Metal-banded canteens clattered against wooden
musket stocks with each thud of a hobnailed boot. Breath whistled
through noses misshapen by barstools and barmaids, and between
missing teeth, courtesy of same, laced with wit, pleas, groans, and
curses. Spit and matter less liquid flew freely, expelled with a
rasping smack of sun-cracked lips, leaving a trail of wet stains
and gaining the attention of insects large and small who converged
on the sweating mass in a thrumming buzz. The serried rows of
soldiers took up a ragged applause in response as hundreds of hands
slapped away their tormentors, cursing each and every one.
Accompanied, as the Iron Elves were, by
horses, brindos, and a baggage train of muraphants, there was the
added sound of creaking wagon axles, the rhythmic friction of jute
ropes, the clink of bridles and bits, the swish of tails, the clomp
of hooves—cloven and not—and the respective calls of animals as
annoyed with their current lot as the soldiers that marched with
them.
You'd have to be deaf not to hear a regiment
on the march. Or dead.
The order to halt echoed down the line, and
the regiment creaked to a ragged stop. Nervousness washed over the
men like an incoming tide.
Alwyn strained to hear some kind of commotion
up ahead. It would be dark in another hour or so, and even though
the faeraugs had not bothered them again, he still expected to see
them every night when the sun went down.
There was no sound beyond a few coughs and a
single bellow from a muraphant. The soldiers near Alwyn started to
fidget and look around them, scanning the vines for movement.
Teeter, a former sailor with a limp, had his pipe lit in an
instant. He tilted to the side as if leaning into a stiff breeze,
his leathery face beaming satisfaction. Another soldier took off
his shako, revealing an apple-sized divot missing from the back of
his head. He saw Alwyn staring and glared back, giving him a very
rude hand gesture to boot.
"Don't mind Scolly," a third soldier said, his
face temporarily hidden behind a large, pink hanky he was using to
mop the sweat from his face. When he removed it, Alwyn saw the
round, chubby face of a middle-aged man who looked as if he should
have been at home delivering milk.
"Alwyn Renwar," Alwyn said, sticking out his
hand.
"I know. Poor luck having to flog the elf, but
from what I hear, he deserved it."
Alwyn nodded and said nothing.
"Alik Senerson, by the way," the soldier said,
shaking his hand, "formerly of the Queen's Tamburian Guards." His
face betrayed his offense a moment later in reaction to Alwyn's
open-mouthed response. "Not all Guardsmen are six-foot oaks; there
are a few normal-sized men in the ranks. I was the pay
clerk…until a small accounting discrepancy, that is."
"Oh," Alwyn said. "So what's the deal with
that fellow over there?"
Alik dabbed at his face again with the pink
hanky and nodded toward Scolly. "That miscreant yonder is
Scolfelton Erinmoss, son of the Earl of Boryn. Fell off a horse
when he was ten and got impaled on a wooden stake. It's a miracle
he survived, but of course, he hasn't been right ever since."
Thunder boomed in the distance.
"You smell that?"
The voice startled Alwyn, and it took him a
moment to realize Yimt had asked him a question. "What?"
"That stench. That's why we stopped."
Alwyn sniffed the air. There was something,
and it was far more disgusting than the current gamey fragrance of
the Iron Elves. "What is it?"
There was the sound of boots and Regimental
Sergeant Major Lorian came into view. He leaned against his halberd
to catch his breath. "Arkhorn, fall out and bring your section with
you."
"Yes, Sergeant Major," Yimt said, and motioned
for the section to step out of line.
As they marched past the rest of the regiment,
Alwyn couldn't help but notice that the other troops were giving
them an odd look. It surprised him to realize it was pity. What, he
wondered, did they know that he didn't?
The section reached the head of the column,
where the smell was definitely stronger. Yimt called a halt and the
section grounded their muskets, the sound oddly muffled. Alwyn
looked down and saw they were standing in tufts of short, spindly
grass. Grass. They had made it through the vines! He looked up and
noticed that what he had at first taken for more vines in the
distance was a grove of trees on a downward slope. He almost
shouted for joy, the hardships and horrors of the journey falling
away as if an angel had plucked them from his shoulders.
Then he saw the dirt.
"I could plant me some nice crops here,"
Inkermon the farmer said, scuffing the earth with his boot. "Got
heft, it does, and plenty of vitamins in it, too. The Creator has
blessed this land."
"What is that?" Alwyn asked, ignoring the
farmer's assessment and pointing his chin to where the officers
were grouped in a circle. A hundred yards beyond them the earth was
humped, at least two men tall and a few hundred feet across. The
mound was blood-red in color and peppered with holes big enough for
several faeraugs to jump out of at once.
"Some kind of warren, I reckon," Inkermon
said, sucking thought-fully on the single tooth in the front of his
mouth. "Awfully big holes to be water gryphs, though."
