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I'm supposed to have a title? (Original/NaNo) - Valles - 11-09-2009 The Grey Road had been built, or at least begun, by her grandfather on his ascension to the throne. It wove hundreds of miles through the rough foothills of the Whitewalls from the Lock all the way to the steep, twisting road that made the brutal climb to the high pass of the South Brother. Which, at this time of year, was snowed solid, impassible until spring. Hence the long way around, south from her father's seat to the Lock, then west along the border between Montan and Deltan territory, and north as the mountains turned until they reached the bank of the Thread river. The Thread ran almost due west - and never entered Deltan territory - until it joined the Pendant, the flowing sea, which they could follow upstream to their, her, destination, the city called The Setting, on the shore where the Pendant drained from the freshwater Dazule Sea. Where her future husband waited. The thought was... intimidating. What it would mean politically, she was ready for. The alliance she and her brother-in-law would eventually inherit would have the power and the influence to squash every bandit and toll-gouging petty-lord on in the hundreds of tiny baronies that seperated the high country of Montan, with its mines and endless forests, from the endless farmlands and cities that spread out from the shores of the Dazul. Once those barriers to trade were removed, and proper roads built from the cities and rivers to the two high Whitewall passes, the increase in taxable volume of trade would give either of the two powers deep enough coffers to outright crush the greatest gougers of all - the Deltan lords. With them gone, and free travel throughout the Pendant's watershed - the entire continent, for all intents and purposes - and the two most powerful nations wedded... Literally, and the thought made her stomach flip. ...wedded together in firm alliance if not outright union, the only real competing power would be the united Riding Clans, and however deadly their swift cavalry and all-knowing eyes might be on the battlefield they were ultimately too few and too divided to face up to the kind of forces her children... Children. She was going to have children, and not just in a decade or so, but soon. ...her children and their people would have available. Whether by military conquest or economic pressure, the greater Empire woudl subsume the Riders, either as a whole or more likely clan by clan, probably with each clan as a semi-autonomous vassal like the Montan Passwardens or the lesser Dazuli city-states. Her grandchildren... She shivered as the unfamiliar timescale of the thought whispered along her spine. ...her grandchildren would probably be better off consolidating than expanding further, solidifying the world's civilization into the blood and bone of society as 'how things have always been' rather than forcing military adventures along the coasts and at sea to the Islands. And there would be peace, if not in that generation than in the next, or the next. Not complete peace, people being people and factions being factions, but an end to constant raiding and invasions and banditry... real peace. But first this marriage - her marriage - and the alliance it would be key to had to work. "Her Highness is fretting, again," said a voice from beside her. The phrasing - the choice of pronouns and conjugation - was respectful enough, and the lack of the expected Western accent was still perpetually startling after nearly a month of acquaintance, but the really curious thing about the statement was, well, that its speaker would make it to one of Royal Blood. Squadron Blade Barshir Kayanzda was, to all appearances, simply a junior officer of the Setting's cavalry arm, a leanly fit youth a couple of years younger than she was and a centimeter or two taller, obviously of noble or at least moneyed background from his education and arms-skill, but dressed in the same sturdy but ill-fitting armor and tunic as his men. His footmen, three files of tough, quiet professionals, every single one of the forty-five men carrying the black-painted shield awarded to a nine-year veteran... Under the command of a noble charioteer who couldn't have been serving for as many as three. Not that that was the only puzzling thing. Hm. Asking might make a good distraction, to keep him from bringing up the whole 'blushing maiden' thing. Again. "You know," she said, with a teasing lilt in her voice and a predatory glint in her sidelong glance at her 'escort', "it occurs to me, not for the first time, how strange it is that a bodyguard or guide would say such a thing." "You're not offended," he observed in return, with perfect calmness. Excellent. The game began. "Not in the slightest," she admitted. "And yet, though you might forbear such impertinence if I were, I cannot help but think that you wouldn't feel the slightest bit of actual concern over the matter... which is oh, so interesting." Strike. "I should fail in my duty did I not ward Her Highness from her troubles, even those, like tedium or trepidation, too ethereal for any blade." And counterstrike. "Ah? Shall I indulge my speculations, then?" Feint. "I am, of course, at Her Highness's service." Guard, and now where to land the first real blow? The thoroughness of his knowledge of the Setting and its Palace's intrigues? The size and nature of his detachment, and how they did not match the usual manner of their deployment? Or perhaps... A shift in the tempo of their vanguard's march brought Asima out of her speculation. They were tenser, now, and not just by the amount to be expected of meeting an ordinary traveler. She turned and caught her aide's eye. Kathim had heard it too, and he double-timed ahead to investigate with only a slight head-tilt as instruction - they had, after