by David Weber
He needed to stay out of that confusion and chaos if he meant to exercise any sort of control. And he had to keep his standard—the visual orienting guide his troop commanders would look for as they pulled back into their new formation—out of those plunging, screaming horses and cursing armsmen.
He pulled up, turning his horse once more, as he reached the military crest of the hill, and his jaw clenched. The bugler was on his heels, with the standard-bearer just behind him, and the blue-and-white gryphon standard writhed and danced. The wind of the standard-bearer’s passage blew in through the large, open beak of the screaming gryphon’s head, and the silken, wind-tube body flared wide and proud to its pressure. Sunlight glittered on the gryphon’s golden head in a splendid show of martial glory, but the truth was hard and cold beyond its bearer.
All of Trianal’s scouts were gone, and at least twenty more men lay scattered where the head of his column had been ravaged. With the scouts added, that was almost a quarter of his entire command. Many of those men lay motionless, but others writhed and screamed, curled around the arrows buried in their flesh. He wanted, more than he’d ever wanted anything in his life, to ride to their aid. They were his men, his responsibility, and he should be down there, seeing to their wounds, not abandoning them.
But he couldn’t throw away still more lives, and he forced his jaw to unclench as he saw the rest of his command falling back as he’d ordered. The column had unraveled, but not into the confusion and rout such an onslaught might well have produced. And that, he realized, was because of the brief warning his command to halt the column had given his men. His troopers hadn’t known what was about to happen, but they’d been warned that something was not as it ought to be. That warning had blunted, however slightly, the surge of panic which even the most experienced armsmen must feel under totally unexpected attack.
His order to fall back in skirmished formation had been the right one, too, he realized, although he still had no idea whether reason or instinct had prompted him to give it. In either case, it had opened the column, making it a more spread out target, less vulnerable to massed archery, even as the same order pulled it back, opening the range. And, just as importantly, it had been proof there was still someone in command, someone providing the authority to hold them together as a cohesive force.
Now he had to find out what he’d held them together to face.
* * *
This time, Darnas did swear, albeit in a deceptively mild tone. He hadn’t missed by much, but his arbalest bolt had gone flashing by the figure in Balthar’s colors which had to be Trianal Bowmaster. At that range, even the powerful arbalest would most probably have been defeated by the youngster’s breastplate … but it might not have been, too. And it almost certainly would have penetrated if it had hit anything but his cuirass or helmet.
There was nothing Warshoe could do about that now, so he pulled out the crank of the cocking windless built into the dwarvish arbalest’s stock and began respanning the steel bow. It wasn’t a speedy process, but that was all right with him. He had no intention of getting directly involved in what was going to happen next.
* * *
Sir Fahlthu jerked a hand angrily at his bugler, and the armsman raised his bugle. It sang out, sounding the command to mount and advance, and his outsized company and the three troops Lord Erathian had assigned to him moved forward.
It wasn’t what Fahlthu wanted to do. Not without having killed more of the enemy, or at least broken them as an organized force, before he engaged. But his orders from Chalthar and Halnahk left him no choice. He doubted that there was any real chance of killing every single one of Trianal’s armsmen, whatever Lord Saratic wanted. Yet he could hardly pretend he hadn’t attacked them, and the men he’d already killed had upped the stakes enormously from simple cattle or horse-stealing raids. Now that he’d effectively declared war on Glanharrow, his orders left him and his “brigands” no option but to kill as many more as he could.
* * *
Sir Yarran’s belly muscles tightened as he watched the woodline spawning armsmen in the plain, unmarked leather and cuirasses of outlaws or unemployed mercenaries—if there was a difference. There were far more than there’d been in the party they’d been pursuing. At least ten-score, he estimated, and possibly as much as half again that number. Even without their opening losses, Trianal’s men would have been seriously outnumbered.
He darted a look at his commander. The youngster had reacted with more speed than most grizzled veterans would have shown. And he’d done the right thing by halting the column. Maybe not the perfect thing, but the right thing. Yarran knew Trianal would always blame himself for not having halted the scouts, as well. In his position, Yarran would have blamed himself just as bitterly, but stopping them in their tracks would have been unjustifiable with no more than disturbed birds as the vague indicator of something possibly out of the ordinary.
The critical thing was that Trianal had held the command together. Many a formation would have shattered like glass on an anvil under that sudden attack. If it had been composed of veterans, their troop commanders and sergeants would probably have rallied them … eventually. But in the meantime, their attackers would have sought to take ruthless advantage of their confusion. Yet Trianal’s orders had stilled that automatic, instinctive urge towards flight before it could take effect, and the armsmen Baron Tellian had sent with him to Glanharrow were hand-picked veterans themselves. Like Yarran’s own men, they knew the difference between an officer who had a firm grip on his command and one who did not, and they were responding to Trianal’s mastery like the well drilled troops they were.
Now to find out if the young man beside him knew what to do with them.
* * *
Trianal watched the main body of his men spread out as they fell back towards his standard. Sothoii tactical doctrine had taken over, and each troop commander knew exactly what to do. His troopers swirled in what anyone who had never faced Sothoii cavalry would undoubtedly have thought was utter confusion, but Trianal’s eye saw the underlying pattern. His men had their bows out now, and they sent their own shafts hissing back in reply to their attackers.
