And here came the next man, as lightly equipped as the last. Deri managed to get his spear in play this time, and impaled the man before he got within arm’s length. But before he could get the spear loose another came, and he had to swing his sword again, this time a lucky strike that cut the man’s face open so that he fell back, jaw dangling, screaming in a strange, liquid way. And then the pressure from behind shoved him forward almost into the arms of his next opponent, and he lunged and stabbed again.
So it went on, the great blocks crashing into each other in a band of bloody friction, where men screamed and lunged and slashed and stabbed in a compressed, struggling mass. There was a stink of piss and shit from emptied bowels, and the blood was everywhere. Deri had to fight just to stay upright, let alone to give himself room to swing a blade. He had barely moved from the position where he had started, the lines were collapsing in on the front where they met, and soon he found himself slipping on a heap of corpses underfoot. Yet he remembered Tibo, and Nago, and Vala, and all the others who had fallen because of the Trojan, and let the anger fuel his muscles as he slew and maimed, again and again.
And then above the screams and battle cries he heard a new sound, like thunder, rolling across the field. Some of the more experienced men recognized it. “Chariots!”
Standing on the flood mound with the commanders, supporting a battered and dizzy Mi, Milaqa saw the Trojan chariots coming from behind the enemy’s right flank. There were dozens of the charging vehicles, pulled by swiftly running horses, the sound of their hooves loud even over the battle’s din, and bells clanged noisily. They were a shocking sight, a mass of spinning wheels and rearing animals driving at the Northlanders’ left flank where the advancing Hatti units had been met by Gairan priest-warriors, strange silent men who fought ferociously. Now the fighting men were distracted by the noise, and the sergeants bellowed for them to hold their shape, to keep fighting.
Kilushepa pointed. “A mix of Greek and Hatti types. Look, can you see, Raka? The fleeter ones are Greek, lighter, with two men—four-spoked wheels. The Hatti are the big ones with three men, and their six-spoked wheels …”
Milaqa murmured hasty translations.
“They are running better than we supposed they would,” Raka said. “We had hoped the ground would be too soft.”
Teel said, “Qirum had the initiative. The weather has been dry, the groundwater low, the ground reasonably firm. He knew that. This was a good day to fight, for his purposes.” He let the criticism hang in the air, unspoken. We should not be fighting the man at all. And if we must fight, not today.
And Milaqa watched, astonished, as the chariots slammed into the Gairan lines, huge masses of hurtling wood and straining animals that cut a bloody swath through the ranks of men, like blunt blades passing through flesh. The big three-man Hatti chariots were the most effective, each with a driver and shield-bearer accompanying an armored warrior who shot arrows from a distance, and stabbed and slashed when his chariot closed. As the chariots spread chaos and panic through the Northlander lines, the Trojan infantry pressed with renewed vigor. The fighting became even more intense and chaotic.
Now the surviving chariots emerged from the crush, having passed right through the Northlander phalanx, and they drew up, preparing for a fresh strike. Hasty cries went up from the commanders for the archers to reform and take on the chariots. “Aim for the horses!”
Hunda clambered up the mound. He was bloodied and panting; he had been in the thick of the fight, but Milaqa knew that Muwa had sternly ordered him to make sure the person of the Tawananna was safe. “Madam. This position may be threatened. Please fall back.”
Kilushepa knew better than to argue. She began to help Hunda lead the Annids down off the mound.
Mi lunged forward, as if trying to get off the mound and back into the fray. But she staggered, still dizzy from the blow to the head she had taken on the field.
Milaqa grabbed her arm. “No, you don’t. Besides, you lost your bow.”
“We must do something …”
One more chariot, a big Hatti three-man vehicle, belatedly broke out of the crush. The crew looked around for a fresh target. They spotted the commanders on the flood mound, pointed up. The driver hauled on his reins and the chariot veered that way.
Heading straight for Milaqa on the mound.
“We can take it,” Mi said suddenly. “That chariot coming.”
“What? How?”
