I
It was a sight almost as glorious as an
Askhan army. On a litter carried by ten men, Erlaan-Orlassai
surveyed his Mekhani warriors; fifty thousand near enough, arrayed
in the best war gear their tribes could provide. Under the reign of
their new king, the people of Mekha had responded swiftly,
gathering what resources they could. With bronze taken from Askhan
settlements, forged by armourers and smiths held as slaves from the
same raids, the Mekhani made spear and arrow tips that could pierce
the armour of a legionnaire. Under the guidance of the great
Orlassai and his two strange companions, the Mekhani had learnt
afresh how to best cure the hides of the behemodons, fashioning
shields and armour almost as strong as metal.
Gone were the stone axes and
howling mobs, the infighting and wildness. In quiet warbands led by
their shaman-chiefs, the Mekhani horde waited on the dunes for
their lord and commander. Behemodons stood sullenly at their
chains, their backs heavy with howdahs, catapults and enormous
spear-throwing bows constructed under the direction of their
returned masters. Around totem-standards bedecked with bones and
feathers, the groups of warriors knelt in the sand, hands raised to
their brows as their king approached from dawnwards, the sun at his
back.
At Erlaan-Orlassai's command, the
bier-bearers stopped and lowered him to the ground. Wood creaked
under his massive tread as he rose from his throne and strode down
onto the sands of his adopted kingdom. Armoured he was, a few scant
patches of rune-etched flesh visible between hard leather plates
and rings of bronze and iron. His bizarre, boyish face regarded the
army from beneath a helm crested with a dozen long feathers of red
and blue and black.
The king grinned his approval,
revealing teeth like ailur fangs.
"See the glory of Mekha
restored!" Erlaan-Orlassai shouted, raising his arms into the air,
the runes upon his tongue twisting his words into the guttural
language of the desert people. "Feel now the strength that lies
within these lands; a strength longforgotten but now
recalled."
Erlaan-Orlassai drew a curved
sword almost as long as a man is tall and held it up, its gilded
blade gleaming in the rising sun. Fifty thousand spears were raised
in return.
"Who shall rule again?" bellowed
the Mekhani king.
"Orlassai!" came the reply, the
sands shifting at the thunderous noise.
"Which land shall rule again?"
The king's sword swept in an arc, encompassing the surrounding
deserts.
"Mekha!"
The blade stopped, pointing to
coldwards; neither at the dunes, nor the scrub, nor even at the
river that glittered at the edge of the horizon, but at the lands
beyond, and a city encircled by mountains.
"Who shall fall to us?" Erlaan
roared.
The answering cry was even louder
than the others, fuelled by generations of scorn and hatred,
powered by fifty thousand grievances and two hundred years of
subjugation.
"Askh!"