There; Dietz saw it beyond one of the buildings and tried to pierce the shadows there. He was sure he had seen... yes, there it was again. Something was definitely moving among the stone structures. Then it shifted, came forward, and he saw it more clearly.
It was a beastman, and then another one, and then several more. There were at least six of them, walking towards the buildings' front, armed with spears, clubs and axes.
'They may be a patrol,' Lankdorf whispered. He gestured behind him, indicating that Jarl and Dietz should back away, and he followed, moving slowly and without a sound. Dietz kept his eyes on the buildings, and saw that his friend had been right. The beastmen were marching to the left, cutting in front of the buildings, and would probably turn and head the other way once they reached the far end. They were standing guard. Dietz had no doubt they would come running, weapons at the ready, if any of them spotted him or his two companions.
It seemed to take forever, but at last Dietz backed around a bend and the buildings vanished from view. Jarl was already there, leaning against the cliff and shaking his head, and a few seconds later Lankdorf also joined them.
'We need to get back and tell the others,' the tracker said. 'We were expecting a band of beastmen, possibly a small encampment, but that place is a bloody fortress. There's no telling how many they've got burrowed away in there, and we'd have to cross that clearing to reach them.'
They've probably got rifles, too' Dietz reminded him. All three of them shuddered at the thought of beastmen using blackpowder weapons and holed up in a stone fort.
'Keep it quiet,' Lankdorf urged, although Dietz didn't need reminding, and he suspected Jarl didn't either. 'We don't want them catching wind of us and coming after
us before we can get back to camp.' They all turned and began stalking away, moving as carefully and quietly as possible. It was several minutes before Dietz stopped feeling like a beastman was sighting down a rifle at the back of his head.
Alaric was writing in his journal when Dietz, Lankdorf, and the mercenary Jarl returned. They had been gone two hours or more, judging by the sun, but Alaric had lost track of time as he jotted down notes about this and that, and scribbled shorthand versions of their recent encounters. He capped his ink vial and tucked it and his quill away, as the three men approached.
'Did you find them?' he asked, rising to his feet. Kleiber and Wilcreitz had approached as well, and it was to them that Lankdorf gave his answer, but not before Alaric saw Dietz's answering nod, and the frown that meant the news would not be good.
'We've tracked the beastmen to their lair,' Lankdorf explained. The mercenaries were all listening as well, since what the tracker had to say would most likely effect their tasks in the near future. They are holed up in what looks like an old city or fortress, roughly an hour north of here and nestled up against the mountains.'
'A city?' Alaric stared at them. 'What sort of city? What did it look like? Did you find any markings to indicate age, or origin, or-'
'I'm sure the beastmen will be happy to give you a tour if you ask nicely,' Wilcreitz snapped, and Alaric stopped, remembering the reason they were here.
'Ah, right. Sorry, I just got carried away,' he apologised.
'It's made from stone,' Lankdorf answered, glancing over at him and then back at Kleiber, who frowned, but nodded for him to continue. 'Looks to be taken from the mountain.' He shrugged. 'I've no idea who built it or when, or why.'
Alaric looked to Dietz, but the older man shrugged. 'We didn't get too close,' he explained, 'but I doubt they made it. It's too finely crafted, and it looks old.'
'Old?' Alaric was already running through what he knew of the area's history in his head. 'Could be human,' he muttered to himself, 'or perhaps dwarf, though why it would be exposed and not dug in... Could they be elf ruins?'
'How many did you see?' Kleiber asked, cutting off Alaric's train of thought.
'Half a dozen or so,' Lankdorf replied. They were just a patrol, however. We've no idea how many more are in there.'
Kleiber nodded. 'A stone fortress or city, up against the mountains,' he repeated, 'with an armed guard and an untold number of beastmen hidden within, some with blackpowder weapons.' The witch hunter glanced around, and then smiled grimly. 'Sigmar has presented us a mighty challenge indeed,' he declared, 'but I say if we are steadfast in our faith we will prove equal to the task.'
'Faith isn't the problem,' Dietz muttered as he stepped over beside Alaric, speaking softly, so that only Alaric heard him. 'It's bullets and claws and good shelter that concern me, and how all three are on the wrong side.'