all, known each other for years, ever since her instruction had expanded from simple arms to true war. When she turned back, Barshir's usual thoughtful expression was still in place, as peaceful and ever, but when she asked him if he had heard what she had, there was a tension in his answer. "Air is heavy, a little. Chill like battle, but not soon, yet." Interesting, she thought as the men of her bodyguard began to check the fit of their armor or shift their weapons for readier use. His accent showed up when he was worried. Kathim returned with company, a short, wiry man of middle years and dark complexion, dressed in good fashion for a Deltan lord of minor status, with a harness of straps for six smokebows and one of the heavy Deltan sabres, and a leather helmet. He wasn't mounted, which was a bad sign - if Kathim had thought him trustworthy then the envoy would have stayed mounted, perhaps with a muzzle for his horse, and if he'd been uncertain then there certainly would have been one, with a guard or two pacing beside with blades ready to draw. That his weapons were peacebonded and his horse's claws and fangs held politely at the head of the now-stopped column said that this meeting took place under the protocol for a hostile parley - that it was, at heart, the delivery of an ultimatum. "Your Highness the Dynasty's Princess Heir Asima din Dhasam, I beg leave to present to you Zodasu of the Golden Pillar, petty-baron in service to the King of the Delta." The lordling's eyes flashed with quick fury at being so-titled by an underling, but his bow - one hand on the sabre's pommel, the other on the breastbone, and deep enough for precedence's sake - was smooth and polite in spite of it. So and so and so. A courtier, as well as a man of his hands. In truth, she'd half-expected to have this trip come to 'incident'. If an untried girl could see where her trip would lead within a generation then anyone of vision in the fullness of his years could likewise predict such, and while the Delta had never been noted for its shortage of arrogant fools, it would be too much to expect that King and Dukes alike should be numbered one and all among them. "I see you, Zodasu," she said in the Deltan dialect, with a bit of glacier chill in her voice and the constructions for one lord to a lesser such. "I am seen, King's Daughter," he answered in turn, this time not quite able to keep his affront from his voice. Probably he'd never been addressed so by one without what he and his would have called the 'touch of Divine Mastery'... But that was hardly her problem. "You have a message for me," she observed, and the man withdrew a leather tube from his coat and slid out a sealed roll of parchment to offer on both palms. She took it, forbearing her usual courteous nod or acknowledgment, and noted the Prince-in-Waiting's seal. It made sense; her opposite number among the marshmen was a fool, and inclined to fancy himself a stallion, while his father was clever enough to see a need to send someone and dumb enough to think her sex made her just a figurehead. She broke the wax and read; bad poetry with worse penmanship, arrogant assumptions with ugly threats backing them and all the subtlety of a horse after a squirrel. "In his own hand, is it?" she asked, then indulged in a nasty snicker and passed the note to her guide. "He'd've been better leaving it to a professional." Barshir was a very quick reader, which fit - fit what, she wasn't sure, but it was in line with the rest of the man. "The Song of Silver Bees, is it?" he said. "His taste is nearly as bad as his paraphrase." Zodasu's voice wavered like he was being strangled, but he nevertheless managed to force out a measured reply. "Shall there be a note in reply to my liege, King's Daughter?" She held his eyes until the choler faded into first a wary caution, then a chilling awareness of how many of her sworn men surrounded their little confrontation. "In plainest terms, Zodasu, not only shall I not surrender to be raped as your prince's plaything, nor give up my duties to my people, but I shall see his head picked by crows for the presumption." Finally the Deltan's ego eclipsed his control. "You shall regret that, serf-girl." "'This being done,'" Asima quoted darkly, "'I cannot run.'" * * * * * * * The country was opening out from the endless marshes her employers called home, in lockstep with the way the rocks of the foothills lifted away from the sea-plain. The trees weren't different, yet, but there was a visible line on the slopes of the looming crags ahead, where vivid summer-green changed to the cooler, bluer shades that were so common at home, both new and old. Aimue's fellow mercenary commander shivered whenever she thought no one was looking, being one of a people her Brotherhood's translator said lived south of even the green-choked swamp of smothering misery they'd already crossed. Fortunately, with their employer's handfast troops already offloaded from the transport ships that had finally grounded on the bottom of this narrow river, there wasn't much for the tattooed woman to do. Aimue's own followers were already ashore, laughing and joking, staining their furs and leathers with dropped flecks of facepaint as they readied for battle. The swamp-men's leaders flowed around the group, keeping their distance like wolves watching a campfire, while the underlings simply gathered in clumps and waited leaning on their shabby spears. It was good that they didn't try to approach; the broken blankness in their eyes was chilling. Despite being far more decent than the last couple of weeks had been, it was still a warm day, with the sun high and the moon a long narrow crescent of gold across a quarter of the sky. Simply standing out of the shade was enough to make her sweat, and the rich men's horses were panting, long pink tongues lolling out of drooping faces and