Major,
there!" Lorian shouted, pointing toward the gap.
A group of four elfkynan came walking through,
their pace slow and even. They were dressed in bright
crimson-colored robes and tall white hats that rose to a point more
than a foot above their heads. Each hat bore a shining blue gem in
the center that sparkled with the last rays of the setting sun. All
four carried tall walking sticks of a dark brown wood entwined with
green vines.
"Shamans," Lorian said, his voice rising with
indignation. "These poor buggers have been throwing away their
lives thinking they could protect them from musket balls."
"Don't judge a tree by its bark," Konowa said,
the old proverb of his father's coming back to him. He watched the
shamans, looking for some grand gesture or conjuration, but they
showed no outward sign of being in the midst of battle, or of being
in danger at all. Wizards were forever getting under Konowa's
skin.
A group of thirty elfkynan warriors dressed in
dark blue robes and carrying spears followed close behind. As they
passed through the trees, they fanned out in a circle around the
first four.
Konowa pushed his senses outward. He came up
against something incredibly vibrant and warm, a feeling so natural
and peaceful that it caught his breath. The four red-robed figures
turned as one to look in his direction.
"Magic all right…" he managed to say,
grabbing hold of Lorian to steady himself in the saddle. The
feeling reminded him of the calm he had felt when Visyna had woven
her magic earlier. It wasn't the deadening of the voices of life,
but a complex harmony that made simple, beautiful sense.
"Major, are you okay? Major?"
Konowa tried to speak, but no words would come
to his mouth. The four shamans continued to stare at him, their
faces calm, their posture relaxed.
"They've bespelled you," Lorian muttered,
shouting orders at once. "Take out those shamans! Front row, by
volley…fire!"
Most of the troops had not had time to reload,
but at least twenty had, and at a distance of less than a hundred
yards they couldn't miss.
The sound of musket fire sounded from far
away. Konowa knew he should care about it, but found it difficult
to do so. He started to urge Zwindarra toward the circle, then
gasped, feeling as if he had fallen through ice on a frozen lake.
He came to his senses at once, the acorn bitterly cold against his
flesh. The air shimmered in front of the circle of blue-robed
warriors and then cleared again. Not one had fallen. His siggers
had missed. Shouted orders echoed down from the fortress. The
howitzer in the fortress boomed, its flight almost straight up as
the gunners tried to land a shell within the circle. The shell
carried long, coming dangerously close to the Iron Elves by the
river, and exploded harmlessly in dead ground, throwing splinters
of red-hot metal through the air.
The elfkynan warriors nonetheless decided it
was time to find safer ground and moved toward the protection of
the four shamans, slipping through the ring of blue-robed warriors.
As more and more elfkynan stepped through the circle the warriors
moved out, increasing its size until it held more than a thousand
elfkynan. Soon, all the elfkynan able to make it to the circle had.
Chants of "Sillra! Sillra!" rose in volume again as they called on
the Star to finally reveal itself.
The Iron Elves looked to Konowa, waiting. This
was far beyond their experiences. Muskets and bayonets were their
tools, tried and tested, yet they had failed in front of their
eyes. It was an unsettling feeling in the lee of the coming night.
Not believing what they were seeing, a couple of siggers actually
fired without orders. Both times the air shimmered about the circle
and no elfkynan was hurt. Somewhere in the line a soldier laughed.
Konowa shared the sentiment. Just minutes ago, the elfkynan were
being cut down in droves, the shamans doing nothing to prevent it.
Now they stood in a perfect killing ground, surrounded by the Iron
Elves, and apparently impervious to harm.
Torches and lanterns flamed to life as the
last rays of sunlight dimmed. The regiment was growing restless,
and Konowa knew Prince Tykkin would be apoplectic, wondering why
Konowa hadn't ordered a charge to finish the elfkynan off,
shimmering air or no shimmering air. Something would have to
give.
The cold in Konowa told him something now
would.
It started with the trees. As the sun
disappeared below the horizon, the shadows were stretched to their
full length, their shapes a dark, twisted stain on the ground.
Frost began to crackle wherever they lay, the grass withering
beneath the weight of obsidian crystals sparkling in the twilight.
To look down was to see the night sky beneath their feet, and many
soldiers and elfkynan alike felt a sudden nausea at a world
inverted.
A ripping sound criss-crossed the earth
between the trees and then surged upward as sickly white roots
stabbed skyward, impaling the many elfkynan bodies littering the
battlefield. Red blood turned black as the roots began to grow into
new trees, their limbs stretching outward like many-fingered hands,
groping for contact with the other sarka har.
