Authors: Jr. L. E. Modesitt
Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Music
and Anna had felt as though her tunic and trousers were perpetually soaked, half-steamed. She
blotted her forehead, then reached for the water bottle, looking at the winding road before her.
Riding ahead of the main body—if behind the scouts—were the two standard-bearers, one
bearing the purple banner of Defalk, with the crossed spears with the crown and the R beneath,
and the other bearing a green banner with gold blades crossed over a sheaf of grain.
Hadrenn rode to Anna’s right, a large hand-and-a-half blade in a shoulder harness, and a short-
sword in a scabbard. Rivulets of sweat streamed down his round face, and his tunic was splotchy
with the dark stains of sweat.
Behind Hadrenn and Anna. crowded stirrup to stirrup, rode Jecks, Jimbob, and Kinor. Behind
them rode Himar and Stepan.
"... problem with lances... one-time weapons... get under a lance, or knock it aside, and your
lancer’s chopped meat... can’t carry that many lances anyway... what do you do once you break
the first lance, or it lodges in some other armsman or lancer?” Jecks laughed, almost
sardonically. “Lances and heavy armor work well against peasants or ill-equipped foot without a
pike—if your heavy cavalry doesn’t have to ride far... and if you can find enough peasants to
carry all the baggage..."
Anna nodded, almost to herself, as she listened to Jecks’ voice carrying forward. She’d often
wondered about lances and knights, about what earthly use a lance was except in a joust or a
pitched battle in a small area. She’d heard Avery give all the arguments, but most of those
arguments were what she’d have called Eurocentric chauvinism. In Earth’s history heavily armed
knights had been an expensive and costly rarity useful only in limited circumstances, and mainly
in European settings by barons and others able to amass large amounts of wealth. No empire of
any great size or extent had ever been held through the armored knight... for all the
romanticization about knights. And of course, neither Avery nor Mario had ever listened to your
observations.
Anna snorted to herself. Some things didn’t change across worlds. Lord Dannel and Avery
would have gotten along fairly well. She shook her head. That’s too cynical, even for you. Avery
wasn’t near that bad.
Hadrenn glanced toward the Regent. “You said that the usurper’s forces were still in Elahwa?”
Anna blinked, reorienting her thoughts. “According to the mirror, that’s where he was this
morning.” She took another long swallow of water. In some ways, the steamy fall heat of Ebra
was as bad as the drought-created heat of Defalk had once been. “You think it will take another
two days to reach where the rivers join?”
“Two, if it does not rain." The stocky brown-haired lord glanced to the east, and the intermittent
thunderclouds forming there.
“Good.”
“You feel that Bertmynn will meet us there, and that he will fight. What if Bertmynn retreats to
Dolov?”
Anna thought. What if he does? Then she shrugged. “Then We will free Elahwa, and you will set
up a free state ruled by the freewomen, but under your protection. Bertmynn will return. Quickly,
I’d bet.”
“That’s a wager I’d not take.” Jecks laughed from where he rode behind Anna and beside
Jimbob.
“I yield to your judgment, Lord High Counselor,” Hadrenn responded, wiping his damp brow
with the back of his forearm.
“Bertmynn, indeed all Liedwahr, knows that Lady Anna’s sympathies lie with women who have
been ill-treated. For that reason alone," Jecks continued, “I would doubt that he would allow you
two to nde unmolested to Elahwa.”
“You are certain that Bertmynn is near Elahwa?" asked Hadrenn.
“The mirror hasn’t misled me that way yet,” Anna answered. “Unless he can cover two days’
ride in half a day, he can’t be far from Elahwa or where the rivers meet north of there.”
“He will wait for us,” Jecks said. “We should take three days,if necessary."
Anna understood that, but she worried. Even though the mirror indicated that Rabyn and his
forces had just left Esaria, the ride from Elahwa back to Denguic was farther than from Esaria to
Denguic. Lord, every military strategist ever quoted by Avery or Sandy talked about not fighting
wars on two fronts, and you’ve gotten into one? Was she acting out the old adage about fools
rushing in?
She pursed her lips and shifted her weight in the saddle.
48
Anna's tent was set up without the sidewalls, more as an awning to offer some shade for the
group that gathered in the late afternoon. She glanced at Jecks, then let her eyes travel across
Hadrenn, Stepan, Jimbob, Kinor, and Liende. Liende brushed back hair that showed less and less
red and more white, but offered an amused smile to Anna.
