Horselords
Page 28
“By your word, it shall be done,” said the big man. Sechen guided Koja and a band of his guards up the last yards of the broken slope until they reached an outcropping of brush. There they found a shaded spot where Koja had a clear view of the wall.
They were less than a mile away from the great Shou fortification. The Dragonwall stretched in a long unbroken line, greater and more massive than it had appeared from the top of the pass. The brick used to build it gave the wall a dull yellow-brown color. Koja guessed it stood thirty feet high. The top was toothed with crenellations. A roadway ran the length of the top, broad enough for a chariot to ride down. At regular intervals, about one mile apart, stood square towers, taller than the surrounding wall. These were obviously watchtowers.
The trail from First Pass Under Heaven wound down from the heights to a massive gate set in the wall. The doors themselves were fully as high as the wall, while the towers were even higher. These gatehouses, smooth-surfaced and rectangular, tapered toward the top. Arrow loops, barely visible on the lower levels, were replaced by balconies as archers’ positions higher up. An arching bridge stretched between the towers, over the heavy wooden gate.
Briefly, Koja considered telling Yamun that his spell revealed their situation was hopeless. If the trick worked, he could save untold lives. Morally though, he knew he must work the spell. He could not presume to speak for Furo; such an act would be blasphemy. Besides, he doubted his prediction could sway Yamun’s resolve.
Bright flashes of light sparkled on the plain. “They’ve deployed outside the gate,” observed Sechen, whose eyesight was much better than Koja’s. Now that it was pointed out, the priest could see the men arranged in a long line. The flashes must have been from their armor and weapons. “They know we’re here. Work quickly, historian.”
Koja began a breathing exercise to calm his mind. It took a long time, but Sechen was too busy counting the standards of the enemy to notice. Finally, the priest produced a scroll he had made that morning. It was covered with special prayers. Holding it up to the east, he read it aloud, then carefully repeated this process to the other points of the compass. Finished, he closed his eyes and stood quite still, his body unconsciously going completely rigid. Sechen and the guards waited, all afraid to say anything lest they disturb the spell.
At last his overtensed muscles sagged and relaxed, and the priest staggered backward. Blinking, he opened his eyes and stared at the Dragonwall. Furo’s power was filling his sight, letting him see the great balance of all nature. All things, living and dead, animal and mineral, were filled with the force of the Enlightened One. Some, such as an ordinary rock, contained only a little, while others—men of powerful will, in particular—glowed brightly with inner power. By seeing these auras through the divine inspiration of Furo, Koja hoped to “read” the harmony of the land, and, perhaps, predict the battle’s outcome.
At that moment, Koja saw that a prediction would not be difficult to make.
Before the priest’s eyes blazed the aura of the Dragonwall itself, as blinding as the sun. Its brilliance blotted out all other auras, even that of the Shou army deployed on the plain. The intensity was beyond anything Koja had experienced. The priest was dumbstruck. The aura shone from all the way underneath the foundations of the fortification to the topmost towers. The burning fire stretched all along the length of the wall, and in it Koja could barely make out a form, a shape struggling, as if against invisible bonds.
Painfully, Koja forced himself to stare into the heart of this magical fire, to discern what lay hidden in the wall. A claw dug deep into the earth. A ridge of spines reached to the topmost battlements. A pattern of scales blended with the brick and stone. Through it all, Koja felt a power watching him, wrathful and tortured at the same time.
“Furo protect me!” he blurted in astonishment, shattering the enchantment. Suddenly, the scene was gone. Blinded, Koja stumbled back, groping his way down the slope. Sechen leaped after him, convinced the lama had gone mad. The priest eluded his grasp. Undaunted or unaware of the danger, Koja increased his speed and excitement at the same time. By the time he reached the bottom of the ridge, his breath came in ragged gasps. Eyesight returning, the priest hobbled and bounded back to the khahan’s party.
“Well, what is it?” Yamun shouted. The lama’s obvious excitement was contagious, infecting the khahan with a feeling of hope. “What’ve you learned?”
Koja finally caught his breath. How could he describe what he saw? A power, a spirit greater than anything he had ever imagined, lay beneath—no, was part of—the Dragonwall.
