My first false assumption was that the Limper would be home when
we called. Darling’s maneuver against the Taken obviated
that. I should have recalled that the Taken touch one another over
long distances, mind to mind. Limper and Benefice passed nearby as
we moved north.
“Down!” Goblin squealed when we were fifty miles
short of the edge of the Plain. “Taken. Nobody
move.”
As always, old Croaker considered himself the exception to the
rule. For the Annals, of course. I crept nearer the side of our
monster mount, peered out into the night. Way below, two shadows
raced down our backtrack. Once they were past I took a cussing from
Elmo, the Lieutenant, Goblin, One-Eye, and anybody else who wanted
a piece. I settled back beside Tracker. He just grinned and
shrugged.
He came ever more to life as action approached.
My second false assumption was that the windwhale would drop us
at the edge of the Plain. I was up again as that drew near,
ignoring naughty remarks directed my way. But the windwhale did not
go down. It did not descend for many minutes yet. I began to babble
sillinesses when I resumed my place by Tracker.
He had his till-now mysterious case open. It contained a small
arsenal. He checked his weapons. One long-bladed knife did not
please him. He began applying a whetstone.
How many times had Raven done the same in the brief year he
spent with the Company?
The whale’s descent was sudden. Elmo and the Lieutenant
passed among us, telling us to get off in a hurry. Elmo told me,
“Stick close to me, Croaker. You too, Tracker. One-Eye. You
feel anything down there?”
“Nothing. Goblin has his sleeping spell ready. Their
sentries will be snoring when we touch down.”
“Unless they aren’t and raise the alarm,” I
muttered. Damn, but didn’t I have it for the dark side?
No problems. We grounded. Men poured over the side. They spread
out as if this part had been rehearsed. Parts may have been while I
was sulking.
I could do nothing but what Elmo told me.
The early going reminded me of another barracks raid, long ago,
south of the Sea of Torments, ere we enlisted with the Lady. We had
slaughtered the Urban Cohorts of the Jewel City Beryl, our wizards
keeping them snoozing while we murdered them.
Not work I enjoy, I’ll tell you. Most of them were just
kids who enlisted for want of something better to do. But they were
the enemy, and we were making a grand gesture. A grander gesture
than I had supposed Darling could order, or had in mind.
The sky began to lighten. Not one man of an entire regiment,
save perhaps a few AWOL for the night, survived. Out on the main
parade of the compound, which stood well outside Rust proper, Elmo
and the Lieutenant began to yell. Hurry, hurry. More to do. This
squad to wreck the stellae of the Taken. That squad to plunder
regimental headquarters. Another to set out stuff to fire the
barracks buildings. Still another to search the Limper’s
quarters for documents. Hurry, hurry. Got to get gone before the
Taken return. Darling cannot distract them forever.
Somebody screwed up. Naturally. It always happens. Somebody
fired one barracks early. Smoke rose.
Over in Rust, we soon learned, there was another regiment. In
minutes a squadron of horse were galloping our way. And again,
someone had screwed up. The gates were not secured. Almost without
warning the horsemen were among us.
Men shouted. Weapons clanged. Arrows flew. Horses shrieked. The
Lady’s men got out, leaving half their number behind.
Now Elmo and the Lieutenant were in a hurry for sure. Those boys
were going for help.
While we were scattering the imperials the windwhale lifted off.
Maybe half a dozen men managed to scramble aboard. It rose just
enough to clear the rooftops, then headed south. There was not yet
enough light to betray it.
You can imagine the cussing and shouting. Even Toadkiller Dog
found the energy to snarl. I slumped in defeat, dropped my butt
onto a hitching rail, sat there shaking my head. A few men sped
arrows after the monster. It did not notice.
Tracker leaned on the rail beside me. I grumped, “You
wouldn’t think something that big would be chicken.” I
mean, a windwhale can destroy a city.
“Do not impart motives to a creature you do not
understand. You have to see its reasoning.”
“What?”
“Not reasoning. I don’t know the right word.”
