Casca 34: Devil's Horseman (19 page)

BOOK: Casca 34: Devil's Horseman
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CHAPTER NINETEEN

He wasn’t smiling the following morning as he crouched behind an outcrop of rock along with his men, waiting for the newly built catapults to do their job. The clouds had lowered and were now drifting amongst them, depositing snow in freezing clumps everywhere. The wind howled along the pass from the north east, behind them, and blew the snow in the faces of the Hungarians, so that they couldn’t see what was coming towards them or when.

The men shivered as they waited, hoping to hell that the stone throwing war machines did their work fast. At least they would be moving and fighting hard, which would give them a chance to warm up. Rather that than freezing your balls off here, Casca thought sourly.

The machines crashed as the arms came up and sent yet more boulders hurtling through the air at the palisade. There was no shortage of missiles; the pass floor was full of them. Casca grimaced as another blast of wind blew around the outcrop and stung their faces. The Mongols bore it in stoic silence; they were used to such hardships out in the wilds of High Asia, but some of the European mercenaries that had found their way to Batu’s force turned their backs and cursed the wind, the weather, the Hungarians and anything that came to mind.

As in all war, the side that appeared to be winning attracted men to its banners and they were willing to even turn their backs on their own king, for some Hungarians were there amongst the rag-tag collections of Kipchaks, Bulgarians, Vlachs, Germans and Slavs who had volunteered their sword arms and expertise. Many of the Vlachs were hardy mountain men and knew the passes well in these mountains. Casca thought they’d slit their own mothers’ throats if paid enough. Still, Batu had decided that the Europeans would spearhead the charge. That way his Mongols wouldn’t get the worst of the defenders’ missiles in the attack. Sensible of him, Casca admitted.

There came a crash from ahead and cheers rang out. More boulders went sailing through the snow and struck the palisade. Word came back that the rocks had done their job and the main barricade had been knocked down in a couple of places and there were now gaps through which an attack could go.

The banner colored with their unit’s design fluttered in the wind and dipped, pointing at the Hungarian position. Casca stood up, sword in his gauntleted fist. “Rise up! Up! For the glory of the Great Khan, and all of Mongolia!
Death to the Hungarians!”

Two thousand throats roared. Most of them didn’t give a damn about the Khan, and had no idea where Mongolia was. But they as sure as hell understood about the death to the Hungarians bit. As one the odd mixture of Europeans, steppe nomads and Mongols rose up and brandished their weapons; swords, spears, axes, bows and clubs. Then with a rising howl they broke cover and rushed towards the splintered and broken wooden wall.

Batu’s archers ran to their positions to either side of the rushing mob and began laying down a rain of arrows, arcing high up into the snow laden wind and dropping over the wall into the Hungarian positions. Casca’s odd assortment of men bounded towards the wall, now clearly visible despite the poor visibility, and the leaders vaulted the ditches with their wicked points in one bound and crashed into the wall, scrambling for purchase points to climb up and slaughter the defenders. The nearest gap attracted most of the attackers and the Hungarians had massed most of their men around this spot.

Javelins and spears flew from the walkway behind the wall and dozens of the lightly armored Vlachs, Kipchaks and Bulgars who had outrun the more heavily armored Mongols and Germans were sent crashing to the ground screaming.

Casca ran hard for the gap, Lars, Karl and Kaidur close behind him. Lars suddenly sported an axe, and Casca recalled how these Scandinavians loved this weapon. The Swede weighed it in his hand, drew his arm back, and still running, released it. The axe span lazily through the air and buried itself cleanly into the chest of one Hungarian who was thrusting a long spear into the neck of an unfortunate Vlach. The impact of the blow sent the defender flying backwards off the walkway.

In no time Lars had his sword in his hand and bellowing mightily, was racing Casca to the gap. Casca leaped over a ditch and caught a quick glance of a few bodies impaled on the sticks in the bottom of it, then was at the hole in the wall.

