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The Horse Stealer’s thoughts broke off as his companions reached him and drew rein. Wencit rose in the stirrups, thrusting his head above the low-growing trees’ cover and peering into the roaring wind as if he could actually see. He stayed there for several minutes, turning his head to sweep his gaze back and forth across something visible only to him, then settled back and wiped snow from his beard. He tucked up the skirt of his poncho to clear his well-worn sword hilt, and Bahzell told himself it was only the cold that made him shiver as those wildfire eyes moved back to him.

“There are four more sentries!” Wencit had to shout to make himself heard above the gale. “The closest is about fifty yards that way!” He gestured off to the left, then shrugged. “I imagine they’ll take to their heels when they realize what’s happening, but watch your backs!”

Both hradani nodded grimly, and Brandark drew his own sword. Wencit didn’t, but then, if all went well, the wizard would have no use for steel tonight.

If all went well.

“Remember! So far I haven’t done anything to draw attention to myself, but the instant the spell goes up, the wizards at least will know I’m here! Leave them to me, but get to Zarantha as quick as you can!”

Bahzell nodded again. The wizards might prefer to use Zarantha’s death to raise power, but if their main goal was to prevent the creation of Spearmen magi, their hirelings would have orders to kill her to prevent her rescue.

“Ready?” Wencit demanded. Two more nods answered, though a corner of Bahzell’s mind shouted at him to get the hell out of this. Too much of their plan depended on a man they’d met only hours before, and whatever his reputation, Wencit was a wizard. But this was no time for second thoughts, and he stepped out around the edge of the scrubby trees into the teeth of the wind.

Brandark followed at his shoulder, and they moved confidently forward despite the howling near invisibility. They were all but blind, but Wencit had briefed them well. Bahzell had felt acutely uneasy when the wizard produced the polished stone he called a “gramerhain” and peered into it. The heart-sized crystal had flared and flickered even more brightly than Wencit’s eyes, blinding the hradani if they glanced at it too closely, but Wencit had stared intently into it for long, studious moments. Then he’d put it away and drawn an impossibly detailed diagram of the enemy’s camp in the snow. The wind should have blotted it out in a moment, but it hadn’t, and he’d taken them patiently through it again and again, until they knew it as intimately as the backs of their own hands. Bahzell might be uncomfortable with the way the information for that diagram had been obtained, yet he had to admit there seemed to be advantages to having a wizard on his side.

Assuming of course that Wencit truly was on his side.

He shook his head sharply, castigating himself for his doubts, but Fiendark take it, the man was a wizard . Twelve centuries of instant, instinctive hatred couldn’t be set aside in an instant, and-

The nagging undercurrent of thought broke off, and he touched Brandark on the knee as the ground began to angle downward before them. They stood at the lip of the deep, sheltered hollow their enemies had selected for their camp, and it was time.

Bahzell looked up at his friend for just a moment, seeing the echo of his own doubts on the Bloody Sword’s face, then grinned crookedly, shrugged, and squeezed Brandark’s knee once. The Bloody Sword nodded back, and Bahzell got both hands on the hilt of his sword, drew a deep breath, and hurled himself down the slope with a bull-throated bellow.

Hooves thudded beside him as Brandark spurred forward, and the Bloody Sword’s high, fierce yell answered his own war cry. Their voices should have been lost without a trace on such a night, but they weren’t. They couldn’t be, for they were answered and echoed from all sides, and suddenly there weren’t just two hradani charging down the slope. There were thirty of them, mounted and afoot alike, bellowing their fury, and even though he’d known it was supposed to happen, superstitious dread stirred deep inside Bahzell Bahnakson.

He felt the cold and wind, the snow on his face and the hilt in his hands and the wild, fierce pounding of his heart, and exhilaration filled him, banishing his dread, as he gave himself to the Rage and the phantom warriors charged at his side. His and Brandark’s own war cries had triggered the spell Wencit had woven, and a strange, wild sense of creation-of having snapped the others into existence by his own will-sparkled through him. And, in a sense, he had created them, even more than Wencit. The wizard could have settled for simple duplicates of Brandark and himself, but his spell was subtler than that. He’d plucked images of remembered warriors from the hradani’s memories, breathing life into them, and the verisimilitude of his illusion was stunning. The bellowing, immaterial figures actually left footprints in the snow, and the sheer multiplicity of warriors-each with his own face, his own weapons and armor and voice-left no room for question. This was a real attack, and shouts of panic and the scream of startled horses split the night as Bahzell bounded through the last swirling snow curtain into the sheltered hollow.

Forty men rolled out of their blankets, snatching for weapons, leaping to their feet in horror as the horde of hradani erupted into their midst. There was no time to don armor; those who’d shed their mail for the night were forced to let it lie, and their vulnerability filled them with its own panic.

A man dodged frantically, scrambling to evade Bahzell, but there was no time for that, either. The Horse Stealer’s massive blade whistled, and his victim went down, screaming as his guts spilled out in a cloud of steam. Brandark thundered past, leaning from the saddle, longsword sweeping like a scythe. A raised blade sought desperately to block the stroke, but its wielder’s arm flew in a spray of blood, and he shrieked as the Bloody Sword rode him down. The shrieks cut off with sickening suddenness under trained, iron-shod hooves, and the warhorse pivoted, spurning the body as Brandark reined it around to split the skull of a fleeing foe. Another enemy, this one braver, helmetless but clad in chain mail, leapt to engage Bahzell, and the Horse Stealer smashed him into bloody ruin with a single mighty stroke.

Steel clashed all around him, and even through the Rage and the fury of battle a corner of his mind marveled at the depth of Wencit’s illusion. His phantom allies couldn’t actually harm anyone-that would have been against the Strictures-but that was the only thing they couldn’t do. The men who engaged them “felt” and “heard” their own blows go home against armor or shield. They knew-didn’t just think, but knew -they were locked in mortal combat with real enemies, and Bahzell and Brandark rampaged through them like dire cats. The hradani were the only ones in that entire mad melee who knew the truth. They were unhampered by any confusion as to who could kill them and who couldn’t, and they forged straight for the knot of figures beside the fire.

Two unarmed men leapt to their feet in almost comical disbelief, but they were wizards. Even through the cacophony of shouts and shrieks and clashing steel, Bahzell heard one of them scream a curse as he recognized the illusory horde for what it was. The man’s head darted from side to side, seeking the real attackers he knew had to be present, and his hand went up as Bahzell crashed through his panicked retainers. Light flashed on his palm, and the Horse Stealer felt something tug at him even as he kicked a guardsman in the belly and lopped his head as he went down. But the wizard behind that spell was no Wencit of Rūm. The elemental fury of the Rage brushed his spell aside, and both wizards stumbled back as Bahzell vaulted over the body of his latest victim towards them.