“Great khahan,” Koja began, his chest heaving, “the omens are not favorable. A powerful spirit protects the wall. I am certain it will not let you break through.”
Yamun was taken back by the priest’s words. Not having a reply, he turned to Sechen, who came running up behind. “What did you see?”
“Lord Yamun,” the wrestler said as he stumbled forward, “I saw the Shou army. They know we are coming and have lined up to meet us.”
“How many?” Yamun probed, leaning forward in his saddle.
“Twenty, maybe twenty-five standards. I’d guess one thousand men to a banner, like our minghans.”
Yamun settled back into his saddle. “I’ve got sixty standards. We’ll leave—”
“But Yamun! You cannot break through!” Koja stepped up to the khahan’s horse. Soaked in sweat, the priest was frantic, trying to get Yamun to understand. “You will—”
“Quiet!” Yamun roared. “We won’t have to.” He pointed to a spur of the ridge that Koja had just crossed. “Chanar, take your men to that ridge and hold them there. Goyuk, take one tumen and advance; set the rest of your men to protect the northern flank. I’ll hold the center.” The two khans nodded in understanding.
“Goyuk, you must draw them out. Charge them once, then break and run. Chanar, your men must be ready to close the rear behind them … separate them from their wall. I’ll be the anvil and you two will be the hammers. Together we will break them.” Neither khan had any questions. Their aides would settle on signals to be given with banner and drum, signals that would allow them to attack in unison.
Goyuk and Chanar left to deploy their men. It would be several hours before the troops were in position. That was good, Yamun thought, since it would keep the Shou soldiers standing motionless in the sun for most of the day. Heat and thirst would weaken them. His own men would hardly notice such conditions.
Yamun turned to Koja, who stood nearby, dispirited and dejected. “Priest, I want you to learn more about what you saw.” With that the khahan turned away to find some shade. For him, there was nothing more to do now but take a nap.
Leaving the khahan, Chanar galloped down the valley to rejoin his command. Purposefully, he took a long route, one that carried him past Bayalun’s camp. Arriving there, he was greeted by a motley collection of wizards—tall and lean, fat and sweaty, some clothed in finery, others scabrous and filthy. The khahan’s guards had yet to arrive. Contemptuously, Chanar made his way past Bayalun’s lackeys to seek out the khadun herself.
He found her sitting in the warm sun, disdaining the cooling shade. She looked asleep, but without opening her eyes, she dismissed her servants. “Welcome, Chanar. Why do you visit me?”
The general swung down from his saddle and squatted beside the khadun. Quickly, he explained Yamun’s plans.
“He’s giving us the chance!” Chanar urged, knotting his hands into fists. “Tell the Shou we’ve changed the plan. They must ride forward and then we will all attack Yamun. We can pin him between us and destroy him today!”
“No. We will do nothing of the kind,” Mother Bayalun answered coolly. She pulled the red and blue shawl off her head, letting her graying hair fall naturally to her shoulders. “Think, Chanar, think! If you were the Shou general would you trust us?” She rose from her seat and walked to the door of her yurt. “Don’t forget, Yamun will have his guards all around me. We will keep to the plan. For now, let us prove
to Yamun we are loyal.”
Chanar knew perfectly well that the khahan would never fully trust Bayalun. She was right, however; Yamun could not maintain his vigilance forever. Still, it rankled him to see such an opportunity slip by.
Bayalun sensed his dissatisfaction. “These Shou warriors are no match for the Tuigan,” she suggested, appealing to Chanar’s pride. “We would be foolish to trust them to defeat the khahan. Today, Chanar, do what the khahan expects. Tomorrow we will crush him, and you will be khahan.”
Four hours passed while the khahan’s forces moved into position. During that time Yamun slept under a thorny tamarisk tree. Koja sat in the shade of a rock, meditating and seeking guidance from his god. He hoped that Furo would grant him more knowledge of the spirit he had seen today. As the last of the troops moved into position on the plain below, a servant roused the khahan from his nap. Yamun insisted Koja accompany him, so the priest stopped his exercises and followed him back to the top of the ridge. There they found a comfortable position where they could watch Goyuk’s attack. Sechen stood nearby, ready with their horses.