dribbling slobber over everything that held still long enough, even the ones that were still soaked from splashing out of the river to claw their way up the green bank where the host was massing. The boats rocked in the current, sails stowed, held in place by lines run ashore. Most were high and fat as a waterfowl, painted in loud shades or left the pale grey of seasoned wood, but here and there a long narrow crocodile-shape lay close to the water, sides pierced by hundreds of oars and crammed full of the crews who would guard the expedition's supplies while it deployed. She took a moment to double-check her own gear, yet again. Heavy boots of stiff leather, with much-scored steel caps over the toes and heavy hobnails in their soles - those had belonged to her father. The plainest of the three pairs of trousers she'd brought, their soft tan deerhide leather much patched in the same crude stitches that had originally shaped them - but if her work was ugly, it was also sturdy, and that'd be more important than fetching looks. Soft sheepfur unders, a gift from sister Owkeuv, who'd hoped - correctly, the busybody - that if she made them comfortable enough then Aimue wouldn't care that they were cut for mancatching rather than warmth. A heavy buff tabard of layered soft leather, stitched together in triangles nine layers thick and perfectly fitted to her frame, sleeveless for tradition and quick reaction and, in this hot place, the cooling comfort of open air. Long strips of still more soft leather, woven tightly around the palms of her hands for grip, pale hide stained dark by the sweat of practice. Finally the mantle of her Fallen One, symbol and source of her priesthood, dark claws and stained fangs strung together with bright gold and amber at neck and shoulders, anchoring the still-pelted likeness worked into her helm and capelet. Her own war-paint was already on, a palmprint across the mouth with thumb on one cheekbone on one side and fingers splayed from eyebrow to jaw on the other, so she simply turned to pick up her weapon and join her men. It wasn't lying propped where she'd set it down, but held in the ship's captain's hands, offered grip-first. Despite the five-stone weight, the only obvious sign of stress was the way the muscles and tendons of her arms stood out beneath sun-bronzed skin and tattoo-stained sucker scars - but then, Aimue had already known that any of these sailors was as strong as any Sworn man. "Thank you," she said, with the coughing monotone of their paymaster's language still awkward on her tongue. "Need something?" Which was probably wrong, of course, but should get the idea - that she was wondering why the sailor had come over - across anyway. "Welcome," the captain answered - in the language of the Departed. Her brow was furrowed over sunset-pink eyes as she concentrated on getting the sounds right. "Saying... be careful. Job is potato." ...Potato? "Is root?" The captain stopped, and blinked, then swore by the private parts of... a spirit? An explictly female being, anyway... and shook her head with a flash of earrings in sunlight, then pulled off the band that held her hair back and tucked the dark strands out of the way with the same hand. "No," she said, then another word Aimue didn't know - and expanded on it when the priestess could only give her a helpless look in return. "It's a part of... of a fight for rank between great lords. This is big, and we're small. Easy t' get-" something "-like a bug." "Politics," the priestess guessed in her own language, emphasizing the flat tone in the first syllable and the falling one in the second. "Loud," answered... her name was something in ordinary words... Watch Fisher? White Whaler? Something to do with fish, anyway... then made a face and corrected herself. "Yes. Watch out." "I will," Ah! that was it. She smiled. "Thank you, Witch Fisher." "Good luck," the sailor told her, then turned away to answer a call from one of her own men. Aimue waved a blessing at her back anyway, then turned and gauged the distance over the rail to the bank - close enough, and only a little up. Three quick steps of run-up and she landed easily on the living green grass of the riverside. Witch Fisher's galley could have pulled up on the landing easily, of course, but that space was full of dedicated transports unloading more human beings than she'd ever seen in one place at one time before. The few Departed mercenaries who'd been crammed into the small spare corners of the force's already cramped galleys could get to shore on their own easily enough, even those whose rites of passage had gone more ordinarily. As a Priest of Bear, Aimue was in theory the senior and leader of the Departed who had followed the Deltan's banner, but she was ten years younger than the chief of the Hawk Brothers, and him the youngest of the five men who'd gathered together for a quick huddle in a proper language before the enterprise moved out. One, who was Boar at this place and time, glowered at her, eyes beady and narrow over silver-bristled jowls and inlaid regailia. He was of the northern lineage, originally, and his pride rankled taking orders from a female nearly as much as it did from a child barely into her courses. His Sworn, a lean, gristly man, who'd already bristled his hair up in Boar's crimson warpaint, took the Spirit's will regarding her more seriously, at times uncomfortably so. Wolf, whose drab features went oddly with their green striping, seemed slow and colorless here in waiting - but she had seen the man fight, when his Fallen One came alive at the hunt. Hawk, tall and lean and handsome, with his golden paint and feather-woven hair, could have made any young girl's heart flutter in her chest like a dove, but she would... ...rot, who was she kidding. The man was gorgeous. Fortunately, he was too old for her and knew it, only flirting enough for the