Konowa swayed in the saddle as the hunger of
the trees washed over him. He felt a surge of anger, a hunger of
his own to destroy them all, to leave him in peace. The confusion
of the world as he had known it, that constant thrum of life just
below the threshold of understanding forever poised to overwhelm
him, seemed a simple, wonderful thing now.
A musket fired, the ball tearing into a tree
with no real effect. The howitzer in the fortress boomed in
response, tossing a fizzing cannon shell high into the air, its
path easily followed by the trail of sparks it smeared across the
sky. The gun crew's aim was better, as this shell landed near the
trees to the left of the square. It detonated on impact, and both
trees and foes were shattered by the blast, but not enough.
"Hold your fire!" Konowa shouted, his mind
racing. Zwindarra tossed his head and pawed at the ground
nervously, but still responded to Konowa's commands.
The encircled elfkynan were even more
agitated, their cries of Sillra falling away as they witnessed the
desecration of their brethren. The four shamans in the center of
the circle stood back to back, their eyes closed, both hands
gripping their staffs, chanting silently. Konowa expected to see a
bright light, a glow, something, but though the wizards continued
to chant nothing appeared to happen.
"Major, over there!" Lorian shouted, reining
his horse in as it reared and neighed in fright.
Konowa swung around in the saddle to look, but
he had already felt it.
Gray, awkward shapes were crawling from the
water. The creatures were man-sized, their heads a blunt, eyeless
knob with a circular mouth filled with rows of small, pointed
teeth. There didn't seem to be a neck, just a scaly tube for a
body, studded with spikes and supported on what looked like four
short legs.
They were the huge ancestors of the bara jogg
that swam the river.
Their progress was slow, their transition from
water to land an uneasy one. Konowa cast a glance back at the
elfkynan to make sure they weren't preparing anything and urged
Zwindarra closer to the river. As he got closer, the reason for the
creatures' strange gait became apparent. What he had taken for legs
were just four large spikes that flailed and scratched at the
ground for purchase, propelling them up the bank and toward the
Iron Elves.
Konowa's mind was still reeling when a more
familiar and unwelcome sight greeted his eyes. Rakkes emerged from
the trees, their hulking forms all but hidden within the shadows
save for the glow of their white, milky eyes. They began roaring
and beating their chests, working themselves into a frenzy. Konowa
figured they had a minute, maybe two.
"Major?"
"There's no point holding the river now. We've
got to get the men up to the fortress as quickly as possible. I
need you to keep them in check; we'll go slow and steady. No
stragglers, no heroics, and I mean it."
Lorian nodded, a gesture mostly lost in the
dark. "There's still the matter of the elfkynan between us and the
fortress. How do we get by them while keeping those monsters at
bay?"
"I don't think we have too much to worry about
from them for the next little while," he said. The elfkynan were
clearly horrified by the new trees squirming to life and showed no
sign of mounting any kind of attack. The Iron Elves were no doubt
troubled by the spectacle as well, but discipline would hold them
together where others ran. Discipline, and an oath.
"Very good, sir," Lorian said, adjusting
himself on the elfkynan saddle, which appeared a bit too small for
him.
The howitzer in the fortress fired again, the
shell landing only a few yards from the previous one. Instead of
exploding, the shell bounced, the ground within the ring of trees
hardened with frost. It started rolling toward the square, the fuse
still sputtering. A soldier leaped out of line and ran toward the
shell. He bent over it and fumbled with the fuse, trying to pull
the burning cord out. After two failed attempts, the soldier simply
picked the cannonball up and heaved it at the trees, where it
exploded a moment later. Konowa didn't need to see his face to know
the identity of the only soldier who could toss a cannonball like
that.
"If he was a little smaller, Private Vulhber
would make one hell of a cavalryman," Lorian said, his voice filled
with relief and pride.
"Regiment, load muskets!" Konowa shouted,
cantering Zwindarra in front of the line of soldiers at the edge of
the river. Muskets were held at the hip as cartridges were pulled
from leather pouches, the iron ball bitten from the top of the
waxed paper that held the black powder, a portion of which was
poured into the pan. As one, the regiment grounded their muskets
and poured the remaining powder down the barrel, the musket ball
following. Ramrods rattled and banged.
"Regiment will fix bayonets!" The sharp clang
of steel on steel rever-berated in the cold air, and Konowa smiled
at its familiar tune. He would get these men up to the fortress no
matter what black horror stood in their way.
"What about the guns?" Lorian asked, using his
halberd to point at the two positions at either end of the
line.
Konowa spit. "There's nothing for it, they'll
have to be left behind. We'll never get the muraphants down here
now. Have the gun crews fire double canister shot into those things
coming out of the water, then a couple of shots into the trees, and
then go. The one in the fortress will have to do."
