Eiriann sneered, ‘That’s very confident, very old King Lorn.’
‘Eiriann, remember what we talked about. .’ Lorn gave her a sly smile. ‘Keep yourself safe.’
But Eiriann was afraid for him; he could see it plainly on her pretty face. She nodded, looking down at Poppy.
‘I want to come with you!’ shouted Bezarak. ‘Damn it, Lorn, I can fight!’
‘Good,’ said Lorn, ‘because you might have to. If any of those raiders make it up here I expect you to defend my daughter. Hear me, Bezarak.’
Bezarak agreed though clenched jaws. ‘All right.’
Lorn wheeled his horse around. ‘All of you, defend yourselves. If you have to fight, then fight. Head north if it looks like Aztar’s men have won. Otherwise I will see you again.’ He gave Eiriann one last, longing look. ‘Be careful.’
‘And you,’ whispered Eiriann.
With his sword at his side, Lorn tucked down against his horse and galloped toward the battle.
Gilwyn knew the battle was lost.
Aztar’s fresh fighters had swarmed the field, overwhelming them. Falouk’s northerners put up a remarkable defence, but they were ill-trained compared to Aztar’s men, who were mounted and who easily trampled them. Only the kreels kept them from being slaughtered entirely. Gilwyn still had more than twenty of the beasts in his command. And though tiring, the young kreels continued ripping through the Voruni ranks, their tails whipping like cobras, their great maws snapping down mercilessly on limbs. In the chaos of the fight Gilwyn struggled to keep control, to make his mind meet those of the kreels, but he had lost control almost completely now and could only watch as the beasts’ reptilian instincts took over. Somewhere in his mind Gilwyn could feel Ruana, floating through his brain, struggling along with him to see through the eyes of the maddened kreels. But like Gilwyn, Ruana could no longer hold the beasts. Instead, Gilwyn darted through the battle on Emerald’s back, now thickly engaged in his own fight. With his clubbed hand he could barely work his sword, and so kept it tucked beneath his arm while he held fast to Emerald’s reins. The female kreel fought ferociously.
Slowly, unceasingly, Gilwyn’s fellows were falling. He had already seen Paxon crushed beneath a Voruni scimitar. The deadly blow had shattered the old man’s skull. Nearby, Falouk had gathered his remaining men into a huddle, trying to increase their fighting power. Ghost still rode invisibly across the sands, hacking with almost inexhaustible fury. And Greygor, like a leviathan, took on all comers with his meaty battle axe. Alone on the field, the sands around him bubbled with Voruni blood. Yet they were all horribly outnumbered. Gilwyn wondered if they should pull back, retreat to the city before they all died.
‘No!’ he seethed. He hurried Emerald against an onrushing horseman, barrelling over beast and man. There were others coming for him now, at least two more. He could see them only peripherally, their scimitars raised. He fed the view to Emerald, who leaped sideways to avoid the blow, then turned to face their new attackers.
Then, another horseman got Gilwyn’s attention, riding hard for his two enemies. This one rode a big black gelding and had a face as maniacal as a demon. With broadsword raised, the stranger blasted into the battle, cutting down one of the raiders. His bearded face split with a howl even as blood sprayed his body. Shocked and utterly confused, Gilwyn hurried to the stranger’s aid. He was an older man, big and northern, with short white hair and foreign armour and the worst expression of fury Gilwyn had ever seen. As the remaining raider engaged him, the stranger stabbed his bloodied sword forward, pushing it through the man’s chest in one enormous thrust. The blade burst through the raider’s back, exploding outward in a scarlet bloom.
‘Who are you?’ Gilwyn cried as he hurried toward his saviour.
‘Lorn!’ replied the man. ‘You fight for the Jadori?’
‘Yes,’ Gilwyn sputtered. ‘But. .’
‘Fight, boy! Talk is for women!’
True or not, there was no time for it. Another half-dozen raiders were already charging toward them. The man called Lorn drove his horse toward them, taking the brunt of the attack. His sword moved expertly from foe to foe, parrying every blow, never missing an advantage. Gilwyn and Emerald leapt to his defence, landing in the midst of the melee. The kreel’s fast tail slashed the nearest horse out from under its rider. Lorn’s sword cleaved the air and enemy flesh. The sight of him was terrifying, the glee he took in killing astonishing. But he was on their side, Gilwyn knew, and that gave him comfort.
The carnage against his men astonished Prince Aztar. Still safe atop his dune, he had watched in dread as the kreels ripped his men apart and the strange folk of Grimhold fought with inhuman strength. It had been a devastating morning for Aztar. He had lost three of his five Zarturks, leaving only Narween alive from the first wave. Thankfully, Baraki had done a good job of turning the tide in their favour. Now, at least, Aztar knew the day was his.
Yet still the one thing he needed as much as victory evaded him. Shalafein had not shown himself.
‘Where is he?’ he wondered aloud. He scanned the field for the Bronze Knight yet still saw no hint of him. Enraged, Aztar at last broke from the dune and galloped forward. His protectors — two hundred of them — hurriedly followed him.
‘Shalafein!’ he cried. ‘Show yourself! Fight me, you cursed creature!’
Baraki saw his half brother at once. Breaking off from the battle, he rode up to Aztar.
‘Enough, Brother,’ he shouted. ‘Shalafein is not here. You must get to safety.’
‘No! He must be here!’ Aztar pulled his own scimitar and shook it madly in the air. ‘Here I am, Shalafein! Come and fight me!’
No one answered Aztar’s call — not at first. Then, the massive man in the spiky armour turned to look at him. Aztar’s heart froze. Around the giant were the broken bodies of dozens of his fighters. The huge man held his two-bladed axe in both hands, resting it like a club, the silent slits in his helmet fixing hatefully on Aztar.
‘That one,’ said Aztar. ‘Who is he?’
Baraki shook his head dreadfully. ‘A thing of Grimhold.’
Both men were still as the giant took its first plodding steps toward them.
‘That’s not the Bronze Knight,’ said Aztar.
‘No,’ agreed Baraki.
‘Stop him, Baraki.’
Baraki blanched. ‘We have tried, Brother.’
Aztar’s fist tightened around his blade. ‘Then we will do so together.’
On the tower of the white wall, Minikin had watched the battle and the deaths of her friends. With cold, steely eyes she had contained all of her emotions, even when Kamar died. She had barely said a single word to her companions on the roof, those Inhumans who had come to defend the city. Though the city was filled with commotion, Minikin remained silent. She had watched the dawn turn into morning and the morning into a nightmare. And all the while she had held her amulet and communed with Lariniza. She was not really praying with the spirit of the Eye. More precisely, she was talking. As though conversing with an old friend in a tavern, she put her troubles into Lariniza’s hand and let the great spirit feed her shaken soul.
It had been a high price, but it was the way the Akari wanted it. What they would do for her — for all of Jador — would harm their souls as much as it would Minikin’s, and they had only agreed to do so if no other choice was apparent. So Minikin had let her friends fight and die, knowing they could never stand against Aztar, helpless to aid them until nearly all their breath was squeezed away. As she watched the forces of Aztar overwhelm her companions, she hated herself. She had tried so hard to accommodate the Seekers, to be a good leader, to help. .
Today I become death, she told Lariniza. And not just for my enemies.
Lariniza was quiet for a moment, but Minikin could feel her sympathy. She, too, had watched the good folk of Jador die and been moved by it. But she had held out the small hope that they might prevail without Akari magic. Now, like Minikin, Lariniza knew they could not.