For answer Mi slithered down the slope, to the edge of the tide of battle, where broken corpses lay unmoving. She grabbed a sword and spear—but as she straightened up she staggered again, the bruise on her head purpling.
“You are insane.” But Milaqa saw there was no other choice than to follow her. She scrambled off the mound, found a spear, and stood by her cousin.
And the chariot charged toward them. The driver was dragging at his reins, trying to control the horses, and the warrior and shield man were looking up at the notables on the flood mound. None of them seemed to notice the young women standing before them.
Mi began running before the chariot reached them. Milaqa joined her, spear in hand. Mi jumped first, grabbed the chariot driver by the neck and fell back, pulling the astonished man off the chariot with her. Milaqa managed to leap up on the platform itself. Without thinking, she swung her spear and caught the warrior with its shaft. He fell from the chariot before he even saw her. But now the plummeting chariot, out of control, was tipping over. The last man, the shield-bearer, yelling in fear and anger, swung his shield at Milaqa. She ducked, but the shield caught her on the back of the head, and she fell out of the chariot onto a mound of bodies, warm and slippery. She heard a splintering crash as the chariot went over—and then a huge weight fell on her back, knocking the air out of her.
She sank into a dream of stone and bronze and iron.
61
“You idiot.”
The words were in Hatti. That was the first thing Milaqa was aware of, that the language was Hatti.
And then, that she was still alive. She opened her eyes. The daylight was fading from a clouded-over sky. Smoke billowed. She smelled grease, like meat burning. She tried to sit up, and pain banged in her skull.
An arm around her shoulder lifted her to a sitting position. She turned her head cautiously. Kilushepa sat with her. They were back on the flood mound, she saw, sitting on a blanket spread on the bare earth.
And on the plain before her, bodies lay strewn. People moved among them, some stripping the bodies of armor, clothes, boots, others hauling naked and broken corpses onto carts. Occasionally a wounded man would be found, and surgeons would be called. Many of the surgeons were Egyptian, brought in from that country by the Annids for their expertise, especially in the kinds of injuries to be expected in battle.
Away from the battlefield pyres burned. And to the south, far off, more pyres.
“That’s the Trojans,” Kilushepa said. “Honoring their own dead. Since the fighting stopped for the day, behavior has been civilized. The living have been returned on either side; the dead are not being dishonored. Not that I’ve seen anyhow, despite the precedent set by that animal the Spider, and may he rot in the underworld for it.” She glanced at Milaqa. “I take it you can understand me. That you remember your Nesili. The knock on the head—”
“I’m fine.” Although she wasn’t. Her body was a mass of bruises, and her aching head wasn’t even the most painful spot. Yet she wasn’t bleeding anywhere, at least not much, nor was any bone broken. She stretched, gingerly. “I’ve been lucky.”
“You have.” Kilushepa pointed to the wreck of a chariot, just below the mound. “Only heroes take on chariots on foot. Heroes and idiots, like you.”
The memory returned sharply to Milaqa. “What about Mi?”
“Worse off than you. She is back behind the lines. Your uncle Teel is caring for her. She will recover. She is with the rest of the soldiers, who are tending their wounds, eating their soldier-bread and drinking t
heir wine, consuming the barley and goats’ cheese that they believe kills pain and restores strength. And you were left to my care.”
“I’m grateful.”
The queen stroked Milaqa’s hair. “I do marvel at you, child. What a mixture of rebel, hero and genius you are! I never saw the like. But you only did it because your cousin went first, didn’t you? I understand, you know. There have always been plenty of people like you in the Hatti court. You don’t really know what other people are feeling. You can only guess. So you do what they do without ever quite understanding why. It’s a flaw in your heart, child. And your uncle Teel shares the same flaw, I sense—or it’s a strength, depending on how you look at it. Depending on how it is used.”
Milaqa, deeply disturbed, wasn’t sure she understood. “And the battle—is it over?”
“No. The fighting just stopped, because of exhaustion. It may resume tomorrow. I have urged Raka to send an embassy to Qirum, to negotiate a truce.”
