Tip barked a laugh. "As my da used to say, 'Life is what happens while you're making plans.' Well, we made our plans, and good plans they were, but it seems Life is running all over us, or perhaps in this case it is Death."
"Sir Tipperton, be it Life or Death," said Agron, "we must make do with what the Fates have cast our way. And e'en though the Rupt assail our walls, our immediate objective is to slay the Gargon, and by Adon, slay him we will!"
"Where is the Gargon?" Alvaron called up to Delander, the Mage peering into the night.
"Yet at the fore of his tent," came the shouted reply. dng!
"What th-?" muttered Tip, then, "Oh, the ram."
Above and from within the embracing walls crossbows twanged, hurling quarrels at the batterers before the outer gate. dng!
"Ready at the bar," Agron commanded the inner gate warders.
"King Agron, do we not wait for the Dwarves?" asked Alvaron. dng!
Agron shook his head. "What better time to attack than in the midst of all. Their forces are spread along the moat. The Gargon stands behind them alone, and can we break through the ring of Riipt we will take him undefended."
Alvaron shook his head. "A Gargon is never undefended, my lord, for the casting of dread shields him from harm."
"Nevertheless," said Agron, and he signed for the gate to be opened. dng!
The great drawbar was pulled away and, squealing, the portcullis was raised.
Delander came rushing down from above and joined his fellow Mages, the six bracing themselves for what was to come.
The inner gate swung open Dng!
– and wheeling the ballista amid them, afoot they entered the twisting way under the wall-King Agron and his handpicked company of men. And among the armed and armored Dendorians strode six Mages, only two of which even bore staffs. And among the Mages walked one wee Warrow, his Elven bow at the ready.
Dng!
When they were all within the dark, twisting confines of the tunnel, with a clang the gates behind were shut, and the portcullis squealed down.
Passing below the murder holes and alongside the arrow-slits in the tunnel walls, in moments they reached the last turn, and the outer gate stood before them.
Dng!
In the fore, Agron stepped to the side postern and cautiously drew aside a small viewing panel and looked outward, and a ruddy flicker from without dimly lighted up the passage. In the wavering reddish light, Tip looked up at Imongar and said, "I am minded of what DelfLord Borl once told me."
Dng!
Imongar raised an eyebrow.
Tip smiled grimly. "He said, the moment the battle begins is the moment all goes wrong."
Dng!
"Well then, Tipperton, let us hope in this case it is Delf-Lord Borl who is wrong and everything here goes according to plan."
Agron closed the viewing port. "Stand ready," he commanded. "The battering ram and its crew of Drokha are in the way. Pavises shield the Wrg from the crossbows above and to the sides. We'll have to charge in among them and hurl them back and then shove the ram away to get the ballista out through the main gate and past."
Dng!
"Signal the men aside and above to cease the attack on the ram," said Agron.
As word was swiftly passed through the flanking arrow-slits to the crossbowmen in the passages behind the tunnel walls and to the crew at the murder holes above, two men began to remove the bar from the side postern.
"Wait, my lord," called Veran, pressing forward through the ranks. "Mayhap I can serve here."
King Agron turned.
"A ruse," said Veran. "Let me at the viewing port."
Dng!
"What's he doing?" hissed Tipperton, the wee buccan down among the men and trying to peer past. "I can't see."
"He readies a casting," replied Imongar.
"Oh, goodness."
"Here," muttered Alvaron, bending over and lifting Tipperton up.
Tip held his breath and squinted his eyes and turned his head slightly aside in trepidation, for magic was about to be loosed.
Dng!
And Veran at the port muttered, "Casus incendio!"
Yaaaaah! Shrieks and wrauls came from without, and King Agron bellowed, "By damn, I said no fire from above! It will only delay us."
Without turning, Veran said, " Tis not true fire, my lord, but instead a mere glamour of fire cascading down which dwarves to rout the Spaunen." Veran paused, then added,
"I believe we can go now. Fear not the fire, for it does not burn."
The side postern was flung open, and crying For king and Dular! Agron and half his captains and men charged outward, swords and axes ready to rive, maces and morning stars to bash, but the foe was gone, abandoning the ram and pavises and fleeing back across the stone bridge and into an angry sheeting of crossbow bolts sissing down from the walls above.
Of a sudden the inner portcullis began to squeal upward, and the drawbar of the main gate slid aside and men sprang forward to open the portal. As Alvaron lowered Tipperton back to the cobbles, the iron panels swung wide, and lurid scarlet light flooded into the passage, turning it a ghastly bloody red.
For king and Dular! shouted the men in the tunnel, surging forward, Tipperton surging forward as well, only to stop dead in his tracks, for the soldiers in the lead strode into burning flames, or so it seemed. And midst the conflagration, fire bellowed up and whirled about the crew who shoved against a huge battering ram, pushing it back and away, back over the bridge to unblock the span, a span now guarded by Agron and others, while in the distance Hloks fled. Other men hurled aside the pavises, abandoned by the fleeing Rupt. And beyond the ram, yet other men cast dead Foul Folk off the bridge and into the flaming moat, the Spaunen brought down by crossbow quarrels as they had run away.
Out from the tunnel surged the men, and into the flames wheeled the ballista, the weapon they hoped would slay the dreadful Gargon.
Now following, Tip drew back as he came to the fire, and Imongar, standing within the blaze, turned and beckoned to the Warrow and held out her hand to him.
His heart thudding-whether from fear of fire or from the Gargon's cast or from fear of magic, Tip did not know-the buccan screwed his courage to the sticking point and stepped within.
The world all around him roared with raging blaze, yet it touched him not. Even so he rushed forward, running ahead, passing the wheeled ballista, the buccan trying not to scream.
And then he was beyond the illusory flames and onto the stone span, and still ruddy fire roared up and about, yet this was from the burning moat and real, and scorching heat hammered at the Warrow.
Even so, even though true fire was but an arm's span away, even though scathing incandescence blasted against his exposed skin trying to incinerate this fool, it could not reach him on the stone bridge, and now only the dread cast by the Gargon made his hammering heart race.
Waves of black smoke from the flaming moat billowed over the bridge and, coughing and hacking, his nostrils filled with the thick smell of burning oil, Tipperton pressed forward, to come to the foot of the bridge.
He turned to see where the ballista was and gasped, for behind stood the high stone walls of Dendor, the raging fire in the moat casting its ruddy light over all for as far as the eye could see.
It seemed a city aflame.
And eastward, yowling Rucks and Hloks and Ghfils swarmed toward a massive siege tower and upward, toward the ramp above which spanned from tower to top of wall, a ramp bridging high above the flames of the burning oil.
And up on the wall, men quailed back, some to flee screaming.
The Gargon! Tip turned and looked southerly to see where the dreadful creature was, yet all he saw by the wavering light was but an abandoned dark tent.
No, you fool! Look straight out from the tower! Tip looked east to the place at the wall where the men had fled and Foul Folk were now pouring over the battlement, and then he swung his gaze outward… and his heart leapt to his throat Adon! There it is!