sake of his 'honor as a man' rather than outright destroying her composure. Her Sworn nodded as she joined the group. "Bear," he said, "all is ready for the blessing." Three years since meeting her Fallen One had polished already-familiar rituals into a perfect dance, as Hawk and Wolf brought the sacrifice forward and held it in place under the waiting black glass knives in her either hand as the entreaties and blessings were spoken and respoken, the chant echoed back by the basso rumble of the warriors standing witness before she brought the stroke home. The first blade's keen edge fit neatly between the sheep's vertebra, shearing through the spine and easily free to the second cut across the blood vessels of the throat - a good omen, that the creature didn't squeal or claw, and better one that the entire thing was done by the same blade, without breaking or shattering. Her Fallen's strength made the killing easy, of course - if need be she could have torn its head free in her hands - but gauging the angle and the force right to keep the brittle rock intact were beyond difficult even for priests many decades her senior. Boar caught the sacrifice's blood in a bowl, then bent the body over backwards to bear its furred chest and belly. She opened the stomach in a single grip-deep stroke up towards the ribcage, then paused just short of the breastbone before the second cut in and down, opening the diaphragm. The unused second knife was laid carefully in the bowl of blood as the Boar Sworn took it away to be shared among the first ranks of unblooded oathtaken, and with that hand she reached into the warmth of it and closed her fingers about the heart. When she pulled it free and held it up, all could see how it still beat. "As we partake of this your strength, you who ran well and long, so we run in our turn at the sides of the greater spirits of this world, and ready the strength you nurture within us for their glory - in battle!" The iron tang of blood and the priest's portion filled her mouth as the men cheered. * * * * * * * Because they were Deltans, the enemy sent the first wave of the trap in as light infantry, half-naked men in dirt-stained peasant rages of any age from first beard to tottering oldster, swarming forward in a wave of wicker shields and crude spears. Facing them were the elite warriors of the Dynasty's Royal Guard, the personal troops of the oldest and wealthiest single kingly line in the world. His own people's Blackshields were, man for man, the only force in the world that could come close to their abilities, and his file leaders, proud men all, who had faced the Guard in the past, had quietly admitted during the march to the Key that they would just as soon avoid testing the matter again. The column had been marching in four sections, a detachment of the Royal Guard as vanguard, then the core bodyguard, then his own men, and finally another detachment of Guardsmen are rearguard. After Her Highness had sent the Deltan's 'envoy' packing with his ears roundly boxed, a quick flurry of orders had split the main force of Guardsmen off to either side of the road, pulling the vanguard and rearguards in to fill the gaps between their lines. One line in the torrent had directed his own men, without so much as a by-your-leave-dear-ally, to form at the center as a reserve for the entire force. He'd complied, of course, and smartly, too. Even leaving aside the question of its being merely a matter of time 'till she was his Queen in fact, Barshir was not the sort of fool to quibble over petty pride when a fight for their lives was in the offing. He'd hardly have been tapped as the Princess's guide if he were, after all. Two hundred armed peasants stormed at a hundred swordsmen from the uphill side of the road, sliding and slipping in a torrent of soil and leaf litter. The line of soldiers facing them recoiled slightly, as any human would when faced with foes who simply threw themselves in with no fear of death, then recovered as the crude spear points scraped across white-enameled steel plate and finely-honed skills severed the lives of every single attacker in two quick ripples of flashing sword-strokes. "Well, now they know your guards are not fakes," Barshir observed. Her Highness gave him what he thought might well have been the first seriously displeased glare he'd ever seen on her face. "What kind of cack-handed idiot butcher..." Pointing out that they'd known their opponent was a fool anyway didn't seem wise. "Either distraction, probe, or simply effort to wear us down," he said instead, and pulled out the parchment sheet holding the notes he'd taken for this section of the trip, including a sketched map. "There was river nearby, so paramour could have brought quite considerable force. Ahort cross-country hike over hill could let them bring a blocking force in behind us, or up above on hillside. Probably main force will be below," and he pointed, describing an arc, "so, on flat ground where their cavalry will be able to move better." The young woman leaned over his shoulder to examine the map, a weight of presence looming close so that even with her armor and his, he could feel his hair trying to stand on end. It was, to think a dangerous thought of which his father would certainly have dissaproved, quite pleasant... Easily enough so to distract from the crashing and cracking of sticks and leaves as the next wave of attackers piled out of the woods. "So if they're..." she said slowly, thinking aloud as she fixed the positions in her mind, "And the river is... and upwind." Upwin-... oh. "My men won't be as fresh as yours," he said, "But we should still be in condition to be of some use." This time the sudden outbreak of violence included a hoarse scream from one of the Montans as well as the involuntary hisses and cries of the falling horse-fodder. No disparity in skill or equipment