As Corlas sent soldiers to defend the area, he heard ‘Commander!’ behind him. It was the gerent, white as a ghost and clutching a bloody bandage to his side. A worried healer stood next to him and six of his personal guards, who looked ready to support him should he stumble. Corlas reported quickly to Ateppa as another volley of fireballs plummeted around them, cracking buildings and spitting fire.
‘All right, Corlas,’ the gerent said. ‘You take the walls. I’ll see to the breach.’
Corlas jogged towards a stairway as, behind him, the gerent began to yell instructions. The situation was dire – without mages they were almost defenceless against any magic thrown at them. He glanced across the town as he bounded up the stairs and received a small boost of hope. The fireballs, while they damaged buildings, had not resulted in as many casualties as the enemy no doubt hoped. The fires did not spread well in the dry, stony town, so apart from those caught directly in a fireball’s path, or who had been standing nearby as the tar flew out, all remained unharmed.
Reaching the top of the stairs, he saw a bow gesturing upwards. High in the sky, out of arrow range, clusters of Graka were flying. Corlas squinted to see what they carried – it looked like large cauldrons between groups of four. As the first group moved above the fort, they tipped their cauldron and liquid spilled downwards, glinting crystal in the sun’s rays. It hit the ground and soldiers screamed. Corlas saw smoke rising from thrashing bodies as bones showed through ruined flesh.
‘Acid,’ he muttered to himself.
Below, the gerent was ordering soldiers to stay under whatever cover they could find. Corlas saw a group run into a house, narrowly avoiding an acid downpour. A moment later a flaming ball smashed through the roof. A foetid stench rose into the air to accompany the screams.
Fighting broke out as Arabodedas and Vorthargs reached the breach. Kainordan soldiers held them back easily, as the opening was only wide enough for seven or eight to get through at a time. Only a few Vorthargs managed to leap past the defence on their powerful hind legs. Like their smaller frog cousins, the mottled Vorthargs were able to jump long distances and cling to the sides of buildings. Their mouths were wide like those of frogs, though they had pudgy noses, ears like dried apricots and piggy eyes. More troublesome were their burning spit and large upward-curving tusks. Corlas saw a Vortharg spring onto a soldier, hang on with the slimy pads of its feet, and bite down on his head. Being so outnumbered, however, any Vorthargs past the line were quickly felled.
Above, the Graka were leaving with their empty cauldrons, no doubt to get another load. ‘What I wouldn’t give for a swarm of Zyvanix,’ Corlas growled.
A second group of Arabodedas and Vorthargs detached from the army. Another volley of fireballs shot up into the air. The floor beneath Corlas shook as some smashed against the upper walls, one landing directly on a group of bows. As the Arabodedas and Vorthargs drew close, Corlas saw another three mages disengage from the group.
‘Oh no you don’t,’ he said, and shouted, ‘All bows, target the mages!’
Shouts came from taskmasters passing the order along the line, and the barrage of arrows pouring down shifted to concentrate on the three mages. As one began to summon energy, the other two found themselves facing an impossible number of arrows. Frantically they cast their deflection spells, but as the First Mage raised his hands to unleash a bolt, he fell screaming with an arrow in his heart. The bolt flew off randomly, hitting a place high up the walls without punching through. The other mages retreated.
Arabodedas and Vorthargs were again nearing the breach. ‘Target the Vorthargs first!’ Corlas shouted, for the Arabodedas were more easily held back. He frowned at these ground attacks, which were hardly effective. With a breach so small, and so many archers on the walls, each wave met death quickly. It didn’t make sense.
In the distance he saw Graka taking off again. He squinted more closely at the Fenvarrow army. Minions of the dark lord ran here and there, attending to the catapults and large vats, which, Corlas guessed, contained the deadly acid. A good proportion of the army seemed to be focused on keeping the aerial attacks going, while the waves of ground attackers seemed almost a distraction. Suddenly Corlas knew what needed to be done. As long as they stayed within the fort, the Shadowdreamer could pelt down death from the skies. The fort had become a trap and they needed to get out.
He ran back down the stairs, at the bottom carefully avoiding ground where acid still smoked. At the breach he found a phalanx commander organising the defence.
‘Where is the gerent?’ he demanded.
‘In the main square.’
Corlas covered the distance as quickly as he could. In the main square he found Ateppa on a stretcher, face drained of colour and set in a grimace of pain, blood trickling from his lips. Ignoring the healer’s pleas, he was sitting up to shout orders. Troops had scattered so as not to provide large targets for the aerial attacks, and everyone looked edgy. There were more than enough soldiers at the breach to take care of the small waves of attackers, so a large portion of the fort’s force was standing idle and useless.
‘What are you doing here?’ shouted Ateppa as he caught sight of Corlas. ‘Get back to the walls!’
‘Gerent Ateppa!’ puffed Corlas. ‘We must leave the fort!’
Soldiers nearby were paying attention.
‘What?’ said Ateppa. ‘Are you mad?’
‘If we stay,’ replied Corlas, ‘we will surely be defeated. Without mages to protect us, we cannot withstand these aerial attacks!’
‘You talk of suicide!’ said Ateppa. ‘They cannot pelt us forever. We must hold, and wait for their main attack. They will not take us by ground!’
‘This is their main attack, gerent!’ said Corlas, flinching as a fireball slammed into a nearby building. ‘We must leave the fort!’
‘Get back to the walls!’ screamed Ateppa, his ghostly pallor flushing red for a moment. ‘Do as I command!’ He slumped back onto the stretcher, moaning with pain.
Corlas stared hard at his superior. He needed to act, else the gerent was going to sentence them all to doom. Though it pained him greatly, he reached a decision quickly and turned to the gerent’s personal guards.
‘You blades take the gerent to his quarters and see to his safety. I am taking full command.’
‘ What ?’ screamed Ateppa. ‘You dare to …’
‘You are wounded, sir,’ said Corlas loudly. ‘You have lost too much blood and are not thinking clearly. If we are to win this battle,’ he turned to the soldiers surrounding, ‘we must fight. Soldiers – do you wish to be cooked here like crabs in a pot? Or shall we take this battle into our own hands? Shall we give the Shadowdreamer more than he bargains for?’
A chorus of assent went up. Already the soldiers had seen too much carnage as they stood powerless to stop it.
‘You’re relieved of duty, commander!’ shouted the enraged Ateppa. ‘Return to your quarters!’
Corlas stood, hands on hips, staring hard at the gerent’s guards. ‘We are dead if we stay,’ he said.
One of the guards, an older man with a weathered face, looked from Corlas to Ateppa. Ateppa was writhing angrily on his stretcher, trying to stand up. The guard nodded slowly. ‘Come, blades,’ he said. ‘Let’s get the gerent to safety.’
Two men picked up the stretcher as the gerent shouted curses and protests and carried him from the main square. Corlas immediately sought out the officers in the crowd.