupefaction. She seized a fresh arrow and put it to her bowstring.
The thing dropped to its fours and leaped, landing on her rock. She dropped her bow to seize her glaive. As the thing pounced, Kel drove the glaive’s iron-shod butt into the monster’s black metal torso with all her strength. The blow dented the thing and smacked it back into her boulder. The monster swiped viciously at Kel—she jumped back, to go sprawling as a branch rolled under her boot.
Jump leaped to seize a jointed metal arm. Kel shrieked, “No!” The dog bit and let go with a yelp, scrambling out of the monster’s reach. The four sparrows darted in and around the thing’s head. It jerked, trying to follow their flight, razored hands clacking as it tried to grab the birds.
Symric lunged in, sword raised. The thing took his weapon and beheaded the corporal with its blade-fingers.
“Ropes!” Kel shouted, scrambling to her feet, still clutching her glaive. She smashed its butt into one empty eye-pit. “Tie this thing up! Ropes, chains, now!”
The thing regarded her, cocking its head. Kel thought the men had run. She didn’t blame them. How could anyone fight this creature? They didn’t even know what it was.
The monster slashed at her. Kel dodged the knives and slammed the glaive against its head over and over—the noise seemed to confuse it, which was better than nothing. It flailed its arms. Kel had to keep moving; if she stayed in one position too long, it would have her.
She heard scrambling in leaves: Wolset, his face white with terror, climbed the rocks, a clear target if enemy archers waited in the woods. From the top of the large rock at the monster’s back, he tossed a loop of rope over the thing. His rope caught under its head, in the neck groove. Wolset slid down the far side of the rock. His weight drew the rope taut, pulling the monster flat against the stone.
Another rope lasso settled over and caught one of the monster’s arms. A man from the squad wrapped the free end around his hands and pulled as he backed up, yanking the arm out straight.
The monster slashed at the rope with its free hand. Kel grabbed that hand close to its wrist-
pulley and hung on. The monster was horribly strong. Over and over it smashed her against the rock as if she weighed no more than a rag doll, trying to shake her loose. Balancing on one leg, it lashed at her with the other, trying to cut her with its knife-clawed toes. Gasping for air, Kel raised her legs out of the way. Her belly muscles burned with the effort.
A white shape raced past Kel. Jump carried a hank of rope that unrolled as he ran. At the other end one of the men anchored the rope to a heavy tree. Jump leaped over the slashing leg, trailing his rope. Nimbly he ran under the leg and jumped over it again, wrapping the rope around it twice. He galloped back to the man, who grabbed and yanked the rope, drawing the leg straight out to the side, then secured the rope to the anchoring tree. The monster’s leg was safely trapped, temporarily, at least.
Another coil of rope, one end trailing, settled across the arm that Kel gripped. Hanging on with one hand, she wound it around the metal-and-bone limb. She tossed the rest back to the man who had thrown it. He gripped it and pulled as Kel jumped clear of the arm. She lurched and nearly fell, her back a thudding, grinding source of pain.
Two other men were on the ground, trying to trap the monster’s remaining limb. Letting its full weight hang on Wolset’s rope, it had freed the leg on which it stood. Now it hacked with it, cutting a long slash in one man’s scalp as he tried to thread a rope through metal bones and rods. He shook blood from his eyes and finished the job, giving the free end to his companion. They separated and ran to tie each end of rope to opposite trees. The thing was secured, for the moment. It struggled like a fly on a spiderweb.
Gasping, Kel reviewed the situation. The thing wasn’t beaten, only halted. As it struggled, even the thickest of the trees that anchored its ropes shook. It was slowly pulling Wolset back up from the far side of its rock. If he were shot or if his body crested the boulder, the thing’s head would be free. It would be able to put its entire strength into its battle with their ropes. Kel was reasonably sure it would free itself. They had to kill it now.