This was something new to worry about. "Water
gryphs?"
"Sure, you find them along rivers an' such,
but it don't look like no warren I ever seen them in."
The first drop of rain fell with a splat on
Alwyn's nose. He looked up and was rewarded with several warm, fat
drops pelting him in the face and blurring his spectacles as the
sky opened up directly above them.
"River?"
"Over there past that grove of trees. Can't
you smell it?"
Alwyn squinted through the rain. "I don't see
it."
"Course you don't, it's tucked down there
below where them trees is at. You got to pay attention to the lay
of the land is all. That and the smell. I tell you, with this dirt
and that water and the Creator's guiding hand, a fellow could do
right proper here."
The rain was now slashing down. Alwyn tried
tipping his head forward slightly to shield his face, but as soon
as he did, the rain trickled down his back. He looked over at
Inkermon. He'd taken a different tack and leaned his head far back
and opened his mouth wide, his single tooth glistening a buttery
yellow as rainwater splashed into his mouth.
Movement to the left drew Alwyn's attention
away. The elfkynan witch and a couple of the muraphant drivers had
dismounted and walked up to the front of the column. The Prince
waved them over to the group. It was impossible to hear what was
being said, but there was a lot of pointing toward the mound. One
of the elfkynan took a few tentative steps toward the mound, then
started shaking his head and turned around and ran right back past
the officers and kept going. Alwyn got a good look at his face as
he ran past, and it did nothing to instill hope.
The second muraphant driver began
gesticulating wildly while the witch pointed a finger at no one in
particular and stamped a boot on the ground. The Prince,
surprisingly, seemed amused by it all, while the major just stood
there, his left hand resting on the pommel of his saber, his right
clutching his chest.
The other elfkynan started shaking his head,
too, and the Prince appeared to agree, because he suddenly pointed
at the major and everyone stopped talking.
"Look sharp!" Yimt said.
The RSM and Major Osveen left the small group
and marched through the rain toward them, talking and looking back
over their shoulders toward the large dirt mound. They stopped a
few feet away and the major addressed them. Even through the rain
Alwyn could see the major was steaming.
"It'll be dark soon, so the quicker we get
this sorted out, the quicker we can set up camp. Corporal Arkhorn,"
the major said, "you know how this works."
Yimt nodded. Water cascaded off his beard like
a miniature waterfall, turning the normally black mass a shimmering
silver. "Is that witch going to be any help?"
Lorian straightened up and glared at Yimt.
"Not at this time."
If the news bothered Yimt, he didn't show it.
He patted the hilt of his drukar and pointed over his shoulder.
"Fair enough. Once I get inside, I'll light a charge. After that,
it's all down to who wants it more." He hunched over his pack and
opened the flap, revealing a white gauze bundle the size of a loaf
of bread.
The RSM looked surprised. "What are you doing
with an artillery charge? That isn't part of an infantryman's
kit."
Yimt flashed him a metallic smile. "A soldier
never knows what kind of important task those higher up than
himself might ask him to do. It's a murky path, trying to divine
the thoughts and fancies of your finer thinkers like officers, so I
try to be prepared…just in case. I call it me head-and-shoulder
plan."
Major Osveen obliged. "Head-and-shoulder
plan?"
Yimt tapped his head and then his shoulder.
"Keeping the one as close to the other as possible."
"See that you do," the major said, a smile he
did nothing to hide stealing over his face. "And the same goes for
the rest of you. There might be nothing in there, then
again…"
"Not to fret, sir," Yimt said, taking off his
shako and unslinging his shatterbow, motioning for the section to
shed their packs and all other unnecessary equipment. The rain
bounced off the top of his head and the thin skiff of hair covering
it. "We'll be back in two shakes of a dragon's tail. Oh, speaking
of tails, that kitty-cat of yours any good for sniffing things out,
Major?"
The major looked over his shoulder to where
Jir was tapping a large paw into a puddle, apparently mesmerized by
the splashing raindrops.
"If he's in the mood," he said, whistling to
the bengar and making a hand gesture toward the mound.
Jir looked up from his puddle and twisted his
head from side to side as if contemplating the request, then
bounded toward the warren and was lost in the rain.
"Right, we'd best get after him," Yimt said,
saluting and quickly addressing the patrol. "Until we know better,
you get it in your heads that there is something nasty down there
and act like it. Keep your yaps shut unless you see something.
We'll get closer and then see what we're dealing with."
He looked from soldier to soldier, his glance
hard and determined. Alwyn returned it, unable to read anything
else in the dwarf's eyes.
"Fix bayonets and make sure they're locked in
tight. I don't want it pulling off the first time it gets stuck
into something solid."
Alwyn grabbed the bayonet out of the frog on
his belt and fumbled to get it in place. Everything was slick with
rain and he was keenly aware that he was being watched. He took a
breath and tried again, sighing with relief when the tell-tale
click sounded.