Lorian spurred his horse to a gallop to relay
the message. Konowa watched him go, quickly running things over in
his mind. They had close to three hundred yards to cover to get to
the safety of the fortress, normally a three-minute march.
Konowa stood in the saddle, resting the balls
of his feet on the stirrups. "Cannon will fire on my
command…fire!"
The night momentarily lit up as twin gouts of
sparks burst from the muzzles of the two five-pounders, scattering
two hundred musket balls along the riverbank. The huge bara jogg
blew apart, their scales no match for the force of the canister
shot. More bara jogg still crawling out of the river began feeding
on the remains of the others. Konowa was sure no one would straggle
after seeing that.
The gun crews were already pivoting their guns
to face the trees nearest the regiment, the sizzle of the wet
sponge extinguishing the remaining sparks in the barrel before the
next charge was rammed in place surprisingly loud in the cool,
night air. The quiet was broken a moment later when the rakkes set
up a new howl, and some of them began lumbering forward.
"The cannon will fire on my
command…fire!"
Portfires, the metal sticks holding a length
of burning cord called slow-match, were brought down to the touch
hole at the rear of the cannon barrel. The flame came in contact
with the fuse, in this case a goose quill filled with fast-burning
powder, which ignited at once, sending flame directly into the
powder charge inside. The guns roared, the force of the shot
sending them rolling backward on their wheels. Each disgorged a
solid cannonball through the air and into the trees.
The force of the impact uprooted several trees
and scattered steel-like splinters into the nearest rakkes, felling
them as forcefully as musket shot. It was enough to send the rest
scurrying back for a moment, which was exactly what Konowa was
waiting for.
"On my command, regiment will form a hollow
square and prepare to march. Regiment…form square!"
In an open field in daylight the maneuver
could be quickly and easily done by a well-drilled regiment. This
was not an open field—it was night, the Iron Elves had had almost
no time to practice complicated drills, and creatures from
nightmares roared and crawled all around them.
Lorian's voice rose above the din, and in turn
the sergeants and corporals got their men moving. Konowa directed
Zwindarra toward the gun crew near the gap while Lorian went toward
the other, each shouting at the men to hurry up. The two guns crews
came running in a moment later, a wagon wheel being rolled by each
group. Konowa kept twisting around in the saddle, trying to keep an
eye on both the tree line and the river.
Everywhere he looked there was a threat.
Everywhere his senses flowed he felt the malice and the hunger and
knew there would be no negotiation, no mutual retreat. There would
be only those not yet dead.
When the last man finally entered the ranks,
Konowa and Lorian rode in and the Iron Elves closed around them,
facing outward.
Typically, a square was formed to defend
against roving cavalry. It allowed line infantry to create, in
effect, a miniature fortress with all-round defense, their bayonets
a bristling abatis, their muskets a deadly fusillade, and most
important, the sense of security that derived from standing side by
side with other soldiers, comrades in arms, friends. A square was
strong only as long as all four walls held. A single breach would
invite destruction.
The large bara jogg, their impromptu meal
finished, responded by jerking and rolling their bodies faster up
the bank, teeth-filled mouths opening and closing in anticipation
of more flesh. The rakkes began to howl again and move forward,
sensing the change was in their favor.
"Three hundred yards to the fortress,
gentlemen," Konowa shouted above the din, walking Zwindarra around
the tight area within the circle. He could see his breath as he
spoke, though he didn't feel particularly cold. "Just three hundred
yards, a stroll in the park."
There were a few laughs, not as many as Konowa
had hoped for. He looked over at Lorian. The RSM sat tall in his
saddle, the reins in his left hand, his halberd leaning against his
right shoulder. He walked his horse slowly around the inside of the
square, nodding approval at what he saw. It was now or never.
"Keep it tight, keep it strong, and don't run!
Now let's get out of here. Regiment…forward march!"
The square lurched forward. Konowa knew the
trouble would come from the rear, which was forced to march
backward. Lorian was already on it, shouting encouragement to the
men and giving a tap with the butt of his halberd to those who
needed a bit more.
They quickly outpaced the bara jogg, who
continued to scratch and spike their way forward, the first of them
crawling over the abandoned firing position. The rakkes were
another matter. Their frenzy peaked with long, drawn-out howls, and
then they charged as one, converging on both the Iron Elves and the
elfkynan.
Many rakkes held crude wooden blades in their
hands, the weapons little more than large, splintered chunks of the
sarka har.