could entirely prevent a lucky or unlucky break, particularly from a foe as... desperate... as they faced. He turned and met brilliant green eyes, and then they both nodded and turned to their troops. "Well, my fellow gentlemen of leisure," he told his own men in wry, comfortable Western, "it seems likely that there are a great number of uncouth sorts about desirous of our company. Speaking just for myself, I'd as soon disappoint them. You?" That won a laugh, and one man, safely hidden among his fellows, made a fairly good impression of a man losing the previous night's wild indulgence. "Really? I can't imagine why, handsome fellows that they must be. Eunuch of a scholar that I am, I've been asked to carry the lady's things while she hails a gondola - those of you who recall this ground may perhaps remember a certain river nearby?" "I fell in when a bird crapped on my head," a voice answered, from a different section of the clump than the last wag. "I can see that that might be memorable," Barshir allowed. "So, it being reasonable to guess that our sudden admirers have had their carriers wait, I come to my point - that being that we shall, very shortly, need to move quite quickly indeed. Shall there be any problems to advise the beautiful lady of before we begin our placid constitutional?" There were not - nor were there any illusions in the veterans answering gazes. These shouting mobs of madmen were hardly going to be the only component of any force sent after a target as important as a member of the Dynasty's main line - there would be hired mercenaries, also, hardened professionals from all across the civilized world, and waiting behind them, Deltan knights with their armor-piercing smokebows and white-fanged horses... And there would not be just a few of them, but enough to be sure of overwhelming the Royal Guard detachment - probably enough to be a literal army in its own right. Stealing a ship - that might not be there - and taking it down a river - that might be blocked - to sail up the Pendant - that might be blockaded - was a risk, and a reckless one... but without surrendering into the hands of a foe not known for being bound by their word to 'mere feral serfs', there were no better ones available. With shocking suddenness, and before the next wave of attackers could arrive, the Blackshields and Royal Guard alike fell into a rough marching order and began to quicktime down the slope and, hopefully, towards safety. * * * * * * * "So much for an easy paycheck," Witch Fisher grumbled, ducking behind a gunwale and listening glumly to the axe-blows of crossbow bolts going home in the protecting wood. Fortunately enough the Royal Guard's weapons didn't seem to be powerful enough to put a shot through Krakenhook's side, at least at this range, but there'd been men on shore wearing Dazuli-make lobster-banded gear, too, and their halfbows were nearly as bad as smokebows for penetration, with more range and accuracy. "'Just a few personal retainers,' yeah, sure, just like summer's a little windy! 'Cause, hey, what's a fucking hurricane between friends?" "That puffed-up cockhead of a prince lied," remarked the rower hiding next to her - one of the new men, called Two Joints after the missing tip of one of his index fingers - in a tone that was probably supposed to imply shock and horror. The other benches hiding with them at the stern laughed, so at least they were in high spirits. "He couldn't have just shorted our pay or something?" his captain complained in return, winning another laugh, then poked her head up into view for a moment and ducked back down before she could get it shot off. "How many?" asked Carpenter. "Call it a triple-twin's worth of the whiteshells and a single of blackshields." A triple twin - a war galley with three levels of benches and two men per bench - carried between two hundred and forty and three hundred and sixty oars and rowers, while a single - one set of benches, with one man each - typically topped out at sixty. Krakenhook, a double-twin, carried a crew of two hundred and twenty-four, plus however many soldiers her current paymasters assigned. Red Lip was a constant problem at sea, always simmering with enough wrath at the universe in general that it was rare to have ten days go by without his coming to blows with someone. For a mercenary galley there was usually either a storm or an enemy to absorb his belligerence, but the rest of the time Fisher just beat the twit up herself. "Us and Lockjaw and Stormborne... we could take 'em, easy." Big Whip, whose shoulders and scar-seamed back left him with nothing to prove to anyone, snorted. "Yeah, sure. Like a kraken takin' a witch squid. Those milk-shell bastards don't get their shiny suits just 'cause they kiss up t' the great and the good so pretty. Me, I ain't getting paid that much short of the Silver and Azure saying they're lonely one fine night while the Nightlord's away." "Mmmm," Witch Fisher said, thinking while her men argued. None of the galleys had been beached, just the transports for the serfs - the nobles had gone ashore in small boats, and let their horses swim. Given the force that'd been landed... "All right!" she shouted, loud enough to be heard a hundred and twenty feet away at the stern-post. "To your oars! I want us ready to move at three beats!" Granted that turning around would be entirely too much of a challenge given how much sea room they didn't have on this stream, but one of the reasons this point had been picked was that it was wide and deep enough for maneuvering. "Are we going to run?" Night Eyes, the bow watchman asked as most of the crew scurried to their benches. "No," she told him, "No, no need. They want to escape - and they'll need to go past us to do it. We'll be able to close for javelins or ramming without needing to board whatever transport they take - or we can simply shadow them