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Gritting his teeth, Feric immersed himself in the book's contents. "Ah-ha!" he exclaimed some time later. "To Render an Object Apparently Invisible."
Thyf spell, he read,causeth the eye to flee the object enchanted, deflecting the gaze as a s.h.i.+eld deflectf a blow.
Indeed, if it be well cast, thine enemyf entire bodie shall be turned aside.
"Excellent! Just what I was looking for."
The difficult part would lie in getting Teri to leave her beloved breastplate with him to be enchanted.
Two days later, well before dawn on the day of battle, unit commanders, Terion among them for the first time, met for a final briefing with the Prince and his senior staff.
His Highness's brow was clouded this morning. He stood alone, brooding, wrapped in a black cloak.
He probably thinks he looks romantic, Terion thought, not without sympathy,but what he really resembles is a big-footed puppy someone left out in the rain. Which was, perhaps, to be expected from a boy of seventeen forced to face his own uncle in battle. Occasionally he looked sulky, as the mercenary officers around him yawned, stretched, drank hot things out of mugs or picked at their teeth with daggerpoints. It was hard to look romantic next to someone finis.h.i.+ng a piece of toast and brus.h.i.+ng crumbs off their gorget.
The Duke had protested the Princes right to the throne and had given his young nephew a scant month to surrender his birthright. Then he'd marched immediately upon the royal city ofFeval to wrest that concession from the Prince by force. Help was on its way from all quarters, but for now the Duke's army outnumbered them considerably.
A great map hung from the wall slightly to the left of the sulking Prince; the Lady General Ples rose from her place and went to it. With a pointer she began to outline the enemy's positions and their own.
As she described the intended course of the battle to come, Terion leaned towards Brunea.
"Look at that hill anchoring the end of the Prince's line," she whispered. "They've gotnothingon it but a few troops! If the Duke gets an inkling of that he'll be over that hill and through our flank like lightning."
"Lady have pity on the poor sod who gets that position," Brunea muttered back. "They're dead, whoever they are."
"Terion of Captain Tesser's company, you'll be here," the General's pointer slapped the hill they'd just been discussing. "I don't need to tell you," Ples said grimly, catching Terion's eye, "how important this position is. At all costs, we are relying on you to hold this hill."
Terion could feel the hair on the back of her neck rise. She knew the eyes of her comrades were on her, so she refused to swallow the lump in her throat until the General had caught their attention again. Then it felt like she was trying to swallow a live cat.
At the conclusion of the briefing the commanders began to file out to muster their troops in the citysquare. Suddenly, the General was at Terion's side, placing a hand on her arm to stop her. Ples nodded to Brunea, urging her to leave them alone.
"I wanted to emphasize once again the importance of your position," the General said softly. "I doubt you'll see much action way down at the end of the line, but it's still crucial. Thought I'd give you something easy for your first command." Ples smiled at her and squeezed Terion's arm. "Good luck. Carry on," she said and saluted.
Ten returned the salute smartly and walked away. Glancing over her shoulder, she saw Ples cover a smile with her gloved hand. No, she was more than smiling, she was laughing.
What does the Captain think of this easy command? Ten wondered. She glanced around and saw her commander in deep and apparently angry conversation with some of the regular army captains.
Suspicion and dismay roiled within her. Did the General think she was stupid?Well, obviously, or she wouldn't have all but suggested that I pack a picnic lunch and something to read.
But her inexperience at command didn't alter the fact that she was going to be seriously undermanned in a vulnerable position. And the General seemed to find it amusing. Teri frowned.
If she were still a sergeant she would've told her commander that the situation stank and just why she thought so. But as a commander herself...
She didn't want to look hysterical, nor like she was afraid of a hard post.I wish the Prince would stop brooding and start leading, she thought. She watched General Ples step between Captain Tesser and the Prince. Ples nodded wisely while the Captain expostulated.Not surprising, Teri thought rea.s.sured by her commander's obvious anger.This plan looks more like a model for How to Lose a Major Battle in One Easy Step. Frowning, she went to meet her troops.
In the city's main square the pre-dawn silence was shattered by the clatter of horse's hoofs on cobblestones, the rattle of armor and the barking of dogs and frustrated sergeants trying to get sleepy troopers properly lined up. The scent of animal dung and of sweat, horse and human, added sharpness to the crystalline chill of the morning air.
"Where's Feric?" Brunea asked, tying off her silver shot braid with a thong.
