The Flea shifted slightly. Sigrid smelled suddenly eager. The Urghul woman was fast and strong, but she was not Kettral.
“These people will kill you, Huutsuu,” Valyn said. “If you do not give them the horses, they will kill you and the rest of your Urghul on this side of the wall.”
Huutsuu hesitated. When she spoke, the scorn boiled in her voice. “So this is the Annurian way. You told me I must fight my own people in order for you to defeat the leach. I fought them, and you failed. You failed. And for that failure, you would betray our trust, kill my warriors, take my horses.”
“You are welcome,” the Flea said wearily, “to just give us the horses.”
“You are lost to honor,” the woman snarled. “All of you.”
“Honor’s a fine thing, but it’s not much use in a fight.”
The silence that followed was knife-sharp, poised to cut the first person who moved or spoke. Valyn listened to the heartbeats, half a dozen stubborn drums hammering out their cadences of wariness or rage, each one trapped inside its cage of bone. Breath sawed in and out between chapped, bloody lips. Breath and blood-that was all that separated them from the dead littering the ground outside. It didn’t seem like much. Didn’t seem like enough.
“How many times,” Valyn asked finally, turning to Huutsuu, “have you called Ananshael the Coward’s God?”
He waited. She refused to reply.
“Let’s be clear about one thing,” he went on finally. “I know the Flea. If he kills you, there won’t be any pain. There won’t be any glory. You will be alive, then you will be gone, off into death’s endless softness. Balendin will be alive, and we will be fighting him, but you will have quit. Over a few horses.”
Huutsuu ground her teeth. “This is not what we agreed.”
“We agreed to kill the leach,” the Flea pointed out.
“And you failed to kill him.”
“When I am dead,” the Wing leader replied, “then you can say I’ve failed.”
Valyn could almost feel their gazes locked like horns, the Flea’s eyes dark as mud, Huutsuu’s sky blue and cruel.
“All right,” she said finally. “You will have the horses you need. How do we kill the leach?”
Valyn exhaled slowly. “We go in now,” he said. “Kill him while he’s wounded, while his guard is down.”
The Flea shook his head slowly. “It won’t be down. It will be doubled. Remember your Hendran: Wariness is the strongest armor. Balendin has always been cautious. Now that he’s wounded he will be more so. Worse, he knows he’s facing Kettral. He’s seen us.”
Belton spat onto the broken ground. “Isn’t this what you Kettral do? Sneak around? Kill people?”
“It is, and we’ve done a lot of it, so you’ll have to trust me when I tell you this won’t work. If we go after Balendin right now, there will be sneaking and killing. We will be the ones getting killed.”
“There is no blade,” Newt agreed, “as keen as surprise.”
“I understand this,” Huutsuu said. “A child of five understands there is a good time for a raid, and a foolish time. We do not have the choice. We cannot hold this wall forever.”
“We will hold it as long as we can,” the Flea replied. “Then we will fall back to the next position, then the next. We will purchase time for the men and women of Annur, and we will wait for the leach to make a mistake.”
“Wait?” Huutsuu demanded. “That is how you plan to kill this leach? Wait? This is not the way of a warrior.”
Outside the stone chamber someone screamed, a long, lost, awful cry, then fell viciously silent. Valyn’s blood blazed at the sound, his hand dropped to his ax, but there was no attack, not yet. The soldier was battling his own agony, nothing more, nothing less.
“You call Ananshael the Coward’s God,” the Flea said finally.
Huutsuu stiffened. “He shields the weak from their pain.”
“We have another name for the Lord of the Grave: the Patient God.”
“Patience is no virtue for a warrior.”
“I’m not a warrior,” the Flea replied quietly. “I am a killer.”
* * *
Late that same night, after the legionaries had finally plugged the breach in the wall with a jumble of hastily cut logs, after the Annurian dead were buried in shallow graves and the wounded given what comfort there was to give, after everyone on the south side of the wall had collapsed into a few hours of fitful sleep, Huutsuu found Valyn sitting atop one of the guard towers, staring blindly over the land to the north.
“How many are there?” he asked, not bothering to turn.
The woman smelled of blood-soaked leather and something else, a sharp, pungent scent. It took Valyn a moment to realize she was drinking some sort of strong spirit.
“I don’t know. Our songs say the Urghul are numberless as the stars.”
Valyn grunted. “Then we’re fucked.”
Huutsuu’s earthenware bottle clinked as she set it on the stones next to him. “Drink.”
Valyn took the rough bottle around the neck and lifted it. The liquor burned his split lip, burned all the way down his throat. “Where did you get this?”
“They were hidden in a back room of the fort. I don’t know why.”
“Smugglers,” Valyn said. “Probably running the stuff up or down the Haag.” It seemed strange that this place had been used for something so normal, strange that there were people beyond the scope of the battle, men and women inside the empire and beyond who knew nothing about the violence that had exploded there that day, whose thoughts were bent instead toward saving a few coppers on a jug of rotgut. Valyn shook his head, took another swig, then passed the bottle back.
Huutsuu drank long and deep, swirled the spirits inside the crock. The sound reminded Valyn of waves, of the sea around the Islands, of endless hours swimming or running the beaches. He had thought he was beyond sorrow, that the events of Andt-Kyl had hammered it out of him. Earlier in the day, he’d listened to thousands of men and women fighting for their lives, Urghul and Annurian alike, fighting and dying, and he’d felt nothing but a savage animal anticipation. That the sound of splashing should haul back all the old emotions-if only for a moment-baffled him. He took the jug from Huutsuu, threw back a slug, then another, and another, until the feeling subsided.
He could feel her eyes on him. “Tens of thousands,” she said finally. “That is how many of my people came to your land. There are more scattered through these miserable forests, but here, fighting us, maybe thirty thousand.”
Valyn stared at her, then laughed. It seemed the only response. “Tens of thousands against less than a hundred. The Flea can talk all he wants about waiting to kill Balendin. If we survive one more day, I’ll eat this ’Shael-spawned bottle.”
Huutsuu hesitated. “I saw you fight today.…”
Valyn shook his head. “So?”
“You killed two dozen men. Alone.”
The number sounded insane. Certainly, there were men and women among the Kettral who claimed to have killed scores of foes, but that was over the course of many missions, twenty or thirty years; not standing in front of a wall battling a whole army.
“Why didn’t they shoot me?” he asked.
His memory of the battle was jagged and haphazard, as though he’d been viciously drunk, or only dreaming. There had been the wall behind him and the Urghul in front, the corpses of warriors and horses piled high on every side, a barricade of sorts, one he’d hewn from the flesh of his foes. It was an awful position, open to even the most amateur bowman, and the Urghul had never lacked for bows.
“They tried,” Huutsuu replied. “The arrows … flew aside. It was as though they hit a wall of air. The leach, the Edish woman with no tongue, she stood on that wall. Her eyes were fixed on you until the sun fell.”
“Sigrid,” Valyn said slowly.
It made sense. According to the Flea, the woman was too exhausted to fight, too weary to work any significant kenning. Flicking a few dozen arrows wide, though-that might be something she could manage. Valyn found himself laughing again, the sound rough and ragged. “There you have it. I might have killed two dozen of your riders, but I was hiding behind a shield.” He shook his head. “Some warrior.”