easily enough, and strike when they tangle with the Deltans. And if they don't, then the jaws will just close on them here rather than at the road." He nodded, understanding. "There were several keeps right on the river that we passed." "Exactly. We-" Fisher cut her reply off and risked another peek at a sudden tremendous noise from the riverbank. Wolf-howl and bear-roar and hawk-scream mingled as the ragged wave of ice-sea mercenaries poured out of the woods and piled into the Montans and Dazuli, but what she'd heard had been the shower of outright cobbles slamming home. She swore at length, staring at the results. She'd seen the invaders practicing with their slings, but hadn't really appreciated that any of their shock fighters could hit nearly as hard as a skilled stone-hurler... And the accuracy of their scouts was eerie. Not as bad as the occasional Rider mercenary she'd seen at work, but enough to put a lead bullet into the few vulnerable points of the Montan armor. At slingstone speeds, even a few ounces of weight could ruin a joint for hours if not permanently. There was a shudder, passing like a ripple in water through the Montan force as, for the first time that Fisher had ever heard of, the Royal Guard fought a foe their famous armor couldn't give them an advantage against. Deltan smokebows and rebel or bandit crossbows had always been able to pierce even their thick plate, of course, but in close combat their protection had always made them uniquely deadly. For a moment, it probably seemed to the parties in the actual fight that the mercenaries would carry the field in a rush, but looking at the action from a little outside was enough to convince Fisher that there would never have been a chance of that. Even the men going down were doing so stubbornly, wounding or killing a foe or two and more importantly delaying while their comrades rallied. There one Guardsman held back three barbarians in wolf-fur with threatening sweeps of his sword, while elsewhere a bear-bannered warrior batted aside a sword as long as he was to crush his attacker's chest with a club ten times the bladed weapon's weight, and elsewhere still a pair of white-armored soldiers feinted and split up and reinforced each other without even trading glances, and carved apart every enemy who came close enough solely through the power of superior teamwork. A solid plug of black wood bullied its way into and around the enemy flank in a dense, deadly mass of stabbing blades and faceless force, while elsewhere a single familiar bear-headed figure sent hundreds of bits of armor and dozens of pieces of men tumbling and flying like straw fluttering in the air after a swordsman cut through a scarecrow. At equal numbers, Fisher thought, calling on years at sea and the occasional bit of on-shore hired skullduggery, the Guardsmen would have won fairly easily. One on one, they weren't as dangerous as the bear warriors, but they worked together much better. The true-boars might have had a larger margin over the blackshields, but were actually having less luck given the higher degree of reinforcement in the Dazuli shield-wall. The wolves and hawks and 'unhallowed' initiates were barely able to compete... Though they'd've been ugly in their own right in a boarding action against her people. Those so-called 'targets' were dangerous, dangerous men. The numbers weren't equal, though, with nearly half-again as many furbacks in sight and more coming out of the trees at every moment, along with the first few scraps of half-exhausted Deltan rabble. "Helllooo, what's this, now?" Night Eyes murmured under his breath, and she turned to follow his gaze. A quintet of figures - three in Guardsman white, one in plain steel torso rig, and a fifth whose armor had a patch over its right arm and shoulder the color of dry dirt - were sliding out onto the water in one of the nobles' landing boats. The Dynasy's colors were a tan block in the upper right of a white field. "Leavin' 'er men to buy time. Didn't think they did that..." the watchman continued, obviously on the same reasoning she'd made. "Any family gets cowards... But I'll bet you this is just taking the only chance she's got." "Looks like Stormborne's got them either way." And, indeed, the smaller galley was backing water on one side and forwards on the other, spinning in place to point its cruel bronze beak at the tiny dinghy. Witch Fisher would have commented about it being a bit of a pity to miss that bonus, when four of the figures on the boat threw themselves down and the last - the Dazulian - turned to face the threatening warship squarely. And lightning struck. Not from the clear sky but from the standing man's hand, reaching out to play along Stormborne's length from bow to stern, leaving a trail of smoking corpses, smoldering boards - and flaming pitch. Probably a quarter of their crew was dead in that single strike, the rest stunned senseless by the flash and a report that made Fisher about jump out of her skin from hundreds of feet away - at close range the noise would have been a physical impact in its own right. Even with all the crew alive and awake the number of fires she saw aboard the other vessel would have been difficult, maybe impossible, to fight. With seconds, probably minutes going by while they grew unchecked, the Stormborne was doomed. "Black, blue, and grey," Night Eyes swore. "A mage." His captain had not attained her rank, or even survived as long as she had, by thinking slowly. Every magister she'd ever heard of, from her home islands' stone-hurlers and witches to Montan enchanters to Deltan nobles and Dazuli mages, had some kind of limit to their endurance - and the more spectacular their work, the sooner they'd hit that. But this fellow hadn't fallen over yet, so he probably had at least one more thunderbolt left - or, more likely, enough to torch half the fleet if