“Our weapons. The iron arrows—”
“They helped. The Trojan has the advantage in numbers, and without the iron, and without some good strategy from Muwa and his generals, the day would have been lost. But even with the iron we can never win a battle like this. Just as I have been telling Raka and any of your Annids who will listen. The trick is to pick a battle we can win.”
“What kind of battle?”
Kilushepa hugged her close, an unexpectedly human gesture. “That will wait for tomorrow. You must wash away the dried blood, change your clothes. Look, they are lighting another pyre …”
The men lowered their torches to the dark tangle of bodies, and they threw on whale oil, and soon the flames were rising high in the gathering night. Out on the field, Milaqa saw birds coming down to feed, rooks and buzzards, and dogs loped. When the men gathered up another corpse, Milaqa watched, astonished, as a cloud of butterflies rose up from the disturbed body, flying into the fading daylight.
62
The Third Year After the Fire Mountain:
Autumn Equinox
After three days of fighting, the Battle of the Wall finished inconclusively. The Trojans withdrew to their siege lines.
Two months later the priests were still busy at their pits all along the roof of the Wall, and in the interment chambers deep within, storing the bones of the war dead within the growstone, readying them for the longer war against the sea.
And yet again Milaqa was to be sent to face the Trojan in his lair.
She was to be accompanied this time by her uncle Teel, Annid of Annids Raka, a gaggle of other Annids, priests and advisers—and by Kilushepa herself, with a squad of Hatti troops under the command of Muwa. Once again the bewildered, bloodied Northlanders were going to try to come to an accommodation with the monster in their midst.
Milaqa had her own special mission once more. Again she was to be used to try to reach Qirum, who had retired to New Troy once the campaigning season was done—to speak to his heart, and to put an end to the war.
She thought she understood what was really going on here, why such a formidable expedition had been formed around her. Milaqa knew enough of Qirum’s culture, she had seen it in Anatolia, to understand that marriages to seal unions between nations were common. Was that what was being planned here, with herself used as bait? After all as a daughter of an Annid of Annids she was the nearest Northland had to a princess, though it galled her to admit it. Well, Milaqa was now nineteen years old; she was nobody’s gift, nobody’s whore. Besides, every time she had been pushed at Qirum in this way before it had ended in disaster.
Or maybe there was some deeper scheme here, she wondered, which she had yet to glimpse. If there was, Teel was giving her no hint. She had found all the high-ups increasingly obscure recently, Teel even more enigmatic than usual. She had no choice but to go along with their schemes, whatever they were, and wait for the chance to make her own decisions, take her own chances.
When the procession formed up at the foot of the Wall, people stopped what they were doing to come and stare. Children leaned over soot-stained galleries, adults laboring to rebuild defensive ditches and ramparts stopped their work and leaned on heavy shovels, the priests looked down from the roof of the Wall. Even now Milaqa felt distanced from it all. It was as if she were the only real person in a world of puppets. Save, perhaps, for Qirum.
Following the great Etxelur Way south, they were passed without trouble through the Trojan lines, the desultory besieging force left in place for the winter. Most of the Northlanders walked. Kilushepa, however, preferred to ride with her ladies in a horse-drawn carriage. She had gifts for Qirum and his basileis, a custom in the countries they all came from, she said. The queen herself took special care of these items, which were wrapped securely in linen blankets and ox hide and stored in her carriage and other carts.
Milaqa was shocked at the country’s worsening state, the canals and weirs blocked, the dams broken, the hearthspaces weed choked or flooded, the houses burned. But the people had survived, mostly. After the first Trojan attacks they had melted into the countryside and lived as their ancestors had, supported by the land’s natural bounty. And now they too came out to stare as the procession passed, strange, wild-looking people.
“The land itself is flourishing,” Raka observed at one rest stop, as they sat by a broad marsh. She watched a family of harvest mice busy in a nest woven in the tall grass. “Perhaps there’s a lesson in that. The land, you know, that’s what’s important in the end, not our petty human squabbles. Perhaps we have lost sight of the will of the mothers.”