The ugly, bickering battle which had sprung so suddenly into existence was developing into a classic clash between light cavalry units. All was movement and speed, bursts of archery followed by sudden wheels away from the enemy while another twenty-man troop dashed up to rake the flank of anyone who followed the withdrawal too closely. Neither side was scoring a high percentage of hits now, for galloping horses, swerving evasively, were difficult targets.
Half a dozen of his troopers who’d been dismounted when their horses were wounded or killed were racing back towards his standard on foot. He saw some of their still-mounted companions swoop up beside them, reaching down a helping hand and offering them a stirrup as they galloped further back from the front of the combat. Riderless horses were also galloping back from the fray. Many of them, as well trained to the bugles as the riders they’d lost, were falling back, not simply running in panic. His double-strength command troop, which formed his only real reserve, let the panicked beasts go, but Captain Steelsaber had detached a sergeant and half a dozen men to scoop up the others and add them to the company’s remounts. Trianal wondered if he ought to order them not to, to stay concentrated. But the way things were going, he thought grimly, they were probably going to need every horse they had.
“Pigeons!” he snapped, and a wizened little trooper appeared as if by magic at his elbow. Soft, anxious cries and the flutter of worried wings came from the wicker carrying cage on the other man’s packhorse, but he laid a hand atop the cage and made soft, soothing noises to its inhabitants.
Trianal fumbled a block of thin, expensive paper and a stubby pencil out of his map case. He gazed out at the intensifying battle—damp as the ground was, dust was beginning to rise here and there, a thin haze breathing into the air as pounding hooves dashed back and forth over the same dryer pieces of grassla
nd—and made himself think hard for several seconds. Then his pencil scribbled furiously. He had to make the best possible use of the few lines for which he had room, and he wrote quickly, then paused long enough to reread what he’d written. He grunted in satisfaction. It wasn’t perfect, but it would have to do.
“Send it,” he said, and handed the tightly folded message to the pigeon-keeper. The wizened man had already coaxed one of the pigeons out of the cage. Now he quickly but carefully fitted Trianal’s message under the band on the bird’s leg and threw it into the air. It circled twice, then headed off, straight as an arrow, into the west.
Trianal had no time to watch its flight. He had turned back to Sir Yarran even before the pigeon-keeper launched the bird.
“We’ll fall back towards Shallow Cross,” he told the older knight quickly, stabbing the air towards the northwest as he spoke. “I don’t want to let them force us into a close action, but I don’t want to break contact completely, either.”
Sir Yarran glanced at the swirling wave of combat falling steadily back towards them. Although horses were moving at breakneck speed in every direction, the actual westward movement of the combat itself was much more gradual, moving little more quickly than a single horse might have covered the same distance at a slow trot. That would probably change once the other side was completely free of the tangled underbrush and could begin to make its full numerical advantage felt, but both sides were Sothoii, and no one was better than the Sothoii at this sort of fight. The attackers would be wary of pressing too hard, too quickly, of letting themselves be drawn into fighting piecemeal. They would settle for a more cautious pursuit, using their greater number of bows—and, even more importantly, the greater number of arrows so many men could carry—to wear down Trianal’s command. They would nibble away, killing and wounding men and horses, exhausting the remaining mounts, and forcing Trianal’s troopers to expend their own arrows beating off attacks until, quite abruptly, the moment would arrive. The moment both sides would recognize, when mounting casualties, fatigue, and lack of ammunition shifted the momentum suddenly in the stronger side’s favor and the time came for it to finish its opponents off.
The only true counter to that eventual outcome was for the weaker side to break contact and pull away as quickly as possible. He knew it, and so did Trianal. But he also knew what the youngster had in mind, and it might just work. The odds were against it, but Trianal had the audacity of youth, and the superb quality of the troopers under his command might just let him pull it off.
Might.
Sir Yarran Battlecrow weighed the options and alternatives, considered his responsibilities as Trianal’s adviser and mentor, and made his decision.
“Aye,” he said grimly. “Shallow Ford should do fine, Milord.”
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Sir Fahlthu broke out of the undergrowth and guided his own horse up the northern bank of the ravine to the grassland above. It wasn’t the best vantage possible, but it meant he could finally see at least some of what was happening with his own eyes. He pulled his double-glass from its case and raised it, adjusting the knurled wheel between the twin tubes until the standard at the crest of the hill to the west snapped into focus. He couldn’t make out as much detail as he might have liked, even with the double-glass, but the figure on the tall, black stallion beside the standard wore the blue and white of Balthar, and the white bow and crimson-headed, green-fletched arrows of the House of Bowmaster showed clearly against the breastplate of his blackened cuirass. That had to be Trianal. And the other rider beside him, the one in the gray of Glanharrow and the plain, battered breastplate, was probably Yarran.
He lowered the double-glass and let his unaided eye sweep the seeming chaos of galloping horsemen. Trianal and Yarran would have a much better view of the action from their higher location, but Fahlthu was experienced enough to read the tempo of the battle from the smaller portion of it he could see. And as he absorbed it, he smiled grimly.
