The
rain finally stopped, and in its absence, a heavy fog shrouded the
night around the black forest. Few of the soldiers knew what a
sauna was, but all on the scouting parties outside the ring of
trees understood the effect. Sweat and fog mixed, turning their
skin slimy with heat. Rubbing one's hands against a sopping caerna
did nothing to improve the grip on a slick musket, the bare metal
already blossoming with the first tinge of orange rust.
But it wasn't the wrath of a nitpicking
sergeant that worried them. Scouts were coming back in with reports
of something in the east that the soldiers on the outer piquets
could hear for themselves.
An army was approaching.
Konowa stood on one of the short wooden docks
that jutted out into the river and peered into the mist. It was
still too dark to see anything beyond a few hundred yards, even
with the benefit of elvish eyes and a full moon trying to shine
through the fog. He stepped to one side as a group of soldiers
brushed past carrying an elfkynan kios, which they took to the end of
the dock. With much grunting and cursing they lifted it down onto
several other kios that had been lashed together
and then planked over, creating a thin, precarious bridge that
stretched across the river. It was a tenuous lifeline at best, but
it would allow the outlying soldiers a quicker return after doing
what they could to slow the advance of the enemy.
He felt something brush against his leg and
looked down to see Jir standing beside him. "Get back up to the
fortress," he said, gently ruffling the fur on the bengar's head.
Jir looked up at him for a moment, growled softly, then slowly
padded away, but not before lifting a leg on the edge of the
dock.
The sound of soldiers working drew Konowa's
attention back to the far side of the river. Over the fall of
hammers and muffled oaths the sound of the rebels approaching could
be heard. Konowa tried to force his senses out beyond the river,
but found he could not. He placed a hand over his heart and tried
harder. The temperature around him dropped and tiny shards of frost
glistened from his cloak, but still he was unable to detect more
than a vague presence. He gave up and turned his back to the river,
staring hard at the reason.
The trees now rose more than ten feet in some
places, their gnarled branches crooking back on themselves to
interlock with the trees around them. Their growth appeared to have
stopped, but Konowa knew better. Within the ring of trees, his
senses were clearer than they had been at any time in his life.
Even now the roots were twisting and stabbing their way deeper into
the soil, deeper even than their branches reached skyward.
The dock began to shake, and Konowa knew
without looking who it was.
"Getting a bit nippy around here, sir,"
Private Hrem Vulhber said, saluting as he came to attention in
front of Konowa. It took a moment for Konowa to pull his stare away
from the trees. When he did, he saw that Hrem was staring at the
trees, too.
"The Prince's choice of uniform leaves
something to be desired, I'm guessing."
Hrem shrugged, his massive shoulders lifting
and falling. He absently brushed at his caerna, still staring at
the trees. "I'm more worried about them trees."
"As am I, Private, as am I. How are the troops
holding up?" Konowa asked, trying to smile.
Hrem nodded toward the far side of the river
and the sound of the elfkynan army. "We can handle the natives easy
enough. I was riding rear guard on a wagon train a few months back
when we were attacked by a couple hundred of them. Two volleys of
musket fire put the fear in them and they ran like rabbits. They're
brave enough, and there's no denying they would just as soon see
the back of the Empire from their land, but they're not stupid.
With those cannons we found in the fortress, we'll more than be a
match for them. But they aren't going to be our main problem, are
they?"
It marked just how absurd their position was
that the impending attack of a substantially larger rebel elfkynan
army should be considered a secondary concern. But it was.
"No, I suppose they won't," Konowa said,
choosing to play it straight. He reached up and laid a hand on
Hrem's shoulder. "But I'll tell you this, I won't let this regiment
be destroyed. Not now, not ever."
Konowa had expected the soldier to nod, maybe
even voice his agreement. Instead, Hrem gently shrugged his hand
from his shoulder. "That's what worries us."
It was insubordination, pure and simple, but
the way Hrem said it gave Konowa pause. Before he could ask for an
explanation, Hrem bent down by the edge of the dock and grabbed
something from the water. When he stood up again he held his hand
out, palm up. A little crab no bigger than a silver coin stood
there, its tiny claws waving in the air to ward off danger. It was
futile. A moment later the crab was enveloped in black frost, then
consumed by a dark, cold fire.
"Can everyone do that?" Konowa finally asked,
looking around at the other soldiers still working on the makeshift
bridge.