Below, on the plain, was the one tumen Goyuk had chosen to make the initial charge. The old khan had divided the ten thousand men into three large blocks. Each block was ten riders deep and about three hundred men wide. The right wing was deployed along the base of the ridge where Koja and Yamun sat. The rest of Goyuk’s force stretched off to the left. The priest spotted the old khan’s banner, a pole with streamers of blue silk topped by a silver crescent, in the gap between the nearest wing and the center. Across the plain stood the soldiers of Shou Lung, waiting in the broiling afternoon sun.
A rapid roll of drums signaled that all was ready on the plain. Lance tips wavered, creating a sparkling sea of lights. Yamun waved his hand, and his standard-bearer dipped the yak-tail banner to the ground. The signal had been given. The war began.
Koja watched, fearful and expectant, waiting for Goyuk to act. The crescent moon banner trembled, then dipped. In a wave spreading out from that one point, the banners of the minghans dropped, transmitting the signal down the length of the front. The ranks of horsemen trembled, but did not move.
A sound rose up from the plain, at first like the breeze through aspens. The sound grew stronger until it echoed like the roar of a thunderstorm. Ten thousand voices were raised in a harsh, piercing war cry. It reverberated until it seemed that the hills themselves were screaming for the blood of Shou Lung.
Goyuk’s banner was suddenly raised. The effect was electrifying. The standards of the minghans sprang back up. The blocks of men seemed to expand, stretch, and then the entire tumen was in motion. The hoarse, echoing shouts of the war cry were replaced by a new sound: the deep rumble of forty thousand hooves hammering the ground. Even at the top of the ridge the ground seemed to tremble.
“Hai!” Yamun cried, leaping to his feet. He chafed with the desire to be at the front, leading the advance. Unable to be there, he paced impatiently back and forth, issuing orders.
Goyuk’s men crossed the plain in a well-ordered charge. It was not a wild, pell-mell rush. Instead, the minghans advanced at a trot, keeping in a line abreast. Gradually, as they closed the distance to the enemy line, the horses picked up speed, first to a canter, then a full gallop. Across the plain, the spears of the Shou rippled in anticipation.
Yamun waited for the moment when the lead horsemen would suddenly slow their charge just short of the enemy, loose a flight of arrows from their bows, and gallop away, stinging the enemy into pursuit.
That moment never arrived.
From the ridge, Yamun could see the front of the rushing wave of horsemen reach the point where they were in range to fire, just inside the long shadow of the Dragonwall. Down the length of the Tuigan line, the ground rippled, then surged upward, exploding in a fountain of dust and rock. There was a shrieking grind of stone grating on stone and a rolling thunder as the earth’s crust tore asunder. Another voice, higher than the roar of upthrusting earth, pierced through the din: the screaming wail of men and horses, their voices fused into a single cry.
Yamun shouted in astonishment and outrage. The front-most ranks of the Goyuk’s tumen had suddenly disappeared, crushed by dirt and stone. The next ranks, unable to swerve their charging mounts, were swallowed by the curtain of dust that roiled outward. Here and there, the swirling tornado parted to reveal geysers of earth erupting amidst the panicked riders. Boulders tumbled and bounced, crashing through the remaining ranks of horsemen, leaving bloody and crushed bodies in their wake.
Under the onslaught, the tumen wavered and began to fall back. The riders farthest from the churning earth wheeled their mounts and began to flee. Their panic was infectious. Standards started to drop as more men turned to run.
Impossibly, one section of the Tuigan line held firm and pressed forward, lunging into the chaotic landscape. At the center of the mass was Goyuk’s blue-streamered banner. The dust clouds reached forward, beckoning the entire block of riders into their gloomy arms.
“No! Break off, Goyuk!” Yamun shouted futilely, as if he could recall the riders from where he stood. The khahan whirled to his standard-bearer. “Signal them to withdraw!”
Suddenly, Goyuk’s charge was engulfed in dust. Fountains of dirt and rock erupted in the midst of the riders, flinging men and horses like childrens’ toys. A pall of clay descended on Goyuk’s banner, and it disappeared from sight.