He reminded me of a four-year-old struggling with a difficult
concept. “It’s outside the lands it knows. Beyond
bounds its enemies believe it can breech. It runs for fear it will
be seen and a secret betrayed. It has never worked with men. How
can it remember them in a desperate moment?”
He was right, probably. But at the moment I was more interested
in him than in his theory. That I would have stumbled across after
I settled down. He made it seem one huge and incredibly difficult
piece of thinking.
I wondered about his mind. Was he just slightly more than a
half-wit? Was his Ravenlike act not a product of personality but of
simpleness?
The Lieutenant stood on the parade ground, hands on hips,
watching the windwhale leave us in the enemy’s palm. After a
minute he shouted, “Officers! Assemble!” After we
gathered, he said, “We’re in for it. As I see it, we
have one hope. That that big bastard gets in touch with the menhirs
when it gets back. And that they decide we’re worth saving.
So what we do is hold out till nightfall. And hope.”
One-Eye made an obscene noise. “I think we better run for
it.”
“Yeah? And let the imperials track us? We’re how far
from home? You think we can make it with the Limper and his pals
after us?”
“They’ll be after us here.”
“Maybe. And maybe they’ll keep them busy out there.
At least, if we’re here, they’ll know where to find us.
Elmo, survey the walls. See if we can hold them. Goblin, Silent,
get those fires put out. The rest of you, clean out the
Taken’s documents. Elmo! Post sentries. One-Eye. Your job is
to figure out how we can get help from Rust. Croaker, give him a
hand. You know who we have where. Come on. Move.”
A good man, the Lieutenant. He kept his cool when, like all of
us, what he wanted to do was run in circles and scream.
We didn’t have a chance, really. This was the end of it.
Even if we held off the troops from the city, there was Benefice
and the Limper. Goblin, One-Eye, and Silent would be of no value
against them. The Lieutenant knew that, too. He did not have them
put their heads together to plot a surprise.
We could not get the fire controlled. The barracks had to burn
itself out. While I tended two wounded men the others made the
compound as defensible as thirty men could. Finished doctoring, I
went poking through the Limper’s documents. I found nothing
immediately interesting.
“About a hundred men coming out of Rust!” someone
shouted.
The Lieutenant snapped, “Make this place look
abandoned!” Men scurried.
I popped up to the wall top for a quick peek at the scrub woods
north of us. One-Eye was out there, creeping toward the city,
hoping to get to Corder’s friends.
Even after having been triply decimated in the great sieges and
occupied for years, Rust remained adamant in its hatred for the
Lady.
The imperials were careful. They sent scouts around the wall.
They sent a few men up close to draw fire. Only after an hour of
cautious maneuver did they rush the half-open gate.
The Lieutenant let fifteen get inside before tripping the
portcullus. Those went down in a storm of arrows. Then we hustled
to the wall and let fly at those milling around outside.
Another dozen fell. The others retreated beyond bowshot. There
they milled and grumbled and tried to decide what next.
Tracker remained nearby all that time. I saw him loose only four
arrows. Each ripped right through an imperial. He might not be
bright, but he could use a bow.
“If they’re smart,” I told him,
“they’ll set a picket line and wait for the Limper. No
point them getting hurt when he can handle us.”
Tracker grunted. Toadkiller Dog opened one eye, grumbled deep in
his throat. Down the way, Goblin and Silent crouched with heads
together, alternately popping up to look outside. I figured they
were plotting.
Tracker stood up, grunted again. I looked myself. More imperials
were leaving Rust. Hundreds more.
Nothing happened for an hour, except that more and more troops
appeared. They surrounded us.
Goblin and Silent unleashed their wizardry. It took the form of
a cloud of moths. I could not discern their provenance. They just
gathered around the two. When they were maybe a thousand strong,
they fluttered away.
For a while there was a lot of screaming outside. When that died
I ambled over and asked a grim-faced Goblin, “What
happened?”
“Somebody with a touch of talent,” he squeaked.
“Almost as good as us.”
“We in trouble?”