Hrem flexed his hand and dropped it back by
his side. "Maybe, I don't know. A few of the lads went to see the
witch and she told them it was a kind of cold fever and that it
would go away in a few days. She did some kind of spell to hurry up
the healing and told them it was best not to try it again or, um,
stuff might fall off."
"Oh." Konowa wasn't sure if he should laugh or
cry.
"They're simple lads for the most part," Hrem
said. "They'll go along with that for now. Sometime soon though
you're going to have to explain to them, to all of us, just what
being an Iron Elf really means."
Konowa was about to say he wished he knew
himself when the sound of running boots and shouts of alarm came
from across the river. The acorn cooled appreciably and his senses
immediately heightened. He ran forward, drawing his saber as he did
so, Hrem at his side bringing his musket to bear. They met a
soldier hurrying across the makeshift bridge, bent over in obvious
pain. His uniform was torn and he was breathing heavily.
The private lifted his head as Konowa
approached and struggled to give his report. "They're here, the
elfkynan army is here."
There was the unmistakable crackle of musket
fire from the far side of the river. He saw the familiar shower of
sparks out of the corner of his eye—contact had been made.
"One of their patrols must have stumbled into
one of ours," Konowa said, sheathing his saber and looking at the
group around him. He spied a corporal he didn't know by name and
pointed to him. "You, report that we have made contact, though I'm
sure they heard the muskets, then have the two cannon brought down
to the river. Private Vulhber and the rest of you are with me."
Without waiting for a reply, Konowa headed
back to the dock leading six soldiers. His eyes were more than
capable of seeing the precarious planking that had been laid down
over the kios, but he knew the soldiers behind
him would not be so fortunate. He turned to tell them to light a
torch and saw that Hrem was already lighting a lantern he had found
on a pole near the dock.
When Konowa reached the other side, the first
thing he noticed was the heat. It was like diving into a hot
spring. The air was thick in his lungs and he coughed and wiped his
brow. As he put his foot down on the far bank, his senses blurred,
and the clarity he had known within the ring of trees vanished.
"Major!"
Konowa unbuttoned his cloak, took it off, and
waited for a jogging Lorian to come to a halt in front of him. "How
many?"
Lorian saluted. "It was a cavalry scouting
party, maybe twenty, twenty-five. Hard to say in the dark, but it
looks like we dropped about half of them. I managed to wrangle
three horses, one slightly wounded, but no prisoners. We suffered
no casualties."
"Show me."
Lorian led him and the six soldiers on a dirt
path through knee-high grass for a couple of hundred yards. The
night sky had an eerie glow to it, and it occurred to Konowa that
he had no idea what phase the moon was in. From the degree to which
visibility improved the further they moved away from the mist
surrounding Luuguth Jor, however, he guessed it was probably
full.
"There," Lorian said, pointing to a squad of
soldiers kneeling in a line to either side of the path. From a
distance, the wings of their shakos created the appearance of a row
of vultures perched on rocks. They had built a makeshift wall with
a few fallen branches of wahatti trees and an overturned
kios, its
hull so rotten that its only protective function could be to their
morale.
Konowa motioned for Vulhber and the others to
stretch out the line on either side and walked forward on the path
to where the first body lay just twenty yards away. Other dark
forms dotted the grass, some much larger than others and obviously
horses. Konowa stopped himself. Better not to assume anything. He
tried to search the area with his senses, closing his eyes
momentarily and trying to recall what it had felt like when Visyna
drew on the living skeins around her. Everything was jumbled, not
that it really mattered. He could hear the sound of the main body
of the elfkynan army fanning out in front of them, probably no more
than half a mile away. Already the surviving cavalry scouts would
be reporting that they had made contact. An attack was not far off.
He opened his eyes and knelt to examine the body.
The elfkynan lay on his back, his arms raised
over his head, his mouth and eyes open in surprise. He wore a
simple pair of thin blue cloth pants, the bottoms wrapped tightly
around his calves with red puttees. His feet were bare, as was the
custom of most elfkynan. Instead of a jacket, his chest was covered
by a length of white cloth wrapped up and over one shoulder, the
fabric stained with blood still dribbling out of a
copper-coin-sized hole where a musket ball had punched through his
heart. The cloth was held around his waist by a broad, flat belt of
jute fiber adorned with bits of gems and polished pieces of wood.
His headdress lay a few feet away, a wide-brimmed hat of woven
grass. Konowa looked around and realized what was missing.
"Where's his weapon?"
