The Hero of Ages

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The Hero of Ages Page 34

by Brandon Sanderson

Page 34

  Elend had been to the city before. His father had made certain to introduce him in all of the Final Empires main cultural centers. Fadrex hadnt been one of those, but it had been on the way to Tremredare, once known as the capital of the West. In forging his new kingdom, however, Cett had ignored Tremredare, instead establishing his capital in Fadrex. A clever move, in Elends estimation—Fadrex was smaller, more defensible, and had been a major supply station for numerous canal routes.

  "The city looks different from the last time I was here," Elend said.

  "Trees," Ham said, standing beside him. "Fadrex used to have trees growing on the rocky shelves and plateaus. " Ham glanced at him. "Theyre ready for us. They cut down the trees to provide a better killing field and to keep us from sneaking up close. "

  Elend nodded. "Look down there. "

  Ham squinted, though it obviously took him a moment to pick out what Elends tin-enhanced eyes had noticed. On the northern side of the city—the one closest to the main canal route—the rock terraces and shelves fell down into a natural canyon. Perhaps twenty feet across, it was the only way into the city, and the defenders had cut several troughs into the floor. They were bridged at the moment, of course, but getting through that narrow entryway, with pits in front of the army and archers presumably firing from the rocky shelves above, with a gate at the end . . .

  "Not bad," Ham said. "Im just glad they decided not to drain the canal on us. "

  As theyd moved west, the land had risen—requiring the convoy to pass through several massive lock mechanisms. The last four had been jammed intentionally, requiring hours of effort to get them working.

  "They rely on it too much," Elend said. "If they survive our siege, theyll need to ship in supplies. Assuming any can be had. "

  Ham fell silent. Finally, he turned, looking back up the dark canal behind them. "El," he said. "I dont think that much more will be traveling this canal. The boats barely made it this far—theres too much ash clogging it. If we go home, well do so on foot. "

  " If we go home?"

  Ham shrugged. Despite the colder western weather, he still wore only a vest. Now that Elend was an Allomancer, he could finally understand the habit. While burning pewter, Elend barely felt the chill, though several of the soldiers had complained about it in 1the mornings.

  "I dont know, El," Ham finally said. "It just seems portentous to me. Our canal closing behind us as we travel. Kind of like fate is trying to strand us here. "

  "Ham," Elend said, "everything seems portentous to you. Well be fine. "

  Ham shrugged.

  "Organize our forces," Elend said, pointing. "Dock us in that inlet over there, and set up camp on the mesa. "

  Ham nodded. He was still looking backward, however. Toward Luthadel, which they had left behind.

  They dont fear the mists, Elend thought, staring up through the darkness at the rocky formations that marked the entrance into Fadrex City. Bonfires blazed up there, lighting the night. Often, such lights were futile—signifying mans fear of the mists. These fires were different, somehow. They seemed a warning; a bold declaration of confidence. They burned brightly, high, as if floating in the sky.

  Elend turned, walking into his illuminated commanders tent, where a small group of people sat waiting for him. Ham, Cett, and Vin. Demoux was absent, still recovering from mistsickness.

  Were spread thin, Elend thought. Spook and Breeze in the North, Penrod back at Luthadel, Felt watching the storage cache in the East . . .

  "All right," Elend said, letting the tent flaps close behind him. "Looks like theyre holed up in there pretty well. "

  "Initial scout reports are in, El," Ham said. "Were guessing about twenty-five thousand defenders. "

  "Not as many as I expected," Elend said.

  "That bastard Yomen has to keep control of the rest of my kingdom," Cett said. "If he pulled all of his troops into the capital, the other cities would overthrow him. "

  "What?" Vin asked, sounding amused. "You think theyd rebel and switch back to your side?"

  "No," Cett said, "theyd rebel and try to take over the kingdom themselves! Thats the way this works. Now that the Lord Ruler is gone, every little lord or petty obligator with half a taste of power thinks he can run a kingdom. Hell, I tried it—so did you. "

  "We were successful," Ham pointed out.

  "And so was Lord Yomen," Elend said, folding his arms. "Hes held this kingdom since Cett marched on Luthadel. "

  "He all but forced me out," Cett admitted. "He had half the nobility turned against me before I even struck toward Luthadel. I said I was leaving him in charge, but we both knew the truth. Hes a clever one—clever enough to know he can hold that city against a larger force, letting him spread his troops out to maintain the kingdom, and to endure a longer siege without running out of supplies. "

  "Unfortunately, Cetts probably right," Ham said. "Our initial reports placed Yomens forces at somewhere around eighty thousand men. Hed be a fool to not have a few units within striking distance of our camp. Well have to be wary of raids. "

  "Double the guards and triple scout patrols," Elend said, "particularly during the early morning hours, when the daymist is out to obscure, but the sun is up to provide light. "

  Ham nodded.