The pieces of wood dripped black ichor, the frost that covered the
ground sizzling wherever a drop landed. Konowa had been prepared to
let the rakkes get within seventy-five yards before giving the
command to fire, but then one of the rakkes let out a great mewling
cry and threw its splinter at the square. The soldiers facing the
rakke saw it coming and ducked, but those facing the opposite
direction did not.
The wood caught one soldier high in the back,
running him through and slamming his body to the ground. Black
frost began to grow on the wood immediately and soon covered the
soldier's body. The square faltered as soldiers turned to look.
"Halt! Face out! Hold your positions! On my
command, the outer rank will volley…fire!" The muskets sounded
like deep ice breaking up, the cold air lending a clarity to their
violence. Sparks flew and gray smoke roiled outward from all points
of the compass. Dull, wet thwacks marked the striking of flesh by
iron, and scores of rakkes went down, the rest retreating to a
safer distance to howl in rage.
The attack against the elfkynan circle made
more progress, the discipline of the native warriors not as strong
as the Iron Elves', and the rain of arrows not as lethal. As rakkes
charged and threw their jagged missiles, many elfkynan shifted
position, breaking the integrity of the circle. Those who strayed
or found themselves outside were quickly overcome by fangs and
claws and dripping black splinters. The bodies were not consumed by
frost fire, however; instead, roots from the nearest
sarka har
would plunge up from below, impaling the body as a new blood tree
began to grow.
"Sir, we have to keep moving!" Lorian shouted,
struggling to keep his horse under control. The animal's eyes
showed white and it began frothing at the mouth as it chewed its
bit.
Konowa knew he was right, but already a new
problem was literally growing to make that more and more difficult.
"There are a lot of trees between here and the fort—I can't destroy
them all myself."
Lorian looked over at the body of the fallen
soldier. There was nothing left, just a dull, black stain on the
ground where he had lain. "Let's get this over with, then." The
sound of spikes and scales being dragged across the hard ground
grew louder as the enlarged bara jogg came on. The Iron Elves had
no choice but to keep going.
Konowa shouted for Private Vulhber. The giant
stepped out of line and into the center of the square. Konowa
dismounted and held out Zwindarra's reins. "Take care of him for
me; the RSM and I have some work to do." It was a gift any of the
soldiers would have treasured, a chance to stay within the
protective center of the square. After witnessing Vulhber's
heroics, Konowa figured the soldier deserved it.
Hrem looked at the reins longingly, then shook
his head. "If it's all the same to you, Major, I'd just as soon
not. I've got an idea about what you two are going to do, and I
figure a third pair of hands might come in, well, handy."
"Can you control the power well enough?"
Lorian asked, dismounting.
"Better than most. Seems only a few of the
lads can really work it so far and I'm one of them." There was no
joy in the statement, or pride. "That's why I'm still here. I used
the frost to slow the fuse of that shell while I tried to pull it
out. Still working out the kinks, but I saw what the major did with
those trees back at the outpost. I'd just as soon help you and get
this over with."
"Words to live by," Konowa said, whistling for
two soldiers nearby to come and take the reins of the horses. One
of them was the weasel-faced private who had bayoneted the wounded
elfkynan. Konowa was tempted to order him back into the line, but a
chunk of black wood tumbling through the air and gouging a furrow
in the ground in the center of the square got his attention.
"Lorian, Private Vulhber and I will deal with
the trees; you stay here and command," Konowa said.
Lorian looked surprised. "I'll burn the damn
trees, sir, I'm not afraid of them."
Konowa gave him a quick smile. "I know you
aren't, but someone has to keep the boys in shape and I'll be
rather busy."
"Then you should stay and I should go with
Vulhber. You're an officer, sir, you should stay in the center and
command. It's your proper place," he finished.
"I'm no Prince, RSM. I'll lead them back
through the trees; you have command of the square. Take Zwindarra,
you'll have a better view," he said, taking the reins from
weasel-face and handing them to Lorian. Konowa then saluted,
forcing Lorian to return it.
"Let's go, Private," Konowa said, sheathing
his saber and stepping through the side of the square facing the
fortress. "You, too," he said, pointing at weasel-face, who was
trying to wrest the reins of Lorian's horse from another
private.
"Me, sir?" Zwitty asked, shock registering on
his face.
"You'll be our scout. If you see trouble, let
us know."
Private Vulhber slung his musket on a broad
shoulder and grabbed Zwitty by the arm, propelling him through the
square.
"I didn't volunteer!" Zwitty shouted, panic
breaking his voice.
Konowa grabbed him by the front of the jacket
and jerked him onto his toes. Frost radiated out from the point
where his hand held the cloth and up to the collar of the soldier's
jacket. "Oh, but you did. As soon as I saw you use that bayonet, I
knew you were just the man for the job. Now you keep your eyes
peeled and watch our backs, or you won't get a chance to volunteer
for anything again."