The fiery young hothead on top of that hill had made a serious error. Perhaps he’d underestimated the total strength Fahlthu could throw at him. Or perhaps he’d simply reacted with the stubborn inflexibility of youth. Either way, he’d made the wrong choice. He ought to have fallen back immediately, riding hell for leather to break contact while Fahlthu’s greater numbers were still occupied making their way clear of the tangled brush and woodland which had concealed them. Instead, he’d accepted battle. No doubt he’d hoped the numbers were close to equal, or—depending on his optimism—even in his favor. In either case, he’d clearly believed he could skirmish successfully, even against superior numbers, and break off if the engagement grew too hot. But this was a game Fahlthu had played before, and he began giving orders to his bugler.
* * *
Trianal could see the moment when the enemy commander began once more asserting control over his troopers. Trianal couldn’t actually hear the bugle calls across the noise and tumult of the battle between them, but he could see a third or so of the total opposing force falling back in response. The other two-thirds continued to press the attack, volleying arrows from their powerful composite bows and taking slower, more deliberate return fire from Trianal’s men.
It was impossible to form any precise assessment of his own losses so far. Only one troop’s swallow-tailed guidon had disappeared, but most of those which remained had less than the original twenty men following them, and troopers continued to fall by twos and threes on both sides. At a guess, he was down to perhaps a little over a hundred men, but by his rough count, the attackers showed at least a dozen guidons, which meant they had over two hundred—probably closer to three. So the other commander could afford to pull a third of his men back, resting their horses and conserving their ammunition until the critical moment, while the other two-thirds kept the pressure on Trianal’s troopers and forced him to expend his own arrows and exhaust his own horses.
He felt a moment of almost paralyzing doubt, then gave himself a savage mental shake.
If whoever that is knew what I really had in mind, he wouldn’t have pulled back a reserve, he thought. He’d have thrown everything he had at me and accepted his losses to overwhelm me quickly. He can still win this kind of running battle—and more cheaply than a frontal assault, if it goes his way. But if he’s willing to let me prolong it …
“I wonder if they know about the pigeons,” he said to Sir Yarran quietly while the sounds of distant combat became less distant by the minute.
“Likely not,” the older knight said back, just as quietly. “Erathian probably knows at least a little about ’em, but this fellow’s too aggressive to be one of Erathian’s commanders. Besides, this whole ambush—and that’s what it was when we got here, Milord, whatever the other fellow might have intended when he set out this morning—is something Erathian would avoid like the plague. Open warfare with Baron Tellian? He’d never agree to that—not if he thought it could ever be traced back to him, any road. And s’far as I know, nobody outside your uncle’s riding knows he’s been trying out the birds.”
“We can hope, anyway,” Trianal grunted, then looked the older man squarely in the face.
“I’m going to need all the help you can give me, Sir Yarran,” he said frankly. “Maybe I should have picked a spot further east than Shallow Cross, but I don’t just want to drive them back into hiding and leave us to find them all over again.” He shrugged. “I know what I do want to do, but I don’t know that I have enough experience to pull it off. If you have any suggestions—or if you see me making any mistakes—tell me. And be as loud and as blunt as you think necessary!”
He finished with a tight smile, and Sir Yarran returned it in kind.
“Milord—lad—you’ve done just fine so far. I’ll be ready enough to fetch your head a clout, if it seems necessary. But for now I’ve little to suggest … unless it might be as it’s time for you to be pulling a mite further back.”
“You’re right,” Trianal agreed, but before he
moved, he beckoned to Yardan Steelsaber.
“Yes, Sir?” the captain of his command troop said in a voice which Trianal strongly suspected must sound much calmer than the other man actually was.
“You and most of your men, and anyone who gets back here on foot to remount, are our reserve,” Trianal said bluntly. “You don’t commit any of them without my personal approval, or Sir Yarran’s.”
“Aye, Sir.”
“For right now, though, I need three messengers. I want them to go out into that mess and find Sir Rikhal, Major Helmscrest, and Sir Kallian. Tell them we’re falling back to Shallow Cross and that I want them to stay oriented on my standard and keep those people following us until we get there. We’ll fight a slow retreat to the top of the hills, get their teeth set into the notion that they’re pushing us, we’re not pulling them. Then, once we clear the hills, on my signal, it’s time to show them just enough of our heels to keep them chasing us. Is that clear?”
“They’re to keep contact and fall back to Shallow Cross. Slow retreat up the hills, then go to a gallop at your command. It’s a feigned retreat to draw ’em after us. Aye, Sir, it’s clear,” Steelsaber acknowledged, striking his breastplate with a fist in salute. He seemed remarkably composed for someone who’d just received the orders of a lunatic, Trianal thought. But if anyone could get couriers through to his three senior subordinates, Steelsaber would get it done.
“Very well, see to it. And after you’ve sent the messengers, I think we’ll pull back to that cluster of aspens on the far side of the hill. But slowly! I want our people to see the standard on the crest line here long enough to know we’re falling back, not running!”