not the same proportion of infantry. And Krakenhook was one of the only two actual warships remaining. "ABANDON SHIP!" Witch Fisher roared, and her crew did, bolting out of their benches and up over the sides and into the water. A second jag of lightning licked out and played across Lockjaw's midships, turning half its rigging into a flaming mass as Stormborne's blaze spread enough to drive its crew to wakefulness and - in several cases screaming and themselves alight - into the water. The Fisher dove into the river's murky brown herself and flutter-kicked through the dimness towards the shore. Opposite the fighting, of course. She still wasn't getting paid enough to pile into those Guardsmen. * * * * * * * Asima managed to catch the Dazulian before he could finish falling. He hung on weakly, like a runner being helped up after the end of a race, and muttered something that sounded like it might have been a question. "Yes," she said, looking at the spreading inferno that had started as a respectably sized fleet, "You got them all. We're clear." "Good," Barshir sighed as she set him down on one of the boat's rowing benches. "Will pass out now." "Sleep tight," she said, and left him there as she shifted to check their course. She pointedly didn't look at the three retainers sharing the boat with her and the foreigner; they might not have been much happier at having been ordered to force her away from the battle than she was, but they'd still carried out the order. Damn him! She wouldn't shame her father like this! She couldn't. "I ran," she whispered, and with thori, the pronoun used by washerwomen or nuns, not not the noblewoman's dhara. "Highness..." began one of the guardsmen, but she waved him down, watching the battle on the shore. "Do lots for the first rowing shift. I'll take the second. We'll keep going until nightfall, then stop and plan." "...Yes, Highness." They'd need to put as much distance behind them as possible. A small boat, and the lack of numbers, would require changing their plans significantly; three hundred and fifty fighting men with the supplies in one or two transports would have been able to move quite quickly downriver, but with only five, a small boat, and no food or ready coin, they wouldn't be able to sustain anywhere near the same speed... Nor intimidate or cut their way past any real opposition at all. But that could wait a few minutes, an hour or two. For now, she had to watch her men die. She owed them at least that. Captain Kanag had called it a 'rearguard', but that was a lie in the only way that mattered. A rearguard didn't sacrifice three hundred to save one. Those men - her people - were dying... to save her skin. This is a day you'll regret, Prince of the Delta, she thought as the boat pulled around a bend in the river. * * * * * * * It was a constant effort not to try and run - but that wouldn't accomplish anything, given how tired she was and the panting horses she could hear tracking her. There were three of them, sniffing and padding through the leaf-litter she'd stirred up, plus the men bantering from their backs. The men she could have handled easily, even with three of them and only one of her - if nothing else she could always just play along with what they wanted then knife them in their sleep - but the horses had no interest in anything she could offer them and were more than smart enough to recognize an attempt to hurt their masters. And they were five times her size rather than only half-again, of course. "Hey, lemme take another look at that sketch, Zado," said one of them. "No way, you had your turn!" another answered. "If she hears you idiots, then that picture's a close as we'll get," a third snapped. "Yeah, shut up! She'll hea-" the second voice again. "You too!" "Eep!" Well, at least that confirmed they were looking for her. Leaving aside how many runaways were male, most serfcatchers didn't bother to pay that much attention to what their target actually looked like - much less treat the 'Lost' bulletin like a brothel ad. The padding feet moved closer. A voice out of memory reminded her, 'Even when hunters do look up, they usually can't see much if you're careful about where you put yourself. Don't try and huddle up like a knot unless there's a boll of something - you want to try and make yourself look like branches, to blend in with the shapes they won't be able to see well.' His name had been... she had to think a moment. Rapek. Another serf, lean and sort of knobby-kneed but very sweet. He'd been an Eater, of course, but hadn't tried to play up the 'mighty freedom fighter' aspect or any such - he'd at least attempted to hide it, even from her. He'd had gentle hands - and talented, too. The horse sniffed at the place where she'd leaned against her chosen tree on the first pass through. She held very still, and tried not to sweat too much. "Nice boots," said the first voice, with the expected leer. That one, I'm biting off, she decided. "Clever girl," said the third. "But why don't you come down from there?" She'd need to think of a way to deal with the horses... "All right," she called. "Give me a moment to climb down." With the sticks she'd used to help for the first part kicked away into the leaves, she had to take it carefully, stretching to reach the next stable branch and always cautious of her balance. The serfcatchers, of course, were more conscious of the the way her tunic road up as she made the needed reaches. Eventually, she crouched on the last branch before the bottom and looked down at them; one was leering, another trying for suave except for the too-intent eyes, and the last was literally drooling. She sighed internally. "I don' s'pose you're lookin' for someone other'n Zara?" she asked, not with much hope. "'Fraid not, pretty thing," said the one with his composure holding - the third speaker, as she'd figured - and leaned