Konowa released his grasp and the frost
evaporated in a swirling mist. He turned and motioned to Private
Vulhber. "You'll hear screaming; just squeeze harder."
Without waiting for a reply, Konowa looked
back to Lorian, now sitting astride Zwindarra. He waved his arm,
then turned and walked toward the first tree.
A howl rose from the rakkes at the sight of
the three Iron Elves outside the bristling wall of bayonets. Konowa
ignored them, focusing his attention on the tree in front of him.
Musket fire from the fortress sounded for the first time, a short
rippling burst that was quickly swallowed by the night. A single
arrow from an elfkynan archer flitted by Konowa's head, but the
acorn against his chest had nothing to say on the subject.
"Regiment…march!"
Boots crunched on the brittle ground as the
square inched forward again. Konowa reached the first tree, its
limbs wriggling frantically at his approach, slashing at the air in
an attempt to ward him off. He felt the eyes of many on him and
didn't care. Power was what you made of it, and he was getting the
Iron Elves home.
He grabbed the sarka har by the trunk and pulled. It
didn't budge. A surge of cold anger flowed through it far greater
than its size warranted. It was trying to overwhelm him, and he
felt not just two souls, but many. He squeezed, forcing his power
into it, but unlike before, the tree absorbed it with ease. Was the
power of the Wolf Oak acorn failing?
The cold seeped into his blood far deeper this
time, and he felt something new and unexpected. The screaming
softened, beckoning instead for him to join them. A great void
opened up somewhere deep within his mind, a pool of absolute
nothingness. No chaos, no sensations…nothing. The temptation to
dive into it weighed down on him like a mountain, and his hands
began to slip from the trunk. He had almost let go when the pool
rippled and vanished in a storm of light and noise. He blinked and
looked over to see Private Vulhber grab a tree.
Konowa concentrated, realizing now that they
weren't just attacking a single tree, but the power of the entire
forest around them. Every tree was connected.
"Major, look out!" Zwitty shouted as he turned
and ran back toward the square.
The shako on Konowa's head was ripped off, a
chunk of wood thrown by a rakke just missing crushing his skull. He
kept his hands on the tree, not knowing what else to do. There were
still dozens of trees between the regiment and the fort. If the
square was to maintain its integrity, Konowa had to find a way to
remove the trees in its path.
The tramping of boots echoed through the
ground. With each step he felt a growing strength. As the regiment
got closer the power in him increased, magnified by their numbers,
and their oath. He sensed the presence of Iron Elves around him,
their closeness giving him incredible power. With a shout that was
half growl, he ripped the tree from the earth and burned it in a
triumphal blaze of black flame.
A rakke suddenly loomed before him, its yellow
fangs dripping with saliva. Konowa didn't even reach for his saber.
He took one step forward and drove his right fist into the
creature's chest. He felt the ribs freeze and turn brittle,
snapping into several pieces as they were driven into its heart,
which shuddered and stopped.
More rakkes charged.
"Major, Private! Get down!"
Konowa shook his head and moved toward the
rakkes. A hand like an anvil came down on his shoulder and shoved
him to the ground.
"Fire!"
Muskets barked directly above him. Bitter
smoke stung his nostrils, his eyes watering. He shook off the hand
holding him down and stood up. Rakkes lay everywhere, trees writhed
and flailed their crooked branches, and somewhere a series of bells
were ringing.
"—more careful! That volley would…and then
what…"
Konowa watched Vulhber's lips moving, but only
caught a few words. He realized the ringing in his ears was from
the last volley. Slowly, his hearing came back.
"—you okay?"
Konowa nodded and moved forward again toward
the next tree. "Stay close; use their power," he said, pointing to
the regiment behind them.
Private Vulhber shook his head. "There's no
point, sir."
Konowa snarled. "Don't go soft on me now."
Vulhber pointed to the trees. "Look."
Konowa turned. Dark figures moved across the
ground, long, two-handed swords gleaming like lightning dancing
above the ground. They drifted in and out of sight, more shadow
than substance, making it difficult to keep them in focus. Their
swords rose and fell with untiring violence. Black frost sparked
into black flame wherever their swords cut, consuming the
sarka har in
a chorus of screams that echoed in Konowa's head. One of the
figures paused, its blade held high above its head. It turned
slowly, its gaze sweeping across Konowa like a winter gale.
A voice crawled into his skull from somewhere
impossibly far away.
"They are
coming," the shade of Meri said.
"Run."