“In trouble? Us? We got it whipped, Croaker. We got them
on the run. They just don’t know it yet.”
“I meant . . . ”
“He won’t hit back. He don’t want to give
himself away. There’s two of us and only one of
him.”
The imperials began assembling artillery pieces. The compound
had not been built to withstand bombardment.
Time passed. The sun climbed. We watched the sky. When would
doom come riding in on a carpet?
Certain the imperials would not immediately attack, the
Lieutenant had some of us gather our plunder on the parade ground,
ready to board a windwhale. Whether he believed it or not, he
insisted we would be evacuated after sunset. He would not entertain
the possibility that the Taken would arrive first.
He did keep morale up.
The first missile fell an hour after noon. A ball of fire
smacked down a dozen feet short of the wall. Another arced after
it. It fell on the parade ground, sputtered, fizzled.
“Going to burn us out,” I muttered to Tracker. A
third missile came. It burned cheerfully, but also upon the
parade.
Tracker and Toadkiller Dog stood and stared over the ramparts,
the dog stretching on his hind legs. After a while Tracker sat
down, opened his wooden case, withdrew a half dozen overly long
arrows. He stood again, stared toward the artillery engines, arrow
across his bow.
It was a long flight, but reachable even with my weapon. But I
could have plinked all day and not come close.
Tracker fell into a state of concentration almost trancelike. He
lifted and bent his bow, pulled it to the head of his arrow, let
fly.
A cry rolled up the slope. The artillerymen gathered around one
of their number.
Tracker loosed shafts smoothly and quickly. I’d guess he
put four in the air at one time. Each found a target. Then he sat
down. “That’s that.”
“Say what?”
“No more good arrows.”
“Maybe that’s enough to discourage them.”
It was. For a while. About long enough for them to move back and
put up some protective mantlets. Then the missiles came again. One
found a building. The heat was vicious.
The Lieutenant prowled the wall restlessly. I joined his silent
prayer that the imperials would not get worked up and rush us.
There would be no way to stop them.
My first false assumption was that the Limper would be home when
we called. Darling’s maneuver against the Taken obviated
that. I should have recalled that the Taken touch one another over
long distances, mind to mind. Limper and Benefice passed nearby as
we moved north.
“Down!” Goblin squealed when we were fifty miles
short of the edge of the Plain. “Taken. Nobody
move.”
As always, old Croaker considered himself the exception to the
rule. For the Annals, of course. I crept nearer the side of our
monster mount, peered out into the night. Way below, two shadows
raced down our backtrack. Once they were past I took a cussing from
Elmo, the Lieutenant, Goblin, One-Eye, and anybody else who wanted
a piece. I settled back beside Tracker. He just grinned and
shrugged.
He came ever more to life as action approached.
My second false assumption was that the windwhale would drop us
at the edge of the Plain. I was up again as that drew near,
ignoring naughty remarks directed my way. But the windwhale did not
go down. It did not descend for many minutes yet. I began to babble
sillinesses when I resumed my place by Tracker.
He had his till-now mysterious case open. It contained a small
arsenal. He checked his weapons. One long-bladed knife did not
please him. He began applying a whetstone.
How many times had Raven done the same in the brief year he
spent with the Company?
The whale’s descent was sudden. Elmo and the Lieutenant
passed among us, telling us to get off in a hurry. Elmo told me,
“Stick close to me, Croaker. You too, Tracker. One-Eye. You
feel anything down there?”
“Nothing. Goblin has his sleeping spell ready. Their
sentries will be snoring when we touch down.”
“Unless they aren’t and raise the alarm,” I
muttered. Damn, but didn’t I have it for the dark side?
No problems. We grounded. Men poured over the side. They spread
out as if this part had been rehearsed. Parts may have been while I
was sulking.
I could do nothing but what Elmo told me.
The early going reminded me of another barracks raid, long ago,
south of the Sea of Torments, ere we enlisted with the Lady. We had
slaughtered the Urban Cohorts of the Jewel City Beryl, our wizards
keeping them snoozing while we murdered them.