'What sort of place was it?' Alaric asked, still focusing on the idea of an ancient ruin. 'Describe it to me.'
The older man sighed, used to his requests, and closed his eyes. 'Tall buildings, with balconies and walkways,' he recounted after a moment. 'Sloping roofs. Narrow windows. Paved streets. It was close enough together so that it could all be one building, or it could be a city or town built compact.'
'You didn't see any writing?' Alaric pressed.
'Never got that close,' Dietz replied. 'They had guards,' he reminded Alaric.
'Well, there's nothing for it,' Alaric decided. 'You'll just have to show me.'
His friend gave him a familiar look, the one with the single raised eyebrow, the one that said he was both amused and puzzled. 'You do realise we're probably attacking it?' he asked.
Alaric nodded. 'Yes, of course,' he answered. 'I knew that.' He frowned. 'I just hope I have time to have a look round before Kleiber's men destroy the place.'
'You haven't seen the place yet,' Dietz commented. 'I'm more worried about staying alive long enough to take a leisurely look at the architecture.'
Alaric smiled and gestured towards Kleiber and Wilcreitz, who were speaking with Lankdorf and the mercenaries. 'Weren't you listening?' he asked his friend. 'Sigmar is on our side, how can we possibly lose?'
Dietz didn't bother dignifying that with a reply.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
'What of the humans?'
'Leave them. They are unimportant.'
'They have desecrated the forest. The woods must be cleansed of their foul touch.'
'Do not lecture me on what the woods demand, Cel- lomir,' Lasalnean snapped, turning and glaring at the other elf. 'I can feel Athel Loren's displeasure as keenly as you, and perhaps more so.' He took a breath to calm himself. 'We will deal with the humans soon enough, but they will keep. We must first clear the ruins of the filth that has occupied them and stained them for far too long.'
The others of the kinband murmured their agreement, and Cellomir nodded, his head bowed to acknowledge the correction. Lasalnean had already shifted his attention back to the ruins, and the stretch of open dirt between them and the forest, where he and his kin lay hidden and watching.
'We lost the element of surprise last time,' Lasalnean said softly, although whether to himself or to the other elves
was unclear. The beastmen spotted us, and thus we surrendered any advantage. That must not be the case this time.' He glanced at Ulmael. 'You know what to do?'
The other elf nodded. 'I do.'
'If it works, Athel Loren will laud you,' Nelyann assured him with a quick grin. She looked towards Lasalnean. 'It is a good plan,' she confirmed, 'and with it we shall slaughter the creatures and reclaim the sacred ruins, but you should not be part of the charge. Your wound-'
'Is healing,' Lasalnean interrupted her. 'I am fully capable, and I will not send others on such a task if I am not willing to go myself.'
'Willing, yes' Nelyann agreed, 'but able? I don't-'
'I am able,' Lasalnean replied, 'and that is that.' His tone made it clear that the discussion was over. 'Do it now,' he instructed Ulmael.
Ulmael nodded and started to build a fire from twigs and leaves. He carefully called forth a tiny wisp of smoke, followed by an almost invisible flicker, and then, suddenly, fire.
Lasalnean and the others watche
d as Ulmael added more tinder to the fledgling blaze. He had been careful to select green leaves and twigs, and the fire began smoking almost immediately, sending a thin trail of dark grey smoke aloft. He added more material, and the flame expanded, the smoke thickening and beginning to billow. Soon the fire covered a narrow strip as long as a tall elf, and the smoke formed a curtain flapping in the wind: a curtain that was blocking them from sight of the ruins, and was wafting closer to the stones and their foul inhabitants.
'Not yet,' Lasalnean said quietly, extending a hand to block Ridsitil as the latter moved to slip past the trees and into the clearing, 'another moment or two.'
They waited impatiently, clutching their weapons, as the smoke spread, casting a pall across the clearing and even back among its creators. Then the elves' sharp ears picked
up raised voices from the beastmen, and soon they heard footsteps, heavy, clumsy ones, drawing closer.
The beastmen had sent a scouting party out to investigate the smoke.