"He's at home," Terion said, her voice clipped, her face pale. "Asleep."
Brunea raised her brows at that.
The whole city was here to cheer the Prince's forces off to battle. And this was Terion's first command.
She'd have sworn the scrawny little newt would understand how important this was to Teri. Even if he didn't, this was war, he might not see her again, or not in one piece anyway.
She shrugged her muscled shoulders. Men were hard to figure. Wizards, downright impossible.
Terion stood on the crest of the hill and stared out over the enemy lines. Her heart sank. The Duke'smen were lined up awfully deep here and were backed by a rank of cavalry.
Suddenly I feel like the subject of a tragic ballad, she thought. One of those set to an unfortunately bouncy tune.They slew her then with sword and spear, oh, tra la la and hack-away, aye!
The air was laden with the scent of crushed gra.s.s, horses and ma.s.sed humanity. The tension was almost palpable, as though you could tear chunks of it out of the air.
She looked down at the enemy and pictured them charging the hill's gentle slope.They'll barely work up a sweat running up here, she thought.
The Duke's men were laid out in a gentle arc that half surrounded her position. And they had archers.But I have no cover. She flinched inwardly. Ten's eyes flicked left and right as she tried to second guess the enemy commander. She gave that up with a disgusted sound.Just to see them is to know their plan.
They're going to walk up here and use our noses to plow up the gra.s.s.
Her sergeant came and stood just behind her, his hairy face calm, hazel eyes worried.
It's as if theyknewthis was our weakest spot, she mused, then clicked her tongue impatiently.Irrelevant at this point, she thought.
Terion wondered if the Prince was aware of this unexpectedly heavy concentration of enemy troops. He might not have noticed how things stood way down here at the end of the line. He certainly seemed to be too busy brooding to be paying attention at the briefing.
So the kid's not a genius. At least he's good hearted. His uncle's head is nothing more than a knot of muscle at the top of his spine and he's as vicious as a drunken wolverine.
And there was something to be said about fighting on the side of the light. But at the moment, staring at the thick shouldered ma.s.s of her enemies, she couldn't remember what.
"Sergeant," she said, "send my respects to his Highness. Tell him the Duke has enough men here to push us back at the first go 'round. Tell him they have archers and they're backed by cavalry."
"Yessir," the sergeant said. He turned and called out a name, spoke briefly and sent a long-legged girl running for the center of the line.
A herald bearing a silken banner with the Duke's device came forth from the enemy lines and approached the Prince's position. He read a long and, no doubt, eloquent speech that Tenon couldn't hear, but which almost certainly demanded the Prince's surrender.
She heard his Highness's ringing response of "Never!" from her hilltop, though. And all of the Prince's troops called out "Never!" after him in a roar that rolled after the retreating herald like thunder.
All the feeling in her body seemed to coalesce in her stomach, making her breath come short. Now, in a moment, the battle would begin. She lowered her visor and breathed a prayer to the Lady.
No word had come from the Prince, not even her messenger had returned. She decided to send another. Things would be no worse here for the loss of two soldiers, and it might just help. She reminded herself that her status as a commander ent.i.tled her to the Prince's attention. She'd known at this morning's briefing that she was in trouble. The General's insistence that she and her troops "stand" had been her first inkling. Experience had taught her that rhetoric like that meant "so long, sucker."
Terion needed archers here and she had pikemen, and not nearly enough of them. She rubbed her gauntleted hands together and tried to think of some new way to deploy her troops that would lessen the enemy's advantage in numbers.
Fine, cold sweat misted over her body, and a s.h.i.+ver ratcheted up her spine, making her gasp. Someone stepping on your grave her mother had said, or maybe that was Feric.
Thinking of Feric got her dander up, which was just what she needed right now. She welcomed the spurt of anger. He'd been asleep when she'd gotten home last night and she hadn't been able to wake him this morning.
Who does he think he is? she demanded of herself.How dare he ignore me at a time like this!
She wondered, and worried, on a deeper level about just what he'd been doing to make him so tired.
Jealousy popped its head up briefly, wondered what it was doing here and vanished without really making an impression.Nah. Whatever he's up to it doesn't involve another woman.
The enemy troops began to march, ma.s.sed spear points glittering in the sun like the surface of a wind ruffled pond. There was a tremendous clanking of armor and the sound of a ringing battle hymn as they moved inexorably forward, picking up speed as they came.
She watched the archers take stance and draw their bows.
"We're going to charge," Terion suddenly said to her second. "On my signal."