Broken stumps of wood stuck up, their splintered edges gleaming wickedly at ankle height. Men were battling furiously at the edge of the opening, each side determined to push the other side back, and neither side was giving way. Casca pulled one hillman out of his way. A waft of sweat and goat came to him momentarily, then was gone.

Before him stood a wall of men.
They were clad in iron helmets, leather or padded armor and long leather leggings. Cloaks hung down their backs. Their grim, determined faces were backed up by spears, swords and axes. Casca’s first task was to clear these people out of the way. He raised his sword, and slammed it down at a spearman.

The Hungarian jabbed forward but Casca had been expecting that. His blow severed the spear clean in two, so that the enemy soldier was left holding a short stick. His reverse blow slashed up across the soldier’s neck and blood spurted out, splashing Casca’s arm.

He stepped forward, Lars and Kaidur right behind him and Karl just a pace further back, a spearhead that thrust itself into the defensive line. Roaring his challenge to them all, Casca hacked at the next man, a swarthy spear-wielding man with lank black hair. The spear shattered at the first blow, and the man had nowhere to go, hemmed in by his colleagues. Casca thrust his sword deep into the man’s chest and the victim fell forward. Casca used him as a stepping block, gaining a few inches in height.

The roar of battle was almost deafening, confined by the sheer rock walls and the cloud. The snow was forgotten as all that mattered now was to kill and not be killed. Steam rose from the fighting men, body heat rising up from the writhing organism. Lars was bellowing too, hacking left and right, slaughtering Hungarians as he went. Casca dispatched another defender, and suddenly the front line gave way. Now they faced the better armored guards.

The Mongol attack broke in and now it dissolved into hundreds of individual clashes. The Eternal Mercenary was attacked by a tall man wearing a red cloak, chain armor and a segmented iron helmet with a crest on top. He looked like some kind of officer. The defender slashed down and Casca blocked, then pushed. The Hungarian snarled and pushed back. Again, the officer hacked at Casca. Block. Casca thrust forward, aiming for the gut. It was deflected down. The Hungarian reversed his swing, hoping to take the scarred warrior’s head off, but Casca had lived too long to fall for that.

Step back. Regain balance.
Attack. Steel rang on steel as the blades met above their heads. They stood, face to face, straining. Beneath, the frozen earth was beginning to churn up and become even more slippery. Casca pushed to one side and the Hungarian had to give way or his sword would have been too far down to recover in time to meet the next blow. The look on his face became more desperate; he knew he was facing a better warrior. Another swing but Casca bent back at the waist and the blade kissed air inches above him. A quick step forward and the blade sank into the Hungarian’s gut and sliced upwards, tearing aside muscle and organs.

The defender sank to his knees and Casca pushed him over onto the black earth. To one side stood a wooden tower, a crude affair, manned by archers. They were shooting down attacker after attacker and Casca decided they had to be dealt with. He ran towards the simple ladder that led up to the single platform where the three archers were firing from. A Hungarian stepped across his path and Casca crashed into him, sending him staggering back, but Casca slipped too and had to put his hand out to stop himself from falling over.

The defender regained his balance and came at him again with a shrill cry. Casca swung two-handed and smashed the blow aside, then swung back with all his strength and the defender staggered aside, clutching the ugly gash that was erupting with blood across his chest. He reached the foot of the ladder and an arrow narrowly missed him. He’d been spotted.

It was ten feet up to the platform and Casca scrambled up one-handed, his sword ready in his right fist. One of the archers appeared at the edge, where the ladder touched the platform, and kicked the ladder free. Casca felt himself falling and let go of the ladder, plunging eight feet to the ground and rolling to break the fall. Another arrow plunged into the ground next to his head and he hauled himself up, cursing.

He spotted Lars and Kaidur and yelled at them to help him. The two came running over, sweat on their faces. “Help me get this damned tower over.”

He ran to one of the legs, underneath the platform, and the others joined him. Throwing their weapons onto the ground they grabbed one leg and began pushing hard against it.