  "Also," Elend said thoughtfully, "order the men to stay in their tents during the mists—but tell them to be ready fo1r a raid. If Yomen thinks that were afraid to come out, perhaps we can bait one of his surprise attacks against us. "

  "Clever," Ham said.

  "That wont get us past those natural walls, though," Elend said, folding his arms. "Cett, what do you say?"

  "Hold the canal," Cett said. "Post sentries up around those upper rock formations to make certain that Yomen doesnt resupply the city via secret means. Then, move on. "

  "What?" Ham asked with surprise.

  Elend eyed Cett, trying to decide what the man meant. "Attack surrounding cities? Leave a force here thats large enough to stymie a siege-break, then capture other parts of his territory?"

  Cett nodded. "Most of the cities around here arent fortified at all. Theyd cave in without a fight. "

  "A good suggestion," Elend said. "But we wont do it. "

  "Why not?" Cett asked.

  "This isnt just about conquering your homeland back, Cett," Elend said. "Our primary reason for coming here is to secure that storage cache—and I hope to do that without resorting to pillaging the countryside. "

  Cett snorted. "What do you expect to find in there? Some magical way to stop the ash? Even atium wouldnt do that. "

  "Somethings in there," Elend said. "Its the only hope we have. "

  Cett shook his head. "Youve been chasing a puzzle left by the Lord Ruler for the better part of a year, Elend. Hasnt it ever occurred to you that the man was a sadist? Theres no secret. No magical way out of this. If were going to survive the next few years, were going to have to do it on our own—and that means securing the Western Dominance. The plateaus in this area represent some of the most elevated farmland in the empire—and higher altitude means closer to the sun. If youre going to find plants that survive despite the daymists, youll have to grow them here. "

  They were good arguments. But I cant give up, Elend thought. Not yet. Elend had read the reports of supplies back in Luthadel, and had seen the projections. Ash was killing crops as much or more than the mists were. More land wouldnt save his people—they needed something else. Something that, he hoped, the Lord Ruler left for them.

  The Lord Ruler didnt hate his people, and he wouldnt want them to die out, even if he were defeated. He left food, water, supplies. And, if he knew secrets, he would have hidden them in the caches. There will be something here.

  There has to be.

  "The cache remains our primary target," Elend said. To the side, he could see Vin smiling.

  "Fine," Cett
said, sighing. "Then you know what we have to do. This siege could take a while. "

  Elend nodded. "Ham, send our engineers in under cover of mist. See if they can find a way for our troops to cross those troughs. Have the scouts search out streams that might run into the city—Cett, presumably you can help us locate some of these. And, once we get spies into the city, have them search out food stores that we can ruin. "

  "A good start," Cett said. "Of course, theres one easy way to sow chaos in that city, to perhaps make them surrender without a fight . . . "

  "Were not going to assassinate King Yomen," Elend said.

  "Why not?" Cett demanded. "Weve got two Mistborn. Well have no difficulty killing off the Fadrex leadership. "

  "We dont work that way," Ham said, face growing dark.

  "Oh?" Cett asked. "That didnt stop Vin from tearing a hole through my army and attacking me back before we teamed up. "

  "That was different," Ham said.

  "No," Elend said, interrupting. "It wasnt. The reason were not going to assassinate Yomen, Cett, is because I want to try diplomacy first. "

  "Diplomacy?" Cett asked. "Didnt we just march an army of forty thousand soldiers on his city? Thats not a diplomatic move. "

  "True," Elend said, nodding. "But we havent attacked, not yet. Now that Im here in person, I might as well try talking before sending out knives in the night. We might be able to persuade Lord Yomen that an alliance will benefit him more than a war. "

  "If we make an alliance," Cett said, leaning forward in his chair, "I dont get my city back. "

  "I know," Elend said.

  Cett frowned.

  "You seem to be forgetting yourself, Cett," Elend said. "You did not team up with me. You knelt before me, offering up oaths of service in exchange for not getting executed. Now, I appreciate your allegiance, and I will see you rewarded with a kingdom to rule under me. However, you dont get to choose where that kingdom is, nor when I will grant it. "

  Cett paused, sitting in his chair, one arm resting on his useless, paralyzed legs. Finally, he smiled. "Damn, boy. Youve changed a lot in the year Ive known you. "

  "So everyone is fond of telling me," Elend said. "Vin. You think you can get into the city?"

  She raised an eyebrow. "I hope that was meant to be rhetorical. "

  "It was meant to be polite," Elend said. "I need you to do some scouting. We know next to nothing about whats been going on in this dominance lately—weve focused all of our efforts on Urteau and the South. "

  Vin shrugged. "I can go poke around a bit. I dont know what you expect me to find. "

  "Cett," Elend said, turning, "I need names. Informants, or perhaps some noblemen that might still be loyal to you. "

  "Noblemen?" Cett asked, amused. "Loyal?"

  Elend rolled his eyes. "How about some that could be bribed to pass on a little information. "

 

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