There were a few coughs and shuffling of feet,
and one soldier bent and retrieved it from the grass. "A
mioxja,"
Konowa said, taking it from the soldier. It was beautiful in its
simplicity. Two blades of razor-sharp jimik grass were tightly
bound to the end of a three-foot-long section of willow. It was
more bladed whip than spear.
"Is that all they have?" the soldier who had
handed Konowa the weapon asked. "I mean, it's just grass and twigs
tied together. I've known blind beggars with canes who were more
dangerous." A few of the soldiers laughed and voiced their
agreement.
Konowa pointed to the grass hat a few feet
away. "Pick that up and hold it out from your body. You might want
to cover your face; I haven't tried this in a while."
The soldier looked a little startled, but did
as he was told. He had no sooner held the hat out than Konowa
snapped his wrist and flicked the mioxja. The soldier yelped, let go of
the remaining tiny section of hat, brought his hand up to his
mouth, and blew on his fingers. This time, the laughter was more
subdued.
"Never underestimate your enemy," Konowa said,
throwing the weapon to the ground and grinding the blades into the
dirt with the heel of his boot. "A mioxja in the hands of a skilled
warrior can flay a soldier alive with a couple of strokes. In the
unlikely event that they get through our musket volleys, don't lean
back. Close the gap and get right into them."
"What about the trees then, and the Shadow
Monarch, sir?" the soldier who had held the hat asked. He had a
weasely look about him, thin and conniving.
"Never mind that, Zwitty," Lorian barked,
glowering at the private.
Konowa held up a hand. "It's a fair question.
The answer is I don't know. The elfkynan are the enemy before us,
so that's who we will fight."
The answer satisfied most of the soldiers, but
not Zwitty. "What if the Shadow Monarch gets that Star everyone is
talking about? What if She uses it to turn them into more monsters?
Then what do we do?"
Konowa shook his head. "Bayonets and musket
balls are cure enough for that. Keep your head, and they'll lose
theirs. They'll attack at ceh-gwadi," he said, staring into the
distance. "The ears of the morning. It's a herdsman thing. It's the
time of day when the ears of the brindos can first be seen against
the lightening sky. Until that happens, they'll keep their
distance. They fear the spirits that roam in the dark and believe
if they are caught, their souls will be lost forever. So they'll
wait until dawn to attack."
"But what—"
"No more questions!" Lorian said, looking hard
at Zwitty. He shifted his halberd to hold it in both hands. "Save
your breath for when you're going to need it. Back to your posts,
and I don't want to see the glow of a pipe or I'll be flaying the
stupid bugger with ten of those mojas, and the dumb bastards to
either side of him who didn't stop him. Now move."
The soldiers melted away, the sound of their
boots stomping through the grass receding quickly.
Konowa followed them, passing through the
makeshift line and taking the path back toward the river. When they
were out of earshot he stopped and motioned for Lorian to stand
close. "On edge?"
Lorian grounded his halberd and let out a
sigh, slumping his shoulders as he looked back toward the front.
"This is utter madness. The elfkynan aren't stupid. Once they
realize we're trapped, they'll cross the river to either side and
surround us. We don't have supplies to last more than a couple of
weeks, maybe a month if we slaughter the brindos and
muraphants."
"They won't have the luxury of starving us
out," Konowa said, wiping at the sweat on his brow. His breathing
was labored, as if he had just run a mile, not walked a few hundred
feet. He needed to get back within the ring of trees and the cooler
air. "The Star is a lodestone to them. It's why this forest is
here, why we're here, and why they're here. They've taken up arms
in open rebellion against the Empire. They can't afford to wait for
the Imperial Army to turn back from the orc border and move
north."
Lorian lifted his chin. "Or for the maker of
this hellish forest to come back."
It wasn't a topic Konowa wanted to discuss.
Fragments of dreams kept racing through his head, none of them
pleasant. "As I said, we'll deal with the enemy before us for now.
I want you focused on delaying the elfkynan on this side of the
river. Throw out a skirmish line at first light and have them pick
off leaders and shamans if they can see any. Draw the elfkynan
straight on, but whatever you do, don't make a stand. Keep falling
back to the river. We don't want them trying to outflank you."
Lorian nodded. "With the horses we took, I
could do a scout of my own and see just what we're facing."
"You're not in a cavalry regiment now. If you
get cut off out there, we have no way to come get you. Keep it
simple, no heroics. Just make contact, get them interested in
coming straight on, and fall back."
Lorian didn't look convinced, but agreed.
"We'll make it back, Major."
"See that you do, and bring the elfkynan with
you. I'll have a surprise waiting for them when they get to the
river."