I
Seeing his army marching across several rough
wooden bridges thrown across the Nakuus, Erlaan wondered if Askhos
had enjoyed the same feeling of power when he had loosed the First
Legion against the tribes of Askhor. This was the start of
something new, a fresh force of nature arising to claim the
world.
The king-messiah strode at the
head of the Mekhani host, tens of thousands of warriors following
him onto Askhan-claimed soil. Behemodons waded effortlessly through
the sluggish river, urged on by the goads of their mahouts. The
wood of the bridges shook with the tramp of so many feet.
The last time he had passed this
way, Erlaan had been wrapped up in concerns for his father and
himself. Though he had come of age, he realised now that he had
still been a boy in mind. When Ullsaard had defeated Cosuas's army
and Lakhyri – masquerading as high brother – had ushered Erlaan and
his father to safety, he had been afraid and uncertain. He had
doubted whether he would ever see Askh again.
Certainly he had not foreseen the
manner of his return at that bleak time. Now the fear and doubts
were gone. He had lain to rest the worries of his father and taken
up the mantle of a true king. As his body had been strengthened, so
had his ambition and resolve. He could scarcely believe that he had
once thought himself unfit to become a ruler. Perhaps that was the
price of a position inherited, not earned. Not so on this day. It
was not by right of the Blood or accident of birth that he would
become lord of the world, but by his own hand and his own
will.
His thoughts strayed from Askh to
Ullsaard. He admitted that he was thankful to the usurper; for his
strong words, his guidance and for forcing Erlaan to fight for what
he believed to be his. The priests thought Ullsaard was blunt, if
not outright stupid, but Erlaan was going to assume nothing. After
so much effort to take it, the Askhan king would not relinquish his
grip on the Crown without a hard fight.
The horde of Mekhani warriors
were chivvied into a more organised column of march as they struck
out into Okhar, heading almost directly coldwards in accordance
with Eriekh's information. Midday had passed and the army was still
divided by the Nakuus when Erlaan's rune-gifted sight spotted his
scouts returning from dawnwards. Skittering through the grass on
the backs of their lacertils, the outriders were returning with
speed and purpose.
The only reason for such haste
would be a sighting of Askhan forces. It was inevitable that an
army of the size Erlaan commanded could not progress unseen, but it
was a blow that their first encounter with the enemy was so soon.
As the lizard-riders approached, Erlaan passed the word for the
army to halt and wait for those on the other side of the river to
catch up.
"If we are discovered, we cannot
allow the Askhans to escape to take word to their king," Erlaan
told the cabal of the oldest shamans that served as his general
staff. "We must obliterate them entirely."
"As you say, mighty Orlassai,"
one of them replied, Erlaan could not remember his name; the
shamans all appeared as shrivelled, near-dead husks to the
king-messiah's eyes, their font of life energy almost spent. "We
shall slay them all."
Several of the shamans left to
help with the mustering of the army from the march, leaving Erlaan
with two hunched, aging companions. He ignored them, wondering
where Eriekh and Asirkhyr would be found. They were probably still
with the rear of the column, ensuring that there was no
dawdling.
Riding up to their ruler, the
handful of scouts leapt from the backs of their lizard mounts and
prostrated themselves in the patchy grass. Their obeisance gave the
king-messiah mixed thoughts; such unthinking dedication was
gratifying, but having been raised in the court of Askh where there
was little formality Erlaan could not help but feel a small amount
of embarrassment at their abasement. He signalled for them to
rise.
"You have sighted Askhans?" said
the king.
"Yes, divine Orlassai," said the
chief of the scouts, a haggardfaced elder called Inomasai. He
turned and pointed back to where he had come from. "Soldiers riding
on giant snakes, in the hills towards the dawn."
Erlaan said nothing about the
vagueness of this report, consoling himself that when the new
empire was established the Mekhani would learn of such things as
hours and miles. He looked to where the scout pointed and saw that
the ground rose up to a steep, scrub-filled slope about four miles
away. If the scouts were there, the Askhan force for which they
were the eyes would be another five to ten miles behind.
"Did they see you?" he
demanded.
Inomasai shrugged and looked at
his underlings, who cautiously shook their heads.
"They gave no cry of warning, so
it is not likely, mighty Orlassai," said Inomasai. "I stayed for a
while hidden in the grass and they did not change
direction."
"And which direction was
that?"
The scout hesitated before
replying. The Mekhani used landmarks and well-known trails to
describe places in the desert; without such references, Inomasai
was finding it difficult to explain what he had seen.
"They move along the hills, from
the cold to the hot," said the chief of scouts, waving his hand in
the direction of the scouts travel. "They head towards the
river."
Absorbing this information
without comment, Erlaan turned his gaze back to the Nakuus, several
miles behind. At a rough guess, there were still more than a tenth
of his army to cross the river. He had to make a
decision.