This was what the elves had been waiting for, and Lasalnean smiled, a cold quiet expression that brought shivers to those that saw it. He nodded, and his kinband took up their positions, each elf poised behind a tree or perched atop a low branch. When the beastmen stepped through the smoke curtain, they barely had time to realise that the smoke began just within the clearing and was deliberate rather than accidental. Then the elves were upon them.
Knowing the need for silence, Lasalnean bit back his customary battle cry as he rose to confront the first beastman. His long, silvery sword leapt forward, its blade angling down to glide past the creature's upraised club, and the tip pierced the beastman's throat, turning its emerging cry into a soft gurgle. Lasalnean continued the thrust, the blade emerging a second later from the back of the creature's neck, and then twisted and tugged sideways, slicing the beastman's neck open and freeing his blade. The next beastman stumbled upon its dead comrade, eyes widening at the sight, and Lasalnean's blade took it through the mouth before it could scream. Nelyann had already carved a third beastman open with her twin blades, and spun gracefully to behead another even as she blocked its axe with her second sword.
The smoke effectively cut them off from those within the ruins, preventing anyone from aiding those battling within the smoke or beyond it, and it took little time to dispatch the eight beastmen, who had not been expecting a full ambush by determined elf archers and warriors.
'They will be wondering what became of their comrades,' Nelyann reminded Lasalnean, kicking the nearest body
Lasalnean nodded. They will send a second wave to find out,' he replied. 'We will kill them as well, and each band
they foolishly let pass through our curtain. Once the creatures learn their mistake, once they no longer let scouting parties dare to enter the smoke, then we will use this smoke for cover and take the fight to them.'
The others in his kinband grinned at the thought, and Lasalnean bowed, acknowledging their support.
Then the elves settled in, alert for the sound of additional beastmen approaching their hiding places. Lasalnean suspected they would not have long to wait.
'Charge?' Alaric asked, his blue eyes wide. That's your plan, your strategy? This is what a full night of contemplation has led you to decide? To charge?'
'From two directions at once,' Kleiber corrected. 'This will confuse the defenders, and they will be forced to split their attention, thus allowing one or even both groups to reach the ruins safely.'
'It still boils down to a charge, just a two-pronged one,' Alaric argued.
Sitting across the small fire from him, Kleiber shrugged. 'It has the virtue of simplicity,' he replied, perhaps a touch defensively.
'So does "run headfirst into a wall",' Dietz muttered, low enough for only Alaric to hear him. 'I still don't see many people trying it, and never more than once.'
Alaric laughed, but quickly smothered the reaction, which Dietz thought displayed unusual common sense for his employer. Kleiber was without a doubt the most open- minded witch hunter they had ever encountered, but Dietz knew that only went so far, and most people didn't like being laughed at.
They may have rifles,' Dietz reminded Kleiber.
The witch hunter nodded. 'Indeed, friend Dietz, they may have rifles.'
'So they'll shoot you down before you can get anywhere near them,' Dietz explained further.
'Only if we allow them time to spot us, convey that information, and take aim,' Kleiber corrected, 'and I have no intention of granting them such an opportunity.'
Alaric was still too amazed to even consider being tactful. 'So your strategy is actually "Charge from two sides, very fast"?'
'That is the essence of it, yes,' Kleiber admitted.
'It's not as bad as it sounds,' Lankdorf offered. He and Jarl were also sitting there. Wilcreitz was speaking with the rest of the mercenaries. 'We have to get across that clearing and to the ruins quickly. There isn't any cover or any way to approach from another direction.' He shrugged. 'So if we've got to charge, we should do it fast and take them by surprise.'
'You're all insane,' Alaric said, shaking his head. 'You've got a fort there, from what you described, well-placed and well built. You've got an untold number of foes holding it, physically powerful and utterly unrestrained. They have blackpowder rifles, which they know how to use, and they've got higher ground; and you want to charge the place at a dead run?'
'Do you have a better suggestion?' Wilcreitz asked, having walked over in time to hear Alaric's last statement. Dietz could tell that the short witch hunter was spoiling for a fight. He tried to catch Alaric's eye so he could warn him, but Alaric wasn't looking.
