“I think the regent wishes our presence,” said Ayrlyn.
“I get that impression.” Nylan leaned toward Tonsar. “I don’t know how long we’ll be, but I’m sure you can keep them in order.”
“All I have to do is tell them what you’ll do if the regent sees them acting up while you’re talking.” Tonsar offered a broad grin.
“There is that,” said Ayrlyn with a straight face, “but we will need to leave some alive for the Cyadorans.”
The burly subofficer was still shaking his head as the two angels eased their mounts onto the shoulder of the narrow road and up a column of levies, and then past Fornal’s squad of professionals.
The dark-bearded regent continued to look at the road ahead to the south for several moments after Nylan and Ayrlyn joined him, and the three rode silently.
“Your training has been good, but we’ll see how well they recall it when blades fly.” Fornal glanced back toward the three squads that trailed his professionals, the last two being those of the angels.
Nylan could sense one thing-his levies rode better, in better order, and more quietly than they had on the way to Kula.
“Look like armsmen now, anyway,” observed the redheaded subofficer riding to the left of Fornal.
Nylan glanced at the man, recalling the face but not the name, wishing he were better with names.
“This is Lewa, next senior to Huruc,” offered Fornal pleasantly. “He has the Rohrn levies.”
“I’ve seen him, but I’m not good with names,” admitted the engineer.
“Not me, either, ser,” returned Lewa. “But angels are easier to pick out.”
“How far to Hesra?” asked Nylan.
“Mid-morning. The Cyadorans will show after that. They don’t move that early.” Lewa snorted. “They only ride in perfect order, and each one carries a white-bronze toothpick just like the rider before him and the one behind.”
“Does it work?” asked Ayrlyn.
“As long as there are more of them than us…yes.” Lewa ran a hand through his short red hair.
One rolling hill followed another, with the dust growing with the day, and the grass getting sparser and browner with each hill. Whether they rode through the depressions between hills, or along the ridge lines, as the road wandered southward, each hill revealed yet another hill similar to the last.
Just past mid-morning, at the crest of one hill not markedly different from any other, Lewa nodded to Fornal and announced, “Hesra is over the next line of hills.”
Fornal grunted. When the road had carried them to another valley and turned east toward a gap between the hills, the regent gestured. “We’ll leave the road here, angle up to the south.”
“That will be a better position on the road from the mines,” Lewa explained.
A good two hundred cubits short of the browned grasses that covered the ridge line ahead, grasses that hung limply in the morning light, Fornal slowed his mount, then nodded to the subofficer.
“Rein up!” snapped Lewa. Both the Rohrn levies and the more professional armsmen halted.
Nylan slowed his mount on the dusty grass and stood in his stirrups, echoing the command.
“Rein up!” repeated Tonsar.
With little more than a ghost of a breeze, the dust began to settle immediately once the horses stopped.
Fornal eased his mount toward the angels. “We’ll ride over the top and out along the ridge. You ought to be able to get a good view from there,” said Fornal. “The white demons will branch from the road-they have so far anyway. If they see us, they’ll think we’re scouts.”
Nylan wondered, but said nothing as he flicked the reins for the mare to follow Fornal. Sweat poured down his neck, and the space between his shoulder blades itched-and it wasn’t all that far past mid-morning.
Several flies buzzed past his sweat-dampened forehead, and he brushed them away, wishing absently for the cool of the Westhorns.
“Hot already,” Ayrlyn observed.
“Cool compared to late summer, angels,” answered Lewa.
The ridge was covered with browning grass, with only two low trees breaking the grass line, and one of them was dead. Neither tree was much higher than the head of a mounted rider.
Fornal reined up at the crest, then inclined his head toward the redheaded subofficer.
“Hesra’s at the head of the valley where the stream turns. There’s an earthen dam there.” Lewa pointed toward a blue oval and a dark splotch to the left. “They use that for ground crops, and for stock water.” The redhead turned in the saddle. “That’s the road from the mines, and it won’t be long now, I’d say.”
The empty road from the southwest entered the valley at the west end, traversed the flat, and met up with the section they had taken at the gap on the northeast end, less than a kay from the dark splotch that Lewa had called Hesra. Where the road from the mines entered the valley, it was a line of reddish brown that angled down a brown-grassed hillside steep enough that the parts of the lower section of the hill were still in shadow, even late in the morning.
Was the haze beyond the hill a cloud? Nylan shook his head as the dust began to rise over the top of the hillside.
“We’ll wait until they’re on the lower part of the road,” Fornal said. “Then we’ll hit them. Lewa and I will take the lead. Your job, angels, is to seal off their rear.”
The four eased their mounts back beyond the ridge crest, far enough that they could still see the road, but so the Cyadorans would have difficulty seeing them.
Amid the dust came the shimmer of white, and the glinting of sun on polished shields, as the white lancers rode downhill. The van was less than a kay before the main body, and Nylan saw no scout-perhaps because Fornal had been more than effective over the past days in picking off scouts.
Nylan studied the precise column of white lancers, absently estimating the group-three score, in all-compared to perhaps four and a half for the Lornians, but the score and a half of his troops were greener than the hillside grasses had been a season earlier, and the engineer wasn’t too certain that the grasses still didn’t have more seasoning.
“Seen enough?” asked Fornal. “Let’s get them ready.”
“The Cyadorans are professionals,” Ayrlyn said to Nylan in a low voice as they rode back to where Tonsar and their levies waited.
“They’re well-drilled. That doesn’t make them professionals. If Gethen and the scrolls are right, we and Fornal have more experience than they do. I also didn’t see any archers.”
“Why doesn’t that comfort me much?” asked the flame-haired angel.
“Because their good drilling could still kill a bunch of our hotheads?”
“That thought had crossed my mind.”
“And because archers aren’t that effective when you’ve got two bodies of forces on horseback?”
“That, too.” Ayrlyn, slightly ahead of Nylan, reined up first.
Tonsar and the levies watched, silently, waiting for the angels to speak.
“The Cyadorans are about to enter the valley on the other side of this hill,” began Nylan. “They’ll be on the road. Our job is to hit the end of the column and seal off their line of retreat.” The engineer looked around. “We have more armsmen than they do. So I don’t expect either problems or complaints.”
Several of the levies swallowed, including Fuera and Wuerek, both of whom would be in Nylan’s squad.
“We’ll each take a squad, like we practiced,” Nylan said. “Tonsar, your group will be on the left, and Ayrlyn’s will be on the right, and we’ll make this simple. Just hit the column straight-on from the side and chop down anyone you can.”
“…just?” came a murmur from somewhere.
“Just,” affirmed Ayrlyn.
“Fighting is simple,” added Nylan. “You hit them and kill them before they hit you. You can do it, and I expect you to.” He looked around, and saw that the other squads were riding uphill.
“Let’s go.” The mare followed his flick of the reins, and he found himself leading the trot uphill.
Ayrlyn crossed behind him to take the lead of the right squad, and Tonsar flashed a grin as he lifted his blade.