Himar stood before the group, and his voice was raspy as he talked. "...likely that we will meet
with Bertmynn’s forces on the morrow. He brings near-on eighty score, though some are foot
levies from Dolov... with little experience or training. His own lancers are well seasoned, and
they will be at the fore…”
The faintest of breezes carried a hint of coolness from the river to the north then faded, leaving
the group sweating in the unseasonably sultry heat.
“Lady Anna has studied Bertmynn’s forces with her glass, and they are here." Using a whittled
length of pencil wood, Himar pointed to a spot on the crude map just south and east of where the
River Syne and the River Dol joined. “Where he now waits is perhaps a ride of three glasses.”
Hadrenn looked at the maps and then toward Anna before speaking. “We could circle south of
him, cross at one of the lower fords, and then go downriver and take Elahwa from behind. We
would not have to face Bertmynn…”
Anna shook her head, without even thinking about getting opinions from Jecks or Himar. “That’s
not the reason I’m here. I want it set up so that all of Bertmynn’s armsmen are in one battle.”
“You risk all of your armsmen as well,” countered Hadrenn, “and much of my forces.”
“Yours are at risk in any eventuality; Lord Hadrenn,” suggested Jecks. “You cannot raise the
numbers he has, nor can you count on assistance from the Liedfuhr or the Sturinnese.”
“Well we know that,” answered the brown-haired lord of Synek. “Well we do.”
Himar cleared his throat, and the others looked at the mustached overcaptain. “Ah. . . also, if we
circled south, Bertmynn could well be between us and either Synek or Defalk, and then we
would have to fight more in a place of his choosing.” Himar addressed Hadrenn. “Also, should
aught go amiss, you can return to Synek more easily if we fight more to the north."
Jecks nodded. After a moment, so did Hadrenn.
“We’ll have to move slowly in the morning,” Anna said. “We can’t afford to attack from lower
grounds—”
“Or be attacked from higher ground,” added Jecks.
“And we’ll need time to set up the players.” Anna glanced toward Liende, who nodded. Then she
inclined her head to Himar.
“The Regent and Lord Hadrenn have explained our aims,” Himar said. “It is now time for you to
tell your subofficers and those men who will carry them out. Remember that the task of all the
lancers is to protect the sorceress and the players first. If we succeed in that, Bertmynn will fall.”
As the others hurried away, in the burnt orange of twilight, Jecks and Anna remained under the
awning tent, with Kerhor and Blaz a dozen paces away.
“You do not wish Ebra to be like Dumar," Jecks offered in a low voice.
“That’s partly it.”
“You could take Ebra, and none would gainsay that.” The white-haired lord’s eyes flicked in the
direction where, a hundred paces away, Hadrenn was speaking with Stepan. “You would likely
rule better than young Hadrenn, even from Falcor.”
“I can’t rule Defalk very well,” Anna said. “The last thing I need... anyone needs. . . is another
set of lords to argue with. This way, the women of Ebra who don’t like the old ways have
somewhere to go. Those who like the old ways can keep them, and outside of complaining about
the free state, and me..." She shrugged. “Whatever.”
“You do not wish to leave a trail of fire and spells,” Jocks suggested.
“No. In Dumar, I ended up destroying a whole city of innocents—or mostly innocents. That was
because I let myself get backed into a corner.”
“You backed Ehara into a corner, most would says.”
“No. In losing, he forced my hand. Or I let him, because I worried about spending too much time
in Dumar with the Thirty-three machinating in Defalk. And…I was trying to be merciful, and it
didn’t turn out that way. This time..."
“Is that why Gestatr remains in Synek?” Jecks’ eyes twinkled.
“Yes. He’s more valuable to Ebra than Hadrenn.”
“And so, to Defalk,” Jecks affirmed.
Anna nodded. Except nothing works out the way you plan it, not the details or the costs, anyway.
49
NORTHWEST OF ELAHWA, EBRA
Bertmynn runs a hand through his thick blond hair, then glances at the scroll on the folding camp
table. He picks up the scroll once more, squinting to read it by the light of the candle. “She
travels the Syne River road... she is camped less than a half day’s ride from here.” He drops the
scroll and stands, stretching, before he looks at the older man, who is the only otherone in the
tent with him.
“We could swing northward, through Nuvann, and then strike at Synek..." Ceorwyn lines a
general path on the map pinned to the battered board set on a makeshift easel of lashed branches
beside the table.
Bertmynn picks up the scroll once more, studies it, and sets it back on the table. He shakes his