"What?" he roared.
"If we stand," she said, "they'll shoot us to s.h.i.+t and then ride right through the gaps. If we charge it might break their line in confusion. Our third option of course, is to simply desert. But the archers will still skewer us and whoever wins here, the Captain will hunt us down and kill us for cowardice. So I'd say charging is really our only course. If that's all right with you, sergeant."
"Yessir," he said, eyes round.
Tenon waited until the advancing troops were halfway up the gentle slope of the hill before she gave the signal and charged screaming down upon them at the front of her pikemen.
She waved her sword over her head and tried to keep her balance as she ran on the slippery gra.s.s.
Now she was committed to action she needed to neither feel nor think beyond the killing of the foe.
The Duke's men stumbled to a confused halt and started to brace for the impact of Terion's troops.
But as the black-clad virago leading them came closer, they saw in horror that she had no body. Legs pumped furiously as she rushed towards them, her unadorned helmet glinted in the morning sun and gauntleted hands brandished sword and dagger, but there was no body.
The more they stared, the greater the compulsion they felt to look away. Terrified, they felt their bodiesforced to follow their eyes' example. Then, as one, they spun 'round and fled shrieking.
The cavalry horses, already alarmed by the rout, suddenly rolled their eyes in terror as Terion came near. They took the bit between their teeth and fled the field squealing, their riders needlessly, but frantically, trying to whip greater speed from them.
Terion stopped flat-footed and lifted her visor as the last of the enemy turned tail. She and the sergeant eyed each other, then stared, open-mouthed, after the retreating forces.
"But I bathed just last Lugsday," the sergeant muttered.
Then-all in a moment-everything was clear to her. Terion stood torn between a scream of rage and a sigh of resignation. She whirled her sword through a complicated arc, then furiously paced back and forth, wondering what to do.
She turned to her sergeant.
"Get the troops back into position and hold this hill. I'll be back. Probably."
Then she charged towards the Duke's lines where they'd already engaged with the Prince's.
Wherever she went chaos reigned, the heat of battle cooled in cowardly rout, and the Prince's men poured in joyous pursuit of the enemy. In two hours the battle was over, the Duke defeated and kneeling in humiliation before the Prince.
"FERIC!".
Startled from a sound sleep he sat up with a gasp. At the horrific sight of a bodiless warrior charging towards him he scrambled backward. Trying to get out of bed he tangled himself in the bedclothes, falling to the floor with a crash.
"Ow," he groaned.
Terion tore off her helmet and threw it on the bed.
"How dare you?" she bellowed. "What were you thinking of? Are you trying to get me hanged?"
All she could see of him from where she stood was the top of his curly head and his terrified eyes.
"Well?" she screamed.
Fighting down his fear, Feric stammered, "P-p-please c-c-calm d-down. Or, or I-I'll have to r-r-run away."
She turned her back with a snarl and stomped over to the window. Taking a few deep breaths of fresh air, Terion deliberately squashed her anger. Then, desperately calm, she turned to confront him.
"What did you do to me?" she asked quietly. "Nothing," he said.
Her eyes blazed and he flinched.
Terion calmed herself once more with a heroic effort and said, calmly, "I'm not stupid, you know. You didsomething!"
"Yes," he admitted, with a sheepish smile, his eyes frantic. "But not to you directly. I, uh, I enchanted your new armor."
"Oh! We-el." She threw up her hands as though all she'd needed was an explanation. "Of course! That's just fine. Yes, lovely. And do you happen to know the penalty for using magical swords or armor in battle?" she asked sweetly.
"No," he said in a tiny voice.
"Death!" she hissed. She glared at him and then turned her back. "If you had left well enough alone I'd still be dead, but at least I'd have my self-respect."
That wouldn't matter if you were dead, he thought, but, wisely, did not say.
"No one needs to know," he said. "I can remove the enchantment."
She threw him a look. "Well, that's not exactly honorable either. Now is it?"
Feric stood up and walked over to face her.
"Terion," he said firmly, taking her hands in his. She made to pull them away but he held them with surprising strength. "I love you. And I don't want you to die. Not for money, not so someone can steal your armor, not for honor. I've waited for you too long, I've had you for too little time and I need you too much to watch you put your life at risk and do nothing about it."
"I'm a soldier," she said defensively. But she was cooling down, fighting a smile in fact. "Risking my life is what I do."
Feric's lips thinned to a grim line and he nodded sullenly.