Teel nodded. “Those who are to follow us will listen to the mothers’ wisdom, I am sure.”
More of his enigmatic obliquity. Those who are to follow? Would Raka not be leading the recovery when peace came, Teel not still be gliding among the Annids with his hints and tricks?
One of Muwa’s men, bored, pulled his sword from its scabbard and began slashing at the long grass, where the harvest mice had made their nest. Kilushepa stopped him with a sharp word in the Hatti tongue. That surprised Milaqa. She would not have thought the Tawananna, who had refused even to acknowledge the existence of her own daughter in Etxelur, would care anything for mice.
They were still a long way out from New Troy when they were first met by a Trojan patrol. And as they passed through deep layers of earthworks Teel looked quietly pleased. All this defensive effort was a response to the campaign of petty retaliatory raids he and others had been organizing ever since Qirum had begun his own assaults on Northland communities.
Their reception at the gate in the wall around the lower town was prickly at first. Highly trained soldiers on both sides, some of whom must have met in battle only months before, faced each other down. But there was no trouble, both sides kept their discipline.
Qirum’s man Erishum came out to meet the Northlander party, and escorted them through the gate. The city inside the wall seemed emptied out to Milaqa, depopulated, with none of those hungry crowds she had seen last time. She wondered if the Northlanders held here had found a way to slip away from this kingdom of mud and hunger and gone back to the country, quietly abandoning Qirum’s dream.
They were shown to a house of mud brick and thatch, in the shadow of the walls of the citadel itself, evidently the house of some warlord evicted for the purpose. Carpeted inside and with tapestries on the walls, it seemed grand to Milaqa. Kilushepa said it was small and poky, but it would do. Erishum waited with them until a runner brought a message that Qirum would be prepared to meet Milaqa at sundown.
This sent Kilushepa into a kind of regal panic. “And it is already midafternoon! There is barely time to make this wild woman anything less than grotesque—oh! How I hate to rush these things.”
Milaqa glared at her, suspicious. “What ‘things’?”
Kilushepa chased out everybody but her serving women, Raka, and Teel—the only man, “but, ball-less, you will cause no offense,” she said dismissively. Then she turned on Milaqa. “St
rip.”
“What? I will not.”
“Do it, child, or I will have the soldiers do it for you. I don’t have time to waste.” She clapped her hands. Her ladies, barefoot on the carpeted floor, hurried in with trunks of clothes and cosmetics brought from the carts.
Milaqa turned to Teel and Raka in outrage. “What is this? Is she to dress me up? Am I a doll, a toy?”
“No,” Raka said. “You are our ambassador. You must make an immediate impression on the Trojan, and the right one. Put yourself in Kilushepa’s hands. Look—Qirum calls himself a king. Kilushepa is a queen. How such people behave toward each other is a mystery to us, and with the mothers’ blessing it always will be. But she knows how you should present yourself to him.”
Teel lay back on a couch, sipping water and wine. “Don’t argue for once, Milaqa. Trust the judgment of others.”
“If I didn’t trust you I wouldn’t be here at all.”
Teel shrugged. He would not look her in the eye, which was unlike him.
And Kilushepa was waiting, arms folded, glaring.
Milaqa shrugged, and began to peel off her traveling clothes.
“We will burn those,” said Kilushepa.
“We will not,” replied Milaqa.
As soon as she was naked the serving women closed in on her. They scrubbed her from head to toe with water and soaps, and washed her hair and dried it vigorously with towels. They even shaved her armpits, but she balked when they tried to shave her pubic hair. Then they began to rub scented oils into her skin and hair.
She sneezed. “There’s something getting up my nose.”
“Stop complaining, child,” Kilushepa snapped.
“Try to enjoy it,” Teel advised. “This is called being pampered.”
“Give me the life of a soldier any day.”
Bronze Summer : The Northland Trilogy (9781101615416) Page 37