The carnage was breath-taking.
Not a single Southerner was left standing on Ahrenrhen, and Medair did not doubt that the thousands who had so recently raised their voice in battle-chant beyond the wall were also lying in pools of their own blood. Medair had never imagined that the Horn would bring such a quick, decisive victory. So terribly one-sided.
She lifted wide, disbelieving eyes to the jewelled spirits. Most were rising slowly into the air. Only one remained, all brilliant red and blue. His bright gaze was fixed on the boy who wore the pale skin of a conqueror, but whose firm jaw revealed his Corminevar heritage.
Heal Palladium, said the Emperor. The ringing, unnatural notes of the Horn made the simple statement an order, a proclamation. It was all he said, before following the army of dead, up away from Athere. They were still beautifuclass="underline" deadly jewels of light which rose with ever-increasing speed until they were lost among the stars.
Only Cor-Ibis' faint, steady glow remained. He reached out once more and touched Medair’s arm. She was not certain if he thought her in need of support, or simply wanted to keep her in reach. Before her eyes could adjust properly to starlight and Keridahl-glow, dozens of magelights were conjured all along the length of Ahrenrhen. The brighter illumination revealed that the stones of the wall were awash with blood. Spirals of noxious vapour continued to rise from the bodies of the fallen giants, and those nearest the fumes were the first to move, picking their way awkwardly across the corpses of enemies and allies.
"So many," someone said.
"An army able to defeat any other." The Kier, after a lingering glance at her son, crossed the slick stone to where Medair stood. "A more decisive battle than any could have expected. Again, Keris an Rynstar, I can only offer you my gratitude."
Medair just turned away. Unforgivably rude, but she could not face this woman’s thanks or the reason for them. She could not do anything but struggle to remain upright, for if she fell she would be kneeling in the blood of those for whom she had summoned death. She could smell it. The air was full of a thick iron tang, wet with it.
The Ibisians allowed her to stand alone, gazing up at the palace. She wanted to shut out their voices as well, but that was not so easy.
"We must stop these fumes," said a voice she didn’t know, and someone began to cast, voice muted. No more set-spells ready, it seemed, and no doubt reserves were low. The battle had so nearly gone the other way. Outnumbered and for once magically outmatched, the Ibisians would have crumbled and fallen under the onslaught. Burning swords inside the walls, Palladian White Snake blood running in the streets. Instead, Athere had lost a few hundred at most, and an entire army was dead. Because Medair had blown the Horn.
They were discussing funeral pyres behind her; ways to efficiently dispose of bodies. The corpses of men and women, of the army of Decians who had come to retake an Empire, and overthrow a thief. The conversation had an air of unreality, and more than one voice shook. Even Ibisians could not quite hide the horror that any sane person must feel at having witnessed death. Or perhaps they merely trembled at thoughts of their narrow escape, after they had been so nearly overwhelmed.
What had Estarion said? "A name of hope and honour. A name which made a promise." This was what she had set out to do, after alclass="underline" defend Athere from invasion. Everything had changed, yet was still the same. But as with every decision Medair had made, she was left with a heavy load of consequence and hurt. She had used the Horn and thousands had died and she was not even certain it made any difference. Not to the deep, festering wound at the heart of an invaded land.
A familiar brown leather shape was pushed into her hands.
"I think you dropped this," Avahn said. He waited until her fingers had closed on the satchel before letting go. Medair looked down at the symbol of a role she could no longer claim as her own. Could she do nothing but betray the past? The Horn had drawn Medair’s own people back from the dead to fight beside Ibisians, to save Ibisians. No right choice, no wrong decision. That didn’t make it any better.
"There are some Southerners still alive," Avahn told her. "Among the wounded. And there are even small groups untouched outside the walls. It seems that if they dropped their weapons they were spared, though few enough did that. The smart ones are fleeing, but they’ll be rounded up soon enough."
He paused, perhaps waiting for a response, but Medair had gone to a place beyond words, where there was only blood, and her name.
"Riders to the east!" someone exclaimed sharply.
Avahn must be using a night-sight enchantment, since he seemed able to see through the gloom, peering into the distance. "Not riders, I should think," he murmured. "Keris N’Taive called them deskai, didn’t she? This, I want to see." He turned back to Medair. "Come down with me when the Kier greets these marvellous vassals for the first time. Else I will not be able to witness it."
"You’ve been given the job of looking after me," Medair said. Her voice was small, a thread.
"Just so. Come down, Medair. Refusal is not an option."
Resistance, at least, was too much effort. Medair allowed him to guide her down the stair and out Aerele Gate, all the time aware of walking through the blood of the people she had killed, stepping over outflung arms. Only the gloom made it possible to pass, hiding the faces of the men and women whose lives had been taken by the Horn.
There was a patch of clear grass, close enough to the Kier to listen, and reaching it Medair refused to go further. As more magelights were summoned she stared into the dark to have something to look at which was neither the Ibisians she had saved, nor the Farakkians lying still and bloody.
Those who approached were not riders, but a small army of riderless horses, most black or dark brown. As the main body slowed, a distinctive pale grey horse led a small detachment forward to the city. Each and every one of them trotted at least a foot above the ground, a fortunate thing considering the thousands of corpses.
Although the deskai bore no saddles or bridles, each of them had an odd arrangement of cloth and leather slung around their necks. The purpose of this burden became clear after the lead group had halted some thirty feet from the gate. They underwent a swift, writhing twist which was less than pleasant to watch and suddenly there were nine men and women instead. All were well over seven feet tall. Each made identical movements to tie apron-like garments around their not-inconsiderable waists. Their skin ranged from pink-pale to charcoal darker even than the people of the Farakkan’s south-west.
The grey had turned into a dark young woman with short-cropped white hair. Tanis Araina, Medair presumed.
"Ekarrel." The deskai leader was smiling in open relief as she executed a precise bow. "Praise to the Four, you are unharmed!"
"My thanks, Keris Araina," the Kier said. Nothing in Inelkar’s face betrayed that she had not met this woman before. But Keris Araina’s entire race hadn’t existed a day ago, and the Kier must be wondering what to say to her. This was now no more Inelkar’s world than it was Medair’s.
A touch on her arm drew her attention and she found the Kierash, under Cor-Ibis' escort, at her shoulder.
"Keris an Rynstar," the boy began. "I recognise that now is not the time, but I would like to speak with you, at your convenience."
Medair’s lips curved, though she doubted it was a cheerful expression. She needed only one more push to shame herself with hysteria.