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The Faithful and the Fallen: Ruin Part 90

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It is.

Thousands of warriors were pouring out of the trees to the north-west of the fortress, spilling into the open s.p.a.ce like blood from a wound, gathering into a thick pool, edging forwards.

From this distance Corban could make out little detail, just a ma.s.s of iron and leather, red cloaks and fur. Most of the warband were on foot, and the disconcerting thing was that they just kept on appearing, more and more of them emerging from the shadows of Forn. Eventually riders appeared, a banner held aloft, a lightning bolt with a pale serpent wrapped around it.

I like my banner better, thought Corban, looking up to see the bright star on a black field snapping from the gate tower above him.

Slowly the warband moved southwards, skirting the edge of the land cleared over the last few moons, until they were ma.s.sed about a thousand paces from Dra.s.sil's only gates. Then they began to edge closer, a semi-organized line stretching the width of the western wall, ten men deep at least. Corban began to make out details, the most troubling of which was the number of long timber ladders he spied being carried amongst their ranks.



'Two and a half thousand swords,' Gar whispered behind him.

Five hundred paces out and horn blasts rang from the cl.u.s.ter of riders, the warband rippling to a halt, a silence settling heavy upon them all.

'Is it just me, or is there a lot of waiting in war?' Dath muttered.

'Aye, you're right,' Farrell replied. 'Usually followed by a lot of dying.'

Dath took a deep breath.

'That's comforting.'

'Here to help,' Farrell muttered.

Hearing Dath and Farrell's bickering actually helped to calm Corban's nerves, something familiar in this most unfamiliar of circ.u.mstances.

The other battles seemed to just happen Dun Carreg, Murias, Gramm's hold. This waiting and watching is worse.

Four riders separated from the others, riding at a steady pace towards the gates of Dra.s.sil, one clearly the leader, his horsehair plume tugged by the wind must be Jael, the self-appointed King of Isiltir another held Isiltir's banner, the third appearing to be a shieldman, obviously a warrior, sitting his saddle with an easy grace and clothed similarly to the other two, in red cloak, black cuira.s.s and iron helm, sword at his hip, spear in one hand. The fourth appeared elderly, hunched over his saddle and wrapped in a voluminous cloak, the hood pulled up.

A loremaster, perhaps, come to tell me that I have no legal claim to be fighting against the King of Isiltir.

They rode steadily closer.

At least it looks as if the waiting's over.

CHAPTER SEVENTY-NINE.

ULFILAS.

Ulfilas rode one side of Jael, his first-sword Fram upon the other, their cloaked and hunched companion close behind them. As they drew nearer Ulfilas looked up at the walls of Dra.s.sil, the great tree towering behind them, its branches unfurling like some giant organic shield that touched the clouds.

The gates were huge, constructs of weathered oak and iron, as tall as a house from Mikil, and looked as thick as a wall. On the wall above, warriors stood in silent rows, peering down on them. Here and there Ulfilas saw the huge proportions of a giant.

Never thought I'd wish for the company of Ildaer and his Jotun. Where is he, the traitorous coward? Over a dozen messengers had been sent north into the Desolation in search of Ildaer and his giants. Not a sight or sound had been heard of them since the disaster at Gramm's hold, and eventually Jael had tired of sending messengers.

On one of the gate towers a banner rippled; as Ulfilas drew nearer he was able to make out a rayed white star upon a black field.

In the crook of his arm Ulfilas held the banner of Isiltir, the wind trying to rip it from his grip.

White star against the storm and serpent.

They were three or four hundred paces from the gates now, still closer to their warband than to the walls of Dra.s.sil, but nevertheless Ulfilas was starting to feel a little intimidated by the sheer scale of them.

Are our ladders even tall enough?

'Are you sure this is a good idea?' Ulfilas asked Jael, who sat straight and confident in his saddle.

Jael reined his horse in and cupped his hands about his mouth.

Too late.

'Who leads this rabble?' Jael called out, voice sounding small and insignificant as it battered against Dra.s.sil's walls. No answer came back to them.

'I've heard a name, and a t.i.tle,' Jael called. 'Corban. Bright Star. Are you up there, Corban, but too scared to speak with me.'

He's always had a natural ability to get under the skin, has Jael.

'I'm here,' a voice came down to them.

'I've a proposition for you, Bright Star,' Jael shouted, managing to make the t.i.tle sound like an insult. 'I've a lot of men under my care, and no doubt you've a fair few with you inside those walls. How about we decide this the old way, and spare the blood of thousands of men. Spare their lives.'