Not work I enjoy, I’ll tell you. Most of them were just
kids who enlisted for want of something better to do. But they were
the enemy, and we were making a grand gesture. A grander gesture
than I had supposed Darling could order, or had in mind.
The sky began to lighten. Not one man of an entire regiment,
save perhaps a few AWOL for the night, survived. Out on the main
parade of the compound, which stood well outside Rust proper, Elmo
and the Lieutenant began to yell. Hurry, hurry. More to do. This
squad to wreck the stellae of the Taken. That squad to plunder
regimental headquarters. Another to set out stuff to fire the
barracks buildings. Still another to search the Limper’s
quarters for documents. Hurry, hurry. Got to get gone before the
Taken return. Darling cannot distract them forever.
Somebody screwed up. Naturally. It always happens. Somebody
fired one barracks early. Smoke rose.
Over in Rust, we soon learned, there was another regiment. In
minutes a squadron of horse were galloping our way. And again,
someone had screwed up. The gates were not secured. Almost without
warning the horsemen were among us.
Men shouted. Weapons clanged. Arrows flew. Horses shrieked. The
Lady’s men got out, leaving half their number behind.
Now Elmo and the Lieutenant were in a hurry for sure. Those boys
were going for help.
While we were scattering the imperials the windwhale lifted off.
Maybe half a dozen men managed to scramble aboard. It rose just
enough to clear the rooftops, then headed south. There was not yet
enough light to betray it.
You can imagine the cussing and shouting. Even Toadkiller Dog
found the energy to snarl. I slumped in defeat, dropped my butt
onto a hitching rail, sat there shaking my head. A few men sped
arrows after the monster. It did not notice.
Tracker leaned on the rail beside me. I grumped, “You
wouldn’t think something that big would be chicken.” I
mean, a windwhale can destroy a city.
“Do not impart motives to a creature you do not
understand. You have to see its reasoning.”
“What?”
“Not reasoning. I don’t know the right word.”
He reminded me of a four-year-old struggling with a difficult
concept. “It’s outside the lands it knows. Beyond
bounds its enemies believe it can breech. It runs for fear it will
be seen and a secret betrayed. It has never worked with men. How
can it remember them in a desperate moment?”
He was right, probably. But at the moment I was more interested
in him than in his theory. That I would have stumbled across after
I settled down. He made it seem one huge and incredibly difficult
piece of thinking.
I wondered about his mind. Was he just slightly more than a
half-wit? Was his Ravenlike act not a product of personality but of
simpleness?
The Lieutenant stood on the parade ground, hands on hips,
watching the windwhale leave us in the enemy’s palm. After a
minute he shouted, “Officers! Assemble!” After we
gathered, he said, “We’re in for it. As I see it, we
have one hope. That that big bastard gets in touch with the menhirs
when it gets back. And that they decide we’re worth saving.
So what we do is hold out till nightfall. And hope.”
One-Eye made an obscene noise. “I think we better run for
it.”
“Yeah? And let the imperials track us? We’re how far
from home? You think we can make it with the Limper and his pals
after us?”
“They’ll be after us here.”
“Maybe. And maybe they’ll keep them busy out there.
At least, if we’re here, they’ll know where to find us.
Elmo, survey the walls. See if we can hold them. Goblin, Silent,
get those fires put out. The rest of you, clean out the
Taken’s documents. Elmo! Post sentries. One-Eye. Your job is
to figure out how we can get help from Rust. Croaker, give him a
hand. You know who we have where. Come on. Move.”
A good man, the Lieutenant. He kept his cool when, like all of
us, what he wanted to do was run in circles and scream.
We didn’t have a chance, really. This was the end of it.
Even if we held off the troops from the city, there was Benefice
and the Limper. Goblin, One-Eye, and Silent would be of no value
against them. The Lieutenant knew that, too. He did not have them
put their heads together to plot a surprise.