"Send word to the rear to cross
as soon as possible," he told the remaining shamans. "The rest of
the army will march to dawnwards. If the enemy scouts spot us they
must not be allowed to give the Askhans too much warning. We will
fall upon them like a scouring wind and sweep onto whatever force
it is they protect."
"As you command, mighty
Orlassai," the shamans said in unison, bowing low before scampering
away.
While the orders rippled through
the army, Erlaan loosened his sword in its sheath. The thought of
battle excited him. This magnificent body he had been given by the
sect of the Temple had not been truly tested yet. He wanted to know
just what sort of ruin he was capable of unleashing.
It took a while for the Mekhani
to settle on their new course, and there were a few disagreements
as shaman-chiefs argued over who took which position in the line.
While he waited, Erlaan sent Inomasai to round up the scouts and
press into the hills ahead of the main attack. From all around, the
lizard riders converged, more than four thousand of them advancing
as a screen.
Eventually the desert-dwellers
arranged themselves on the new line of advance and with a signal
from Erlaan the army set out at a fast pace towards the hills.
Erlaan loped to the front with long strides, golden eyes scanning
the hillsides for signs of the Askhans. The lacertil riders had
reached the bottom of the slopes when the king-messiah spotted the
first kolubrids.
Even from this distance, Erlaan
could see the exchange of arrows and slingshots as the two
skirmishing screens clashed. Far from sweeping away all before
them, the Mekhani advanced faltered quickly, losing dozens to the
volleys of the Askhans' bellows bows. This was the first thing to
give Erlaan pause; the number of kolubrid scouts present indicated
a larger force than he had anticipated, perhaps even a full legion.
It made little difference, he decided. Even a full legion numbered
no more than five or six thousand legionnaires; little match for
the tens of thousands at Erlaan's command.
Despite their best efforts, the
lacertils were driven back down the slopes, and then further onto
the grassland, harassed by the bellows bows of their foes. Erlaan
reckoned his main army was a mile away, no more. Even if the Askhan
force had already received warning, they would have no more than a
six or seven mile head start over the king-messiah. Certainly that
did not give them enough time to prepare a march camp or other
defensive position, and though a smaller, nimbler force, the
armoured legionnaires would not move as swiftly over the rough
ground as Erlaan's warriors. It would only be a matter of time
before they were caught.
When the king-messiah was half a
mile from the foot of the closest hill, he saw the sun glinting on
spear points and shields ahead. It seemed that the enemy commander
had come to the same conclusion as Erlaan and had decided to fight
instead of flee. Phalanx after phalanx of legionnaires appeared at
the crest of the hills, their standards flapping.
The soldiers were as easy to see
to Erlaan's eyes as if they were no more than an arm's reach away.
He recognised the standard and colours of the Seventeenth. Things
may have changed since he had left the empire, but when last Erlaan
had been in Askh, the Seventeenth had been commanded by Harrakil.
Dredging through his memories, Erlaan recalled that he was a good
commander – bad commanders did not become First Captains – but not
of remarkable talent or great achievement. He had spent most of
Ullsaard's war for the Crown guarding Governor Adral of
Nalanor.
Raising his hand, Erlaan called
for the army to halt and spread out for attack. As the order
rippled through the tribes, the Mekhani moved into position,
placing behemodons between their warbands, while the crews in the
howdahs readied their war machines.
While this continued, the Askhans
were also preparing. Erlaan could see kolubrid riders hurrying back
and forth between the First Captain and the company commanders,
carrying the details of the battle plan. Positioned at the top of
the steepest slopes, the legion had the advantage of ground; the
kolubrids were trying to push back Erlaan's skirmishers and gain
the flanks, but so far were being held between the two
armies.
"Let us see how you fare against
a commander who knows how you fight," Erlaan growled.
He had spent much of the winter
preparing the shaman-chiefs for such an encounter, impressing upon
them the need to avoid challenging the Askhan spear blocks head-on.
It had taken some considerable time, but the king-messiah had
hammered home the importance of tactics and manoeuvre over
individual bravery and strength. The Mekhani could not hope to
defeat a phalanx one-to-one, on attack or defence; with his
subordinates, Erlaan had drilled his troops to feint against the
front of the enemy before using their speed to get between the
Askhan formations to attack from the side and rear.
Erlaan flexed his fingers in
anticipation and was about to draw his sword to signal the attack
when a doubt stole into his thoughts. Seeing through the cloud of
pleasure that had filled his mind at the prospect of battle, he
paused for a moment to think about the situation.
"Why does he fight?" the
king-messiah asked himself. "What can he hope to gain?"
