“What has happened?” he asked as soon as he reached them.
“A few scouts on our left flank failed to report in,” Sendarus said. “I sent a larger scouting party to find out what was happening.”
“And they haven’t come back either,” Galen guessed.
Sendarus nodded and pointed to the west. Galen could see clouds of birds winging their way. “Whatever’s stirred them up is very large. Salokan?”
Sendarus shrugged. “How could he have made such a wide detour without us detecting him? It must be him, but I don’t understand how he’s done it.”
“It may not be Salokan at all,” Charion said seriously.
“What do you mean?” Galen asked.
“Her Highness thinks it may be a second Haxus force, coming in from the Oceans of Grass.”
“Mercenaries? This Rendle that Areava was so angry about?”
“Possibly.”
“If it is, do you think he has been in touch with Salokan?”
“No way of knowing. If he has, we can probably expect him to be bearing down on us already, but whether to hit us on the flank or to join Rendle before making a combined assault, we don’t know.” Sendarus licked his lips. “There is another possibility.”
“Which is?” Galen asked.
Sendarus and Charion spoke at the same time. “Lynan.”
A whole street seemed to be on fire. Flames belched into the air as houses built from nothing but old wood and thatch ignited. Screaming people were jammed into the street, some of them on fire, some of them bleeding from burns and wounds caused by falling timber. Children slipped and if not caught up right away by their parents were trampled underneath by the panicking mob.
Olio tried to force his way though the mass to get to the stricken, but could make no headway. He grabbed one man by the arm and showed the Key of Power. “I am Prince Olio!” he shouted. “Help me get these people out of the way!” But the man shook his arm free and fled as fast as his legs could carry him. He tried with another man, and then a woman, but their reaction was the same as the first.
“God’s death!” he shouted. “Will no one help me?”
The mob swept by him, forcing him against a wall. He heard a crack above him and looked up to see a roof smoldering, and then all at once catch fire. Flames seemed to leap over his head to the roof of the house on the opposite side of the street, and it, too, went up in flames. The heat was unbearable. He retreated to the end of the street, ducked in a doorway and waited for the mob to pass him by. When he emerged, he found that a handful of men and women had also stayed their ground, desperate to do something but not knowing what. He went to the nearest, a woman, and showed the emblem of his authority.
“Where is the nearest well?” he asked.
“A block away!” she said. “But we have no buckets to get water!”
“Make sure there is no one left inside these houses,” he shouted, pointing to all those homes that were still free of the fire. “And collect as many buckets and pans as you can—anything that will carry water!”
The woman nodded, passed the word to another, and then another. In a short time there was a gang of about twenty people, all with a container of some kind.
“Form a chain to the well. We need to douse with water all the houses in the next street so the fires doesn’t spread.”
Other people came to see what was happening and, without being asked, joined in, but in a few minutes Olio could see their efforts were wasted. They could not get to the other end of the street where the fire was still spreading, and they could not carry enough water at this end to make any difference. The fire was leapfrogging houses now, sparks blowing from roof to roof, shining in the dark, smoky sky like miniature shooting stars.
“It’s no good!” Olio told them. “Get to the harbor. Carry any who cannot get there themselves!”
At first some people ignored him, desperately trying to save their homes, but eventually the heat from the flames even drove them away.
Olio found an old man with only one leg who was struggling to keep up with the crowd; he was leaning against a corner post, bent over and gagging. Olio hooked an arm around the man’s shoulders and helped him along.
“Thankin‘ ya, sir,” the man said between bouts of coughing. “Thankin’ ya.”
A little way on they came across a small child, crying, standing by herself under the lintel of an open door. Olio shouted to a passing youth to take the man, then went to the child.
“What’s your name?” he asked, picking her up.
“I can’t find my mumma,” she said.
“We’ll find her, darling. What’s your name?”
“Where’s my mumma?”
The contractions were now less than two minutes apart. Areava was covered in a film of sweat. Her nightgown and the sheets on her bed were soaked, and the smell of them made her want to gag.
“A span of five fingers,” the midwife said.
“Find Olio,” she said desperately. “Find my brother. Find Prince Olio.”
“There is nothing he can do for you, my lady,” the midwife said, trying to sound stern.
“He has the Key of the Heart,” she said. “The Healing Key. He can help the baby.”
“Your Majesty—”
“Find him!” Areava screamed, and the midwife scurried off. A second midwife took her place and curtsied.
“I don’t believe this,” Areava moaned, then tensed as the contractions started again.
The first flight of arrows fell short, and even as the second flight was on its way Lynan was suddenly surrounded by twenty of the Red Hands. This time the arrows found targets. One of the Red Hands screamed and fell from her horse. Lynan heard other screams nearby.
“Spread out!” he ordered his bodyguard. They ignored him. “Listen to me, we’re just making a bigger target for them! Now spread out!”
It was not until Gudon repeated the order that they reluctantly moved away from their charge. Another flight of arrows fell among them. Ager galloped over to him. “Where are they shooting from?”
Lynan pointed to a rise about three hundred paces away.
He could clearly see a line of archers dressed in Charion’s colors. “They belong to a Hume regiment,” he said.
Ager squinted through his one good eye. “God, they’re hopeful. They’re shooting at their maximum range. Let them waste their arrows, I say.”
Lynan agreed. Gudon and the Red Hands were spread out in a line to his left, and on his right extended Ager’s warriors. A hundred paces behind him, Kumul had drawn up his lancers into two wedges. Farther on his flanks the rest of the Chett army were still getting into their starting positions for the attack.
Someone on the other side must have realized the archers were wasting their time because the volleys ceased. The ground in between was sparsely coated in arrow shafts sticking out of the ground.
Over the next few minutes riders came to Lynan telling him that their respective banners were ready. Lastly came Korigan. She reined in beside Lynan and Ager.
“Everyone is in position,” she said.
“Give the word, then.”
“Do you want my people to take that ridge first?” Ager asked. “I could clear those archers away in five minutes.”
“We don’t know what’s waiting for you behind the ridge. We go as planned. Flank movements first.”
Korigan nodded and rode off, and for a while the only sound anyone could hear was the beating of her horse’s hooves on the plain. When they stopped, there was a moment of complete silence. There was no wind, and all the birds had long fled.