We could not get the fire controlled. The barracks had to burn
itself out. While I tended two wounded men the others made the
compound as defensible as thirty men could. Finished doctoring, I
went poking through the Limper’s documents. I found nothing
immediately interesting.
“About a hundred men coming out of Rust!” someone
shouted.
The Lieutenant snapped, “Make this place look
abandoned!” Men scurried.
I popped up to the wall top for a quick peek at the scrub woods
north of us. One-Eye was out there, creeping toward the city,
hoping to get to Corder’s friends.
Even after having been triply decimated in the great sieges and
occupied for years, Rust remained adamant in its hatred for the
Lady.
The imperials were careful. They sent scouts around the wall.
They sent a few men up close to draw fire. Only after an hour of
cautious maneuver did they rush the half-open gate.
The Lieutenant let fifteen get inside before tripping the
portcullus. Those went down in a storm of arrows. Then we hustled
to the wall and let fly at those milling around outside.
Another dozen fell. The others retreated beyond bowshot. There
they milled and grumbled and tried to decide what next.
Tracker remained nearby all that time. I saw him loose only four
arrows. Each ripped right through an imperial. He might not be
bright, but he could use a bow.
“If they’re smart,” I told him,
“they’ll set a picket line and wait for the Limper. No
point them getting hurt when he can handle us.”
Tracker grunted. Toadkiller Dog opened one eye, grumbled deep in
his throat. Down the way, Goblin and Silent crouched with heads
together, alternately popping up to look outside. I figured they
were plotting.
Tracker stood up, grunted again. I looked myself. More imperials
were leaving Rust. Hundreds more.
Nothing happened for an hour, except that more and more troops
appeared. They surrounded us.
Goblin and Silent unleashed their wizardry. It took the form of
a cloud of moths. I could not discern their provenance. They just
gathered around the two. When they were maybe a thousand strong,
they fluttered away.
For a while there was a lot of screaming outside. When that died
I ambled over and asked a grim-faced Goblin, “What
happened?”
“Somebody with a touch of talent,” he squeaked.
“Almost as good as us.”
“We in trouble?”
“In trouble? Us? We got it whipped, Croaker. We got them
on the run. They just don’t know it yet.”
“I meant . . . ”
“He won’t hit back. He don’t want to give
himself away. There’s two of us and only one of
him.”
The imperials began assembling artillery pieces. The compound
had not been built to withstand bombardment.
Time passed. The sun climbed. We watched the sky. When would
doom come riding in on a carpet?
Certain the imperials would not immediately attack, the
Lieutenant had some of us gather our plunder on the parade ground,
ready to board a windwhale. Whether he believed it or not, he
insisted we would be evacuated after sunset. He would not entertain
the possibility that the Taken would arrive first.
He did keep morale up.
The first missile fell an hour after noon. A ball of fire
smacked down a dozen feet short of the wall. Another arced after
it. It fell on the parade ground, sputtered, fizzled.
“Going to burn us out,” I muttered to Tracker. A
third missile came. It burned cheerfully, but also upon the
parade.
Tracker and Toadkiller Dog stood and stared over the ramparts,
the dog stretching on his hind legs. After a while Tracker sat
down, opened his wooden case, withdrew a half dozen overly long
arrows. He stood again, stared toward the artillery engines, arrow
across his bow.
It was a long flight, but reachable even with my weapon. But I
could have plinked all day and not come close.
Tracker fell into a state of concentration almost trancelike. He
lifted and bent his bow, pulled it to the head of his arrow, let
fly.
A cry rolled up the slope. The artillerymen gathered around one
of their number.
Tracker loosed shafts smoothly and quickly. I’d guess he
put four in the air at one time. Each found a target. Then he sat
down. “That’s that.”
“Say what?”
“No more good arrows.”
“Maybe that’s enough to discourage them.”
It was. For a while. About long enough for them to move back and
put up some protective mantlets. Then the missiles came again. One
found a building. The heat was vicious.
The Lieutenant prowled the wall restlessly. I joined his silent
prayer that the imperials would not get worked up and rush us.
There would be no way to stop them.