“Eke Bayalun!” Yamun howled. “Get Mother Bayalun! Where are her wizards? They must stop this!” The khahan tore through his small group, screaming out orders, demanding reports, but most of all bellowing for the presence of the second empress to explain the horror he was witnessing. Never had the priest seen the khahan in such a rage.
A rider charged through the ranks of the Kashik behind the khahan, whipping his horse furiously. Leaping off his mount, the man sprawled completely on the ground in front of the khahan, pressing his face into the dirt. “A message from the second empress, Lord Yamun!”
The khahan whirled on the man, poised to strike. “Speak!” he shouted over the rumble from the plain.
Without looking up, the messenger yelled his mistress’s words. “The second empress says the magic of the Shou has taken her wizards by surprise. They are unable to do anything. She asks if the foreign priest might know what causes the earth to heave. She humbly begs forgiveness for her failure to—”
“I’ll hear her excuses later,” the khahan snarled, turning away from the man. The messenger sprang to his feet and backed away, groping for his horse. One of the Kashik, sympathetic to the man’s fears, quickly hustled the courier out of Yamun’s sight. The khahan looked toward the plain, seeing only men and horses rushing through the clouds of dust.
“My horse!” Yamun demanded. A quiverbearer ran to fetch Yamun’s white mare. “Standard-bearer, we’re going down there. Prepare to ride!” The guards looked to each other, then hurriedly began to find their mounts and take their positions around the khahan.
Without waiting for his guards to finish assembling, Yamun urged his horse down the steep slope toward the plain. The guards plunged after him, their mounts half-sliding toward the bottom.
Sechen, his tall, muscular body towering out of the saddle, drove his horse savagely to keep up with the khahan. His master was riding blindly into a trap, and the giant was determined to protect him. The pair reached the bottom of the slope well ahead of the rest of the bodyguards.
Small knots of riders rode out of the swirling dust and galloped for the safety of the ridge. Lone men and riderless horses fled in panic. Weapons, shields, and armor were cast aside.
Yamun charged forward and then suddenly reined in his horse before the first knot of routed men. “Form up! Make your stand here! I command you!” The routed men skidded to a halt, brought short by the wild apparition of the khahan that faced them. “Watch them,” Yamun ordered Sechen as he galloped off toward another fleeing group.
From atop the ridge, Koja watched the kha
han rush from point to point, working to halt the rout and organize a proper defense. The warlord was easy to spot by his banner, white horse, and the swarm of black-robed guards who followed him everywhere. His affect on the men was unmistakable as the broken ranks slowly halted their flight and began to reform into ragged lines. Finally, Yamun turned the task over to Sechen and climbed back up to his command post. As he arrived, a group of guards still clustered in his wake, Koja moved quietly to his side.
Looking very tired, Yamun sat on his stool. For a long time he said nothing, only watched the battlefield. The dust was slowly settling, leaving a clearer picture of the destruction. Across the front was a line of churned earth and shattered rock. Most of the dead or dying lay there, crushed or trapped beneath the fallen stone. On both sides of the wreckage there were still pockets of fighting. A handful of Tuigan riders, the leaders of the foremost rank, were trapped on the far side of the magical earthwork. There they fought, though hopelessly outnumbered and surrounded.
In a few other places, the Shou soldiers had foolishly scrambled forward over the broken ground, believing all the Tuigan were crushed. In pursuing the fleeing horsemen, these small units were also trapped. Battles involving these doomed Shou were brief.
Just when Koja became convinced the defeat had crushed the spirit out of Yamun, the old warlord sat up, shaking off the air of gloom and desperation that had settled upon him. “Find Goyuk, if he lives. I want to know what happened,” he commanded, his old energy gradually returning to him. As one messenger left, he turned to another. “Tell Sechen to separate those who fled from the rest of the men. He is to execute those who have no weapons. Of the rest, every man must be beaten for seven blows and every tenth man for twice times seven.”
“There are thousands of men down there!” Koja said in astonishment.
“They shouldn’t have run” Yamun answered grimly. He continued the orders. “The wizards are to be whipped seven blows for their failure. And if Bayalun argues, tell her she can either have them whipped or give me seven to execute. It’s her choice.” The man nodded and left to deliver the khahan’s orders.