over to snatch a sheet of paper from the leering one, which he then held up at an angle she could see. It was her face and figure, pretty unmistakably, even with the new, less ostentatious outfit she'd found before making her attempt. "Damn," she said, snapping her fingers, then shifted to sit on the branch and kicked her legs a little. "No way you'd just let me keep goin' on my own way? I'd be real grateful." What the hell, she'd even keep the bargain if they took it. They weren't that ugly. "I imagine we could work somethin' out," said Number Three, and he was lying through his teeth. Really, it was practically insulting - how dumb did he think she was? Then an arrow sprouted from his chest, and another from the drooling one's, and a third from the last one's throat, all within a split second of each other. Zara lost her balance on the branch and fell the last eight feet or so to the ground. * * * * * * * It was hard not to panic. More than ever Shoru regretted the delay her lack of recognition had cost her. If she'd had even a week longer, she'd've been able to catch an earlier ship, better winds, and sliced another full week off of her travel time. Those two weeks could have been used for groundwork, preparation... She could have contacted the Eaters, could have had a second force ready to pin Prince Sarad's army against the anvil of the Royal Guard... For that matter, she could have warned the Dynast away and averted the entire war, though that would have been a bad idea. The odds of reaching the Pendant successfully with Asima's life and sanity intact were no more than even even in the best case; without a native guide of some sort to provide both verisimilitude and fluidity they were much worse. Why it was necessary for it to be this girl, she didn't know. The horses of the men she'd shot sniffed at the corpses that had fallen - one nuzzling the body in grief, another wandering off as though relieved of a problem, and the third turning to threaten the girl trying to pull her wits together a few feet away. Its floppy ears could lay back properly, but the head was low and its lips drawn back away from its fangs in a snarl. Rodogun answered her mistress's intention in the same instant that it formed, as always. She and Shoru had grown up together, very literally, and the horse's ability to read her thoughts and body language bordered on magic in their own right. Paws the size of pond-lilies sent broad-leafed little scattering as she accelerated explosively, reaching a full run in the space of three strides, and her tempo and balance shifted in perfect time as her rider lifted her torso out of the basic crouch to free both her hands for the bow, holding on with only her knees and her feet through the harness-loops. The long arrow came free of the quivery and fitted to the string, left hand at the great warbow's neutral node, right on the arrow, thumb-patch fitted and draw to the ear and past... Honed by long practice as a child, and hard effort on the true school of the tundra in the shadow the Icefather, the entire procedure took barely a moment, and the adjustment to see the correct instant, the correct course, no longer than that. The arrow flew... and the growling horse took one slow pace forwards as the too-beautiful girl in the now-stained tunic collected her scattered thoughts enough to recognize the threat and begin to flinch away. The arrow's narrow armor-piercing head punched cleanly through the bone at the back of its eye socket, and the beast stumbled and dropped where it stood with barely a yelp. Not being able to see any arrows falling might have confused the horses once, but this time, alert, they spotted its fall - and then her own form, and Rodogun's, and recognized a threat... and one they thought they could deal with. The horses spread out slightly as they bolted past the Deltan girl, long raw bones and muscles working under loose, short-furred skin. A second arrow killed another, hissing softly across and into its throat to bury itself deep inside the collarbone and lungs, severing the one of great blood vessels of the brain on its way in, and then there wasn't time for a third shot as Rodogun danced away from snapping jaws, with the stiff fur of her ruff standing up against Shoru's legs as her own head angled for a counter-bite. The sword at her hip swept from its sheath and around and down before the other animal could react to the dual threat, and just like that the fight was over. A quick whistle brought the pack-horses trotting close, including the good-tempered one she'd fitted with her spare harness, and the weight of possibilities was enough to make it a fight not to hold her breath as she slid off of Rodogun's back and offered her hand to the girl staring up at her. If only she'd paid more attention to the difference between Deltan and Montan dialects - and the self-recrimination was almost entirely a cover to keep from acknowledging how plain, how unworthy, those gleaming eyes and perfect features made her feel. "Come with me if you want to live," Shoru told her. Unfortunately, this is likely to be all that's in the offing until December sometime - I have a class paper to write that I hadn't planned on when I got myself into NaNo, and that necessarily comes first. =========== =============================================== "V, did you do something foolish?" "Yes, and it was glorious." - Foxboy - 11-09-2009 Still better than I've managed. *darn moving and dad's going spare about his classes. * Fortunatlely, I said PSEUDO-Na-no-wri-mo so as long as I do it in 30 days from wehen I' actually get stuff down on "paper"... What? I mean to do it, really! Still, looking good, V. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - The Wanderer - 11-13-2009 Niiice. This is professional-publication-worthy material, and easily one of the best things I've read in the last month. |