Despite which, it was a truly fearsome host.
Thorn reached into the aethereal and produced not one, but two great stones that fell amongst the defenders’ works, shattering two days’ work and collapsing one whole front wall of the earthwork that held the right flank of the imperial army closest to the road.
Ser Hartmut released his first line and they went up the great ridge, flowing over the uneven ground like brown oil, the light of the first truly sunny day in a week reflecting from their rigid heads and wing cases.
Near the top, they were caught and flayed by archery and deadly small war machines-springals on carts and small mangonels throwing buckets of gravel. Closer in and sorcery began to play a part as the Empire’s sorcerers loosed their powers point blank into the boglins.
As soon as they commenced, Thorn began to kill them. The first was a pretty second-year university student with a solid knowledge of fire-her fire wind laid waste to hundreds of boglins and no few irks before he reached out for her and subsumed her without even bothering to use his powers. She screamed as her soul was destroyed-the utter despair of the young choked off without hope.
Then he struck again, and again. And again. In the time it took a thousand boglins to die, a generation of imperial mages was swept away, and he took their powers and their knowledge for his own.
Too late, the survivors shielded themselves, having never experienced anything like Thorn. Too late they attempted to find him and isolate him.
He began to rain fire on the forward walls.
Ser Hartmut watched it-and for a moment he thought the boglins were going to carry the earthworks. But they could not-they had enough feeling to experience dread, and their losses were hideous.
At a nod from Thorn-a better ally than he’d expected-Ser Hartmut sent the second line into motion. The top of the hill was a smoking ruin-no grass grew, and eldritch fire had swept the summit of the earthworks and the grass in front of it, defining the killing ground so well that some of the Outwallers flinched on getting to the edge of the charred ground.
But Hartmut’s sailors went forward, and the brigans. A sheet of black fire passed over the crest and into the earthworks, the only sign of its passing a slight disturbance in the ground-and the screams began. This time, few of the springals and the mangonels managed to get off a rock or a bucket of gravel-but most of their crews were messily dead, sliced in half by Thorn’s latest effort.
Now the enemy released their cavalry, and there was a sudden sortie. The earthworks were cunningly built, with careful angles and many hidden passages, and armoured men came from the front even as light horse poured into the flanks at both ends, riding recklessly through the high grass and loosing arrows as they came. The Outwallers at the far left took the brunt of the charge of the Vardariotes, and they died, cut down like ripe wheat.
Hartmut smiled. He had put the least reliable there, the useless mouths, and they served to cushion the blow of the Emperor’s finest light horse. They took time to run and die.
Out of the woods at their backs appeared the flash of metal, and then his own lances under de Badefol were forming and charging. And from the third line, Kevin Orley’s men ran forward like the Outwallers they were, heedless of the archery in their superior armour.
The Vardariotes didn’t hesitate, but turned, cut their way through the Outwaller line, and ran, but the desperate flight saved only half, and the rest were ground to bloody paste between Orley’s armoured warband and the knights.
Ser Hartmut hadn’t even begun to sweat inside his armour.
He saw a dozen sailors and a pair of brigans vanish over the top of the centre earthwork. And then he saw another man unfurl his personal banner-it flew atop the wall.
He turned to Thorn. “Now we go up the hill,” he said. “I’ll need your trolls for the Nordikaan guard.”
Thorn was black, and no shadow fell from him or on him. “Let us go up the hill,” he said.
But the Moreans had other ideas.
Out on his far right, a column of cavalry in bright silver and scarlet appeared. They had taken their time to work around his right flank, and now they charged-uphill into the unshielded flank of his long assault line of men and monsters.
Hartmut sent his squire to collect Orley and de Badefol and rode himself towards the fighting. Thorn threw a massive working into the front of the bold riders, killing forty of them in a single sweep of his stone talons and as many of his own Outwallers, but the Scholae-for so they were-came on. The right flank of Outwallers-reliable men, southern Huran with good armour and crossbows-was suddenly swept back sharply, and threatened to collapse.
As Ser Hartmut had expected, the Nordikaans, of whom he had so often heard, came over the top of the central redoubt.
With them came a tall man on a magnificent horse. Even a long bowshot away, Ser Hartmut could see the magnificence of his clothes and armour and the dignity of his posture.
The Nordikaans went into his brigans and collapsed them. They tried to stand-their armour was as good or better, but the blond, axe-bearing guard towered over them, and the axes were like scythes for reaping men.
And they had the weight of the hill behind them.
“Thorn!” Ser Hartmut bellowed.
The deadly magus motioned to the ranks of stone trolls-forty of them-who stood like statues at the base of the ridge. “Go,” he said. “Kill them all.”
The lead troll opened his grey basalt lips and roared his challenge, and then they were away, running as fast as a man might charge on a horse, the earth protesting their weight and their stride.
From the woods behind them burst two of the great hastenoch and an even rarer creature-a great brown thing as big as four war horses, with tusks stained by a hundred years of prey and a great transverse mouth with two rows of teeth the size of rondel daggers, and four great feet like those of an oliphaunt’s. Between them, like a wall of horror, was a loose line of Rukh, towering against the afternoon sun.
They flung themselves into the Scholae.
Harald Derkensun watched disaster unfold slowly, as it usually did, and wrap itself around the imperial army like some sort of malign lover.
One of the problems of being in the guard was that you generally knew everything the Emperor knew. So all the sword bearers-the inner guard-knew the Emperor was not supposed to have waited for the sorcerer alone at Dorling, and they knew that repeated messenger birds had begged him not to engage directly without support.
And they knew that the army was weak on healing and magistry because the Emperor had sent all the strongest talents back to help the Immortals, as he insisted on calling them, to struggle over the last of the open passes into the Green Hills, because their horses were dead.
The Emperor sat, perfectly calm, his handsome face serene, his scarlet cloak and boots spotless. He over-rode each of his senior officers, and sent the Scholae to make a flank attack to relieve the pressure on his centre-an admirable tactic, but not one, Derkensun suspected, suited to the current day, terrain, or numbers.
The Scholae obeyed.
In fact, everyone obeyed. Regiment by regiment, the Emperor flung in his army.
Derkensun could do nothing but stand silently and prepare to die. It had become obvious by mid-afternoon that unless the whole army broke, they would be drowned in a sea of monsters.
The Emperor remained serene, showing his military erudition from time to time-commenting on how very like Varo’s arrangements at Caesarae were the enemy’s three lines, and how like Chaluns it was, especially as the enemy was trying to break his centre.
The acting Count of the Vardariotes was an easterner with insufficient command of the language to argue, and too much stubbornness to refuse an order. He led his people out.