'Misdirection, first of all,' he answered calmly. 'Give them something else to watch, someplace else, and you're more likely to make it across the killing field alive.' He frowned. They're up against the mountains, you said?' Lankdorf nodded. 'Send a few men up there and drop rocks on them,' Alaric suggested. 'That will keep them busy.'
Dietz couldn't help grinning as both Wilcreitz and Jarl stared. Lankdorf and Kleiber looked surprised, but not as stunned. They'd both travelled with him and Alaric for
long enough to know that Alaric's dashing appearance and flighty scholarly demeanour hid a sharp mind and years of strategic training.
'Second, obfuscation,' Alaric continued, either oblivious to the looks or simply ignoring them. 'There's no cover from the rifles, so make your own. Smoke would be best, so light a fire and use the smoke to confuse their aim. Cut some tree limbs and wave them in front of you as you charge, anything to make it harder for them to shoot you.'
'A ballista would be excellent,' Alaric added, more to himself. 'That'd distract them, all right, but building it, getting all the tolerances right.
'Sigmar has blessed us indeed,' Kleiber announced, rising to his feet and stepping around the fire to clap a startled Alaric on the shoulder. 'He sent us to your rescue, and now you will come to ours. These suggestions will allow us to reach the ruins safely, and from there we can deal with the beastmen without hindrance.' He turned to Wilcreitz. 'Tell the men to gather branches and leaves along the way, for the fires, the greener the better, and send two men, whichever are best at climbing, to see about scaling the cliff above the ruins and sending a rockfall down upon them.'
Wilcreitz nodded and strode off at once.
'Not bad,' Dietz complimented Alaric. 'Not bad at all.'
His friend grinned back. 'Well, it's better than "Run forward really fast", anyway.'
An hour later they were approaching the ruins.
'Not much farther,' Dietz whispered to Alaric. They were right behind Lankdorf and Kleiber, with Wilcreitz after them and the mercenaries ranged out behind him. 'Once we round this bend we should be able to see it.'
'Why are you whispering?' Alaric asked in a more normal tone of voice. 'If the beastmen have such superlative hearing that they can make out a conversation from this
distance, don't you think they
'd have already heard the approach of two dozen men?'
Dietz chose to ignore that, in part because something had distracted him. 'Do you smell that?' he asked, lifting his head to sample the air.
'Smell what?'
'That.' Dietz sniffed again. Yes, there was definitely something there. It smelled like... 'Smoke!'
'Smoke?' Alaric squinted up at the sky, and Dietz did the same. After a few seconds, he picked out a haze just ahead of them and to the left, away from the mountainside.
'There!' Lankdorf and Kleiber had seen it as well, and without a word the four of them nodded and started forward again. They rounded the bend, and there was the clearing ahead of them and the ruins along its far side, just as Dietz had seen them yesterday.
The clearing was different, however. It was muddled and indistinct, because it was filled with dark smoke billowing from somewhere ahead of them and along the forest's edge.
'It seems someone else had the same idea,' Alaric said softly, peering into the haze. The question is, who?'
Dietz stared, trying to see through the smoke. After a minute, he noticed movement, and tried to track it. It was a dark shape, looking roughly human and human-sized, but moving like a shadow, fast and smooth and slippery. After a few seconds, and seeing a second shadow, and then a third and a fourth, he realised why the motion looked so familiar.
'Elves,' he told Alaric and the others. There are elves in the smoke.'
'Elves?' Alaric stared, not at the shadows, but at the ruins, which were still visible, if difficult to see in any detail. 'Why would they care about-' A breeze blew a few curls of smoke aside, granting him a clear glimpse of the ruins, and he stopped mid-sentence, staring as if he had been frozen. 'It can't be!'
'What?' Dietz asked. He had a feeling that whatever his employer had just seen or realised was important.
Those ruins are elven,' Alaric answered. They have to be.'
'Of course they do,' Dietz replied. Lankdorf and Kleiber were clearly confused. Meanwhile, they were beginning to hear other sounds in front of them: grunts, shrieks and shouts, and the thud of metal and stone striking flesh and leather. The elves and the beastmen had found one another, and the battle had begun.
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