Casca’s veins stood out on his neck as he strained, and the beefy Lars and sinewy Kaidur grunted in effort too. The leg began to give way and suddenly tore free of the platform. They grabbed their weapons and ran out of the way as the unsupported corner of the archer’s tower began to collapse, dragging the rest of it down with it. The three Hungarians clung to the safety rail but as the platform crashed to the ground, let go and fell onto the ruins and the hard ground.

The three attackers advanced on the defenseless archers who scrambled to their feet and ran for the second wall, set thirty feet behind the first. Most of the Hungarians who had survived the struggle so far now made their way to this and were helped up by their comrades leaning over the top of the parapet.

The less disciplined of the Mongol force chased the last of the fleeing Hungarians and caught them close to the wall. Casca pulled Lars back and screamed at the others to retreat back to the first wall. Arrows were already cutting down the attackers close to the wall, and there was nowhere for them to hide. “Back! Back to the first wall!” Casca hauled Kaidur round and shoved him on his way. As he retreated, he turned and watched as the last of the Hungarians who hadn’t reached safety were cut to pieces, but then the exultant Bulgars, Mongols and Vlachs became the hunted. Caught in the open they were easy prey to the massed Hungarian archers on the wall.

Casca slid round the ripped open hole in the wall and caught his breath. It had been a mad thirty minutes but they’d carried the first wall. Losses had been high but so had those been for the enemy. The downside of hiding behind the wall was that they were getting the snow right into their faces. Casca cursed. He called a messenger to him. “Go pass on the news to Batu Khan that we have the first wall, but the enemy is dug in behind the second. We need the catapults to knock that one down too.”

After the messenger had gone, Casca looked along the line of tired, blood streaked men. He remembered the blood on his arm and looked at it. It had dried but was covering his arm. He scraped off as much as he could and checked the men who were close to him. Lars was fidgeting, keen to get at the enemy again. Kaidur was looking thoughtfully at the wall, while Karl was expressionless. He was wiping some battle gore from his chest.

The catapults were moved up and loaded up again. They hurled their missiles over the first wall and down at the second. Many fell short, or went long, but enough were soon striking the wooden wall for the cracking and splitting of wood to carry to the waiting men. Batu sent up a huge mass of archers to help. Casca wondered how they’d be able to pin the enemy down, given that there were no platforms to stand on this side of the wall, and the enemy was behind the other one.

Men were crawling through the broken sections of wall, sobbing with pain, blood marking their route. Some had parts of their legs or arms missing, and one had his brains oozing out through a huge scalp wound. Casca wondered how the hell men still managed to move with such wounds, then thought back to some of those he’d received. Yes, he was immortal, but he still felt the pain and shock of injuries, and it incapacitated him just like anyone else. It was the healing that was different.

He didn’t know if the Mongols bothered with tending the wounded; most of these were European irregulars, booty hunters attracted to the thought of getting rich on the bodies of the dominant Hungarians. He thought the Mongols would let them die; after all who were they to the Mongols?

“Either we freeze to death here or we attack,” Lars growled. “What is he waiting for?”

“Patience, Lars,” Casca said, looking along the line of the mixed bunch of soldiers again. Maybe fifteen hundred were left, out of two thousand who had started out not an hour before. “Here come the archers.”

A mass of men raised their bows, paused, then on command released a cloud of missiles high into the air. It fell like rain amongst the Hungarians who ducked for cover, shields raised. Screams came to the waiting men by the wall. More crashes heralded another volley from the catapults and a thunderous crack from ahead brought Casca’s head round the corner. He saw through the swirling snow that a huge boulder had taken out a section of wall perhaps six feet wide. It was enough.

“Right, everyone, there’s a hole in the second wall. It’s going to be hard getting to it, but the archers will have to do their best in keeping the enemy’s head down. Come on!”

Again, with renewed vigor and hope, the mixed bag of men charged out from cover and raced across the thirty foot gap to the second wall. A last couple of shots from the catapults went off and rocks the size of a man’s head spun lazily through the air to strike the wall and bounce off, leaving splinters and broken logs where they had hit.

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