"Follow me." Yimt took off at a casual walk,
his drukar in his right hand, his pack in his left. Alwyn wondered
if he would ever be that confident. Who knew what they might find
in there, yet Yimt walked toward the mound as if he wasn't the
least bit concerned.
They were quickly past the cluster of officers
who stood watching their movement as if it were a training
drill.
Adding to the surreal quality of the moment,
their horses were busy cropping at grass. Alwyn took their calmness
as a good sign.
Yimt held up his hand and motioned for the
section to stay still. Alwyn instinctively crouched lower in the
grass and felt for the hammer on his rifle, then stopped. With the
rain beating down, there was no way the powder would be dry enough
to spark. He'd heard of regimental wizards casting spells on powder
to keep it dry, but he seriously doubted a spell could overcome
this much rain, so it wouldn't have mattered anyway. Still, that
witch could have at least tried.
He poked some taller grass to the side with
the end of his bayonet and peered through the gap to see what Yimt
was doing. It was pointless; the rain made everything a gray blur
out past fifty feet. There was no sign of the bengar, either.
Then Yimt came into view, a short, dark figure
in the rain, and pointed somewhere to the left, and then he was
running, his caerna plastered to his legs like a pair of short
pants.
Blurred figures rushed forward on either side
and Alwyn stood up and followed suit, straining to see what was
happening. The rain now hit his face head-on. He took off his
spectacles and jammed them into a jacket pocket as he trotted
forward.
A shadow suddenly loomed before Alwyn and he
yelped, swinging his musket clumsily at it. There was a dull crack
and the musket shivered in his hands, stinging them. A moment later
he saw the shadow fall backward in the mud with a soft thud and lie
motionless.
Shaking, Alwyn moved forward, the musket held
by the barrel with both hands, ready to swing it again.
He'd killed a god. Well, a statue of one at
any rate. Alwyn knelt to examine the now-fractured jaw of a short,
stocky deity that had been placed on a pedestal that he had not
seen. It had once been painted in garish reds and oranges, although
only remnants of the colors now remained. He wasn't sure, but it
looked an awful lot like a pig, or maybe a boar. Whatever it was,
bashing it in the head with his musket wasn't likely to bring him
anything but bad luck. He tucked his musket under his right arm and
heaved the statue back onto its pedestal, placing the broken pieces
of jaw in a neat pile by its feet.
"—ere the hell did he get to?" drifted through
the rain, and Alwyn remembered why he was there. He gave the statue
a pat on the head for good luck, then trotted off toward the sound
of the voice, coming upon Yimt and the others crouched in a
semicircle, less than twenty yards from the nearest opening in the
mound.
Yimt looked at him, but in the pouring rain
Alwyn couldn't tell if he was scowling or just frowning.
"Everyone take a hole," Yimt said at once.
"Don't stay at the opening, go in about ten feet, then hold there.
Keep your bayonet pointing straight in front of you and brace the
butt of your musket in the dirt. Anything comes charging up out of
the depths will impale itself."
Before anyone could respond, a high-pitched
hiss sounded somewhere nearby. A moment later, a large, dark shape
came loping out of the rain. Jir strolled right up to them,
dragging a fifteen-foot-long constrictor in his mouth. He held the
snake just behind the head and seemed completely unconcerned that
it was wrapping its muscular body around his.
The snake coiled tighter around Jir's body,
straining to squeeze the life out of the bengar. The sound of
scales rubbing against wet fur grew louder. The bengar and the
dwarf shared a look, and Alwyn was struck by the feeling of
watching two predators assess each other. There was a loud snap as
the bengar's fangs bit down and the coils of the snake's body slid
from Jir's body. He began to play with it, tossing it into the air
as if it were a twig, then pouncing on it and tearing off great
chunks of flesh.
"All right, let's get this done," Yimt said,
leading them around the mound, dropping off a soldier at a hole as
they went by. Soon, only Alwyn was left—Yimt stopped at the next
hole and turned to face him, pointing a stubby finger.
"You need to keep your head about you. You
don't often get a chance to repeat mistakes out here. Now, if there
is anything down there, it's going to come up in one hellfire of a
hurry. Hold your ground and shout if you need help, and I'll be
there." And then he smiled, his metal teeth glinting briefly in the
rain, and Alwyn felt all was right with the world again.
"I'll hold, Corporal," Alwyn said, smiling
back at his friend.
Yimt nodded and trotted to the next hole,
fifteen yards over. He paused, got a better grip on his drukar, and
strolled right in.
Alwyn was at the back of the mound and hidden
from view from the officers and the rest of the regiment. The other
members of the section had already gone into their holes, leaving
him alone outside. His eyes now picked up hints of things he wished
he'd not seen. Bits of white bone were scattered between beaten
paths of dirt that ran between the holes and over the mound.
Something, or somethings, had definitely lived here. The question
was whether they were still down there.