One possibility was that Harrakil
had despatched part of his force to take warning to Ullsaard while
his legion acted as rearguard. That seemed a reasonable
explanation. There was another, and it unsettled Erlaan. What if,
against all expectation, the Askhan force was stronger than one
legion? The kolubrids had fought so hard to keep the heights, it
was not beyond the realm of possibility that more legionnaires lay
in wait beyond the hills.
Growling in irritation, Erlaan
weighed up the possibilities. The show of defiance could be an
elaborate bluff by Harrakil, conceived to fool Erlaan into thinking
the Askhans were stronger than they were; an act of desperation on
being confronted by such an overwhelming force. Yet, if it was not
a bluff…
Erlaan wished he had someone with
which to discuss his thoughts, but his priestly companions were
nowhere to be seen, and the shamans were incapable of providing any
useful insight with such a conversation. The decision remained
Erlaan's alone, without advice or encouragement.
His instinct was to attack and
have the matter settled, but he knew that good commanders did not
act on instinct alone. Harrakil thought that he faced the Mekhani
of the past; barbaric and impetuous. His plan would be based upon
that assumption. Thinking further along this line, tugging at his
thoughts like a stray thread, Erlaan considered the consequences of
what might happen. The Askhans knew the Mekhani would attack, and
that was what they wanted to happen, for whatever reason. It
followed, Erlaan concluded, that if he was simply to withdraw,
Harrakil would be left with the difficult choice of coming down
onto the grasslands, revealing his true strength in the process, or
simply letting the Mekhani move away to wreak whatever havoc they
intended.
"We will withdraw!" Erlaan
announced.
This proclamation was greeted
with some consternation by his subordinates. The nearby shamans
muttered briefly to each other until one was nominated as
spokesman. He knelt before Erlaan, eyes fixed on the
ground.
"Forgive us for doubting your
wisdom, which is brought to you upon the winds from the sky, mighty
Orlassai," the shaman began. "We seek only to understand your
impeccable will. The enemy are few and we are many, and you alone
could destroy these fools. Why do we not attack? Is it now your
intent that they escape, to take word to their king of the great
and terrible foe that they face?"
As he considered his next words,
Erlaan looked at the Askhan legion intently, unsure whether he was
making an error. It had been Asirkhyr's intent to keep their
presence as secret as long as possible. Such a factor seemed less
important now when judged against the losses that a battle would
inflict, before the campaign proper had begun. A few days mattered
little measured over a season of war.
"They are beneath us," declared
Erlaan. "When we wet our spears, it will be with the blood of men,
not dogs. If they are truly worthy of facing me, they will come
after us, and we shall oblige them with the deaths they
desire."
This seemed to satisfy the
shamans, who nodded and smiled in reply.
"Pass on my will to my brave
warriors," Erlaan told them with a wave of his hand. "The towns and
people of Ersua should not be made to wait too long for our cruel
attention."
As soon as the shamans had
departed, they were gone from Erlaan's mind. He drew his sword and
pointed it towards the icon of Askhos as the centre of the
Seventeenth's line. Drawing in a deep breath, he roared his next
words, the runes on his tongue and lips sending them clear and loud
up to the legionnaires on the hill.
"Know that I am Orlassai, the
reborn king of Mekha! Run like dogs to your cowardly master. Tell
your king that his time is short. I desire his Crown and I shall
take it. If he kneels before me and presents the Crown to me I
shall be merciful and spare his people!"
While the Mekhani turned away and
headed coldwards, there was movement in the Askhan ranks. Two
companies parted and a figure rode forward on the back of an ailur.
Even with his enhanced eyes, Erlaan could not make out the noble's
features, but the glint of gold when the man raised his spear was
an unmistakeable declaration. A shout carried on the wind, picked
up only by the king-messiah's ears; words that amused and concerned
Erlaan in equal measure, for the man who uttered them could not
have known that they would be heard.
"You want my Crown? Come and take
it, you goat-fucker!"
As the cry drifted away on the
wind, the hills were alive with movement. More golden icons
appeared, and the flapping standards of many companies. Rank after
rank of spearmen marched up the crests of the hills, until the
Askhan line was nearly a mile wide.
Four whole legions stared down at
the departing Mekhani army.
Pleased that he had not fallen
into the trap, Erlaan smiled. The priests had been wrong about
Ullsaard. He was here, and he had a force almost the equal of
Erlaan's. Almost equal, but not quite. In the past, four legions
would be a match for fifty thousand Mekhani, but not now. With the
advantage of the hills, he was safe, but on the level ground of
Okhar the advantage was with the numbers. If the Askhan king wanted
to come down and start a fight, Erlaan was happy to let
him.
But he knew it would not be that
simple. Ullsaard had already caught up a step, even if he could not
yet match Erlaan. Given the chance, he would strike when the right
opportunity presented itself; but that was not now.
"We will finish this another
time!" Erlaan cried out.
With that, he sheathed his sword,
turned his back on the Askhans and walked away.