Silence.

'You against my champion. Winner takes the field.'

More silence.

'I'd wager that that has set the cat amongst the wood pigeons,' Jael whispered to Ulfilas.

'You lie,' another voice drifted down.

I recognize that voice.

A face peered over the wall. Wulf.

'Ahh, the son of Gramm,' Jael called out. 'How are your hands?'

I think he's genuinely enjoying this.

'You will die today, Jael. As will your lackey, Ulfilas.'

Well, I did spill his da's guts before his very eyes. I'd be surprised if he wasn't angry.

'Be quiet, you insignificant oaf,' Jael called back. 'I'm talking to your leader, not you.'

Curses drifted down and then Wulf's face disappeared.

'I do not lie,' Jael said. 'I swear an oath, before my people and any powers that deign to listen. If you defeat my champion I shall withdraw and leave you in peace.'

'I'll fight you,' the first voice came down to them.

'Ahh, tempting,' Jael said, 'but, no. I am a king. I have a champion, whereas you are no king, but profess to be a champion. The champion of Elyon, no less; or am I mistaken? That is what the prophecy says, does it not?'

More silence.

'So if you are the champion you claim to be, then come down here. Fight my champion, and spare the lives of your followers.'

Jael turned and grinned at Ulfilas. 'Either way, we win here. If he refuses, he loses the respect of his warband they will not fight so fiercely for someone who had an opportunity to save them and chose not to. And if he comes down here, he dies. Their Bright Star. That will rip the heart out of this warband. They may even surrender after that.'

I'll give it to Jael, he is a canny one.

'But what if he comes down here and wins?' Ulfilas said.

Jael just pulled a face at him. 'Win? Please.' Then he frowned as he thought about it a few moments, finally shrugging. 'If he wins we'll just kill him, anyway. He won't get back to those gates before my mounted shieldmen could catch him.'

'That may inspire some anger amongst his warband, rather than dishearten them.'

'It may, you're right. But he'd still be dead, and that is the most important goal here, Ulfilas. To kill a snake you cut off the head.'

'I'm coming down,' the Bright Star's voice drifted down to them.

The gates opened with a grating of iron and oak and a lone figure stepped out. They closed behind him with a booming thud as he strode purposefully towards them.

'He looks quite confident,' Jael remarked.

'He does,' Ulfilas agreed.

The four of them waited in silence as the lone warrior approached them.

So this is the Bright Star that Nathair is so scared of. Corban. He is younger than I expected.

He was young, his face smooth-skinned apart from the short dark stubble of a beard. He walked with the easy gait of a warrior, of average height, broad at the shoulder, thick at the chest, slim at the waist, built more like a blacksmith, to Ulfilas' mind.

He's well dressed, though, Ulfilas thought, admiring his war gear. A well-fitting coat of mail, leather and iron on his wrists and feet, shield slung across his back and a large hand-and-a-half sword at his hip.

A big sword, too big to use single-handed. Strong but slow.

Ulfilas had seen this type many times before, strong but slow, their strength often their worst enemy, relying upon it to batter their opponents into defeat. He saw a strange weapon strapped to Corban's left hand, like a three-p.r.o.nged knife bound into a leather gauntlet.

Like claws. Ulfilas remembered the wounds on many of those who had been slain in the night-time raids during the journey through Forn.

Something glinted on his arm, an arm-ring spiralling around his bicep, gleaming with silver.

Jael will want that once this man is dead.

He stopped about fifty paces from them, regarding them with dark, serious eyes.

'I am here, then.' Corban drew his sword almost without having seemed to move, his feet shifting, balance perfect. He rolled his shoulders.

Maybe not so slow, then.

'Brave of you,' Jael commented, 'and trusting.'

Not so trusting, that's why he stopped over fifty paces away from us.

Corban shrugged. 'Let's get on with this.'

'Not a conversationalist, then,' Jael said. 'As you wish.' He pulled on his reins and kicked his horse, turning to ride back to the warband. Ulfilas and Fram followed. Ulfilas looked back over his shoulder, saw the surprise on Corban's face as Fram rode away, then saw his expression change as the fourth member of their party slid from his horse and dropped his cloak.

This will most likely be over before we are back amongst our warband.

It was Sumur.

CHAPTER EIGHTY.

CORBAN.

For a heartbeat Corban froze, numb, shocked, then a jolt of fear hit him.

Sumur. Kadoshim.

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The Faithful and the Fallen: Ruin Part 90 summary

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